8
The Daily VOL. LXXXIII CRO - the landlord's best friend. PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIAN TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1967 NO. 49 Specter defends tax status of University-owned buildings By MARK LIEBERMAN Republican mayoral candi- date Arlen Specter defended the University's tax-exempt status before a group of 75 persons in Stiteler Hall last night. "University property is sup- portive of legitimate educational purposes," Specter said, "and its tax-free status." The District Attorney at- tacked the views of State Rep. Bernard M. Gross, who has called for taxation of University property. Specter termed the Gross tax plan "inappropriate," and added, "we should not place a tax burden on the University community. We can raise our money otherwise." The 1951 University graduate spoke on the topic "The Ed- ucational Future of Philadel- phia" and called on the city to "upgrade its education in all respects." He charged that his opponent, Mayor James H. J. Tate, has failed to provide "the aggressive leadership necessary to bring Federal funds into education." Specter also suggested that the educational structure of the city be expanded along the lines of job and vocational training. He said the major problem of the black ghetto is the un- availability of jobs and a short - (Continued on page 8) Junior coeds get apartment rights By STEPHEN MARMON The Committee on Residence Operations (CRO) yesterday ap- proved an UPSG proposal allowing junior women to live in apart- ments. The committee sent back to the UPSG for further discussion the plans passed last week by the Assembly to implement the proposal. CRO Chairman Virginia Cur- tin, acting director of occupa- tional therapy, said the im- plementation proposals were being sent back to student govern- ment so UPSG leaders could confer with Director of Resi- dence Edwin Ledwell about sev- eral legal and technical points in the measure. REPUBLICAN MAYORALTY candidate Arlan Specter speaks in Stiteler Hall in a lecture sponsored by the Eta chapter of Pi Lambda Theta, the national education fraternity. Spice Rack still has influence on University, Rutman claims By BERL SCHWARTZ The gulf which grew up be- tween the faculty and adminis- tration during the Spice Rack affair is still wide, according to Dr. Robert J. Rutman. Rutman also said that at one point in the controversy, faculty members gave serious consider- ation to censuring President Harnwell. Ledwell encourages "fair lease" plan By ERIC TURKINGTON Director of Residence Ed- win Ledwell said last week that his office supports the proposed "fair lease" plan put forward by Wharton business law lectur- er Leigh Bauer, and would join in any efforts to urge local land- lords to adopt it. ''It's an excellent proposal and certainly has our whole- hearted approval," Ledwell said. He noted, however, that it was up to the landlords, not the Resi- dence Office, to determine leas- ing conditions. "The market conditions in West Philadelphia right now are very one-sided - - it's a seller's market", said Ledwell. "So even if we did recommend one parti cular form of lease, they'd be under no pressure to use it." Couldn't use of the "fair lease" be made a requirement for listing apartments with the University Listing Service? Not really, Ledwell said. "In the current market situation, they don't need us they can rent all their apartments without using the listing service." Only if students were required to live in University-approved housing would such an idea work, he said, "and the students would never stand for such a require- ment." Ledwell recommended that students now in apartments make greater use of the Residence Of- fice's facilities. "If there's any- thing questionable at all, see us," he urged. In particular, he said, "if the landlord appears to be violating any provisions of the lease, we'd like to know about it." "John Brogan (head of the listing service) has a good rap- port with a lot of landlords," he continued, "and could be a big help in working something out." At the end of the year, he added, "if there's any indicat- ion of trouble about getting your deposit back -—see us." He indicated that landlord estimates of property damage often shrink or even disappear when the Residence Office be- comes involved. "Faculty-administration re- lations had been seriously jeo- pardized. Some people felt they had been irrevocably jeo- pardized," Rutman, an associate professor of chemistry who act- ively opposed the secret research contract, commented in an inter- view yesterday. "I don't think the gulf can be repaired," he added. The "gulf grew up over the presence at the University of two government - sponsored chemical-biological warfare re- search projects. Spice Rack and Summit, which violated a 1965 Faculty Senate resolution that all research at the University must be freely publishable. The controversy gained mo- mentum through 1966 until last spring when, according to Rut- man, "there was much talk around campus of moves to cen- sure" President Harnwell in the Faculty Senate. "The only reason a censure vote wasn't taken was the force- fulness of the action actually taken," he explained. The "action" to which Rut- man referred was a Senate re- solution specifying that Harnwell should rescind an agreement he made with the Air Force to con- tinue Spice Rack until March, 1969, one year past its expira- tion date. "This action," Rutman said, "was as close to censure as you can come without taking a censure vote." Rutman attributed the end of Spice Rack to pressures applied (Continued on page 5) ROBERT J. RUTMAN "Gulf Still Exists" Mrs. Curtin said the imple- mentation proposals would be brought up for consideration when the committee meets a week from today at 3 P.M. If approv- ed by CRO, both proposals will then go to Vice-Provost A. Leo Levin for final action. Anita Dimondstein, the CW junior who was bringing a case in student court so she could live in an apartment, announced she was withdrawing her suit. Mrs. Curtin also said, "There was no real question about the bill being approved. It was a question of implementation, not one of policy, that was consi- dered at the meeting." She said there wasn't much discussion of what effect the new rule would have on the housing situation in the University area, but that ""the topic may come up for further study next week." UPSG Speaker James Rosen- berg said he was "very pleased with the CRO decision." "I was quite confident the committee would pass the pro- posal," Rosenberg said. "I think the new membership set-up has brought about a progressive change in CRO." The committee now consists of ten students, five faculty mem- bers and five administrators. The student membership on CRO was expanded from five to ten undergraduates over the sum- mer, after informal discussions between student government leaders, the administration and the faculty. The only faculty member pre- sent was Dr. Benjamin Barber of the political science department. The other four faculty members on CRO have not yet been announced. The ten student members of CRO were appointed by UPSG President Alexius Conroy and approved by the Assembly. The five administration mem- bers are Dean of Women Alice Emerson, Acting Dean of Men Gerald Robinson, Director of Re- sidence Edwin Ledwell, Karen Romer, assistant dean of women for residences, and Stephen Mil- ler, assistant dean of men for dormitories. Would limit Univ. use of eminent domain Candidate urges larger citizen role By WILLIAM BURCHILL The University should rea- lize that "the feelings of peo- ple are the most important objective in any development program," according to Mrs. Novella Williams, Democratic candidate for City Council. Mrs. Williams said the only way University development can benefit its surroundings is to "have cooperation between the University and community, not just a lot of intellectuals planning and saying the de- velopment program will work." A frequent critic of the University's attitude toward its West Philadelphia neighbors during her campaign, Mrs. Wil- liams is seeking the third dis- trict City Council seat on a "freedom rights" ticket. Mrs. Williams told The Daily Pennsylvanian the Univer- sity should increase its pro- grams of aid to West Phila- delphia high schools. She cited _the existing program at Sayre Junior High School, in which graduate stu- dents and volunteers from the School of Education work with area students. Such programs, Mrs. Wil- liams added, "can be very helpful in eliminating certain tensions that exist in the third district" by serving as a moti- vator for young students to continue their educations, and giving them " a feeling of col- lege life." Mrs. Williams urged the city government to take the power of eminent domain away from the University, to give increased representation to those area residents who feel "the University has taken over (Continued on page 5) NOVELLA WILLIAMS "Town-gown Cooperation"

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The Daily VOL. LXXXIII

CRO - the landlord's best friend.

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIAN TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1967 NO. 49

Specter defends tax status of University-owned buildings

By MARK LIEBERMAN Republican mayoral candi-

date Arlen Specter defended the University's tax-exempt status before a group of 75 persons in Stiteler Hall last night.

"University property is sup- portive of legitimate educational purposes," Specter said, "and its tax-free status."

The District Attorney at- tacked the views of State Rep. Bernard M. Gross, who has called for taxation of University property.

Specter termed the Gross tax plan "inappropriate," and added, "we should not place a tax burden on the University community. We can raise our money otherwise."

The 1951 University graduate spoke on the topic "The Ed- ucational Future of Philadel- phia" and called on the city to "upgrade its education in all respects."

