12
The Daily VOL. LXXXIII Justice Clark for I. F. president PHILADELPHIA. PENNSYLVANIA FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 10. 1967 NO. 73 Springer: There was always 'one more thing' to do By MARK LIEBERMAN Dr. Otto G. Springer, dean of the College of Arts andSciences, yesterday explained that "there is no specific reason for my resignation." Springer* yesterday released his letter of resignation, in which he cited his long service as Dean and noted that it has been cus- tomary for the Dean of the Col- lege to retire before the statutory age limit set for such positions. Springer is also resigning his post as vice-provost of the University, which he has held since April, 1963. Springer has been dean since July 1, 1959. During his nine years in that post he has seen many changes in the College. He said yesterday that there were many times during his tenure at which he felt he should retire but that there was always "onemore thing" he wanted to accomplish. He said that with the addition of new facilities for the humanities he feels his most important pro- ject has been completed. The Dean cautioned that there is still a great deal to be done in the administration of the College. "It is necessary to review our philosophy of liberal education from year to year to see that our rules and regulations do no" ham- per this philosophy," he said. "I would like to see more flexibility in the College. Not only with re- spect to the course load but in other matters as well.'* Springer called the present student body at Pennsylvania "more mature" and said the students "know what they want." The Dean has increased his con- tact with students this year, meeting with freshman groups, seniors, and lunching weekly with sophomores and juniors. "No matter how removed I am from the 'lunatic fringe'," he added, "I've been getting closer to students. The dialogue during the informal meetings is fruitful, congenial, and natural." Springer cited the Student Committee on Undergraduate Ed- ucation (SCUE) report as "unique evidence of student participation in their own education. Students (Continued on page 2) Summonses go fo protesters By BERL SCHWARTZ After a closed three-hour meeting, the discipline committee on free speech last night issued a statement that it is summoning an undisclosed number of students to appear before it Monday at an undisclosed time in an undisclosed place. Students-believed to number 24—will receive summonses today charging them with "intruding into offices where interviews were being held and with blocking movement through the passageways in Logan Hall," according to Dr. Robert Maddin, chairman of the rec- cently created committee. The charges stem from the Nov. 1 antiwar sit-in which protested on-campus recruiting by the Central Intelligence Agency and Dow Chemical Co. CRO lets jr. women move out By STEPHEN MARMON The Committee on Residence OTTO SPRINGER The teaching dean Weinstein lawyer quits One of accused murderer Stephen Weinstein's court- appointed defense attorneys re- signed his post because he was previously involved in the case as counsel for the University. Henry Sawyer III, a member of the Drinker, Biddle and Reath law firm that advises the Uni- versity, yesterday received per- mission to withdraw from the case from Judge JosephE.Gold, a spokesman for the judge said yesterday. Sawyer refused to comment on his removal from the case, except to confirm that it was his University connections that prompted his resignation. Dean of Women Alice Emer- son, who has been involved in the Green murder investigation, confirmed that Sawyer had been consulted in connection with the case. She said she called Sawyer on the night after the body of Green was found. Several Uni- versity students had been taken for questioning by the police, and she called Sawyer to see if they should have any legal aid. Sawyer "may have felt involv- ed by being in contact with the students" involved in the case, Mrs. Emerson suggested. Sawyer, a former Democratic city councilman, is Chairman of the Americans for Democratic Action political committee. Weinstein's other court- appointed defender is Louis Lip- schitz, a former head of the criminal justice committee of the Philadelphia Bar Association. The committee has not brought any charges against stu- dents involved in Wednesday's noisy but peaceful Logan Hall sit-in against Dow. Assistant Vice-Provost for Student Affairs Alice Emerson was present at the beginning of the meeting to present documents concerning the more recent dem- onstrations, Maddin said. He would not reveal how many names Operations (CRO) this week ap- she referred to him. He did say, however, that some were the same persons who will be issued summonses for last week's dem- onstrations. Madden said he believes "it will be viewed as quite serious" by his committee if any of the students do not show up for the hearing. Madden would not say what the range of punishments would be for breaking a University pol- icy which states: "Demonstrat- ors and others must refrain from physical violence, from damage to property, from prevention of entry to or exit from buildings, and from interference with the normal conduct of University business and the normal utili- zation of University facilities." The policy statement was read to protesters at the Nov. 1 sit-in by Acting Dean of Men Gerald Robinson. Madden said the committee discussed the possibility of o- pening last night's session held in Maddin's office in the Labor- atory for Research on theStruc- ture of Matter building- but the idea was turned down "decisive- iy." Asked how the committee voted on this matter, Maddin re- fused to comment. (Continued on page 2) Lunch at Delta Tau Delta Justice Tom Clark praises fraternities From beer... He is 68 years old, and he has just recovered from hepati- tis, but his wit is still sharp and his back is still straight. Tom Clark, recently retired Supreme Court Justice, was in Philadelphia yesterday to speak at a law society dinner. He took time out to have lunch with his fraternity brothers at the Uni- versity's Delta Tau Delta house. It has been 46 years since he was president of his chapter at the University of Texas, but in that span he has not lost contact with the brotherhood. Fraternities, he believes, are "growing in importance." They are no longer "beer drinking outfits" with no regard for schol- arship. It is the reverse, he com- mented, with fraternities taking the academic lead on many cam- puses. He sees the job of a fraternity as offering the student "an op- portunity to express his individ- uality." "When you come to a school with 30,000 students," he said, "you're lost." Clark disagrees that fratern- ities have only recently become more liberal in accepting pledges. "The democratization of frat- ernities is just a myth," he claimed. "They've been demo- cratic all tl.j time." He added that f r a t e r n i t ies should always have the "right to select people to join as long as they don't discriminate on race or color." He said Delta Tau Delta does not practice discrimination, and pointed to the pledging of three Negroes nationally in the last four years, as well as "quite a (Continued on page 8) Photos by WILLIAM K. MANDEL ...to individuality proved procedures drawn up by the UPSG for allowing junior women to live in apartments. The proposal has been sent to Vice-Provost for Student Af- fairs A. Leo Levin for his ap- proval. If Levin approves the mea- sure, junior women will be al- lowed to move into apartments next semester. The proposal passed by CRO is exactly the same as one pass- ed by the UPSG several weeks ago, except parental permission will be required for women who wish to move into apartments. UPSG President Alexius Con- roy said the only reason for the parental permission require- ment, which was not in the UPSG bill, is that the University has not yet determined its legal re- sponsibility to women who live in non-University housing. CRO has also submitted to Levin a request that the Univer- sity lawyers determine the ques- tion of the University's liability. The procedures set up by UPSG and approved by CRO are: I. Any junior or senior woman who wants to live in private lodging (non-University lodging other than the applicant's home) must apply to the Dean of Wo- men's office. II. Applications will consist of: 1. Signed parental permis- sion. 2. A lease for private lod- ging (unsigned by leasee). 3. Application forms sup- plied by the Dean of Women's office. III. Applicants will be granted permission when: 1. The above conditions are met. 2. It is verified there is someone on the waiting list will- ing to assume the remainder of the applicant's dormitory or wo- men's fraternity room lease. IV. Application must be made by November 15 for the spring semester and June 30 for the fall semester. V. Permission to live in pri- vate lodging will extend for the term of the lease and any re- newal of the lease. VI. A committee consisting of student representatives from UPSG, the Commuter Activities Board, the Women's Affairs Council, and the Men's Residence Board shall assist the Residence Office in the search for and the preliminary inspection of private lodging.

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Page 1: The - library.upenn.edu · many times during his tenure at which he felt he should retire but ... business and the normal utili- zation of University facilities." ... Jane Luckom,

The Daily VOL. LXXXIII

Justice Clark for I. F. president

PHILADELPHIA. PENNSYLVANIA FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 10. 1967 NO. 73

Springer: There was always 'one more thing' to do

By MARK LIEBERMAN

Dr. Otto G. Springer, dean of the College of Arts andSciences, yesterday explained that "there is no specific reason for my resignation."

Springer* yesterday released his letter of resignation, in which he cited his long service as Dean and noted that it has been cus- tomary for the Dean of the Col- lege to retire before the statutory age limit set for such positions.

Springer is also resigning his post as vice-provost of the University, which he has held since April, 1963.

Springer has been dean since July 1, 1959. During his nine years in that post he has seen many changes in the College. He said yesterday that there were many times during his tenure at which he felt he should retire but that there was always "onemore thing" he wanted to accomplish. He said that with the addition of new facilities for the humanities he feels his most important pro- ject has been completed.

The Dean cautioned that there is still a great deal to be done in the administration of the College.

"It is necessary to review our philosophy of liberal education from year to year to see that our rules and regulations do no" ham- per this philosophy," he said. "I would like to see more flexibility in the College. Not only with re- spect to the course load but in other matters as well.'*

Springer called the present student body at Pennsylvania "more mature" and said the students "know what they want." The Dean has increased his con- tact with students this year, meeting with freshman groups, seniors, and lunching weekly with sophomores and juniors.

"No matter how removed I am from the 'lunatic fringe'," he added, "I've been getting closer to students. The dialogue during the informal meetings is fruitful, congenial, and natural."

Springer cited the Student Committee on Undergraduate Ed- ucation (SCUE) report as "unique evidence of student participation in their own education. Students

(Continued on page 2)

Summonses go fo protesters

By BERL SCHWARTZ

After a closed three-hour meeting, the discipline committee on free speech last night issued a statement that it is summoning an undisclosed number of students to appear before it Monday at an undisclosed time in an undisclosed place.

Students-believed to number 24—will receive summonses today charging them with "intruding into offices where interviews were being held and with blocking movement through the passageways in Logan Hall," according to Dr. Robert Maddin, chairman of the rec- cently created committee.

The charges stem from the Nov. 1 antiwar sit-in which protested on-campus recruiting by the Central Intelligence Agency and Dow Chemical Co.

CRO lets jr. women move out

By STEPHEN MARMON

The Committee on Residence

OTTO SPRINGER

The teaching dean

Weinstein lawyer quits One of accused murderer

Stephen Weinstein's court- appointed defense attorneys re- signed his post because he was previously involved in the case as counsel for the University.

