8
' ' STUDENTS, WITH DUFFLE- BAGS and sleeping gear in tow, board a bus bound (or Washing- ton at 30th Street Station. The bus was in the capital in time for its occupants to participate in the March against Death, which began at about 6 P.M. from Arlington National Cem- entery. Washington: 'march against death' By JONATHAN B. TALMADGE and DON HOROWITZ Special to the DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN WASHINGTON--At 8:40 PJvl. last night the first placard bearing the name of a dead American soldier was placed in one of 12 pine coffins opposite the Capitol building, as thousands of others to follow stretched back five miles to Arlington National Cemetery. The "march against death" began shortly after dusk yesterday as the initial group of the expected 45,000 marchers set out from the cemetery across the Potomic River from a security-edgy Washington. Two and a half hours later, the head of the line of single-file marchers reached the Capitol. The 40-hour "march against BRUCE DICt death" marked the start of the three- day antiwar demonstrations here. Each of the candle-bearing marchers is carrying either the name of an American war dead or a Vietnamese city destroyed during the war. The last marcher in the single-file, orderly procession, which goes past the White House, around Pennsylvania Avenue and ends at the statue of Ulysses S. Grant facing the Capitol, is expected to place the final placard in a coffin at 9:15 Saturday morning. The marchers continued solemnly down Pennsylvania Avenue directed by a few District of Columbia Dolice and many of their own parade marshalls. Some of the candles lit at Arling- ton had blown out. Others were shielded from the November wind by antiwar pamphlets carried by the protesters. Coffee venders set up business on the route from the cemetery to the White House. Salesmen peddled peace buttons at street intersections. The marshals trained by the anti- war organizers rode motorcycles and kept entreating the marchers to keep up the pace as they neared the White House. Police reported no arrests along the route of the march. But, in a related event, over 200 (Continued on page 3) Vol. LXXXV No. 80 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Copyright 1969 The Daily Pennsylvanian Friday, November 14, 1969 Yale's building takeover divides faculty members YALE DAILY NEWS TWO WEEKS ago Yale undergraduates occupied the university's personnel offices, trapping four Yale officials in the building. The students claim that Yale fired a biack employee, and that the action is an example of the university's 'institutional racism. By RICHARD FUCHS Special to THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN NEW HAVEN—Two weeks after Yale's first major building takeover, the Yale College Faculty engaged yesterday in heated, secret debate concerning policy towards future oc- cupations. The sharply-divided faculty failed to take action regarding the '' scenario'' for dealing with takeovers developed last spring by Yale Presi- dent Kingman Brewster, Jr. The Yale provost, acting under Brewster's scenario, had suspended, on Nov. 3, 47 stud r :.ts who partici- pated in the building takeover. The undergraduates were suspended following an occupation of the Yale personnel offices in Wright Hall during which four uni- versity officials were barred from leaving. A week later, the students' penalty was commuted to a year's disciplinary probation by the Executive Committee of Yale College, a group comprising student, faculty and administration members. The Yale College faculty met Tuesday and yesterday to consider the Executive Committee's decision. According to Yale College Dean, Georges May, "the committee does not have to receive a ratifying vote, but it is responsible to the faculty." The Faculty seemed sharply divided between a minority of "hard- liners" who felt the Executive Com- mittee had been too lenient, and a sizable majority who felt that the de- cision was at least acceptable. One faculty source said a proposal was brought before the faculty yester- day for a "no confidence" vote against the Executive Committee. Such a motion is given little chance of passing. The occupation and detention grew out of an SDS-led protest over the alleged firing of Mrs. Celia Williams, a black waitress in the dining hall of Jonathan Edwards College at Yale. Mrs. Williams, a former welfare (Continued on page 5) TWO AMERICANS became the first men to walk on the moon in July as the nation watched on television. Here one of the lunar pair views a flag flying by artifical support in the moon s almost nonexistant atmosphere. Today, three men are expected to blast off atop a Saturn 5 rocket in an attempt to repeat the feat of a lunar walk. U.S. to try today for history's 2nd moon landing By United Press International Three American astronauts are scheduled to blast off at 11:22 this morning on man's second mission to the ancient surface of the moon. Earlier this week, Apollo 12 was almost postponed for a month by a faulty liquid hydro- gen tank, but technicians work- ing around the clock managed to replace it in time for the count-down to continue. "At this time, conditions are all go," mission director Chester Lee said in an after- noon briefing yesterday. Meanwhile, astronauts Charles "Pete" Conrad, Rich- ard F. Gordon and Alan L. Bean did some last-minute tuning for their 10-day, 350-million-mile expedition by zipping high over the moonport in sharp-nosed T-38 jet trainers. With the new hydrogen tank installed and filled with frigid liquid hydrogen fuel for the ship's electric generators, everything looked good for an on-time launch. If the three navy commanders are unable to get off by 3:50 P.M. today, they will be grounded until Dec. 14. Originally, Apollo 12 was scheduled to go off Sunday if today's blast didn't work out. But changing the date would mean changing the landing site, because of the movements of the earth and moon. Project officials decided Wednesday that Conrad and Bean -- the two landing pilots -- were not trained well enough to attempt a pinpoint landing on the alternate site. A pinpoint landing would be considered to be within a half-mile of a given point. Apollo 11' s pilots were four miles off target in July. "Although they were prob- ably the best trained crew for a lunar flight thus far, their attention has been mainly plac- ed on landing site 7," a space agency spokesman said. That site is the target for a takeoff today, and it would put the pilots within walking distance of a robot surveyor spacecraft. Achieving the pinpoint land- ing is one of the prime objec- tives of the Apolio 12 mission. Mission planners want to prove the moonship is capable of such accurate landings before targeting Apollo 13 toward a harder-to-reach and more interesting site in March. If the launch is on time, the 39-year-o'd Conrad and his crew will saving once around (Continued on page 6) \

Yale's building takeover divides faculty members

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Yale's building takeover divides faculty members

' ' •

STUDENTS, WITH DUFFLE- BAGS and sleeping gear in tow, board a bus bound (or Washing-

ton at 30th Street Station. The bus was in the capital in time for its occupants to participate

in the March against Death, which began at about 6 P.M. from Arlington National Cem- entery.