He charged that his opponent, Mayor James H. J. Tate, has failed to provide "the aggressive leadership necessary to bring Federal funds into education."

Specter also suggested that the educational structure of the city be expanded along the lines of job and vocational training.

He said the major problem of the black ghetto is the un- availability of jobs and a short -

(Continued on page 8)

Junior coeds get apartment rights

By STEPHEN MARMON The Committee on Residence

Operations (CRO) yesterday ap- proved an UPSG proposal allowing junior women to live in apart- ments.

The committee sent back to the UPSG for further discussion the plans passed last week by the Assembly to implement the proposal.

CRO Chairman Virginia Cur- tin, acting director of occupa- tional therapy, said the im- plementation proposals were being sent back to student govern- ment so UPSG leaders could confer with Director of Resi- dence Edwin Ledwell about sev- eral legal and technical points in the measure.

REPUBLICAN MAYORALTY candidate Arlan Specter speaks in Stiteler Hall in a lecture sponsored by the Eta chapter of Pi Lambda Theta, the national education fraternity.

Spice Rack still has influence on University, Rutman claims

By BERL SCHWARTZ The gulf which grew up be-

tween the faculty and adminis- tration during the Spice Rack affair is still wide, according to Dr. Robert J. Rutman.

Rutman also said that at one point in the controversy, faculty members gave serious consider- ation to censuring President Harnwell.

Ledwell encourages "fair lease" plan

By ERIC TURKINGTON

Director of Residence Ed- win Ledwell said last week that his office supports the proposed "fair lease" plan put forward by Wharton business law lectur- er Leigh Bauer, and would join in any efforts to urge local land- lords to adopt it.

''It's an excellent proposal and certainly has our whole- hearted approval," Ledwell said.

He noted, however, that it was up to the landlords, not the Resi- dence Office, to determine leas- ing conditions.

"The market conditions in West Philadelphia right now are very one-sided - - it's a seller's market", said Ledwell. "So even if we did recommend one parti cular form of lease, they'd be under no pressure to use it."

Couldn't use of the "fair lease" be made a requirement for listing apartments with the University Listing Service? Not really, Ledwell said. "In the current market situation, they don't need us — they can rent all their apartments without using the listing service."

Only if students were required to live in University-approved housing would such an idea work, he said, "and the students would never stand for such a require- ment."

Ledwell recommended that students now in apartments make greater use of the Residence Of- fice's facilities. "If there's any- thing questionable at all, see us," he urged.

In particular, he said, "if the landlord appears to be violating any provisions of the lease, we'd like to know about it."

"John Brogan (head of the listing service) has a good rap- port with a lot of landlords," he continued, "and could be a big help in working something out."

At the end of the year, he added, "if there's any indicat- ion of trouble about getting your deposit back -—see us."

He indicated that landlord estimates of property damage often shrink or even disappear when the Residence Office be- comes involved.

"Faculty-administration re- lations had been seriously jeo- pardized. Some people felt they had been irrevocably jeo- pardized," Rutman, an associate professor of chemistry who act- ively opposed the secret research contract, commented in an inter- view yesterday.

"I don't think the gulf can be repaired," he added.

The "gulf grew up over the presence at the University of two government - sponsored chemical-biological warfare re- search projects. Spice Rack and Summit, which violated a 1965 Faculty Senate resolution that all research at the University must be freely publishable.

The controversy gained mo- mentum through 1966 until last spring when, according to Rut- man, "there was much talk around campus of moves to cen- sure" President Harnwell in the Faculty Senate.

"The only reason a censure vote wasn't taken was the force- fulness of the action actually taken," he explained.

The "action" to which Rut- man referred was a Senate re- solution specifying that Harnwell

should rescind an agreement he made with the Air Force to con- tinue Spice Rack until March, 1969, one year past its expira- tion date.

"This action," Rutman said, "was as close to censure as you can come without taking a censure vote."

Rutman attributed the end of Spice Rack to pressures applied

(Continued on page 5)

ROBERT J. RUTMAN "Gulf Still Exists"

Mrs. Curtin said the imple- mentation proposals would be brought up for consideration when the committee meets a week from today at 3 P.M. If approv- ed by CRO, both proposals will then go to Vice-Provost A. Leo Levin for final action.

Anita Dimondstein, the CW junior who was bringing a case in student court so she could live in an apartment, announced she was withdrawing her suit.

Mrs. Curtin also said, "There was no real question about the bill being approved. It was a question of implementation, not one of policy, that was consi- dered at the meeting."

She said there wasn't much discussion of what effect the new rule would have on the housing situation in the University area, but that ""the topic may come up for further study next week."

UPSG Speaker James Rosen- berg said he was "very pleased with the CRO decision."

"I was quite confident the committee would pass the pro- posal," Rosenberg said. "I think the new membership set-up has brought about a progressive change in CRO."

The committee now consists of ten students, five faculty mem- bers and five administrators. The student membership on CRO was expanded from five to ten undergraduates over the sum- mer, after informal discussions between student government leaders, the administration and the faculty.

The only faculty member pre- sent was Dr. Benjamin Barber of the political science department. The other four faculty members on CRO have not yet been announced.

The ten student members of CRO were appointed by UPSG President Alexius Conroy and approved by the Assembly.

The five administration mem- bers are Dean of Women Alice Emerson, Acting Dean of Men Gerald Robinson, Director of Re- sidence Edwin Ledwell, Karen Romer, assistant dean of women for residences, and Stephen Mil- ler, assistant dean of men for dormitories.

Would limit Univ. use of eminent domain

Candidate urges larger citizen role By WILLIAM BURCHILL The University should rea-

lize that "the feelings of peo- ple are the most important objective in any development program," according to Mrs. Novella Williams, Democratic candidate for City Council.

Mrs. Williams said the only way University development can benefit its surroundings is to "have cooperation between the University and community, not just a lot of intellectuals planning and saying the de- velopment program will work."

A frequent critic of the University's attitude toward its West Philadelphia neighbors during her campaign, Mrs. Wil- liams is seeking the third dis- trict City Council seat on a "freedom rights" ticket.

Mrs. Williams told The Daily Pennsylvanian the Univer- sity should increase its pro-

grams of aid to West Phila- delphia high schools.

She cited _the existing program at Sayre Junior High School, in which graduate stu- dents and volunteers from the School of Education work with area students.

Such programs, Mrs. Wil- liams added, "can be very helpful in eliminating certain tensions that exist in the third district" by serving as a moti- vator for young students to continue their educations, and giving them " a feeling of col- lege life."

Mrs. Williams urged the city government to take the power of eminent domain away from the University, to give increased representation to those area residents who feel "the University has taken over

(Continued on page 5)

NOVELLA WILLIAMS "Town-gown Cooperation"

AN ANNOUNCEMENT

Smalls says Coombs sees edoc. crisis Phila. decays

OUR DAILY

CIRCULATION HAS BEEN INCREASED

TO

I0fi501

By JOAN RICKEL The Rev. Leonard L. Smalls

believes that Philadelphia is in a state of moral decay brought on by the corruption of the profes- sional machine politicians in the city.

At today's Bitch-in at 11 AJM. in Houston Hall Plaza, Smalls, who is running for Mayor of Phila- delphia on the Consumers Party ticket, will set forth his party's platform. The Students for a Democratic Society are sponsor- ing this appearance.

Smalls describes his party as "not just a third party but a moral force, calling for a new system." He sees the major goal of the Consumers Party as an "attempt to utilize the large reservoir of human resources in the city, and to establish living rights for all people."

Smalls sees the University campus area itself as presenting

(Continued on page 6)

WASHINGTON (CPS)-Should the tiny African country of Zam- bia further strain its overworked budget to provide a grammar school education for everyone, particularly if that education will inevitably be greatly inferior to what could be done with a more selective effort?

Should Indian universities continue to accept far more stu- dents per year than they can handle at all well, and in fields in which a labor surplus already exists?