Henry Sawyer III, a member of the Drinker, Biddle and Reath law firm that advises the Uni- versity, yesterday received per- mission to withdraw from the case from Judge JosephE.Gold, a spokesman for the judge said yesterday.

Sawyer refused to comment on his removal from the case, except to confirm that it was his University connections that prompted his resignation.

Dean of Women Alice Emer- son, who has been involved in the Green murder investigation,

confirmed that Sawyer had been consulted in connection with the case.

She said she called Sawyer on the night after the body of Green was found. Several Uni- versity students had been taken for questioning by the police, and she called Sawyer to see if they should have any legal aid.

Sawyer "may have felt involv- ed by being in contact with the students" involved in the case, Mrs. Emerson suggested.

Sawyer, a former Democratic city councilman, is Chairman of the Americans for Democratic Action political committee.

Weinstein's other court- appointed defender is Louis Lip- schitz, a former head of the criminal justice committee of the Philadelphia Bar Association.

The committee has not brought any charges against stu- dents involved in Wednesday's noisy but peaceful Logan Hall sit-in against Dow.

Assistant Vice-Provost for Student Affairs Alice Emerson was present at the beginning of the meeting to present documents concerning the more recent dem- onstrations, Maddin said. He would not reveal how many names Operations (CRO) this week ap- she referred to him. He did say, however, that some were the same persons who will be issued summonses for last week's dem- onstrations.

Madden said he believes "it will be viewed as quite serious" by his committee if any of the students do not show up for the hearing.

Madden would not say what the range of punishments would be for breaking a University pol- icy which states: "Demonstrat- ors and others must refrain from physical violence, from damage to property, from prevention of entry to or exit from buildings, and from interference with the normal conduct of University business and the normal utili- zation of University facilities."

The policy statement was read to protesters at the Nov. 1 sit-in by Acting Dean of Men Gerald Robinson.

Madden said the committee discussed the possibility of o- pening last night's session held in Maddin's office in the Labor- atory for Research on theStruc- ture of Matter building- but the idea was turned down "decisive-

iy." Asked how the committee

voted on this matter, Maddin re- fused to comment.

(Continued on page 2)

Lunch at Delta Tau Delta

Justice Tom Clark praises fraternities

From beer...

He is 68 years old, and he has just recovered from hepati- tis, but his wit is still sharp and his back is still straight.

Tom Clark, recently retired Supreme Court Justice, was in Philadelphia yesterday to speak at a law society dinner. He took time out to have lunch with his fraternity brothers at the Uni- versity's Delta Tau Delta house.

It has been 46 years since he was president of his chapter at the University of Texas, but in that span he has not lost contact with the brotherhood.

Fraternities, he believes, are "growing in importance." They are no longer "beer drinking outfits" with no regard for schol- arship. It is the reverse, he com- mented, with fraternities taking the academic lead on many cam- puses.

He sees the job of a fraternity

as offering the student "an op- portunity to express his individ- uality."

"When you come to a school with 30,000 students," he said, "you're lost."

Clark disagrees that fratern- ities have only recently become more liberal in accepting pledges.

"The democratization of frat- ernities is just a myth," he claimed. "They've been demo- cratic all tl.j time."

He added that f r a t e r n i t ies should always have the "right to select people to join as long as they don't discriminate on race or color."

He said Delta Tau Delta does not practice discrimination, and pointed to the pledging of three Negroes nationally in the last four years, as well as "quite a

(Continued on page 8)

Photos by WILLIAM K. MANDEL

...to individuality

proved procedures drawn up by the UPSG for allowing junior women to live in apartments.

The proposal has been sent to Vice-Provost for Student Af- fairs A. Leo Levin for his ap- proval.

If Levin approves the mea- sure, junior women will be al- lowed to move into apartments next semester.

The proposal passed by CRO is exactly the same as one pass- ed by the UPSG several weeks ago, except parental permission will be required for women who wish to move into apartments.

UPSG President Alexius Con- roy said the only reason for the parental permission require- ment, which was not in the UPSG bill, is that the University has not yet determined its legal re- sponsibility to women who live in non-University housing.

CRO has also submitted to Levin a request that the Univer- sity lawyers determine the ques- tion of the University's liability.

The procedures set up by UPSG and approved by CRO are: I. Any junior or senior woman who wants to live in private lodging (non-University lodging other than the applicant's home) must apply to the Dean of Wo- men's office. II. Applications will consist of:

1. Signed parental permis- sion.

2. A lease for private lod- ging (unsigned by leasee).

3. Application forms sup- plied by the Dean of Women's office. III. Applicants will be granted permission when:

1. The above conditions are met.

2. It is verified there is someone on the waiting list will- ing to assume the remainder of the applicant's dormitory or wo- men's fraternity room lease. IV. Application must be made by November 15 for the spring semester and June 30 for the fall semester. V. Permission to live in pri- vate lodging will extend for the term of the lease and any re- newal of the lease. VI. A committee consisting of student representatives from UPSG, the Commuter Activities Board, the Women's Affairs Council, and the Men's Residence Board shall assist the Residence Office in the search for and the preliminary inspection of private lodging.

Page 2: The - library.upenn.edu · many times during his tenure at which he felt he should retire but ... business and the normal utili- zation of University facilities." ... Jane Luckom,

UN official IAA model

address Assembly

Springer resigns

The all-campus Model United Nations General Assembly, spon- sored by the International Af- fairs Association, will take place Saturday in Houston Hall and in the Christian Association aud- itorium.

One of the highlights of the all-day event will be an address by Dr. Jose Rolz-Bennett of Gua- temala, the U.N. Undersecretary for Special Political Affairs and Deputy Chef Cabinet to Secre- tary-General U Thant.

The schedule for the day's events has been announced by Jane Luckom, Secretary -General for the Model U.N. It will be as follows: 8:30-9:00 A.M. Regis- tration: Christian Assn., 2nd floor. 9:00-9:15 Instructions. 9:15-11:15 Committee Meetings: Houston Hall.

The Political Committee will discuss Vietnam and the Arab- Israeli situation; the Special Po- litical Committee will examine disarmament and the admission of Red China to the U.N.; sanc- tions against Rhodesia and world hunger will be the topics of the

Economic and Colonial Com- mittee; and apartheid and human rights will be taken up by the Social and Humanitarian Com- mittee.

11:15-12 Bloc meetings: Houston Hall. Regional country meetings to plan strategy for the Plenary session will be held. 12-1:30 P.M. Luncheon and ad- dress by Rolz-Bennett in Hous- ton Hall Auditorium, 1:30-6 Plen- ary Session: Christian Assn. auditorium.

Members of the university community are invited to attend the plenary session during the afternoon.

Miss Luckom also announced the following countries as send- ing delegations: Albania, Au- stralia, Austria, Burma, Cam- bodia, Canada, Chad, China, Cuba, Denmark, France, Great Britain, Greece, Guatemala, Ice- land, India, Indonesia, Ireland, Israel. Italy, Japan, Jordan, Laos, Mexico, Nepal, Nigeria, Poland, Romania, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Syria, Thailand, Tunisia, Ukraine, United Arab

Republic, United States of Ameri- ca, and the Union of Soviet So- cialist Republics.

The chairmen and reporteurs of each of the four committees of the General Assembly will be: Political Committee: Chair- man, William Mandel, The Daily Pennsylvanian, and Reporteur Ann O'Hara, IAA; Special Po- litical Committee: Chairman Mary Sprague, UPSG, and Repor- teur Carroll Hogan, IAA; Eco- nomic and Colonial Committee: Chairman Saha Amarasingham, Grad. Internat'l Relations Club and Reporteur Paul Coleman, IAA; Social and Humanitarian Committee: Chairman Graham Campbell, IAA, and Reporteur Ellen Seidman, IAA.

Duncan elected Dr. Ellis Duncan III, father

of Robert W. Duncan, College '70, was elected mayor of Fre- mont, Iowa Tuesday.

(Continued from page 1) are not second-class citizens in their own educational process. They are younger and need more experienced persons as advisors. The 'generation gap' is a per- fectly natural situation in educa- tion."

The 62-year old professor of Germanics has been kept ex- tremely busy trying to "redress the balance between the humani- ties and the sciences."

He claimed the humanities "have always been particularly strong at Pennsylvania. The philosophy department has made great strides. We need people who command respect of their colleagues and who enjoy teach- ing. "

"I'm happy to see how we've been able to bring the arts and creative individuals closer to the freshmen and sophomores. One of the biggest challenges I faced when I first became Dean was to revive the arts.'

Springer is convinced that he has worked with a "faculty worth serving."

"It is nothing but a myth," the Dean commented, "that the University of Pennsylvania has a faculty not interested in teaching and who lives in an ivory tower* They have as much interest in teaching as they do in research but teachers must be placed in the proper environment."

Springer illustrates his own interest in teaching by conducting classes in Germanic literature.

"I want to be a teaching Dean," he commented. "If I were left to paper work, I'd die."

One of Springer's reasons for resigning, in addition to those stated in his letter, is his desire to spend more time working on his primary interest—Germanic medieval literature. He modestly admitted that before his appoint- ment as Dean in 1959 he was considered one of the three of four top Germanic medieval scholars in the world.

"I am determined to regain any ground which I may have lost," he asserted.

(Continued on page 11)

Free speech YAFmeeting (Continued from page 1) Committee member Tom

Knox a College senior, said later that the committee never reached a vote on the issue.

The 11-man committee met yesterday from 5 to 8 P«M. for the first time since it was ex- panded to include two under- graduates and two graduate stu- dents. The other seven com- mitteemen are faculty members.

They will meet again tomor- row to discuss charges against students for other violations of the University's policy on free speech and lawful assembly.

Only a dozen students turned out for the Young Americans for Freedom's second annual me- morial meeting for Veteran's Day in Houston Hall plaza yes- terday morning.

At the conclave, Dr. Joseph R. Rose, chairman of the trans- portation department, asked that the sacrifices made by veterans for freedom to dissent not be forgotten. Another speaker, freshman Charles L. Metcalf, asked for a return to the old- fashioned patriotism found in elementary school history texts.