Washington: 'march against death'

By JONATHAN B. TALMADGE and DON HOROWITZ

Special to the DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN

WASHINGTON--At 8:40 PJvl. last night the first placard bearing the name of a dead American soldier was placed in one of 12 pine coffins opposite the Capitol building, as thousands of others to follow stretched back five miles to Arlington National Cemetery.

The "march against death" began shortly after dusk yesterday as the initial group of the expected 45,000 marchers set out from the cemetery across the Potomic River from a security-edgy Washington. Two and a half hours later, the head of the line of single-file marchers reached the Capitol.

The 40-hour "march against

BRUCE DICt

death" marked the start of the three- day antiwar demonstrations here. Each of the candle-bearing marchers is carrying either the name of an American war dead or a Vietnamese city destroyed during the war. The last marcher in the single-file, orderly procession, which goes past the White House, around Pennsylvania Avenue and ends at the statue of Ulysses S. Grant facing the Capitol, is expected to place the final placard in a coffin at 9:15 Saturday morning.

The marchers continued solemnly down Pennsylvania Avenue directed by a few District of Columbia Dolice and many of their own parade marshalls.

Some of the candles lit at Arling- ton had blown out. Others were shielded from the November wind by antiwar pamphlets carried by the protesters.

Coffee venders set up business on the route from the cemetery to the White House. Salesmen peddled peace buttons at street intersections.

The marshals trained by the anti- war organizers rode motorcycles and kept entreating the marchers to keep up the pace as they neared the White House.

Police reported no arrests along the route of the march.

But, in a related event, over 200 (Continued on page 3)

Vol. LXXXV No. 80 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Copyright 1969 The Daily Pennsylvanian Friday, November 14, 1969

Yale's building takeover divides faculty members

YALE DAILY NEWS

TWO WEEKS ago Yale undergraduates occupied the university's personnel offices, trapping four Yale officials in the building. The students claim that Yale fired a biack employee, and that the action is an example of the university's 'institutional racism.

By RICHARD FUCHS

Special to THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN

NEW HAVEN—Two weeks after Yale's first major building takeover, the Yale College Faculty engaged yesterday in heated, secret debate concerning policy towards future oc- cupations.

The sharply-divided faculty failed to take action regarding the '' scenario'' for dealing with takeovers developed last spring by Yale Presi- dent Kingman Brewster, Jr.

The Yale provost, acting under Brewster's scenario, had suspended, on Nov. 3, 47 studr:.ts who partici- pated in the building takeover.

The undergraduates were suspended following an occupation of the Yale personnel offices in Wright Hall during which four uni- versity officials were barred from leaving.

A week later, the students' penalty was commuted to a year's disciplinary probation by the Executive Committee of Yale College, a group comprising

student, faculty and administration members.

The Yale College faculty met Tuesday and yesterday to consider the Executive Committee's decision.

According to Yale College Dean, Georges May, "the committee does not have to receive a ratifying vote, but it is responsible to the faculty."

The Faculty seemed sharply divided between a minority of "hard- liners" who felt the Executive Com- mittee had been too lenient, and a sizable majority who felt that the de- cision was at least acceptable.

One faculty source said a proposal was brought before the faculty yester- day for a "no confidence" vote against the Executive Committee. Such a motion is given little chance of passing.

The occupation and detention grew out of an SDS-led protest over the alleged firing of Mrs. Celia Williams, a black waitress in the dining hall of Jonathan Edwards College at Yale.

Mrs. Williams, a former welfare (Continued on page 5)

TWO AMERICANS became the first men to walk on the moon in July as the nation watched on television. Here one of the lunar pair views a flag flying by artifical support in the moon s almost nonexistant atmosphere. Today, three men are expected

to blast off atop a Saturn 5 rocket in an attempt to repeat the feat of a lunar walk.

U.S. to try today for history's 2nd moon landing By United Press International

Three American astronauts are scheduled to blast off at 11:22 this morning on man's second mission to the ancient surface of the moon.

Earlier this week, Apollo 12 was almost postponed for a month by a faulty liquid hydro-

gen tank, but technicians work- ing around the clock managed to replace it in time for the count-down to continue.

"At this time, conditions are all go," mission director Chester Lee said in an after- noon briefing yesterday.

Meanwhile, astronauts Charles "Pete" Conrad, Rich- ard F. Gordon and Alan L. Bean

did some last-minute tuning for their 10-day, 350-million-mile expedition by zipping high over the moonport in sharp-nosed T-38 jet trainers.

With the new hydrogen tank installed and filled with frigid liquid hydrogen fuel for the ship's electric generators, everything looked good for an on-time launch. If the three

navy commanders are unable to get off by 3:50 P.M. today, they will be grounded until Dec. 14.