In the United States, is the problem of getting Negroes into better jobs a matter of getting more of them through high school and into college, or would it suffice to have less arbitrary hiring criteria with less em- phasis on the candidate's ability to get through school, regardless * of whether he was learning any- thing or not?

Philip Coombs and his staff at the International Institute for Educational Planning in Paris have

posed an array of problems such as these in a 200-page working paper for the International Con- ference on the World Crisis in Education to be held in Williams- burg, Virginia, October 5-9. It will be hosted by Cornell Uni- versity President James Perkins and Secretary of Health, Educa- tion and Welfare John W. Gard- ner.

While Coombs is not as acer- bic as another French Inter- national consultant, Professor Rene Dumont, who advocates fewer fancy high schools and uni- versities in^he developing coun- tries and more attention to

(Continued on page 3)

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NfAS PAGE TWO THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1967

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Air Force Academy prof, is Goddard's assistant

Use DP Classified Ads George H. Janczewski, as-

sociate professor of foreign languages at the U.S. Air Force Academy, has begun a one-year internship in academic admini- stration as special assistant to the Provost of the University, David R. Goddard.

He is one of 46 men and women selected by the Ameri- can Council on Education to participate in a Ford Founda- tion supported program which will place them in administra- tive positions in colleges and universities around the country.

As an ex-officio member of the University, Janczewski will work on special assign- ments and attend conferences

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with administrative officers. Goddard will serve as his guide and critic.

During the year Janczewski and other participants will meet in regional discussion groups and will attend a final seminar in Washington D. C. to deli- berate their experiences.

Educ. crisis (Continued from page 2)

improving agriculture, he still makes the same points.

He fixes the blame for the present plight of education in most countries on a combination of too many people, not enough money, and an abundance of inertia and vested interests:

The scarcity of national resources to meet the educational demand, except in the richest countries, has become acute. Many underdeveloped countries spend twice as large a proportion or more of their national income on education as the advanced countries, but with little visible effect.

Costs per student every- where in the world are spiraling, mainly due to "the fact that education remains a labor- intensive industry, still close to the handicraft stage. Indeed it becomes even more so with each effort to raise the quality through its conventional means."

o ro. n WHAT IS ITS SIGNIFICANCE?

EL BIRDOZ; WE LOVE YOU. YAZ MAY BE GREAT BUT CHA CHA IS GREATEST!

Beverly Basick, Dept. of Anthropology Archetypical.

The ritual of the Midnight Pudding Snack is well established in primitive societies. Since Shake-A Pudd'n does not require refrigeration, it lends itself to use in dormitories (surely one of the most primitive societies), thereby fulfilling this basic, instinctual human drive at the precise moment it arises.

Harry Holesome, Dept. of Health Education The American Dream come true.

Shake-A Pudd'n combines healthful nutrition, bracing exercise and, above all, Good Clean Fun. An essential part of the Physical Fitness Program.

Sylvia Cimbill, Dept. of Psychology Truly Freudian.

Powder and water are mixed in a cup, an obviously mammalian formation, seen on a deeper level as Mother. One shakes the cup, in a desperate but futile attempt to shake off the inhibiting Superego and free the primitive Id.

Michael Media, Dept. of Sociology A true product of the Electric Age.

Shake-A Pudd'n has transformed a fragmented, time-consuming, mechanical task into an almost instantaneous, totally involving experience. Definitely "cool." Although equally good at room temperature.

&, Francine Factor, Dept. of History Of tremendous historical significance.

Had Shake-A Pudd'n been discovered in the 18th Century, the French Revolution would probably never have taken place w-ien it did. Marie Antoinette's famous remark, "Let 'em eat cake," would no doubt have been transformed to "Let 'em eat pudd'n," thereby appeasing the masses for at least another century.

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PAGE THREE THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1967

.

Man of principle ■ 1885 Siiy Pennsylvania!! 1967

DENNIS H. WILEN Managing Editor

DONALD M. MORRISON Editor-in-Chief

ROBERT I. TUTEUR Business Manager

Kerr criticizes secrecy of university research

RICHARD B. SHAPIRO Editorial Chairman

m JAMES J. RESTIVO JR.

Features Editor LAWRENCE D. KROHN

Sports Editor

BETTY OSTROV Financial Manager

KENNETH MESKIN Advertising Manager

MICHAEL KANAS Business Coordinator

I A. STEVEN PERELMAN PAUL BLUMENTHAL Executive Editor Photography Editor

' . ' ■ ' ' : : :: '''■":' : '■:•:•:■:•:■ ■:•:•: : . :•■

Students' chance Yesterday's action by the Commit-

tee on Residence Operations permitting junior women to take off-campus apart- ments is evidence that the administration is continuing on the road toward a modern, liberal, realistic code of social behavior for both men and women.

CRO in particular has performed remarkably well in this regard in the last year or two, first extending wo- men's curfew, then extending parietal hours in the men's dormitories and now allowing junior women residential freedom which approaches that granted to men years ago.

The suspicion grows among concern- ed undergraduates that perhaps the ad- ministration has some method to its madness, that perhaps some long range plan exists whereby the powers that be are inexorably bringing social regula- tions up to date. It is a frightening proposition to those who have continu- ously criticized that administration for its failure to act in that direction.

There is, however, a reservation to the aforementioned commendation. It was

not until students gained meaningful re- presentation on the committee that liber- alization became reality rather than fodder for discussion. And it was not until students comprised half the members of CRO that really dramatic modernization of the rules stood up to committee scru- tiny.

The new CRO has a total of ten faculty and administration representa- tives and ten student members. If the student members can continue in their unified support of ever-broader liber- alization of antiquated social regulations at this university, then the committee might well write an interesting chapter in the school's history, a chapter docu- menting the rise of students to a genuine decision-making role.

It is up to the students on CRO, and in fact to faculty and administration representatives too, to prove that stu- dents can assume .such a responsibility and, therefore, to lay the groundwork for an expansion of the CRO concept to other University committees.

Clark Kerr is a man that others take cues from. At a conference on the "World Crisis in Education" held at Williams- burg, Virginia, people asked for his opin- ions and approval. Educators and the press were anxious to ascertain what Kerr thought.

But despite the fact that Kerr is a soft spoken, ultimately reasonable, man; there is no possibility that one could mistake his intelligence or conviction.

Kerr said last week that it was a "matter of principle" for a university to be accepting secret research contracts and that it was definitely a "mistake."

"I would qualify that," hesaidinanin :erview, "by saying that only in a period of declared war, when a nation is fighting for its survival, is it appropriate for a university to accept such contacts. And this is not such a period."

When asked if he had ever been pres- sured during his eight years as President of California's higher education system to accept secret contracts, he replied, "I never experienced such pressure.

' 'We got what contracts we were look- ing for, but were never involved in CIA activities."

Kerr began to talk about Berkeley. "Berkeley was a great mistake for

which I cannot excuse myself. I didn't want to use the police and held off until the last, for which I was never forgiven.

"I was already in trouble with the right. Reagan was out to get me. I re- fused to give him my resignation—which caused a lot of controversy—because I could not endorse something in which I didn't believe."

Kerr explained that he did not believe that a new governor had the right to have a new president of the education system

Th world outside

Woo die Guthrie The passing

dies at 55; of a minstrel era

Phil Arkow Woodie Guthrie, balladeering minstrel

of the American people for two genera- tions, died last Tues. in a Queens hospital, following a 13-year illness. He left behind him an indelible trail of some 1,000 folk songs spanning 30 years of hard-luck wandering, an image and a voice for an era, and an unforgettable impact on con- temporary singers and songwriters for all time.

The elusive fame which never quite caught up with him while he traveled "from California to the New York island," ironically began to materialize only after his hospitalization, as the Guthrie charis- ma and legend grew. Hundreds of neo- Depression songwriters — including such greats as Ramblin' Jack Elliott and early Bob Dylan — sought toduplicate the Guthrie style of pathos in songs for the poor folk.