EXCLUSIVE PHILADELPHIA DISTRIBUTOR

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Holiday Inn. Cortland, N.Y.

What Some People Think About The Peace Corps

"Much of our society is like a film negative not yet washed in the proper chemicals."

David Reisman

"Collectively, me Peace Corps experience has been the .greatest eye • opening, mind - stretching education any generation of Americans has ever had."

Roy Hoopcs

"The only reason lhat groups in Ihe United States, or in any other developed country, lake a part in the political, social and economic life of their country is because they are noticed and taken account of."

fn\nk Mankic\\ic7

"My instinct-, revolt against the whole idea of having to prose in M>me mechanistic or

quantitative way Ihe value of the Peace Corps."

Rftumcd Volunteer IXnid Schickcle

"if >ou don't have such ^n experience, you remain a pro- vincial hick, and it creeps up on you al the critical moments — the fact that \ou arc a hick."

fjow Michvnor

Think It Over Yourself And ComeAnd See Us:

THE PEACE CORPS WILL BE IN ROOM #1 (3RD FLOOR) OF HOUSTON HALL ALL NEXT WEEK

Applicotion Placement Tests

Information Or Jvst Plain Conversation

PAGE TWO THE DAILY PENNbYl \ ANIAN FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1967

Page 3: The - library.upenn.edu · many times during his tenure at which he felt he should retire but ... business and the normal utili- zation of University facilities." ... Jane Luckom,

Cinema Roundup ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE

****-Excellent **»-Good **- Fair *- Poor

BAND BOX- "Kwaidan" and "Shadows of Forgotten Ances- tors." Two exceptional color films from Japan and Russia. ***l/2.

BOYD- "The Happiest Mil- lionaire.' ' Saddest Disney picture in a long time. *

GOLDMAN- "Bonnie and Clyde." Arthur Penn's incisive examination of violence is proba- bly the best movie you will see this year. ****

MIDTOWN- "Far from the Madding Crowd." Unless you're a Julie Christie fan, stay far from the madding crowd. *l/2.

RANDOLPH- "Gone With The Wind." Hollywood's best justifi- cation of its own existence. Don't miss this endlessly impressive 1939 classic if you've never seen it before. ****

REGENCY- "Reflections in a Golden Eye." Good acting and direction cannot keep John Hus- ton' s gallery of grotesques from becoming a golden eyesore. **

STANLEY- "Camelot." Moody version of I oadway musical ably preserves the noble spirit of the original. Richard Harris is a superb Arth; Vanessa Redgrave a splendid Guenivere, and the rest of the cast is equally fine. *** 1/2.

TRANS-LUX- "The African Queen." Humphrey Bogart and Katherine Hepburn man a dir old boat in one of John Hus- ton's Hollywood classics. ****

"Odd Couple" is odd By JIM MORROW

"The Odd Couple" is that truly odd phenomenon, a Broad- way comedy that is actually funny. Unfortunately, the quality of the production now at the Walnut Street Theatre isn't up to the quality of Neil Simon's play.

Simon is one of the theatre's most gifted funny men, and he's never been better than in "The Odd Couple." A mere reading of it by a high school drama club would undoubtedly clock scores of laughs, and the New York pro- duction as directed by Mike Nichols and performed by Walter Mat thaw and Art Carney was nothing short of hilarious.

The present production stars Dana Andrews and Robert Q, Lewis, neither of whom is a par- ticularly funny person, and they are certainly no substitutes for the enormous comedic talents of

Mat thaw and Carney. Andrews and Lewis play two middle-aged men, one divorced and one es- tranged and neither quite sure why their marriages fell apart, who move in together for reasons of economy in order to meet their alimony payments and suddenly discover they're having the same conflicts they had in their mar- riages.

SUPERFICIAL, COLD

Probably the show would look better if the presence of "Spof- ford," now at the Forrest, didn't make its humor appear so super- ficial and cold. Too often the play comes across as a TV situation comedy, with the audience me- chanically supplying its own re-

DANA ANDREWS co-stars with Robert Q. Lewis in Neil Simon's Broadway comedy hit, "The Odd Couple," now at the Walnut Street Theatre.

lent less laugh track, whatever the gag of the moment happens to be. "The Odd Couple" is merely funny, but considering the present state of stage comedy that says quite a lot.

A word of warning: don't sit in the first five rows or you'll be periodically bombarded with beer foam, air freshener, and pickles.

"Bonnie and Clyde" bursts with brilliance

From the huge, sensuous closeup of Faye Dunaway* s lips that opens the movie, to the final

ie in which Miss Dunaway and ren Beatty are killed in a

slow motion hailstorm of bullets, "Bonnie and Clyde," now at the Goldman, is a brilliantly cinema- tic gangster saga that rates with the best films of the year.

DEPRESSION ERA

Director Arthur Perm has carefully reconstructed the De- pression era and the hopeless- ness that went with it. The dust- bowl roads of the Midwest, the foreclosed farms, the weary, de- feated economic refugees huddled together in their cars by a lonely, polluted body of water, and the rickety-tickety music serve as the fabric with which Perni weaves his tale.

HYPNOTIC VIOLENCE

WARREN BEATTY stars as the infamous Clyde Barrow opposite Faye Dunaway in "Bonnie and Clyde," Arthur Penn's film now at the Goldman.

The violence is pure and dis- tilled. At once it totally shatter- ing and poetically hypnotic. It explodes suddenly and subsides just as quickly. It electrifies and shocks. What inhuman mons-

By RICHARD RANDOLPH

ters couldbe responsible for such brutality?

The Barrow gang was a handful of misfits out for kicks. They saw themselves as the Robin Hoods and folk heroes of the day. They wanted to be important. In a time when the country was look- ing for escapest entertainment, the antics of these bumblingbank robbers distracted the populace from the hardships at hand. The news media made legends of Bonnie and Clyde. Living in a fantasy world, they sent photo- graphs and poems of their exploits to the newspapers. They were childlike, and could almost be forgiven for their crimes except they used real bullets that actually killed.

SEXUAL PROWESS

Bank robbing was Clyde Bar- row's substitute for sexual pro- wess. Bonnie Parker, his patient, passion-prone lover, went about her mayhem without a tinge of conscience. "C.W.," the mealy- mouthed wheelman, brother Buck Barrow, a small town hood, and his loud-mouthed wife, Blanche, make up the rest of the gang.

SENSITIVE DIRECTION

Peim has fashioned a film

that is sensitive to its material. One memorable scene takes place in a movie house after Clyde shoots and kills his first band guard. He and "C.W." are weep- ing while Bonnie is happily watch- ing and singing along with the "Gold Diggers of 1933."

Penn also gracefully handles Bonnie and Clyde's attempt to consummate their love affair. We finally know when they do make love in a field of daisies because Clyde bashfully asics if he did alright and Bonnie responds, "You did just fine."

NO GUNS

It is interesting to note that from this moment on neither Bonnie nor Clyde is seen with a gun. The only violence that sub- sequently takes place is their own deaths. These facts may lead one to theorize that their destructive acts, were ways of expressing love, building ego, searching for identity, or what have you.

The impressive aspect of "Bonnie and Clyde" is that Penn gives us three dimensional people in a three dimensional story.The depths of character are presented and unanswered questions are graciously left to the audience to* discuss after the film has ended.

People are beginning to talk.

Living Arts

mrnmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm

FORREST- "Spofford) (Or, The Fleshpots of Egypt)." Warm and meaningful comedy with Mel- vyn Douglas is this year's thea- trical sleeper.

WALNUT- "The Odd Cou- ple." Neil Simon's funniest play. See review this page.

THEATRE OF THE LIVING ARTS- "The Entertainer." Courageous and in many ways satisfactory attempt by TLA's new company to put on John Osborn's difficult drama.

MAIN POINT- "Len Chand- ler." Last year Len introduced his first Columbia album at the Point, and he is back for his second record release.

ARTIST'S HUT- "Wright Brothers." The only active Chi- cago Blues band in this region, which had a successful engage- ment earlier this year at the Hut, returns for a special encore this Friday and Saturday night.

THE 2ND FRET- "Judy Roderick." One of the nation's finest blues singers.

THE TRAUMA- "Lothar and the Hand People." The electronic rock group can be heard this weekend.

SPECTRUM- "The Moscow Circus." Last chance to see this presentation of Russia's fin- est circus performers.

"Spofford" By DRAHCIR PLODNAR

"Spofford (Or,The Flesh Pots of Egypt)," at the Forrest Theatre, is a delightful and re- freshing comedy.

It is delightful because it is genuinely funny and features an outstanding performance byMel- vyn Douglas. It is refreshing because it is so unlike the trash Neil Simon is noted for writing.

Herman Shulmin's play is in the vein of' * Our Town' *. It is rich in language, puns, plays on words, and other vocabulary trickery.

The Penn Cinema PROUDLY PRESENTS

JEAN SHEPHERD "THE UNDERGROUND SATIRIST"

LIVE AND IN CONCERT ONE UNFORGETTABLE NIGHT ONLY MON., DEC. 4, 1967 8:30 PM

IRVINE AUDITORIUM TICKETS: $2.50 AND $2.00

MAIL ORDERS NOW FOR CHOICE SEATS MAIL TICKET REQUESTS TO:

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tickets @ $2.50 tickets @ $2.00

(NAME)

to see Jean Shepherd on Dec. 4.

Send my tickets to (ADDRESS)

Enclosed is my self-addressed, stamped envelope

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967 THE DAILY

MELVYN DOUGLAS and Barbara Britton head the cast of "Spofford (or. The Fleshpots of Egypt)," the new Herman Shulmin comedy now at the Forrest Theatre.

It is a thinking man's comedy. Douglas, as a Connecticut

chicken farmer who is part sage, gardener, and would-be novelist (among other things), spends most of his time talking with the audience, occasionally popping in and out of scenes.

"Spofford" doesn't have much of a going plot. What it is is a satiric study, anthropologically speaking, of the so-called Com- muter Class. It makes fun of the audience it is entertaining.