Originally, Apollo 12 was scheduled to go off Sunday if today's blast didn't work out. But changing the date would mean changing the landing site, because of the movements of the earth and moon.

Project officials decided Wednesday that Conrad and Bean -- the two landing pilots -- were not trained well enough to attempt a pinpoint landing on the alternate site. A pinpoint landing would be considered to be within a half-mile of a given point. Apollo 11' s pilots were four miles off target in July.

"Although they were prob-

ably the best trained crew for a lunar flight thus far, their attention has been mainly plac- ed on landing site 7," a space agency spokesman said. That site is the target for a takeoff today, and it would put the pilots within walking distance of a robot surveyor spacecraft.

Achieving the pinpoint land- ing is one of the prime objec-

tives of the Apolio 12 mission. Mission planners want to prove the moonship is capable of such accurate landings before targeting Apollo 13 toward a harder-to-reach and more interesting site in March.

If the launch is on time, the 39-year-o'd Conrad and his crew will saving once around

(Continued on page 6)

\

Page 2: Yale's building takeover divides faculty members

Page 2 The Daily Pennsylvanian Friday, November 14, 1969

11/14/69

Local

Nixon visits House and Senate; thanks war policy supporters

HISTORY OF SCIENCE DEPT. OFFERS UNDERGRADUATE COURSE

The history of science department is offering its first course on the under- graduate level. The course, which requires no prerequisites, will deal with the historical development of science from the French Revolution to the present. The physical, social, and life sciences will all be included. Russell McCorm- mach will be the instructor for the course which will meet Tuesday and Thurs- day at 11 A.M. plus a third hour to be arranged in seminar DPL 4-3 of the Van Pelt Library. Students may now pre-register for the course which will be on the 200 level.

By United Press International WASHINGTON — With thousands

of war protesters gathering for a weekend of demonstrations, Pres- ident Nixon paid a surprise visit to Capitol Hill yesterday and thanked supporters in both houses of Con- gress for backing his Vietnam policy.

"I believe we will achieve a just a just peace in Vietnam," Nixon told the House. "I cannot tell you the time or date. I do know this:

"When the peace comes it will

come because of the support we have received not just from Republicans and Democrats in this body or the Senate, but from the people of the United States."

Nixon's appearance attheCapitol, the first since he became president Jan. 20, was obviously calculated to take some of the edge off the weekend of peace demands here. But White House Press Secretary Ronald Zieg- ler said that Nixon only wanted to express his appreciation to lawmak-

Locust Walk extension begins next Thursday

National By United Press International

4 PERSONS CHARGED WITH CONSPIRACY FOR N.Y. BOMBINGS

NEW YORK -- Authorities arrested three men and a woman Thursday and charged them with conspiracy in the bombing of the Manhattan Criminal Court building Wednesday night and eight other recent bomb incidents including those at the General Motors, RCA, and Chase Manhattan Bank skyscrapers. The four arrested were arraigned on charges of conspiring to destroy government property and held in $500,000 bail each for a hearing next Tuesday. FBI and police captured Samuel Joseph Melville, 34, a former engineering firm em- ployee, and George Demmerle, 39, an unemployed diemaker, early Thursday as they were allegedly secreting four dynamite time bombs in a convoy of U.S. army trucks parked outside the 69th Regiment National Guard Armory in Manhattan. Arrested at a Lower East Side address was Jane Lauren Alpert, 22, Swarthmore College graduate and a writer for the militant newspaper, RAT, and John David Hughey III, 22, former Duke University student who was a member of the staff of The Guardian, a radical weekly until last June.

SENATE BEGINS FORMAL DEBATE ON HAYNSWORTH NOMINATION

The Senate opened formal debate on the nomination of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth to the Supreme Court yesterday in low key and on a high plane. A bloc of uncommitted votes from both parties held the key to confirmation. As the fight opened, Sen. Stuart Symington (D.-Mo.) announced he would vote against Haynsworth and Sen. James Pearson (R.-Kans.) decided to vote for approval. The latest UPI tally showed 46 senators (35 Democrats and 11 Re- publicans) opposed t. President Nixon's nominee and 38 (17 Democrats and 21 Republicans) for him.

By JACK GORMAN Construction is expected to start

next Thursday which will prevent pedestrians and vehicles from traversing Locust Street from 38th Street to 40th Street.

The University is now in the pro- cess of closing Locust Street from 37th Street to 40th Street and will convert it by the fall of 1972 into a pedestrian walk. A Locust walk pedestrian bridge will also be constructed across 38th Street.

The closing of Locust Street is being done in conjunction with the Student Housing Program to facili- tate construction. The former bed of Locust Street from 38th Street to 40th Street will be impassible until early 1971.

After the planned lowering and widening of 38th Street between Spruce and Walnut Streets and the con- struction of the pedestrian bridge are completed, the portion of Locust Street designated to become part of the pedestrian walk will be developed and landscaped.

Until the construction is completed in the fall of 1972, pedestrian traffic along Locust Street from 38th to 40th will be discouraged to allow access of construction vehicles to the job site, and the development of utility trenches.

Permanent barricades will be

Earn in as

Money -

£10

Blood Study. MALE^OVER 21 ONLY. CALL DR. MURPHY. EV 2-4200 EXT. 501.

PSI OMEGA FRAT. U of P DENTAL SCHOOL

-PRESENTS-

HAPPY HOUR Mixed Drinks 5 P.M.