But the new breed could never quite duplicate the individualistic pride that sustained dust bowl migrants, Hooverville, hoboes, striking and starving laborers and an entire nation buried in Depression- poverty. It was Guthrie, and Guthrie alone, who could capture in song the spirit of a Midwest whose topsoil and whose popula- tion had blown west with the wind. It was only Guthrie who could write from the experience of hard travelin'. He would later write in his autobiography, ironically entitled Born to Wire

"You've got to go to work at a factory and spend two-thirds of your time doing a job you hate in order to have enough janerio to go on with your folk songs. You can toot your flute in a military band and get GI pay for it. . . .But there's not any Gl kale that you can lay a finger on to make up folk songs. ..."

•**

Wood row Wilson Guthrie was born on July 14, 1912, deep in the heart of the Oklahoma Dust Bowl in a little town named

Okemah. He quit school in the 10th grade, and hit the open road at the age of 15, following a series of family hardships including two fires and a cyclone, his father's bankruptcy, his sisters death and his mother's contracting Huntington's chorea, a he redita ry nervous system paralysis which would kill him at age 55.

He played the harmonica and guitar in barber shops, pool halls, saloons and at rodeos, riding freight trains everywhere. He wrote most of his "classics" from this scene, including "So Long Its Been Good to Know You," "Blowing Down This Old Dusty Road," "Pastures of Plenty" and "Pretty Boy Floyd." From Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath he created "The Ballad of Tom Joad." He sang of the mi- grants, the DP's, the farmers and the cowboys; he sang of:

Green pastures of plenty from high desert ground,

From the Grand Coulee Dam where the waters run down;

Every state in this Union us migrants have been.

We're gonna work in this fight, and we're gonna fight 'til we winl

Meanwhile, he began to extoll the vir- tues of unionization, and created a new musical art form: the Talking Blues. The non-melodic type of recitation fitted his voice, which, he admitted, did not sound "like dew dripping off the petals of the morning violet." He added, "I would rather sound like the ashcans of the early morn- ing, like the cab drivers cursing at one another, like the longshoremen yelling, like the cowhands whooping, and like the lone wolf barking."

***

The lone wolf is barking no more. The tradition is being carried on by his son, Arlo, by Pete Seeger, by hundreds of country and western and topical perform- ers who include the Guthrie creations in their repertoires, and by thousands of new guitarists each year who practice their first finger picks on "Reuben James" and all the Talking Blues.

I think it was Pete Seeger, at a concert, who was looking for a reason to sing a chestnut of the folk scene. He finally re- membered a school girl who, when asked what the national anthem was, replied innocently, "This Land is Your Land." Seeger sang the verses:

He sang on the radio in California, then headed east to New York. The early Forties found him singing to Bowery dere- licts and stevedores in dockside bars. He declined an invitation to sing at Radio City Music Hall because, as he said, they wanted him to dress in a clown suit.

He rambled again to the Pacific North- west, and was commissioned by the Oregon Department of the Interior to compose 26 ballads about the country. His best-known of these were "Grand Coulee Dam" and _^Roll On, Columbia."

The Daily Pennsylvanian is published Monday through Friday at Philadelphia, Pa. during | the fall and spring semesters, except during vacation periods, and the last seven class days of each term. One issue published in August. Subscriptions may be ordered at Sergeant Hall. 34th 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 FOUR THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1967

I roamed and rambled, and I fol- lowed my footsteps. To the sparkling sands of her diamond deserts. And all around me a voice was sounding,

This land was made foryouandme. This land is your land, this land is

my land From California to the New York

Island, From the redwood forests to the

Gulfstream waters, This land was made foryouandme.

There are many people in America to- day who think that little school girl may have been right.

CHARLES KRAUSE

in California. His job, as he saw it, was not a political appointment.

There is a need "for the separation of the state and the university." There must be good buffers between the two because part of the university's job is to criticize and bring forth new ideas, both of which are often "politically unpopular.''

"The better the university, the more trouble there will be," he aaid.

"One of the reasons I stayed as long as I did underpressure," Kerr said, "was to declare my long range belief in the California system.

"Berkeley was not a drive for student power, although many people have thought that it was." The students wanted back a right which had been arbitrarily taken away from them by the Chancellor at Berkeley.

The students wanted back the privilege of gatheringmoney and signing up demon- strators in an area in the center of the campus. This right was taken away, but "there was never a question of freedom of speech."

Kerr adviseci the chancellor to with- draw the order, but "I should have order- ed him to do so," he said.

The situation deteriorated, Kerr said, and both sides began to square off for battle. The consultative machinery which Kerr thinks is vitally important between students and administration at any uni- versity, had "broken down at Berkeley before this incident. We knew that."

Kerr does not deny the importance and effect that Berkeley has had in the last five years around the country. But he is sure that if it hadn't been at Berkeley it would have been somewhere else. "It was just a matter of time."

This is because there are "more stu- dents today concentrated in larger units, more used to active participation before they get to the university.

"University and college campuses have not kept up, they have not been pre- pared for this more active generation."

Student activism has not confined it- self to issues which involve only the cam- pus. ' 'There are terrible, difficult issues around the world.

"The United States has never hed in its history such devisive internal and ex- ternal issues" at one time, he said.

Students are becoming frustrated be- cause reasonable and responsible state- ments, such as the college student presi- dent's Vietnam statement, have not re- ceived the "attention they should have received."

When Kerr was asked if he would con- sider accepting another college presi- dency, he smiled. "My commitment now is to the Carnegie Commission on Educa- tion.

"I have been the center of a lot of con- troversy, and boards don't like contro- versy." Because of this, "I am viewed as less useful in many quarters."

Kerr believes that education has be- come the "center of society."

"The university is the center of truth, much as the church was in centuries pro- ceeding ours. It must be independent as it gains importance."

Clark Kerr became somewhat wistful as he talked about the importance of edu- cation and of the university. He was calm now as one imagines that he was then.

Principles. He is a man who has lived by them and others might think suffered for them.

But there was no hint of regret.

HEEL

THE

D.P.

Students to learn Catacombs wh,r* .ar* ,hey.?

of foreign customs -n-neJiraing.«?«..» By BRIAN MADDEN

For all the Perm students who find that they can't afford to take monthly trips to foreign countries, The International Stu- dents Association, People - to - People and the Houston Hall Board are sponsoring a monthly Nationality Night.

Arnold Gelber, who is or- ganizing the first of these events, expressed the main idea of the functions as "an attempt to get foreign and American students together more than in the past."

While exposing the American students at Perm to the customs and habits of the foreign students, the program will also help the many foreign students at Penn find out about their fellow foreignors from other countries and to mix with them as well as the students from their own countries.

Tickets for the dinner and the sitar concert are on sale at Houston Hall and the Office of International Services, 3826 Lo- cust Street.

MRS. VINA ARGADE and her son show Liz Van Wezel how to cook an Indian dish for nationality night.

The program, similar to ones at Stamford and Columbia, will consist of a dinner (which will cost $1.25) and some type of related high-quality professional entertainment.

The first of these functions will be this Saturday, October 14, beginning at 5:30 p.m. for dinner and a fashion show. A concert by the Indian sitarist Niknil Banerjee, spon: c-ed by the Indian Students Asscoiation in Irvine Auditorium, will follow the dinner. The theme for this month is India and the dinner will consist of Indian dishes entirely.

In order to get tbe foreign students and the Ameiican stu- dents together, several Indian homes will be open this week to teach girls from other countries how to cook Indiandishesandhow to wear traditional Indian dress, the sari. These girls will then cook the meal for the dinner on Saturday and wear their saris while serving the dinner, to the background of Indian music.

Indian women will model various styles of the sari and explain about them in the fashion show which will be held during the dinner.

Cose translates French history

Dr. Lynn M. Case, Chairman of the History Department, has recently translated from the French The Bourbon Restoration by Guillaume de Bertier de Sauvigny. This book, recognized in France as the most complete and most authoritative account of Restoration history, deals with the period from 1814 to 1830 when the Bourbon dynasty was returned to the throne of France.

According to the Society for French Historical Studies, this book is "the best available syn- thesis of its subject in any lan- guage." Dr.Case made the trans- lation at the request of the author.

Movies The following movies are

showing on campus this week: Tuesday: "Behold A Pale

Horse," Irvine, 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.