Pert Kelt on, as a modern day Mrs. Malaprop, and Jerome Dempsey, as an oversexed poet, give strong support as a couple of whimsical characters. The other supporting roles are rather dully handled, especially those of the "teenage love interest."

"Spofforcf 's two hour run- ning time breezes along at a lightning pace, and we regret the final curtain. It is a meaningful and funny play that has so much to offer that one might like to sit throueh it a second time.

PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE THREE

Page 4: The - library.upenn.edu · many times during his tenure at which he felt he should retire but ... business and the normal utili- zation of University facilities." ... Jane Luckom,

Letters to the editor Prof. Amsterdam of Law School

will chair panel discussion Mon. Bob Chasnow Class of '71 MORE DISCUSSIONS

Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian:

The "Think-In" of Nov. 6 served as a sounding board for many views. If the purpose of the program was to initiate a dis- cussion among the different parts of the University community then the program was reasonably suc- cessful. Communica'ions among these various parts of our com- munity are essential to the goal of student and faculty partici- pation in the decision-making process of the University admin- istrators. One of the panelists stated that there should be meet- ings of this sort held every month. I agree that meetings such as this one should be given some per- manent status.

It is clear from the Preamble of the UPSG Constitution that one of the primary functions of the UPSG is "to foster awareness of the student's position in the cam- pus, local, national, and interna- tional communities." The UPSG played a role in the initiation of this first "Think-In." I think it would reflect credit on the Student Government if they took steps to insure the continuance of such useful discussions.

SCUE CORRECTS

Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian: The Nov. 7 article on SCUE

contained errors both of fact and emphasis. While it is difficult to correct the emphasis now, we do wish to make the following factual corrections:

1) The major evaluation commit- tees are set up to evaluate the entire major program and not simply to deal with the prob- lem of hiring suitable advis- ors.

2) The SCUE report on SAMP does not include "a change in the advising system" nor does it state that "the present sys- tem uses. ..professionalswho are familiar neither with SAMP or with the other de- partments of the University."

These statements were not given to your reporter by any member of SCUE. SCUE regrets any misunderstanding that these statements have caused.

Caren Ralph Sanford Colb Richard Platt, Chairman

PAUL TAYLOR DANCE CO. NOV. 11 8:30 P.M. IRVINE AUD.

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"The Role of the Lawyer" is the topic of a panel discussion Monday, Nov. 13, that will be sponsored by the Law Student Civil Rights ResearchCouncil.

It will be held at 2 P.M. in Room 100, McKean Hall of the Law School, and Professor An- thony G. Amsterdam will chair the panel.

Panelists will include Donald E. Jelinek, director of the South- ern Rural Research Project; Morton Stavis, a private attorney; George Logan, of the LawCenter for Constitutional Rights; and Bernadine Dohrn, a recent grad- uate of Berkeley Law School and a member of the Student Division of the Lawyers' Guild.

Members of LSRC are most recently involved in the elections

and the Freedom Democratic Party of Mississippi and, locally, the Legal Aid Service.

After ten-minute opening statements by members of the panel, there will be open discus-

sion from the floor, and all mem- bers of the University community are cordially invited. A general discussion will follow at 8:30 the same evening in the Law School lounge.

Catacombs presents tonight

THE UNDERGROUND

"A RIOT!" STOKELY CARMICHAEL

Fridays at 9:45

Also Dave Wolf

sings at 9:1 5 & 11:30

PLEASE NOTE:

DOORS OPEN 8:30

SHAPH. STUDIOS Quality Portraiture

Applications & Passports

On the campus at 3907 WALNUT ST.

BA 2-7888

Jobs Abroad Guaranteed

BRUSSELS: The Int'l Student Information Service, non-profit, today announced that 1,000 GUARANTEED JOBS ABROAD are available to young people 17V2 to 40, Year- Round and Summer. The new 34 page JOBS ABROAD maga- zine is packed with on-the-spot- photos, stories and information about your JOB ABROAD. Applications are enclosed. LANGUAGE-CULTURE-FUN- PAY-TRAVEL. For your copy send $1.00 AIRMAIL to: ISIS, 133 Rue Hotel des Monnaies, Brussels 6, Belgium.

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Page 5: The - library.upenn.edu · many times during his tenure at which he felt he should retire but ... business and the normal utili- zation of University facilities." ... Jane Luckom,

CLASSIFIED ADS SITAR LESSONS: AN OPPORTUNITY IS available to those who want to learn Sitar systematically. Those interested are re- quested to contact Mrs. V. M. Meht - 3943 Locust. \pt. 308. EV 2-7930 2640

TYPING S - TERM PAPERS. Theses, etc. Reasonable rates - University Typewriter Service. BA 2-0892. 3394

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ATTENTION

21 PLUS:

Appearing at

I The Timbers

\J7l

the arts council — ymywha presents

paul taylor and

dance company

Saturday, november 11, 8:30 p.m.

irvine auditorium 34th and spruce sts

tickets: 5.00. 3-50. 2.00 mail or phone arts council —ymywha 401 s. broad st. ki 5-4400

HILLEL Raf5f5i Rapfiaei Levy

will speak on

tyewisk Views On War & Peace today 4 p.m.

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W. C. FIELDS: TONIGHT PRESENTED BY

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FEATURING:

NEVER GIVE A SUCKER

AN EVEN BREAK

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LIVER THE EIGHTH MY

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(500F ON THE ROOF SPRUCIN' UP

SUNDAY 2 AND 8:00

World Without Sun Silent World

BY

FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1967 THE DAILY PENNSYLVAN1AN PAGE FIVE

Page 6: The - library.upenn.edu · many times during his tenure at which he felt he should retire but ... business and the normal utili- zation of University facilities." ... Jane Luckom,

Political Penn

1885 £* Pennsylvania]] 1967

DONALD M. MORRISON Editor-in-Chief

Night and day ..

Notes and comment : : : :

fhe breast of darkness WILLIAM K. MANDEL

many brains. I mean, its not what you know its who you know," he said.

The trolley arrived after the wires overhead sung of its impending arrival for five minutes. My friend boarded the trolley with me, but was short the fare. The driver pushed him out of the trolley and down the steps.

As the warm, safe trolley pulled away, Guy Lombardo's nephew slunk off to seek the breast of darkness and be suckled by the night.

It was 1 A.M. The trolley was about half an hour over- due, and I began to feel a- fraid of the shadows around me. What with recent events, security is a very tenuous state.

A figure weaved down the center of the street toward me; two cars slammed on their brakes to avoid killing him; it was only a drunk.

"Hey, kid," he said, "is your name Lombardo?"

I said that it wasn't. "I didn't think it was," he

said. Now normally, drunks and

bums embarrass the hell out of me. I mean, what right have I got to be standing on the street in a nice warm jacket while this guy is freez- ing to death?

"I'm going to New York to spend the Christmas holi- days," he told me. "I'm really not a bum; here, I have a room key."

I askedhimwhere he lived. "I've got a room at 42nd

and Pine; I live by myself," he said. "Ever since I was laid off I don't have much to do."

He told me that New York was a swinging place during the Christmas season. He wanted to know if I could lend him the price of a pack of cigarettes; I didn't have it on me.

He said he was a nephew of Guy Lombardo, the orches- tra leader.

"Just between me and you, though, Guy doesn't have too

Taylor Co. dances here

Paul Taylor and his Dance Company will appear Saturday evening. November 11, at 8:30 p.m. in Irvine Auditorium. This is Mr. Taylor's second performance in Philadelphia under the auspices of the Arts Council of the YM/YWHA.

The dance company is presenting two new works prior to their Broadway ap- pearance. One is "Agathe's Tale," which premiered this summer and is Mr. Tay lor's first straightforward narrative work. The other, "Lento," recently pre- miered in Chicago and received wide acclaim. Completing the program will be "Aureole," set to the music of Handel.

"Lento," described as a work-in- progress is set to part of Haydn's "The Seven Last Words of Christ." It includes the already famous * 'Duet'' choreographed to the Largo. "Agathe's Tale" is a work drawing more heavily on the dramatic as opposed to the lyrical. According to re- views, "It combines a childlike delight with high moral purpose to tell its tale."

Dancing in the company with Mr. Tay- lor will be Dan Wagoner, Carolyn Adams, Daniel Williams, and Bettie de Jong. Tic- kets can be purchased at a student rate at the Arts Council Ticket office at Broad and Pine Streets in downtown Philadelphia.

The band in the corner of the Drake Room at the Drake Hotel was playing "Hello Dolly." It was 8:30 P.M. on election night and the throng in the Democratic headquarters was busily conversing, not knowing whether to be happy or sad.

The polls had been closed for only half an hour, yet one radio station had already declared District Attorney Ar- len Specter the next mayor of Phila- delphia. But no one seemed to know about it in the Drake.

Just down the street at the Lewis Tower Building about 300 people crowded into a room not much bigger than an average living room, waiting for some reason to justify their optimism about Republican chances in Philadelphia.

Back in the Drake, Tate was losing but no trend had developed in the early returns and the Democratic workers knew that somehow, someway, their man would pull it out. He had been down before but managed to win, and his loyal supporters were hoping for a similar resurgence.

Then the returns began to come in quickly. And just as quickly as they were received in the Drake they were announced. 600 divisions in, Tate by 6,000. 700 divisions in, Tate holding a 7,000 vote lead. Every five minutes another "latest" result was announced and each time the Tate margin was growing.

At the Republican City Committee, GOP chairman Bill Devlin mounted the podium in the jammed room.~He looked tired and worn, but seemed convinced that his party had done a respectable job in coming so close to regain a post they lost 16 years ago. 1,400 divisions had reported by this time and Devlin acknowledged that it was impossible for Specter to surmount the 11,000 vote lead enjoyed by Tate. But he re- fused to concede.

"It's impossible for Specter to pick up almost 100 votes in each division," Devlin lamented. "That's what he needs. No, I won't concede. The candidate has to make a statement like that."

"Nothing went wrong," he continued. "Tate tried to pin us to the wall on a religious issue, but otherwise the campaign went just the way we expect- ed. We planned to win with 51 percent of the vote. We knew it would be close."