FALL MIXER Beer & Band 9 P.M

Girls & Guys Welcome PRIZE FOR

SHORTEST SKIRT (Girls only)

4035 Pine St. TONIGHT !

Bob Dylan's first major interview in three years is in the new issue of Rolling Stone Magazine. In the same edition of Rolling Stone, the first complete discography of the un- released Dylan tapes and records. The interview with Bob Dylan, based on a four hour rap with Rolling Stone Kditor Jann Wenner, is complete and unedited. •

AMAZEMENT GLARANTKF.D!

Send SI.00 to "Dylan Interview,"' 746 Brannan Street, San Francisco. Calif. 94103. We'll send you both the special Dylan Interview issue and a little something else.

RLC PRESENTS YOUNG

APHRODITES BERLIN FESTIVAL WINNER

NIKOS KOUNDOUROS'

SATURDAY NOV. 15 7-9 PM

MUSEUM AUDITORIUM

ADMISSION M DISCOUNT 50'

placed at Locust on the west side of 38th street. Access to the parking lot at this corner and pedestrian side- walks on the north side of Locust Street will remain to allow for en- trance to the Kappa Alpha and Sigma Chi Fraternities, the Chaplain's quar- ters, and the Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority.

A new driveway will be built from 39th Street into the Kappa Kappa Gamma and Sigma Chi parking lots.

Vehicular gates will be erected to the east of 40th Street and to the west of 39th Street on Locust Street. The gate at 40th Street may be opened by special arrangement, to allow ac- cess of private vehicles to special functions held at St. Mary's Church during the evenings.

Pedestrian access to the Black Studies Center and St. Mary's Church will continue to be available through the Spruce Street entrance at the RGTC building.

During the construction period, plot plans will be located along Locust Street to show pedestrians authori zed routes.

ers supporting his war policy. The President's appearance

caught most lawmakers by surprise. Although the White House contacted Speaker John W. McCormack about the visit Wednesday night, most House members were not aware of the plan until the House convened at noon and the word was passed to round up a quorum.

Nixon spoke for 12 minutes in the House. After luncheon with a group of senators in the office of Democra- tic Leader Mike Mansfield, he spoke for 10 minutes in the Senate. Both times he spoke without notes, his hands clasped behind his back.

The House interrupted Nixon five times for applause and gave him a standing ovation when he said:

"I do know when the security of America is involved, when peace for the world and America is involved, when the lives of our young men are involved, we're not Democrats, we're not Republicans. We're Americans."

In the Senate, where he was ap- plauded when he entered and departed, Nixon said peace will come because Congress speaks out on vital issues, "not as Democrats or Republicans but as Americans."

In his only reference to war pro- testers, Nixon said, ''I ask not for 100 percent support, because that

would not be healthy. . . but I ask for understanding and support when you feel we are right and construc- tive criticism when you feel we are wrong.''

In the House, Nixon thanked law- makers for sponsoring a resolution supporting his Vietnam peace efforts, signed by 300 members. His Senate remarks included no mention of a similar resolution introduced there.

Conceding the "difficult and con- troversial" nature of the war, he cited evidence that members of both parties had put aside partisan con- siderations and "along with the great majority of Americans" had thrown their support to his efforts to attain peace.

After arrving at the house side of the capitol shortly before 1 PJvl., Nixon entered a door without even being seen by about 140 Congres- sional employees who were staging a "silent vigil" war protest on the Capitol steps.

When he left the Capitol at 2:55 P.M., escorted by Senate leaders, a few shouts of "stop the war" were heard from onlookers in the East Plaza as the presidential limousine rolled toward Pennsylvania Avenue for the six-minute drive back to the White House.

Dorm Concert Series

AN ENJOYABLE EVENING OF CHAMBER MUSIC

Hill Hall Formal Lounge

November 16 8:30 P.M.

JOHN ZELNICKER Night editor

FRANK CAMPBELL Copy editor

JEFF ROTHBARD

Sports copy editor

ALBAN SALAMAN National news coordinator

DAVID TIVE Editorial page editor

If you've got the time,

we've got the car.

It's Yellow Catch: You must be 18 or over, have a Pennsylvania driver's license and 2 years driving experience. Dividend: You might find driving a cab a bit of a liberal education in itself. As a part time Yellow Cab driver you can drive day or night (Girls—days only). So head for the great outdoors— the earnings are great. For more information or an appointment phone: MA 7-7440, Ext. 246. Or come in person to 105 So. 12th Street Monday through Thursday—9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday— 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

YELLOW CAB COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA

UNIVERSITY of PENNSYL VANIA Dept. of Astronomy

Spring Semester Offering Left Off Course and Room Roster Astronomy 202 • Sequence No. 52205 - Astronomical Discovery. Koch. 1 c.u. 3h Time - To Be Arranged.

Exploration in seminar of great themes of classical and modern as- tronomy, e.g. Galileo's Dialogue, Halley and Huqqins on stellar motions, the Shapley-Curtis debate and Hubble's observations of galaxies, dis- coveries of quasars and pulsars. The source material is drawn from the original literature and collected works.

FREE COFFEE, DOUGHNUTS & PHILOSOPHY

TUES. NOV. 18 AT 11

322 LOGAN HALL

DISCUSS SPRING COURSE OFFERINGS, SEX, GOD, LOVE, LOGOS, ETC.

WITH PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT.

J

For a free reprinf of this ad (suitable for framing) without advertising

write: Bud* Man Label, 721 Pestalozzi Street, St. Louis, Mo. 63118

Page 3: Yale's building takeover divides faculty members

Friday, November 14, 1969

Info

Expo:

Jackson,

McKissick

to speak

The Daily Pennsylvania!! Page 3

NOAH ROBINSON (left), director of Wharton's 3usiness Practice Service discusses the problems of black business with Rev. Jesse Jackson (right), his half brother.