Wednesday: "Entr'acte/* Annenberg Auditorium, 4 and 8 p.m. and "Good Soldier Schweik," Museum, 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.

Novella Williams (Continued from page 1)

their community without regard for them."

She claimed the University was granted such extensive po- wer over West Philadelphia real estate in the first place only because it is "economi- cally and politically expedient."

Mrs. Williams cited plans to close various streets in the University area as symbolic of the "closed society" that will result from the Integrated De- velopment Plan.

She said "the University could be instrumental in doing more for the benefit of the total community" instead of concentrating on "pet area."

Mrs. Williams said she plans to meet with Leonard Dill, assistant to the president for community affairs at the University, to discuss a step- up in community-related pro- grams staffed by University students.

She praised the Community Involvement Council for "tak-

ing on the initiative of what the University itself should be doing."

Mrs. Williams also cirti- cized the West Philadelphia Corporation, which President Harnwell heads, and other firms associated with the Uni- versity City Science Center because " they could have found other land for the Center," which would have required re- location of fewer senior citi- zens. She charged that "none of the organizations involved are too interested in comm- unity planning," and that "they could be just a little more careful in acquiring land."

Mrs. Williams declined comment on President Harn- well's direction of the West Philadelphia Corporation, say- ing she was unfamiliar with his personal views.

The nearest thing at Penn to the famous Left Bank student cafes in Paris is the Catacombs, the coffee house located in the basement of the Christian As- sociation. The flickering candles, the little square tables, the ex- cellent coffee, and the hot cider serve to create the right at- mosphere for intense intellectual discussion or a casual chat. The most important thing about the Catacombs is that it offers stu- dents a place to meet free from the harassment of waitresses expecting lengthy orders.

EXPANDED FILM PROGRAM

The Catacombs has greatly expanded its hours and its film program this year, because of the great student response last year. The accent of the film program is definitely on old film classics, with a few modern prizewinners. Tuesday's offer- ing, the WjC. Fields classic My Little Chickadee (1940) was typical. Other old films to be shown include Legend of Rudolph Valentino, the Marx brothers in Duck Soup, and Cleopatra ("CJ3. DeMille's version, not the more recent flop," as die Catacombs bills it). The films are shown either free of charge or for 25 or 35£, depending on whether they are ordered from the Phila- delphia Free Library or directly from the film-makers.

SOMETHING NEW

"In our over-all program, we draw every kind of student," says Peter Marcel, one of the student volunteers at the coffee house. He pointed out that poetry readings and dramatic produc- tions are featured on Wednesdays and Thursdays. Volunteer stu- dents read their own poetry or that of the established modern poets. Classical and flamenco guitarists also perform. Marcel explained that "there's a lot of really good an on campus that never gets a chance to be put on."

Crowds at the coffee house vary from ten to capacity. Each type of offering has been well received, although some of the offerings, such as poetry read- ings, have drawn very small audiences. Perhaps the Cata- combs is best described by Mar- cel, a Wharton Finance major, when he says, "Our aim is to do something that's not done elsewhere on campus."

Spice Rack (Continued from page 1)

by both faculty and students. QQ^ With The three - day College Hall sit-in, in which more than 100 NEW AQ students took part, "was the straw that broke the camel's back," he said. "I don't think the faculty made enough noise," Rutman added. "But it's wrong to say this was a true measure of what was going on. There was a lot going on behind the

The invisible commuter

By SANDI WEINER

Of the 134 commuting women in the Class of '71, approximately three-fourths of them would rather live in University dorms, which unfortunately are too crowded to admit them. Why, one may ask, should these women want to leave the comforts of home and the protection of devoted parents for a 2 x 4 in Hill Hall?

BAD SHAPE

Penn is renowned for the social life it offers to the fairer sex, yet despite the much touted 4:1 ratio, the commuting woman is in bad shape. It is almost impossible for her to receive phone calls, for a gentleman wishing to win or woo her must obtain her home phone number and attempt to contact her there. Unless she looks and acts like Sophia Loren, he is much more likely to take the easy way out and get a resident's phonenumber from the information desk.

TRANSPORTATION PROBLEM

Most activities are at night not to mention the library mixer. Considering the survival rate of women in Phila.'s subways, she is faced with the choice of paying $2 a night to sleep in a bleak room in the Harrison, or have Mommy pick her up at 34th and Walnut. It's a great feeling to walk across the "goodnight bridge" by your- self into the waiting arms of your mother. The merits of driving to school (if she can wangle the family car) are considerably lessened when one has to park at 43rd & Pine.

SOMEWHERE NOWHERE

Somewhere in the University exists the Commuter Activities Board. Ostensibly, it has an office in the basement of Irvine. Just try to find it. We managed to find out the names of last year's chairman, a senior man and a junior coed. It was difficult to reach the man, because being a commuter, he could only be reached at home in the evening, and we just never got through. The girl, incidentally, moved into her sorority house this year. The CAB has had a few meetings, but with limited publicity, the normal commuter finds out about the meeting two hours after it has been held.

NEED MESSAGE DESK

Since a negligible social life is one of the basic problems, perhaps something can be done to help. The CAB could establish a commuter message desk in Hill Hall, with a telephone extension and a message box for each commuter. In addition to helping her social life, this could also help the commuter contact her fellow sufferers, and perhaps get a ride home. The commuters would be glad to staff the desk, one is sure.

As long as there is not enough housing, however, the commuter will still be faced with many problems. No amount of effort by the CAB can equalize the commuter's status with the advantages of residency. The proposal currently before the CRO which would allow junior women to obtain apartments may be a way out. The places the juniors would vacate would most probably allow any freshman who wanted to live in the dorms.

^ MEN! Get with

the COOL ONE!

IKOST LIA\E •» scenes.

Rutman said he thinks there are about six secret research projects still being carried on at the University. He is awaiting a report from the faculty on Im- plementing Research Policy at the first Senate meeting next month to see what state secret research is in at the University.

The luxurious new after shave with the irresistible fragrance of tropical limes.

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PAGE FIVE THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1967

Campus events ■ ;.-■.■.-•.-.;. ;.- ■

OFFICIAL NOTICES ALL ACTIVITIES: All activ-

ities that have not yet registered in 117 Logan Hall should do so immediately.

OFFICE OF FELLOWSHIP AND STUDY PROGRAMS ABROAD: Mr. Richard T. John- son of Harvard University's Graduate School of Business Ad- ministration will be on campus Thursday and Friday, October 12 and 13, from 9:30 AM. to 4:3Q P.M. to interview students planning graduate study in busi- ness administration. For ap- pointment call Office of Fellow- ship Information and Study Programs Abroad, ext. 8348.

CAMPUS AGENDA

CATACOMBS: Legend of Rudolph Valentino will be shown tonight at 10. Enter via alley off 36th St. near Locust Walk.

FALL TRACK CLASSIC: The second annual fall track classic will be held this Sat., Oct. 14, at Franklin Field at 1:30 P.M. Fraternities and dorm groups are encouraged to participate. Tro- phies will be awarded.

HILLEL: Break the fast on Yom Kippur Eve., Sat. Register at Hillel by Wednesday.

HILLEL: Folk Dancing. All welcome. Dances will be taught Wed. 6:30 P.M. - 8 PJvl.

ISA: International Coffee Hour. West Lounge, Houston Hall. 4-6 P.M. Wed., Oct. 11. Filipino Coffee Hour.

NATIONALITY NIGHT: INDIAN DINNER: Sat., Oct. 14. 5:30 P.M.ChristianAssoc.Saree fashion show. International stu- dents invite your host families. Tickets at Houston Hall Ticket Service and Office oi Interna- tional Services, 3826 Locust.

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 lMi $*-••«

M«n*ay Hmvfh Th«ra«ay—• AM to f tM. FrMay «MI Smtvntm-f—9 AM. to S FJA.

PANHEL ASSOC: Rush: Pick up bids in Logan Hall 117, Oct. 10 A-E: 5:30 PJvU F-K: 5:50 P.M.; L-R: 6:10 P.M.; S-Z: 6:30 P.M.