At the Democratic headquarters, the band struck up the traditional Democra- tic victory song, "Happy Days Are Here Again" and Jim Tate made his triumphant appearance. Women scream- ed and cried. Everyone made lunging attempts to touch the Mayor but a

•:::?::: MARK LIEBERMAN

cordon of police shielded the victor from his admirers. Hizzoner made an unoriginal, ineloquent, typically Jim Tate speech, thanking his workers and sup- porters, and left the ballroom to the strains of "When Irish Eyes Are Smil- ing" to preside over a private cele- bration on the third floor of the hotel. While in his suite, the Mayor reportedly received a congratulatory phone call from Lyndon Johnson. The Philadelphia Democratic Party had weathered a dan- gerous storm.

Arlen Specter was still 30 minutes away from an appearance at the Lewis Tower Building. His supporters listened in shocked belief as the returns were read to them. The half hour passed slowly but finally the candidate arrived. Leading Specter into his headquarters was a big, burly man. The big man clapped long and hard as his hero mounted the podium. Finally he couldn't take it any longer and while Specter was speaking, the man buried his face in his hands and cried.

Specter was proud in defeat. He had nothing to be ashamed of. He ran a strong, hard race and lost. He refused to answer reporters' questions after thanking his workers and made a hasty retreat.

The election was over. For the Re- publicans there was nothing left to do but pick up the threads and try to weave a victory in Philadelphia for the GOP 1968 Presidential nominee.

For the Democrats there was cele- brating in the Drake Room. On the third floor, Jim Tate had to wrestle with the problem of where the Democrats go from here. Tate had been rejected by his party in April as a "sure loser." He broke the party machine in the primary and quickly reassembled it to put together a victory in November. He tried unsuccessfully to unseat his major nemesis in the party, Frank Smith. Now Tate has the backing of the electorate, not just the Democratic primary voters. Now he is the top man in the Democratic party.

The feeling at the Democratic head- quarters was that Smith would bow out gracefully now that Tate has won. The Democratic chairman was not present for the victory celebration but wasn't missed. He was busy aiding a local television station give "in-depth cov- erage" on the election and could not be bothered by petty party matters.

Tate had a mandate from his party in May. Now he has a mandate from the people. At the Drake the celebra- tion went on. There's time enough tomorrow for Jim Tate to prove he is truly worthy of his victory.

Letters to the editor SOME SAAS

Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian:

To meet the first objection of many white students about being barred from the SAAS meeting at the Christian As- sociation it should be remembered that the CA has often been used by univer- sity organizations which are not expressly affiliated with Christianity. SAAS is a university organization and as such has the right of access to university facilities, including the CA.

To meet the second objection to ex- clusivity, closed meetings, and dis- crimination, it should be remembered that SAAS stands for The Society of African and Afro-American Students: it is by definition exclusive; its mem- bership is obviously limited to that segment of the student population which is African and Afro-American. Also, its purpose is to afford blacks the op- portunity to identify with blacks, the opportunity to form a cohesive unit with its own communication channel through which African and Afro- American students can voice their opinions and attitudes to the university.

Thus, if the meeting had been open and if as many whites had attended as resented not being allowed to attend, the audience would have been predomin- antly white; the relaxed atmosphere which allows free identification of blacks with blacks and the rapport between the students and Muhammed Ali would have been destroyed. It was to prevent this that Muhammed Ali closed the meet- ing to whites. If the whites are so anxious to have Muhammed Ali address the student body, why don't they ask him themselves? It should be remembered that for the meeting of October 31 Muhammed Ali was invited by SAAS to speak to SAAS.

However, we feel the main objection to this meeting was that whites re- sented being barred because they like to feel magnanimous, they like to feel that they are allowing, permitting blacks to be equal. Consequently, they resent it when blacks operate freely without consulting them or making use of the whites' gift of integration. They don't want to accept the fact that the right to say "we don't want you" is one of the rights guaranteed by the Constitu-

The Daily Pennsylvanian is published Monday through Friday at Philadelphia, Pa. during the fall and spring semesters, except during vacation periods, and the last seven class days of each term. One issue published in August. Subscriptions may be ordered at Sergeant Ha 1. J4th and Chestnut Sts. at the rate of $10.00 per annum. Second class postage paid at Phila- delphia. Pennsylvania. News and editorial Phones: (215) 594-7535. Business and advertising: 594-7534 (If busy call 594-7535).

PAGE SIX THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1967

tion and provided by the equality the whites say they are so anxious to give blacks. They don't want to be re- jected by blacks, but rather to be ac- cepted as liberal and free-minded so that their consciences can be convenient- ly soothed.

Mary Lovett,

College for Women, ' 71

FREE SPEECH

Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian:

Free speech is the right to talk to anyone about anything. Willingness on the pan of the speaker to engage in an interchange of ideas with the person or persons to whom he is speaking, is integral to the concept of free speech. None of the organizations against which we are protesting practices the above, nor can it be demonstrated, that they are engaged in activities which promote the above. Dow Chemical reads a pre- pared statement giving its reasons for manufacturing napalm; the CIA and the military recruiters refuse to explain their position when requested to do so. In fact it is stated CIA policy not to engage in any public discussion what- soever. How then is free speech feasi- ble? They have set the terms; but must we accept them? We are, after all, when we obstruct the recruitment activi- ties of the CIA, dealing with a clandes-

tine agency whose actions in Guatemala in 1954, for instance, effectively stifled the rights of the Guatemalans to free speech. Perhaps we only mean free speech for white middle-class Ameri- cans. If so, we should say so, and declare as Secretary Rusk did recently that the war in Vietnam is first and foremost being fought for reasons of "our national security." There is simply no evidence that the war is being waged on behalf of the Vietnamese people. If it can be shown that these organizations do not practice nor believe in free speech, and that they actively deny free speech to others, then it is out of our feelings of fraternity with other human beings that we must resolutely oppose such criminal acts.

None of us would deny the right of Bill Buckley, Gus Hall, or even Made- leine Murray to speak to us. We would, however, expect the right to reply. Again, we reiterate, this is not the issue here. It is for the purpose of recruitment, the act of recruitment, that these or- ganizations keep coming onto the Penn

(Continued on page 10)

Letters to the Editor must be type- written, double-spaced, 60 characters to the line* The editors reserve the right to edit subject to space limitations* Letters must be^signed, but names will be witheld

upon request*

Page 7: The - library.upenn.edu · many times during his tenure at which he felt he should retire but ... business and the normal utili- zation of University facilities." ... Jane Luckom,

Survey of residents on hours scheduled

Questionnaires will be handed tc all residents of the Men's Dorms this Sunday to determine if the residents want visiting hours for women during week- days.

The questionnaire, which was suggested by freshman repre- sentatives Michael Hardoon and Larry Kefauver, is being spon- sored by the Men's Residence Board and UPSG. Members of the MRB will be present at special dorm unit meetings on Sunday to answer any inquiries about the questionnaire.

There are three parts to the questionnaire. One asks the re- sidents if the opening hour for allowing women in the dormitor- ies during the week should be 11 A.M., 12 A.M. or 1 P.M. The second asks if visiting hours should end at 7 P.M., 9 P.M. or 11:30 P.M.

Trio to be at Jerry's

"Thorin Oakenshield was a really groovy leader of his peo- ple and was pretty much of a human being." Thus spake one- third of "Thorinshield," a trio from the West Coast who will air songs from their first release "Thorinshield" at Jerry's Record Shoppe, 3419 Walnut St. on Friday, Nov. 10 at 3:00 P.M. Since Jerry's Record Shoppe is interested in plugging this latest unearthing, the affair will be free of charge.

The members of "Thorin- shield" have had rather mottled backgrounds. One member of the group was bass guitarist with the Mamas and Papas; another played with the Crossfires, who were later transmuted into Turtles; the third has rendered musical assistance to Chad and Jeremy and to Noel Harrison, the boy from the "Girl from Uncle."

As they themselves declare, "A lifetime of work has gone into our L J3." Fair, warming.

The last part of the ques- tionnaire asks the residents if they think the upperclass dorms should be allowed different rules than those in the freshman part of the dorms.

MRB President Robert Anyon said the results of the survey will be used to determine if a new bill about weekday parietals should be submitted by the stu- dent government to the Commit- tee on Residence Operations.

Kite and Key

There will be a meeting of the Kite and Key Society on Sunday night in the Franklin Room in Houston Hall. Members will meet at 7:00 P.M.. heelers at 7:30 P.M.

Comic movies slated at Irvine

The "oldies but goodies" of the 1930*s will return to campus

. tonight as the Houston Hall Board presents the "W. C. Fields Festival," 8 P.M. in Irvine.

W.C. Fields stars in the 63 minute short, "Never Give a Sucker AnEvenBreak," the story of a' young comedian who becomes a young girl's guardian. Fields, an improvised comedian, also performs in "My Little Chicka- dee."

Also showing is "Oliver the Eighth" with Laurel and Hardy and May Bush as a widow who discovers Oliver Hardy as her long-lost husband. "Goof on the Roof" with the Three Stooges and Abbot and Costello's "No Bulls, Please" will be shown.

This medley of old movies is a one-night retreat from the con- temporary films shown weekly by the Houston Hall Board.

The world outside

Tale of a

Latin American Discotheque

L.A.S.S. in full swing Cha-cha, tango, merengue,

mambo—olel This Friday even- ing from 8:30 to 12:00 P.M. in the MJ3.A. Lounge at 39th and Locust, Penn students will have an opportunity to practice these Latin Rhythms along with music provided by some of Penn's Latin American students.

The Latin American Discoth- eque is the first program of the New Latin American Student So- ciety. This society, open to all students interested in Latin American culture and in meeting Latin American students, prom- ises positive and exciting con- tributions to the international activities of the University. Its main purpose will be to promote the knowledge and understanding of Latin American social, cul- tural and intellectual affairs and to facilitate contact betweenLatin American students and other stu- dents to achieve a greater ex- change of ideas and impressions.