The Business Practice Service, a Wharton student group, is conducting a symposium this weekend featuring two famous national black leaders, the Rev. Jesse Jackson, and Floyd McKissick.

The symposium entitled information Exposition (INFO EXPO) will commence today with a keynote address by Jackson, the national director of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference's Operation Breadbasket, in the University Museum, 8 P.M.

The rest of the conference will be conducted at the Sylvania Hotel, Juniper and Locust Streets in downtown Philadelphia. McKissick, former director of the Congress of Racial Equality, will deliver the opening ad- dress at 9:45 AJvl. tomorrow. Panel discussion on "Where do We go from here?", "Community Economic Develop- ment," and "Entrepreneurship," will complete the sympo- sium s program. Black businessmen and high school stu- dents interested in business have been invited to attend.

BPS was founded in Sept. 1968 by several MBA students including Noah Robinson, the present director of the ser- vice. It was set up to bringthe technical skills the Wharton students learned in the classrooms out into the black com- munities to aid their strugglingbusinessmen. At the same time

"FINANCIAL ASTROLOGY , AND THE STOCK MARKET"

Hear LCDR David Williams, con- sultant to Con Ed., discuss this subject.

Tuesday, November 18 at

The Regency 311 S. Broad St.

Phila., Pa. Admission $1.50

the BPS members are helping to stabilize black businesses, they are getting the opportunity to test their textbook knowledge in the real business world.

Joel Sneider, a member of BPS, said there are now ap- proximately 80 to 100 MBA candidates working forthe ser- vice, divided into a field group and a office staff.

The field group goes into the various black communities and works with clients largely provided by theSmall Business Administration and the Job Loan Corporation. Straighting out a client's books is generally the first responsibility of the field worker.

Most clients need financing for their business, Sneider said. BPS can help them to obtain loans from SBA or the Job Loan Corp. Lately even some Philadelphia banks have been granting loans to these small businesses.

The staff members aid in coordinating the various acti- vities and provide field workers with easy standard ways of alleviating business problems. They are responsible for obtaining the help of professors in complicated business problems.

Sneider said most of the credit for BPS's successes should be given to Robinson. He said that a successful symposium this weekend would make BPS's future even brighter.

W.C.FIELOS IN TWO OF HIS COMEDY CLASSICS.

rv

82? IIM1U0 (NGAGCMIM

THEATRE 1812 1812 Chestnut. LO 3-7100

Rolling Stones Tickets Both Shows

Tickets ax Houston Hall Ticket Desk Houston Hall

ALE:

DINING CLUB

(£} A BALLANTINE THREE RING THING (A>

Campus Chest of Univ. of Penna.

DANCE CONCERT

ft

LIGHTHOUSE SWEET STAVIN CHAIN

PALESTRA

33rd & Locust Streets Philadelphia

Friday, Nov. 21st 8 p.m.

All Tickets $4

Lights by Glenn McCays' Headlights

Sound by Festival Group

Ticket Locations: 1)

2)

3) 4)

Houston Hall Ticket Office 5) 34th &. Spruce Streets 6) Hassle Records 7) Sansom Street Mall Wanamaker's, Center City 8) Glassman's, Center City

Gimbel's. Center City Herb Auritt, Castor & Cottman Achillies Heel Lancaster Avenue, Ardmore Bag & Baggage Wilmington

Information & Mail Orders: Houston Hall Ticket Office 34th & Spruce Streets Philadelphia 594-5610

Produced by Larry's Magic Productions Limited

March in Washington (Continued from page 1)

praying protestors were arrefted in the Pentagon yesterday afternoon as they attempted to hold a "peace mass" there.

A group of over 300 Roman Catholics and Epicopalians had joined in the peace mass which was designed to "confront the militarism of Amer- ican society and the temple of death."

Shortly after the mass began a 1:15 P.M., the priests and laymen were warned to leave under threat of arrest by a Pentagon spokesman. There was no resistance on the part of the demonstrators as they were loaded into buses with obstructing hallways and entrances to the Penta- gon's concourse.

The "mass" was not directly con- nected with this weekend's major antiwar protest sponsored by the New Mobilization committee to End the War in Vietnam (New Mobe.)

By late afternoon, Washington had not yet begun to fill up with demon- strators. Bus terminals in the city operated at normal rush hour pace and traffic on highways leading into the city moved along swiftly.

However, after the " march against death" got underway, demonstrators began arriving by the busload at re- ception centers situated throughout downtown Washington.

Sidney Lens, cochairman of the New Mobe, said in an exclusive inter- view last night that about 120 charter buses from New York andNew Jersey were withdrawn supposedly in re- sponse to a threatened enforcement of a provision of the 1967 Civil Rights Act.

The provision asserts that no per- son can be transported across state lines to participate in riotous activities.

Lens said, however, that 200buses had been chartered in their place by the New Mobe.

"You have to expect a little bit of harassment," the gray-haired New Mobe leader commented.

Lens, the first death marcher to reach the White House, said he was confident that sufficient protesters

COLLEGE STUDENTS: MOONLIGHTERS:

Unusual opportunity to earn extra money for the holiday season and ob- tain generous discount on gift and other purchases too. Positions involve general maintenance and cleaning work on 6 P.M. to 2 A.M. schedule. Continuing work available after Christmas to those desiring it. Apply at once: Start working any time you wish between now and Thanksgiving.