PENN PLAYERS: Announces acting classes directed by Mrs. George Gerbner beginning today at 11 A.M. on the stage in Irvine, Open to all interested.

POLO CLUB: Any people with previous playing experience please call EV 2-4914 if desirous of playing this fall. Next game at Cornell Oct. 14.

1968 RECORD: To all Campus Organizations Presidents of campus activities call EV 2-4561 today to have your group's pic- tures taken for the 1968 Record.

ROMANCE LANGUAGE CLUB: Invites you to join us for lunch and speak French, Spanish or Italian today and every Tues* and Wed. 11:30-1:30 in Hill Hall.

RUSSIAN LUNCH: Russian Lunch in Hill Hall Red Room today 12-1 PJvl. All Russian speaking members of University are invit- ed to come.

SQUASH: Meeting for all Freshmen interested in playing on the Squash team. Today, 5 PJvl., Ringe Squash Courts.

STUDENT TUTOR SOCIETY: Free tutoring available in most subjects. Tutors assigned daily, Mon.-Fri. 1-2 PJvl. Rm. 206 College Hall.

ACTIVITY NOTICES

ALPHA KAPPA PSt Alpha Kappa Psi meeting on Thursday, Oct. 12 at 7:45 PJvl. in the Frank-

lin Room of HH. There will be a speaker from the Pa. RR.

BALALAIKA ORCHESTRA: Rehearsal today, 11 AJvl., Hous- ton Hall Rehearsal Room for all members.

BRIDGE CLUB: Game this Wed. in the West Lounge of Hous- ton Hall at 7:00 PJvl.

CAMPUS CHEST: Sophomore and junior men and women heel Campus Chest tomorrow, Oct. 11, 8 P.M., Smith and Penrujnan Room, Houston Hall. Refresh- ments.

C JJC. — TJH.E£Ji.: Orienta- tion meeting tonight at 8:00 PJvl. in Room #25, basement of Irvine Auditorium for tutors unable to attend previous orientation.

HILLEL: Freshman Commit- tee will meet 11 AJvl., Tues.; all freshmen invited.

HILLEL: Hillel Lecture Series Evaluation and Planning Session Tues., 4 PJvl.A11 invited.

IAA EDUCATION COMMIT- TEE: Meeting today at 11 AJvl. in the Christian Association.

JUDO CLUB: All interested in forming meet in Room 205, Hut- chinson Gym, 3:30 PJvl. tomor- row.

KARATE CLUB: First train- ing session of U of P Karate Club Wed. at 5:00 PJvl. at Phila. Karate Club, 222 S. 45th.

PENN CINEMA: New mem- bers interested in being checked out a camera should meet outside the Friar's Room, Houston Hall, at 3 PJvl. today.

Piano Accompanist Needed

Penn Players needs a rehear- sal accompanist for Bruce Montgomery's new musical, "Why Me?"

Call Steve Goff 594-7570

ISPECIAL RESERVED ICELANDIC FLIGHTS May 16 or 23 return Aug. 24 or 29

$354.25 and $389.50

Make it YOUR kind of summer PUT OUR EXPERIENCE TO WORK FOR YOU. WE SPEC- IALIZE IN BUDGET TRAVEL. GET THE MOST FROM YOUR TIME AND MONEY BY LETTING US ARRANGE:

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HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL VISITOR Mr. Richard T. Johnson, a member of the Admissions Board of the Harvard Graduate School of

Business Administration, will visit University of Pennsylvania on Thursday and Friday, October 12 and 13 to talk to students interested in business as a career of excitement and creative oDDor- tunity. Kt^

Requirements for admission to the two-year course, leading to a degree of Master in Business Administration (MBA), include a college degree in any field of concentration, a standing in at least the top third of the class, and a record of progressive achievement in campus activities, business, the military, or elsewhere.

The MBA Program at the Harvard Business School is based on the experience-oriented case method, pioneered at the Harvard Business School to develop the practical, analytical, and decision- making capacities that are the key to managerial effectiveness.

For outstanding students in each first-year class (of roughly 690) there are 60 fellowships avail- able. Approximately, 40 per cent of the Harvard Business School student body also makes use of the Deferred Payment or Loan Program which enables all students admitted to the Harvard MBA Program to attend even though their sources of funds are inadequate.

Seniors, or others, wishing to talk to Mr. Johnson should contact the Placement Office for an appointment.

PAGE SIX THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1967

Hoffman to read poems Poet Daniel Hoffman, professor of English at the University, will

kick off the 1967-1968 Leon Lecture Series here, Oct. 17, with a reading of his recent works.

The free lecture is set for 11 A .M. in Room 200, College Hall. Hoffman, who has taught here two years, is the author of eight books including his collection of poems, The City of Satisfactions. Last May he was awarded $2,500 by the National Institute of Arts and __^_—1_________^________ Letters in recognition of his

PENN COMMENT: Meeting for all staff members and heel- ers on Tuesday, Oct. 10, at 7:00 P.M. at Bennett Hall, 4th fl.

PENN LIT REVIEW: The Penn Lit Review will meet at 7 P.M. Tuesday at 4019 Locust St., 3rd fl. apt. of Freeman Zausner.

PUNCHBOWL: Important meeting for all members and heelers, Wed. Oct. 12 in Houston Hall. All copy for the Home- coming issue is due at that time.

RECORD: Mandatory meeting for all staff members and heel- ers today at 4 P.M. in the RECORD office.

ROMANCE LANGUAGE: Cordially invites all of its mem- bers to a party in Bennett Hall Lounge tonight at 8 P.M. Ad- mission will be by membership card only but new members can join at the door.

SOCIETY FOR THE AD- VANCEMENT OF MANAGE- MENT: Important meeting for SAM members and others in- terested in joining. Thurs., Oct. 10, Penniman Room.

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work. He was winner of the Library Award of Philadelphia in 1964.

Other books of bis include A Little Gests 1960) and An Armada of Thirty Whales, which was Poet W.H. Auden's choice for the Yale Series of Younger Poets Awajpd in 1954.

His most recent scholarly work is Barbarous Knowledge. Published this year, it is a study of Poets W.B. Yeats, Robert Graves, and Edwin Muir.

Smalls (Continued from page 2)

a problem which the Consumer Party would attempt to solve. Because of the projected expan- sion of the University over a wide area, insurance policies have been canceled and, there- fore, mortgages, too, become unattainable, according to Smalls. "Slums are being de- veloped in this area because of the University's gross unconcern for the poor of the community.*'

More specifically, Smalls ad- vocates the establishment of a bank which will serve as a " credit resource" in enabling the poor of the city to finance loans so that they can own their own homes and thereby "learn the pride of home ownership." He feels that this would do much to improve the general neighborhoods them- selves. VAST, VARIED EXP. EDITING, TYPING: Books, Articles, Theses, Term Papers. IBM. Rush Jobs. Joan. EV 7-0295. 3218

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Oct. 21 sees effort to disrupt war Ca"»di"n "p!: ^S^T* WASHINGTON (CPS) — Op-

ponents of U.S. policy in Viet Nam are shifting their tactics from protests and demonstra- tions to actual attempts to dis- rupt the war effort.

The new tactics will be tested on October 21 when thousands of people will gather in Washing- ton for a protest which, for some of them, will include an attempt to "sit down inside the Pentagon and stop it from working."

Dave Dellinger, chairman of the National Mobilization to End the War in Viet Nam, emphasizes that there will be three parts to the October 21 demonstration: a march, a rally, and "an oppor- tunity for civil disobedience."

He says the Mobilization is a broadly based organization with 100 groups supporting it and the October 21 protest is intended to provide ways of protest both for those who wish to march and those who, in Dellinger's words, "want to do more than dissent, who want to try to stop the war."

Although in the past a few people have employed such tac- tics as lying down in front of troop trains and refusing to serve in the Army, mass demonstra- tions, such as those organized by the Mobilization on April 15 in San Francisco and New York, have only included marches and rallies with numerous speakers. There has been no direct action against the war.