OBTAINING RECOGNITION

The Association is now in the process of being recognized by the Deans and the Student Gov- ernment. At its last meeting,

The Romance Languages Club PRESENTS:

LUIS BUNNEL'S FILM

Los Olvidados (THE YOUNG AND THE DAMNED)

IN SPANISH WITH ENGLISH SUBTITLES

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13 ADMISSION $1.00

8 P.M. IRVINE MEMBERS . $.50

B.U.B.'S CAFE

INTERNATIONALE WEDNESDAY - NOVEMBER 15 - 4-6 P.M.

featuring

WORLDS FAIR OF FOOD"

ADMISSION FREE OF CHARGE-

TICKETS MAY BE OBTAINED AT HOUSTON HALL ON MONDAY AND TUESDAY FROM 11-3

the members elected president Mrs. Esther Arum, aColombian, from the College of General Stud- ies; secretary Miss Ioana Milas, a Panamanian undergraduate from Wharton School; and treas- urer Mr. Jaime Mizrachi from the Wharton School. The adviser to the group is Dr. Henry Wells, Associate Professor of Political Science and specialist in Latin American politics.

Anyone interested in joining or in further information about the Association please contact Mrs. Esther Arum at EV 6-9067 or Jaime Mizrachi at EV 2-0376.

Mi

Hand People to grab Trauma

Electronic rock will jolt The Trauma for two weeks during a return engagement of Lotliar and The Hand People. The five- member group will be appearing with The Mandrake Memorial from November 10 through 12 and November 17 to 19. Capital Records recording artists, Lo- thar and The Hand People have played the longest continual en- gagement of any group ever to appear at The Trauma.

During the same two weeks, November 8 through 11, and No- vember 15 through 18, The 2nd Fret will feature Judy Roderick, blues singer for Columbia Records.

tovarich PHIL ARKOW

Once upon a time there was a schmata. A schmata, for those of you who may be unfamiliar with the traditions of Yiddish lore, may be loosely defined as a rag. One could tightly define it as

a rag, but a schmata is a sort of loose-fitting rag that just hangs there, doing nothing on one's body.

Anyway, this schmata was an asbestos Russian schmata, which meant it was flammable only when saturated with vodka. It was just hanging there in the Spectrum, above a kaleidoscopic center ring where the Moscow Circus was performing. In the Eastern Eurooean tradition, there was only one ring, which meant this schmata canopy could cover all the action at once. But why was it there in the first place?

* * » * »

Russian circuses are not the Barnum-and-Bailey midway most American audiences are used to. Though the Soviets may be ahead in the space race, they haven't yet discovered trampo-

lines, high wires, lion tamers and human cannonballs.Their Eastern culture does not emphasize the distinctive feature of American cir- cuses—elephants—and their clowns appear reminiscent of Chap- linesque slapstick.

But they have horses. Horses that dance ballets.Speeding Arabian chargers with Cossack acrobats. Precarious stallions with fire- juggling daredevils.

The Russian equivalent of Henry the Horse is named Gosha, but he's a big Siberian bear. He also rides a motorcycle, and does handstands—just about what you'd expect any normal, well-behaved bear to do. He juggles the Soviet equivalent of a baton—a rocket.

Nothing political, you understand. The cultural exchange between the two countries was noticeable by seeing the two flags flying side by side over the stage. They were flying up there, right next to the mysterious schmata.

*****

The music was a little different, and the clowns were almost forced into pantomime because of the language barrier, but a clown is funny in any language, even silence. There was this

magician, and he was disappearing people, and suddenly he was coming up to the Muscovite grand finale—the Incinerator.

Out walks this lovely lady and she steps into this birthday cake- like missile and the magician, in all his prestidigitating glory, ignites the rocket and Whoosh! the center ring is a blazing inferno.

There were 6104 people wondering how could the lovely lady -sur- vive. There were 6104 people who were let down when they saw this schmata canopy was there just to catch the flames. There were 6104 people thrilled when the lovely lady walked out alive, rising from the ashes.

Then they all applauded, and the stagehands packed up the schmata and the motorcycles and the illusionist's tents and they disappeared into the night. And they all lived happily ever after, except Gosha's trainer, who was run over by a runaway bear on a motorcycle at City Hall.

RISKING LIFE and limb, daring equestrians of the Caucasus unfurl banners as they cling precariously to their thundering steeds.

Hams awarded plaque by Coast Guard crew

The Amateur Radio Club received a plaque and a letter of commendation from the U.S. Coast Guard, last week, acknowledging service performed for the Coast Guard Cutter MACKINAC. During August and September, club members had transmitted over fifty personal messages for the officers and crew of the MACKINAC.

A letter from the ship's Commander J. L. Fleishell to Dr. Harnwell said: "We of the MACKINAC are most grateful and ask that you accept on behalf of the club the enclosed plaque and picture as tokens of our appreciation." John H. Moore, club president, noted that the plaque and letter were delivered by intramural mail.

Members who participated in the project were John H. Moore, Russel Miller, Bruce Evans and the late John W. Green. III. Miller, vice president, said that Green was heeling the club and was very active. He remembers that Green had tried to contact operators near his home in Des Moines, Iowa, but had not succeeded. His call letters were WAOBOJ.

The Amateur Radio Club is financed by UPSG; it has seventy members, a headquarters in the Moore school and a long campus history. Yet the club is not wellknown, and it suffers from a lack of publicity and an overabundance of apathy.

A nonenity, perhaps, but according to John Moore, president, it is an active, underappreciated nonenity. For instance, the club transmits messages anywhere in the country, gratis, for University students who request the service. Miller gave an ex- ample of a typical message: "Happy Birthday, folks, I just failed all my tests."

The club also holds instruction classes to enable members to earn operator's licenses. The office is located in the Moore Building, room 214.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967 THE DAILY

Mock UN Registration for the 1AA1

I Model UN will take place from 1 I 8:30 to 9:00 A .M. Saturday in i j the Christian Association. All 1 I delegates must register. The § opening session of the Model I UN will also be in the Christian

Association. ■;,

Memorial scheduled

A memorial service for John W. Green, 111, was held Wednes- day morning at eight A.M. by the Rev. Stanley E. Johnson, Uni- versity chaplain.

The service took place behind Hamilton Walk in the Botanical Gardens which Green frequented. Dormmates and friends were present.

"People should respond not with hostility or bitterness." Johnson said, "but rather, bring help to a world full of sickness."

PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE SEVEN

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■ ..■ '■': ..; S-: Mon. - Fri. 1 - 2 P.M. Rm. 2-6 College Hall.

.- ■.- •: -. mmmSi

Campus events Clark

OFFICIAL NOTICES CORNELL UNIVERSITY

GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSI- NESS AND PUBLIC ADMINIS- TRATION: A representative of Cornell University Graduate School of Business and Public Administration will be on cam- pus on Monday, Nov. 13 from 9:30 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. to inter- view students planning graduate study in business administration. For appointment call Office of Fellowship Information and Study Programs Abroad, ext. 8348.

PRE-LAW: Dean Haddad of Boston University Law School will interview pre-law students, Tuesday, Nov. 14. Pre-law stu- dents, especially seniors, are invited to see Dr. Cooper, DE- 46, to make an appointment for an interview with Dean Haddad.

CAMPUS AGENDA

CANADIAN JOB OPPORTUN- ITIES: Anyone, especially Canad- ians, interested in hearing from a team of distinguished repre- sentatives from Canadian uni- versities, the Public Service commission of Canada and the Department of Manpower and im-

migration, they will visiting the campus on Tuesday, Nov. 14. General meeting—3 - 4 P.M. in Rehearsal Room of Houston Hall. Interviews—4 - 6 P.M. in Re- hearsal Room of Houston Hall; 8 - 9 P.M. in Room 1 of Houston Hall. Sign up for interviews at the Office of International Ser- vices, 3826 Locust St.

CATACOMBS: The Under- ground, a satirical revue, per- forms tonight at 9:45. Also, Dave Wolf sings at 9:15 and 11:30. Enter via alley off 36th St. near Locust Walk.

FOLK DANCE CLUB: Festi- val, 1 - 5 PJVI., Sunday, Houston Hall. International dances for everyone. Bring costumes (The Record will be taking pictures), requests, and records.

FIESTA: All invited to a Fiesta offered by the Latin Amer- ican Student Society. On Nov. 10 from 8:30 P.M. to 12:30 A.M. at the M.B.A. House, 39th and Locust Sts.

THE FOLKLORE SOCIETY: Presents John Jackson, Negro songster from Virginia. A. pro- gram of blues, songs, and dance tunes. Dietrich Hall Aud. W51 - Monday, 7:30 P.M.

JOHN MARSHALL SOCIETY: Open Law School Week. Today, undergraduates are invited to at- tend classes inContracts(9A,M« and 2:50 P.M.0, Property (10:10 AM.), Torts (11:20 A.M.) at the Law School, Room 214. Sign up for classes at the Business Law office, DHW-233.

IAA U.JJ. MODEL GENERAL ASSEMBLY: Registration for delegations to the Model U^J. is Saturday morning, from 8:30 to 9 A.M., in the Christian Associa- tion Auditorium. All delegates must register.

IAA UJ4. MODEL GENERAL ASSEMBLY: Draft resolutions may be picked up today in the IAA office in the Christian As- sociation building. Delegates should make the effort to pick up their resolutions.

LAW STUDENTS CIVIL RIGHTS RESEARCH COUNCIL CONFERENCE ON THE ROLE OF THE LAWYER IN THE MOVEMENT: 2 P.M., McKean Hall, Room 100 of the Law School. Participants: Professor Anthony Amsterdam, Moderator; Donald A. Jelink, Director of Southern Rural Research Project, Selma Ala.; Bernadine Dohrn, Student Division, National Lawyers

Guild; Morton Stavis, Esq.; George Logan, Law Center for Constitutional Rights.

MORRIS DORM: All under- graduate coeds interested in a Coed Soccer Game on Sunday, November' 12, are invited to a brunch at 12 P.M. on Sunday in the Morris Dorm, immediately after which the game will begin. Girls, please contact Chris Leach at EV 2-2831.

NATIONALITY NIGHT: Greek dinner with entertainment, fol- lowed by folk dancing. Saturday, Nov. 18 at 5:30 PM. Christian Association.