STRAWBRIDGE & CLOTHIER

801 Market St. Phila., Pa.

would be available to assure that all the placards were carried to the Capitol.

However, at several reception centers, marshalls pleaded for addi- tional protesters to march from the cemetary. "The situation iscritical, there are simply not enough people," one marshall said.

One of the first marchers to re- move the placard from around his neck and place it in a coffin was a World War II paratroop officer. Re- tired army captain GerogeWuchinich, of Mt. Kisco, N.Y. said that he was marching "to convince Mr Nixon that there is very little time left to make a decision on complete withdrawal of American troops from Vietnam.

"Don't make us a nation of Nixi- crats," he pleaded.

The only disruption the marchers experienced were occasional halts at intersections to allow traffic to flow normally.

At the New Mobe headquarters on Vermont Avenue, however, a con- tingent of American Nazis attempted to disrupt the proceedings by in- filtrating the building.

Lens, commenting the incident, asserted, "This sort of thing isn't going to scare our young people."

Last night's activities marked the beginning of the massive three-day antiwar protest whose sponsors hope will attract 200,000 more supporters, for the climactic Saturday march through the nation's capital.

As concern in the government over the possibility of violence built, some 9,000 paratroopers and marines were stationed at four bases outside the city.

Assembly for Saturday's mass march begins on the Mall west of 'the Capitol at 9 A.M. At 10:30 A.M., a special contingent carrying the caskets with the names of the war dead will begin the march, followed a few blocks behind the other marchers. The march will proceed along Pennsylvania Avenue, near the White House to a rally at the site of the Washington Monument.

From 2 to 5 P.M., a rally and folk-rock concert will take place at the monument.

5HAPIR STUDIOS Quality Portraiture

Applications & Passports

On th« campus ot

3907 WA1NUT ST.

BA 2-7888

Spivak Bros, present

special attraction also

SPIRIT-THE KINKS December 5 • 8 PM

Spectrum Sound by the festival group • Light show by Electric Factory

Admission: $3.50 • $4.50 • $5.50 • $6.50 TicktU available at Electric Factory, 2201 Arch; The Spectrum: All Sears 4 Roebuck, all Gimbels, and all Strawbridge & Clothier Stores; Wanamakers: Glassman's, 230 S. 13th St.; Hassle Record Store, Sansom Village; Herb Auritt Men's Store, Castor & Cottman; U. of P.. Houston Hall; Wee Three Record Shop, Plymouth Meet- ing Mall; Mads Record Shop, 9 E. Lancaster Ave., Ardmore; All Computicket Agencies.

Clip and Mail to: ELECTRIC FACTORY 2201 Arch St.. Phila. 19103 Information: Phone LO 3-9284 Enclosed is check or MO payable to Electric Factory for tickets @ $ ea. totaling $ PLEASE PRINT Name

"' ' »" •

Address.

City _State. _Zip_

Day Phom Enclose seif-addressed stamped env.l

Elsewhere in the nation, 5,000 demonstrators jammed Times Square at a noon rally in New York City to protest the-war. A group identifying itself as the Theatre Committee for Peace released dozens of white doves into the bright November sun- light. Pete Seeger, the trio of Peter, Paul and Mary and the cast of the broadway musical "Hair" provided music while Dr. Benjamin Spock pro- vided oratory.

The Atlanta Vietnam Mobilization Committee, having won federal court permission for a rally at the Georgia State Capitol over the objections of Gov. Lester Maddox, led a demon- stration of 250 persons in the rain.

A 36-hour vigil began in front of the federal building at Nashville, Tenn. Another vigil began in front of the state capitol at Sacramento, Calif. About 400 students at the university of California at Davis voted to strike today. More than 300 per- sons left Tampa, Fla., by train for Washington.

Plans were made on various California college campuses to con- vene on San Francisco Saturday for a "march against death." Rallies, marches, class boycotts and peace folk music festivals were held at campuses and communities across the country.

OPENING NIGHT: The Laundry, a French tragi-comedy, will pre- miere tonight at the Annenberg School of Communications. Curtain time is 8:30 P.M. The play, directed by Ilona Gerbner, has beendescribed as "a gripping satire on conventional morality."

The six-member cast and the characters they play are as follows: Sylvia Kauders as Mme. Yvonne; Martin Mayer-Wolf as Daniel; Kevin Korsyn as Sr. Armando; Sandy Schmuhl as Lena; Wendy Blakeman as Estelle; and Ray Gillespie as Laurent.

LET THE SUNSHINE IN

"Handel With Hair" DEC. 5

MARCO POLO

FOR

PIZZA, STEAKS,

SUBS, RIBS ETC.

Tuesday only-Plain Pie - $1.50 Delivery

41st It CHESTNUT STS. EV 2-2I36

Mon-Thurs. 4 till 2:00 a.m. Fri-Sat 4 till 3:00 a.m.

Sun 4 till 1:00 a.m.

INTRO TO PENN Welcomes all interested to attend a meeting:

4:00 PM Wednesday November 19 Penniman Room, Houston Hall

OPENINGS ON: BUSINESS STAFF LITERARY STAFF PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF SPORTS STAFF

REFRESHMENTS SERVED

THE MdtDR A Black Comedy

By Durrenmatt NOVEMBER 14,15,

TOMLINSON THEATER Temple University

Phone: 787 8393 "An all round hit..."