On October 21 there will actually be two marches, one from the Lincoln Memorial and the other from the Washington Monument. The two groups will converge on the south parking lot of the Pentagon, where there will be a mass rally.

Jerry Rubin, the full time or- ganizer of the demonstration, says if there are more than 200,000 people, there may be two or three rallies. No one in the Mobilization leadership has any idea of how many people will be coming. The group has made arrangements for 1,000 buses to bring people down from New York City to the demonstration, however.

Dellinger says the list of speakers for the rally is not yet complete.

According to Rubin, hippie communities from New York, San

Francisco, and possibly Wash- ington will hold a religious cere- mony in which they will form a circle around the Pentagon to drive out the evil, which, according to some Indian religions, resides in five-sided structures.

After the rally, those who wish to will hold a sit-in at the doors of the Pentagon. The object will be to stop people from entering the building. Both Dellinger and Rubin say that anyone who wishes to leave the building will be welcome to do so.

Rubin says the sit-in will be both "symbolic and disruptive." The Mobilization doesn't really expect to shut down the Penta- gon, where as many as 10,000 people will be working that Saturday. "The Movement hasn't yet reached the stage where it can do that," says Rubin, but Del- linger adds, "We hope people will at least have to step over our bodies to get into the build- ing."

Father Richard McSorley, a theology professor at George- town University, says the policy of the Mobilization Committee is non-violence "in the Ghandhian sense. If we are hit we will not retaliate. We will not break police lines." But Mobilization leaders admit that they can't guarantee against the actions of individuals.

"If there is a problem of vio- lence on October 21 it will be caused by the police," Dellinger says.

The committee leaders say they have reason to fear police attacks. They point to Sept. 20, when demonstrators from Women Strike for Peace were attacked with clubs by police because more than 100 were attempting to picket in front of the White House. A recent rule limits the number to 100.

And in another recent case two young men who had been pro- testing the draft with a sit-in in front of the Selective Service headquarters in Washington- Rodney Robinson of Redwood City, California, and Matthew Clark of Clarkesburg, Virginia- said they were pushed into corners and handled very rough- ly by police, even though they

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said they neither resisted nor co-operated with their arrest.

At a press conference last week several reporters suggest- ed that*by sitting in at the Penta- gon the demonstrators will be inciting violence. "There is no reason to club people who are sitting in non-violently," replied Mrs. Donna Allen, co-chairman of the Washington Mobilization Committee. "They can be ar- rested peacefully."

But Dellinger predicts that "even the police will be orderly and non-violent on October 21 because it will be political sui- cide for the Johnson Administra- tion" if they aren't.

Adds Dagmar Wilson, leader of Women Strike for Peace and a recent visitor to North Viet Nam: "One who has seen the despera- tion of women who are helpless to protect their children from violence from the skies can't be very scared of billy clubs and bruises."

Dellinger, who just returned from a meeting with North Viet- namese and members of the National Liberation Front, also fears other tactics by the Ad- ministration, which he says must either pay attention to growing opposition to the war or attempt to suppress or evade it. He points to new ordinances "against free speech," such as the one limit- ing the number of pickets in front of the White House and another, under consideration in Congress, which would strictly limit pro- tests on Capitol Hill.

On October 21, the same day the National Mobilization to End the War in Viet Nam hopes to have the largest anti-war rally ever, a group called the Com- mittee for a Responsible Patrio- tism is co-ordinating a series of local demonstrations "to support the men and women of our armed forces, especially those fighting in Viet Nam."

OTTAWA, Canada (CUP- CPS) - The Royal Canadian Mounted Police last week en- tered the apartment of an un- derground press editor in search of marijuana and con- fiscated the editor's personnal correspondence as Well "Ss photo and editorial copy from his paper, the Canadian Free Press.

The editor, Tony Seed, said the RCMP action was a serious breach of civil liberties.

Jack Neelin, another resi- dent of the apartment said he overheard one of the RCMP officers say, "Make sure you

Ivy meet may host ■ Sisters'

Plans for a conference of Ivy League student government presidents at the University in February are likely to include the "Seven Sister" schools, UPSG President Alexius Conroy has announced.

The aim of the meeting will be "to find out where other groups stand," Conroy explain- ed.

Conroy said plans are "very tentative." However, he hopes to have discussions and seminars which center on such questions as "educational reforms: How do students do it?"

Conroy noted mat he spoke to Bryn Mawr (Pa.) College stu- dent government officials con- cerning joint sponsorship by that school and the University.

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get the pictures," as they searched through the news- paper's files. Seed said the pictures showed the RCMP making an arrest on the Sparks Street Mall, a meeting place for hippies.

The police did not have a list of items taken from the apart- ment and none of them have returned.

Seed was arrested on a narcotics charge. The evidence for the charge was a hooka pipe alleged to contain mari- juana. Seed says the pipe con- tained only tobacco and aspirin, a mixture he had heard caused "highness."

"God won't let the UN succeed as long as we allow sex in movies and television. I've written my congressman about this."

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or a label? If you're looking for

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right places. And is styled to last.

The label on this short- sleeved button-down says "Cum Laude" Oxford. It tells you the shirt is Perma-lron so it won't wrinkle,

"Sanforized-Plus" and tapered. It comes in canary, green, purple, orange and white. For $7.00.

The good things you're looking for in a shirt are all on the label. And the best shirts have the best labels. They're ours. Arrow's.

PAGE SEVEN THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1967

»

The Daily Sports

PAGE EIGHT TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1967

From the press box

Ground game beats the Bruins

Dunn, Chwastyk provide needed Penn grid depth

Penn, all of a sudden, boasts a ground game that bears watching by the rest of the Ivy League.

Last year the Quakers had Cabot Knowlton at tailback and Gerry Santini at fullback, but the former was hampered by a set of bruised ribs and the latter played with a broken hand. This season the pair is healthy, to the detriment of Penn's first two grid oppo- nents and, hopefully, to future foes as well.

The Brown contest established Santini as a runner to be re- spected by Ancient Eight defenders. The Bruins were strongest in their rush defense; Tom Whidden and Jerry Batty are two of the league's finest linebackers. They were not unaware of Santini*s potential. Brown coach Len Jardine admitted, "After seeing films of the Peim-Lehigh game, I knew we had to key on Santini as well as Knowlton."

What makes Santini's performance so impressive is the fact that Brown was ready for the Penn fullback and nonetheless was unable to stop him. Santini carried 18 times for 67 yards, an average of nearly four yards per carry.

Knowlton also devastated Brown's defense, but he had one advantage Santini lacked — Santini as a blocker. On Penn's first two touchdowns, both right side pitches to Knowlton, Santini threw awesome blocks for his tailback, literally hurling himself into the path of Brown's hapless cornerback. And it was Santini, as well as Penn's refortified offensive line, who provided excellent protection for quarterback Bill Creeden.

Although his specialty still is the pitchout, Knowlton has rushed up the middle and off tackle far more this year than in 1966. Saturday he used his diversity of maneuvers to keep Brown's defense guessing; as a result the agile tailback garnered 94 yards on his 21 ground attempts.

There was a reason why Bob Odell went to his ground game 51 times. "When your passing is off, you have to go more often to the ground," said Penn's skipper after the game.

The Red and Blue aerial attack was indeed way off its expected pace. Brown mentor Jardine didn't realize it after the clash; he thought Creeden's passing had hurt him the most. But Penn's talented quarterback completed only six of 20 passes after an explosive first quarter and it was for this reason that Odell chose to exploit his ground attack.

Fortunately for Penn, Creeden's off-day was not costly; Brown's pass defense left much to be desired. Creeden, who suffered from a painful hip pointer in the second half, was overthrowing his re- ceivers, yet only one pass was intercepted. And the receivers Creeden did hit were usually unimpeded by the Bruin secondary.

The Red and Blue defensive fortunes were likewise dually determined — by a fine performance from Penn's line and line- backers coupled with a totally impotent Brown aerial attack.