PENN ANTI-DRAFT UNION: Seminars to train draft coun- selors will begin next week. Call EV 2-4391 to sign up.

ROMANCE LANGUAGES CLUB: The RLC will present Luis Buimel's award-winning film, "The Young and the Damned" (Los Olvidados) in Spanish with English subtitles and a short, "Soap Bubbles" (Boules de Savon), in French with English subtitles and dialogue by Jacques Prevert on Monday, Nov. 13 at 8 P.M., in Irvine Auditorium.

STUDENT TUTOR SOCIETY: Free tutoring available in most subjects. Tutors assigned daily.

(Continued from page 1)

few" Jews and "Easterners," such as Hawaiians.

Clark also discussed his re- tirement, which was supposedly prompted by his son Ramsey Clark's appointment as Attorney General.

He still spends half of every day at the Supreme Court, winding up unfinished business. He plans to sit for one-week periods on a number of benches, including the Court of Patent Appeals and the Second Circuit in New York.

He has had many offers to write books, and is considering one which would follow a single court case from start to finish to show the processes of the law. Another would be a history of the Supreme Court.

Clark has been asked to join many college faculties—not in- cluding the University—but he has no plans to become a professor. He does give lectures on cam- puses, and has just concluded a three-day appearance at Brown.

He is a busy man, perhaps not as busy as he had been, but certainly more busy than the average 68-year-old.

And, judging from his short, happy visit at "Delt" yesterday, his busy retirement does not dis- agree with him at all.

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FRIDAY EVENING SERVICES 8..30 P.M.

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ilGHT THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967

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Page 9: The - library.upenn.edu · many times during his tenure at which he felt he should retire but ... business and the normal utili- zation of University facilities." ... Jane Luckom,

DRIVE PART TIME

MEN AND WOMEN DAY OR NIGHT WORK

Yellow Cab Company of Philadel- phia has openings for part-time drivers. Here is an opportunity for pleasant, interesting outdoor work with good earnings.

Over the years thousands of college students have driven Yellow Cabs to aid their financial needs.

Qualifications. 21 years of age, current Penna. Driver's License; proof of driver's license for 2 years.

Apply

YELLOW CAB COMPANY Employment Office 105 South 12th Street

Monday HM»|II Tfcwr«4ey— • AM. tm * f M FrWey mnd SmU*4my-9 AM. H S P.M.

JV Soccer penn in Heptagonals ln»er Soccer (Continued from page 12)

throughout the first half, keeping the ball on the Drexel side of the field. Quaker goalie David Beigel had only touched the ball once, and Penn fullbacks allowed only two Drexel shots.

In the third period, Bill Herr- mann opened the scoring, driving the ball through the Drexel goal- ie's hands. Greg Dole then tallied another and the Quakers led 7-0.

Near the end of the game coach Binns decided to give his defen- sive players some action. Bob Fugelstad who had played an outstanding game at fullback was moved to center forward. Shortly afterwards, Fugelstad scored on an assist from Beigel.

The JV is now 4-1 and meets Villanova next week in its last game of the season.

Frosh lose to Owls

Temple's '71 gridders rallied with a 19 point explosion in the last quarter to defeat the Perm frosh, 29-20, Thursday at Tem- ple Stadium. The Quakers tallied on rushing scores of 2 yds. by quarterback Pancho Micir and 25 yds. by halfback Roland Fas- ano, and a 32 yd. Micir to Joe Cheechio TD pass.

MONTGOMERY COUNTY. MARYLAND

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and many others offering high-paying jobs—right in the County you call home.

Write today for facts on how to arrange an Interview during your Holiday vacation.

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(Continued from page 12)

The Yale and Brown teams this year have only been defeated by one team, Harvard. Other than this loss to the Crimson runners, the only blemish on either team's record is an early season tie with each other. However, B rown would have to be rated stronger in a big meet of this type due to Yale's lack of depth.

Rounding out the second group are the Tigers of Princeton.This year's Bengal team is probably one of the best ever in the New Jersey school's history and will provide stiff competition for the other members of this group vy- ing for the second spot behind Harvard.

The last group of teams is made up of Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth and Pennsylvania.

The Lions are extremely weak this fall as shown by their poor performances against the Penn thinclads. The Big Red and Indian teams have not done well in this meet in the past, and their medi- ocre records seem to forecast a similar occurance in this after- noon's race.

The Quaker thinclads must be included in this group simply be- cause there is no other place to

over- night case

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put then. Although they are vastly superior to the Lions and visibly better than Cornell and Dart- mouth, the Red and Blue runners really cannot be included as part of the second group as shown by their losses to Yale and Prince- ton in dual meets this year.

SEVEN PENN RUNNERS

Penn cross country mentor Tuppeny will be relying this af- ternoon on the same six depend- able runners who have performed so well for him the whole season, Bob Acri, captain Earl Andrews, Bill Caldwell, Bill Kelso,George Lokken and Jerry Williams. In addition the Quaker coach will choose a seventh man of either senior Dave Goodwin or JudLav- in to run in the meet.

Commenting on Perm's chances in the competition, Tup- peny said, "I'll be depending on all six guys to do a good steady job in the race, and I just hope that we can take advantage of any and all mistakes made by the oth- er teams, which are so common in this type of meet. If the boys really want to suffer and sacrifice on Friday, we can surprise two or three schools and finish very high in the final standings."

Penn's undefeated interna- tional soccer team fought to a 1-1 tie in a scrimmage yeaster- day afternoon at Stewart Field with the once-beaten Quaker freshman booters. Heintz Kreptz scored for Penn inter.

When high-scorer JayPillaid tallied for the Penn frosh, it was the first this season that the inter squad had been scored upon since its season started.

The inter team, having twice shut out Temple's international eleven, defeated the Princeton international squad, 2-0, in its most recent action, with Fara Mahdaui scoring twice.

Tomorrow the Penn inter team takes on its international counterpart at Philadelphia Col- lege of Textiles and Sciences, with numerous South American players expected to start for Textile. Next week Penn travels to Harvard and Brown on Satur- day and Sunday, respectively.

DP Classifieds bring fast

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FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 10. 1967 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE MNE

Page 10: The - library.upenn.edu · many times during his tenure at which he felt he should retire but ... business and the normal utili- zation of University facilities." ... Jane Luckom,

Letters (Continued from page 6)

campus; they do not come to exchange ideas. They have their own ideas on how the world should be run; and they have proceeded to implement their con- ception regardless of public opinion or anyone's rights.

They refuse dialogue. If they refuse dialogue, we must make clear to them, to the university administration, to whomever else sanctions their presence on this campus, that the channels of com- munication shall remain open, even if this necessitates the use of physical force. We must support the principles of free speech, by any means necessary, if no one else will.

Manufacturers of ovens to incinerate human beings luring German students to work for them, are no different from Dow Chemical seeking American students to work for their napalm pro- ducing factories so that the other re- cruiter, the U.S. Air Force, can create vast open-air ovens. It was German foreign policy that demanded ovens. It is U.S. foreign policy that demands

napalm. And in this country, the people "have the right to vote on almost every- thing they want to, including foreign policy." The outcome of the vote, how- ever "will not change foreign policy." (Vice-President Humphrey in the San Francisco Chronicle Oct. 11.1967).

Barbara Tierney

SAMP ' 71

jL **********************

;Y0UR BEST DEFENSE- IS A GOOD OFFENSE.

*

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After winning the light-heavy- ^-weight Naval Championship in 1945, j^.Dan Bucceroni trained 2,000 re- ^cruits per month in the art of self- -defense at the Great Lakes Naval ^Installation. Many of these men J^-had the occasion to resort to their jt boxing training in combat.

. For your everyday living, ^course in boxing will make you J^feel more confident and in the event jL-oi any fistic emergencies, the art ^of self-defense may save you from

severe bodily injury. ^ Today Dan teaches boxing and ^•body building at the DAN BUCCER- j+ONI SCHOOL OF BOXING, 2827 ^N. Broad St. Author of Easy Boxing ^for Self-defense, Dan Bucceroni, on ^three different occasions, was in Inline to fight Rocky Marciano for j^the Heavyweight Championship of T/he World.

» jf. RIGHT HAND SLIGHTLY OPEN

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Is there a best glass for beer?

j

JJ

~~£\With some beers maybe the glass doesn't matter. But when the beer is Budweiser, our brewmaster holds strong views.

"I like a glass with plenty of room," he says. ''Size is more impor- tant than shape. A big glass, say one that'll hold a full bottle, is best."

A big glass gives Budweiser a chance to show off. . . lets you pour it straight down the middle to get a full collar of foam. (Those tiny bubbles are the only beer bubbles in America that come from the natural carbonation of Beechwood Ageing. | Another thing about a big glass: it lets you quaff the beer. And who wants to sip, when the beer tastes as hearty as Budweiser?

That's about the size of it! Choose any kind of glass you want ... as long as it's big enough. (Of course, we have our own opinion on the best beer for the glass.)

Budweiser KING OF BEERS • ANHEUSER-BUSCH. INC. . ST LOUIS

NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA • HOUSTON

t'\GE TEN THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967

Page 11: The - library.upenn.edu · many times during his tenure at which he felt he should retire but ... business and the normal utili- zation of University facilities." ... Jane Luckom,

Springer (Continued from page 2) His immediate writing plans

include a volume of previously unpublished papers as well as an edition of the earliest German medieval play, the original of which is currently housed in the Van Pelt Library. Both of these

works will be published by the University of Pennsylvania Press.

The Dean is also working on the third and fourth volumes of the Langenscheidt Encyclopedic Dictionary of the English and German Languages, the first two volumes of which were pub- lished in 1962 and 1963.Springer said the next two volumes will be

published in 1969 and 1970. Springer also said he has

written many papers which he has not had the time to publish and that he would like to have those works published.

Provost David Goddard said yesterday that Springer "has done an outstanding job as Dean. We can only wish him well."

MRB sets 2 tourneys

HOUSTON HALL BOARD

PENN PLAYERS BENNETT UNION BOARD PRESENTS

THE

COMMITTEE WITH

FOLK SINGER

MARK BERNSTEIN FRIDAY - NOV. 10 -

10 P.M. - I A.M.

HOUSTON HALL SNACK SHOP

Ping pong and pool tourna- ments for undergraduate men will open tomorrow, Nov. 11 at 11 a.m. in McClelland Hall. The tourneys are sponsored by Men's Residence Board.