Singer — The Philadelphia Inquirer

Page 4: Yale's building takeover divides faculty members

1885 Zy Pennsylvania!!- 1969

Page 4 H/14/69

On to Washington Richard Nixon and Spiro Agnew are doing

their best to discredit the demonstrations today and tomorrow in Washington.

Nixon's Justice Department heightened tensions in the capital with talk of violence and procrastinations that forced the demon- strators to go through difficult negotiations in order to obtain a march permit.

Nixon commanded the air waves two weeks ago to deliver an unsatisfying defense of the brutal war in Vietnam.

Agnew toured the country questioning the

intelligence and loyalty of the protesters. Nixon, et al, have had their say. Now it

is time to have ours, to demonstrate to the nation and the world that there are Amer- icans patriotic, honest and courageous enough to oppose a policy which is destroying a small nation 12,000 miles around the world, a policy which is contributing to the havoc in our cities and besmirching our nation's honor.

The time to do something for peace is now, the place is Washington.

For a friend taken or thoughts on Nov. 15 Letters to the editor

/ might recall the rush of colors and smells of u late fall day that brought into night the bonfires and teargas having marched pass the speeches

the day long rally to the pentagon then

or might recall having worked for McCarthy maybe not in New Hampshire but by summer and Chicago I was caught with the crowds and the night made a member in exile by the rush to uphold law

or I m igh t have recalled an election or demonstration that went on to take over a building or campus

but I was greeted by you my President taken off to learn soldier and learned well and served well and

now your silent majority tomorrow I come home in a new plastic bag.

— BRAD SENDEN

ofthe-Awnenfo/y 5^W^^f

^■w .

\r±T

v.'ir

-w«f-

It

'#<

y*

RUMOR HAS IT G Q

TAKE A FLAG

Why should the "silent majority" have sole rights to the American flag as a symbol? We who are going to Washington are Americans too. We are protesting the war because the war is hurting America, and because Americans are tired of the war. We can fly the flag as a symbol of our hope and commitment for a better America.

Joshua Diamond

SUPPORT FOR NIXON

Sir: Between the period of 12-15 November 1969, the students at Penn and across this nation will demon- strate whar the true and untainted motivation is behind their declared intention to help effect peace in Viet- nam. Should the students persist in their demands for immediate U.S. withdrawal, the peace movement will be revealed to be a big hoax whose real purpose is something other than peace. Itwill be clearly demonstrated that certain disruptive and dangerous elements have successfully enlisted the unwitting support of some students to help foster their own desires which are clearly not that of peace.

The President, on Monday night, acknowledged the position of the October 15th Moratorium as well as the other possible courses of action open to him as the leader of this great nation. He announced his choice as to the policy of the United States and will be held fully responsible for the results of that policy. It is now the duty of all those Americans who really desire peace, regardless of the prior belief as to the correct policy, to support our elected head of state. To do otherwise is to work for the defeat of his efforts to secure the peace I believe most Americans want. For this reason, I strongly urge each student, faculty and staff member, who supported the October demonstration to reappraise his or her course of action during the next two weeks. Do not allow a well organized core of agitators to induce the majority of students and administration into ac- tions that will run directly counter to the true search for peace. One of the basic reasons attributed to the rapid change of our youth is said to be the desire of this group to think as indi- viduals. If this is true, then THINK and do not follow a false standard down the pathofdisasterforyourself, your Nation and the World by con- tinuing to protest against this nation's declared policy to end the Vietnam War.

Gene P. Abel Business Administrator Dept. of Biology

AMERICA'S HUMILIATION

Editor's note: This is a copy of the letter written by the Rev. John M. Scott, the Episcopal chap Ian at the University, to President Nixon.

Sir: Lest you be overwhelmed by mail from the "silent majority who support the President's policy" I write to

say that your lying and deceiving words (consult the prophet Jeremiah) do not fool or please very many. Your insult that your critics are disloyal and insult America is only matched by your presumption that America is not yet far deeper humiliated by a bankrupt policy and the inability of its leaders to free themselves from it, and the sentence you have passed on to the yet to die Americans and Vietnamese by your threat to escalate the war.

You will see more and more Americans in Washington, on the streets, or wherever else it takes to turn this country from its true humiliation.

John M. Scott Episcopal Chaplain

OPPOSITION TO THE NEW MOBE

Sir: We would like to state our op- position to the Nov. 13-15 Mora- torium. We feel that though we sup- port the aims of the M-day organizers (in getting out of Vietnam and ad- vocating draft reform) we can not in good conscience support the M-days. Basically, we oppose M-day because of the broadness of the ideas ex- pressed and the groups which support the New Mobe. The sentiments sup- ported by M-day organizers are so broad as to make it very unclear what anybody is expressing. Also, we feel that some groups forming the New Mobe advocate revolution of a type we can not agree with. For us to leave Viet-Nam and then make revolution at home would end in strife and more bloodshed than ever flowed from Vietnamese or American alike. Because one agrees in part with an authoritarians' policy does not ever justify uniting with him.

Doug Rollins for Penn Young Americans for Freedom

A SPECIAL RELATIONSHIP

Sir: Professor Wolfman's letter con- cerning the Senate action on the Vietnam resolution requires one or two comments. It was stated both during the debate and in a recent letter to the DP by Dr. Winegrad that the Senate last June called upon the Trustees to exert their political in- fluence with various agencies of government to help the neighboring community, and that this was just the kind of "politicization" of the Uni- versity against which so many voices are now being raised.

Professor Wolfman replies that "there had been a history of academic involvement between the University and West Philadelphia High School" which caused a "special relation- ship" and that this justified the action.