The defensive front eight already seems an improvement over last year's unit. Even without John Martinowich, the defenders performed admirably in containing Bruin runners Dick Filak and Steve Wormith. Only on Tom Winner's touchdown punt return and on Wormith's 46 yard first quarter jaunt did Penn's defense appear guilty of sloppy football. And Mike Chwastyk turned in an outstanding effort at Martinowich's defensive end position, throwing Bruin quarterbacks for losses on several occasions.

Penn's second quarter goal line stand highlighted the contest. The defense sparkled in preventing a seemingly inevitable Brown touchdown at the one yard line.

The Quaker secondary need not have taken the field at all. Brown quarterbacks Mike Maznicki and Gene DuBay proved totally incapable as throwers and the Quakers were never in clanger of a Brown aerial bombardment. Maznicki and end Greg Kontos put together one impressive 48 yard pass play, but the men from Providence amassed only 52 aerial yards on their five other com- pletions.

Penn's fortunes at Dartmouth this weekend will hinge on Cree- den's ability to come through with the passing performance of which he is capable. The Indians field the finest team in the Ivy League and they will not be beaten nor even approached with ano- ther modest aerial effort.

Creeden is due for a big game Saturday, and Dartmouth, as much as any team in the conference, is aware of his abilities. Last November 19 Creeden completed 20 passes for 317 yards at Frank- lin Field, as the Quakers were defeated by the Big Green, 40-21.

No one objectively can pick the Red and Blue to win, but the possibility of victory exists nonetheless. The Quakers are rela- tively healthy; only Martinowich and John McGraw will miss Satur- day's game, and their replacements, Chwastyk and Wayne Ander- son both played extremely well against Brown.

Even though Penn's secondary was not challenged last week- end, the defense as a whole proved remarkably durable, certainly better than a year ago. The Quaker offensive line of Anderson, Ben Mortensen, George Joseph, Chris Lambertson, and Tom Ham- lin protected Creeden well and opened holes for Penn's runners; it too has improved in a year's time.

Knowlton and Santini possess unquestionable merit as rushers, Denny Blake and Ken Dunn have proven pleasant suprises as re- ceivers, while Rick Owens and George Burrell should be fit enough this weekend to make the substantial^contributions expected of them.

This is not a bad Penn football team, but the two easy victories over Lehigh and Brown don't reflect the unit's fullpotential.lt is up to Creeden to prove once again that he is the best passer in the League and one of the finest in the nation. If he decides to prove it this Saturday, Dartmouth will have quite a bit of trouble holding

off the Quaker gridders.

By NORMAN ROOS

George Burrell needed his fourth-quarter touchdown against Brown last Saturday far more than Penn did.

The junior speedster, who missed most of the pre-season practice with a hamstring injury, had fallen out of the secure start- ing spot which he held as wing- back last season and needed something to bolster his image and loosen him up.

The source of Burrell's trou- bles is fellow junior, Ken Dunn, who has been the starting wing- back for the first two games oi the '67 season.

Commenting on the wingback situation, Penn football coach Bob Odell said, "Ken Dunn has been doing a fine job; as long as he keeps it up, Burrell will have to fight to get back into the starting lineup."

Odell attributed Dunn's new- found success to attitude and ded- ication. "Ken came back to play, this year. He came to practice both mentally and physically pre- pared. Dunn and Chris Peterson have to be the two most improv- ed players on the team," Odell added.

The healthy competition over the wingback spot has spread to other positions where once sure- starters have been so adequately replaced that their starting status has been seriously challenged.

Sophomore defensemanMich- ael Chwastyk, who spilled the Bruins signal-caller for a sub- stantial loss last weekend, has been filling in for injured end John Martinowich so well that, as coach Odell put it, "Martin- owich is going to get better a lot

ooner, I think." But Dunn and Chwastyk are

actually only the most promin- ent members of a group of un- heralded footballers that has made an unanticipated contribu- tion —— depth — to the Penn squad this year.

When asked just how much the depth situation has improved,

Team stats Penn Brown

First Downs 20 8 Rushing Yardage (net) 197 154 Passing Yardage 184 100 Passes (comp./att.) 14/34 6/25 Passes Intercepted by 5 1 Yards Penalized 5-35 6-73

(Photo by KENNETH KAPLAN) CABOT KNOWLTON drives for extra yardage against Brown de-

fense in Saturday's 28-7 victory over the Bruins. Knowlton gained 94 yards in 21 carries to lead all Quaker rushers.

Odell remarked, "We're not deep, but our depth is much im- proved over last year. The qual- ity doesn't drop off as fast."

Odell went on to explain that by juggling the personnel at vari- ous positions, good depth has been attained in certain areas.

The juggling tactic shave been most apparent in the offensive backf ield and defensive line. Bur- rell and Jim McFillin have been seeing action at both the wing- back and tailback spots while Chwastyk, originally a tackle, has been shining as a defensive end.

Wayne Anderson, a senior tackle, did "an outstanding job of replacing injured guard John McGraw against Brown," noted Odell. And Pete Wisniewski has even strayed from the backf ield to relieve RickOwens at split end.

The one backfield position where depth remains an unmea- sured quantity is the quarterback spot. Although Bill Creeden sustained a bruised hip during the Brown game and will miss some practice, it appears that he will be well enough to start at Dartmouth next weekend.

RUSHING

Player Atts. Yds. Knowlton 21 94 Santini 18 67 Creeden 6 19 McFillin 4 8 Barudin 2

PASSING 9

Player Atts. Comp. Yds. Creeden 33 14 184 Barudin 1 0

RECEIVING 0

Player No. Yds. TD Dunn 3 31 0 Owens 3 30 0 Burrell 3 26 1 Knowlton 2 59 0 Blake 2 21 0 Santini 1 17 0

Defense leads lightweights as Quakers rout Columbia, 33-0

By BART STICHMAN

If Penn's opening33-0victory over Columbia is a valid indication of the lightweight foot- ball squad's strength, then the Quakers are indeed an improved ball club.

In their final game of last year, the Red and Blue soundly defeated the same Lion eleven, 20-6, but Friday's meeting at River Field was a complete anni- hilation of Columbia.

The Penn defense, led by John Hogue, A11-league lightweights Harry Van Sickle and Ed Gallag- her, held its New York opponents to a mere 32 yards in total of- fense. So stingy were the Quaker defenders that they yielded just five first downs and didn't allow a pass completion until the game was securely won, late in the fourth quarter.

Besides shutting off Colum- bia's offense, the defensive unit constantly gave the Red and Blue possession of the ball in good field position, especially in the

second half. Early in the third quarter, the

Lion punter was tackled on his

own seven after a bad hike. The Quaker offense quickly turned this into a touchdown with quar- terback Jack Welsh sneaking over from the one.

Two plays after the subse- quent kick-off, Penn's Charlie Linn picked off a Lion aerial and scampered 45 yards down the sidelines unmolested for his third TD.

The Quaker defense had a hand in the final score of the day when it gave the ball to the offense on downs at the Columbia 32. After a pass interference call, Penn's Jim Samuels took it over from the one, making it 33-0.

In the first half, however, when Penn built up a 14-0 ad- vantage, the offense did all the work for the two touchdowns. Behind the running of Linn and Samuels, the Quakers moved up- field 59 yards the first time they had the ball.

Linn covered the final seven- teen yards, and when the PAT was good, Penn led 7-0.

The second drive was high- lighted by Welsh's daring fourth down run after faking a punt with twelve yards to go.

Barely making the needed yardage, the Penn signal-caller, engineering the Red and Blue from their new I-formation, then mixed his ground plays well.Linn again bucked across the goal line with the final yardage, just be- fore halftime.

The Quakers gained almost all their yardage on the ground, with Linn and Samuels evenly splitting 160 yards. Captain and fullback Frank Anthony gave the pair blocking assistance through- out the game.

Specter (Continued from page 1)

age of skilled manpower in Phila- delphia. The D.A. claimed that the increased job training would be a start toward solving other ghetto problems.

Speaking about elementary education, the GOP candidate set smaller classes and more classrooms as the goals of his administration. He also criti- cized the physical facilities of the city school system, calling some "firetraps."