Plans are for the matches to continue throughout the day, with

the champions being determined by 5 p.m., Larry Kefauver.MRB member, said. If necessary, the finals will be set for Sunday at 1:30 p.m., he said.

Trophies will be presented to the top four players in each of the tournaments.

HO COVER REFRESHMENTS

Americans by the thousands upon thousands have been reading and thinking about SENATOR FULBRIGHTS powerful appeal for the United States to come to its senses before it is too late.

THE ARROGANCE OF POWER A very specific protest against the war in Vietnam, and a plea that

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE ELEVEN

Page 12: The - library.upenn.edu · many times during his tenure at which he felt he should retire but ... business and the normal utili- zation of University facilities." ... Jane Luckom,

The Daily Sports MORE SPORTS

ON PAGE 9

PAGE TWELVE FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1967

Yale offers rough debut for soph QB Zbrzeznj

By STEVE RUTTER field goal ^ the last 22 seconds If Penn's sophomore quarter- to gain a 17-14 victory,

back Bernie Zbrzeznj can con- Although Creeden will defin- tinue his sharp passing ways this itely not be starting this Saturday, Saturday at New Haven, theebul- it was evident from last week's lient Elis may possibly confront fourth quarter against Harvard, a situation similar to last year's that Zbrzeznj has the ability and cliff hanger with the Quakers, the knack to move the Quakers

Bill Creeden threw pletions against Yale

21 com- for two

touchdowns in the third quarter of last season's game, forcing the Bulldogs to kick an 11 yard

Wing back GEORGE BURRELL hurdles a Crimson defender

in a fourth period kickoff return last Saturday.

Yale poses threat to hooters9

hopes for Ivy championship By HOWARD TOPEL

Tomorrow morning's 11:30 soccer clash between Perm and Yale at New Haven will take on a much greater significance than last year's contest between the teams.

A year ago, both clubs were hopelessly out of the Ivy League race as they battled to a 2-2 standoff that left them in a tie for fourth place in the Ancient Eight at the season's end.

Tomorrow, however, a Quak- er victory will keep Penn right in the thick of a race that shows three teams tied for the league lead with but three contests left to play.

In Yale, coach Charlie Scott's league leading booters will be facing a club that the veteran mentor considers a dangerous foe. "My impression of Yale is that they've been an in and out team," said Scott. "They've been hampered by injuries all year, but it looks like they'll be at full strength against us. They must be considered a definite threat and we certainly can't take them lightly."

Mike Mueller, a 6'0", 160 pound right outside, leads the Eli attack. The Fairlawn, New Jer- sey speedster has scored three of Yale's four Ivy League goals to date, including both scores in the Bulldogs' 2-0 win over Dart- mouth, and the deciding tally in the 1-0 victory over Columbia.

Yale, who lost two first team All-Ivy forwards in John Gris- wold and Derek Bush to gradua- tion, has counted heavily on two sophomores to add punch to the

JV booters top Drexel in 9-0 rout

The JV soccer team trounced Drexel on Tuesday 9-0 giving coach Artie Binns his first shut- out of the season.

Hugh Curry scored the first and last goals of the game. The initial goal coming with five and a half minutes gone by in the first quarter and the last with five minutes to be played in the fourth quarter.

Ted Kuchels. the Quaker in- side right, connected fo two goals within two minutes of each other to give Penn a 3-0 lead after one quarter. Mike Dahood and Frank Chaney continued the barrage on Drexel goalie John McCaster. as each scored goals in the second quarter. Penn had completely controlled the game

(Continued on page 9)

lineup. Sunny Oyeykan, who scor- ed an overtime goal to nip Spring- field 2-1 earlier this year, plays inside right while King Ohene- Frempong of Ghana mans the outside left position.

The Eli defense is spear- headed by captain Roy Austin, a strong performer who has fully recovered from the swarm of injuries that plagued him a year ago.

The Quakers will enter the contest with the same starting lineup that has produced a 3-0-1 Ivy League record and a 6-0-3 slate overall. The only Penn in- jury is fullback Steve Mazzetti's hamstring muscle pull, an injury that has kept him out of practice all week, but, according to Scott, "There's no way you can keep Mazzetti out of the lineup."

0

STEVE MAZZETTI Will play despite injury

Harriers seek high finish in Heptagonal

By MARK PEARLMAN

34 years ago, the Ivy League schools and Army and Navy com-

bined to establish the Heptagonal championship meet. Since that time, the ten member schools have held 33 cross country champion- ships.

University of Pennsylvania teams have finished in the lower half of the ten team meet 32 times, breaking into the top half only once with a fifth place finish in 1940. This year's team has high hopes of equalling or bettering that performance.

Such a strong showing would indeed be quite an accomplishment. The Penn harriers, who finished eighth in the same meet a year ago, have improved tremendously un-

upfield. In that fourth period, Penn's

sophomore QB completed 11 aer- ials for 141 yards, while his pri- mary targets included fellow sophs Pete Blumenthal and Dave Graham.

Although Yale's head coach Carmen Cozza is not exactly voicing caution over this week- end's game, he notes that "Bernie Zbrzeznj could pose a problem for us as Bill Creeden's replace- ment. I remember that Creeden put on quite a show two years ago when he was only a sopho- more, so we can't afford to as- sume anything."

What remains quite clear, however, is the fact that Zbrz- eznj's debut as a full time signal caller this Saturday will be the roughest test possible. Yale leads the Ivy League in defense, be- sides also ranking first in the offensive department.

If Zbrzeznj runs into too rough a test and becomes injured, Quak- er coach Bob Odell will have little depth left in the quarterback de- partment .

BARUDIN QUITS

Dave Barudin, the Red and Blue's junior field general, has decided to leave the team for per- sonal reasons. Another member of Penn's grid squad absent for the rest of the season is junior Dan Regan.

A starter at defensive tackle since the Bucknell game, Regan has been forced to stop playing football for academic reasons. Senior defensive end John Mar- tinowich, who saw little action last week because of his recur- ring knee injury, is expected to alternate more regularly with Mike Chwastyk at that position.

The rest of the offensive team is expected to remain similar to

that seen last week against Har- vard. Tailback Cabot Knowlton will hopefully remain healthy and turn in another good perform- ance. To date, Knowlton ranks first in the list of Penn rushers with 118 carries for 485 yards, a 4.1 average per run and six touchdowns.

Rounding out the backfield will be Gerry Santini at fullback, while George Burrell and Kenny Dunn will alternate at wingback along with Pete WisniewskL Burrell may also see action at split end with Blumenthal, while Wisniew- ski may play quarterback if Zbr- zeznj becomes injured.

Defensive safety John Brown has also been working out with Penn's other two quarterbacks this week, indicating the danger- ous shortage at this spot that Odell suddenly faces.

To stop the Eli scoring threat of Don Barrows, Calvin Hill et al, both the Penn defensive line and secondary will have to dis- play their best performance of the season. Yale's 56 point scor- ing splurge against Dartmouth was only one of many indices that point to a possible rout if Penn does not respond to the challenge.

PETE At sp!

WISNIEWSKI it end or QB

der the fine coaching of Jim Tuppeny. However, the whole league is much more balanced and talented than in past years.

THREE LEVELS

Based on their records this year, the teams can be classified into three groups. The first of these contains the Harvard team alone.

The cantabs have the best cross country team in their school's history and have to be rated far and above the best team in the league. Led by such stars as Dave Hardin and John Baker, the Harvard thinclads should tri- umph easily.

The second group contains the five teams who will be scrambling for the second position behind Harvard. Included in this group are Army, Navy, Brown,Prince- ton, and Yale.

The service schools do not have the standout runners to put them in the same class with the Cantabs, but their overall balance and tough training always make them top contenders.

(Continued on page 9)

Penn lightweights look to snap losing streak against Rutgers

By BART STICHMAN

When Penn's lightweight squad takes the field tomorrow afternoon against Rutgers, the Quakers on the offensive unit will be understandably appre- hensive — if not because of a three-game losing streak then because only once in those three games have they crossed the goal line.

It isn't that the Red and Blue has not been able to move the ball; the total offense for the three losing efforts are close to that of Penn's opponents. However, it seems that every time the Quak- ers approach pay dirt the offense stalls. A case in point is that in its last game, a 7-0 loss, no less than four times in the final quarter Penn had possession in- side Princeton's 20 and couldn't tie the game.

Nevertheless coach Bob Mur- ray plans no serious alteration in his offense for the River Field encounter, hoping the extra week

the team has had off will help to revitalize it.

"We haven't been moving bad- ly," he explained. "The scoring opportunities we've missed have usually been because of individual break-downs. A change in strat- egy probably won't prevent that from recurring, so we'll basic- ally stick to the plays we've been running all season with the same personnel."

Murray probably won't ex- tensively use Charlie Linn, Penn's leading scorer via a three-touchdown performance on operttng day, on offense. Return- ing from a three-game lay-off due to an injury. Linn will see action mostly as a defensive line- backer.

Therefore it will be business as usual tomorrow for the of- fensive unit with Jack Welsh calling signals. On the ground Welsh will usually hand off to leading rusher Jim Samuels, op- erating from the tailback spot

that Linn vacated, or halfback Lenny Suzie.

On defense, coach Murray has relatively little to worry about. Led by John Hogue, Jon Saylor, Ed Gallagher and Mike Linn, the Quakers have allowed just 38 points in their four games. Rutgers runs from a regular Pro-set formation and should present nothing that the Red and Blue hasn't seen before.

With Army the only other team remaining on the lightweight schedule, it would seem that a victory over Rutgers is a must to eqaal last year's 2-4record. Army has so far won all its games except for a heartbreaking 3-0 defeat to Navy, this season's top squad in the Eastern Inter- collegiate Football League.

Rutgers has split its four games, beating Columbia and Cornell and dropping contests to both service academies. A- mong their common opponents.

"Penn has also beaten Columbia.