May I be forgiven for stating the obvious? There has been a history of academic involvement between the University and the federal government which runs considerably deeper than that with West Philadelphia High School. That we have a "special re- lationship" with Washington can

the magazine of the daily pennsylvanian

JUDITH L Editor-in-

TELLER Chief

DAVID N. KAYE Managing editor

ROBERT A. SAVET1 Sports editor

JILL P. MESIROV Financial Manager

TOM APPLEQUIST 34 th Street editor

STANLEY H. BERKE Business Manager

JEFFREY STERLING Photography editor

MIMI ROGERS NEIL B. BUN'S Advertising manager Production manager

DEBORAH KRAVETZ MARK PEARLMAN Course guide editor Associate sports editor

scarcely be doubted. Another interesting feature of the

June resolution was that it called upon the Trustees to articulate those views in the name of the academic community (familiar?), in spite of the fact that the Senate vote was not unanimous. We have here a nice example of "coercion of a minority by a temporal majority," that is to say, an articulation of an official institutional position by the Trustees notwithstanding the existence on cam- pus of a minority who disagreed with that view.

I hasten to add that I whole- heartedly supported the June action of the Senate and still do. Indeed, lest anyone reading this be tempted to con- clude that that action was ill advised, I note the inescapable fact that every vote of the Senate coerces those who voted nay, because the inevitable out- come is an''Institutional" position to which they did not subscribe.

The question of making a prece- dent for the future also cuts two ways. One could imagine that at some future time the political climate might be so oppressive that faculty members, as individuals, would speak out at the greatest peril to their security. At such a time the deepest concerns of academic freedom might well be* served by having a precedent for col- lective, rather than individual, action. The precedent set by the Senate in deeming it undesirable to speak on the present issue may be cited then with grim effect. I conclude from all of this that the truth is best served if each of us votes his convictions on the substances of such issues instead of attempting to forecast future events.

Herbert S. Wilf Professor of Mathematics

ACTIVITIES COUNCIL

Editors note: the following is a letter sent to the heads of the various campus activities by Jerry Condon, of the student affairs office; and Jeff Aarons, of the Activities Council.

Dear Activities Representative, There are important benefits to

be derived by working together to make the Activities Council a more effective body. A group of concerned activities members has been working since the end of last year to develop a viable organizational structure based on effective and equitable by- laws. However, the Activities Council experienced a number of difficulties at its first two meetings this year. It is felt that while some confusion in getting started can be tolerated, stu- dent activities cannot operate under the aura of uncertainty much longer.

Accordingly, a study has been proposed to determine the major concerns shared by various activities arid methods by which the Activities Council might deal with many of these mutual concerns. A task force is' now being organized to discuss problem areas related to the Activ- ities Council. The following list of problem areas has been compiled from conversations with a large num- ber of activities representatives.

I. Activities Council Internal Gov- ernance - Organizational struc- ture of activities council itself, definition of an activity, and re- lated questions.

II. Activities Coordination and In- teraction - Consideration of how activities serving similar func- tions and purposes, i.e., per- forming arts, publications, ser- vices, etc. might work together and share information of benefit to the activities concerned.

III. Allocation funds (A) Eligibility for funding (B) Present use of allocations by

individual activities (C) General policy governing

distribution of funds (D) Spec if ic guidel ines to be used

by the Finance Committee

(Continued on page S)

Page 5: Yale's building takeover divides faculty members

Friday, November 14, 1969 The Daily Pennsylvanian Page 5

THE THIRD ANNUAL NORTH STAR OPEN com- menced Wednesday night at the Tau Epsilon Phi fraternity with the insertion of the first nickel by presidem Jay Viders.

Approximately 50 pinball-frenzied fans and brothers watched the opening first round match of the tournament in which junior Steve Binder defeated sophomore darkhorse Ed Schreiber by the narrow margin of seven points. All com- petition is match play, asthefirst contestant to attain 5,000 points is the winner. In subsequent rounds, scores of 8,000, 10,000, 12,000 and 15,000 points are required to win.

Thirty-two brothers are entered in the tournament and were divided into four brackets by last year's runner-up Arnle Holland. Viders, the pre-tournament favorite and number one seed, was upset in his first match by senior Tom Pestronk. The three remaining seeds are senior Tom Mann, sophomore hope Peter Rothstein, and Holland.

The Star, as it is referred to with reverence by true pin freaks, is a basic Gottlieb machine with two drops, five bumpers, five corresponding lights, two honey-holes, and assorted green and yellow lights, all appropriately named. A game consists of three balls, and 800 points or a "special" is needed to win a free game. Winning a game or "popping" adds 25 points to your score intourney play. Rollovers, extinguishing all the lights on the machine, yields a free game each time the ball passes through a slot.

Senior Barry Lipman, a contestant and interested spectator, commented on the evening festivities: "It's one big colossal flame."

JEFF ROTHBARD BRUCE WALLACE

NO BOOZE NO BAND

PENN WOMEN OUR THING IS PEOPLE

THETA RHO UNMIXER MIXER

TONIGHT 8:30 4032 SPRUCE ST.

-An Open Lecture Speaker: Sir Charles Goodeve,

Founder President of The British Opera- tional Research So- ciety.

Topic: "Participatory Dem- ocracy, A Challenge to Social Scientists"

Date: Friday, 14 Novem- ber 1969

Time: 1:30 PJf. Place: Room B-26, Stiteler

Hall 3700 Locust St. All interested are invited to attend

Ongoings By JOAN RIEDER

Local News Coordinator

The Society for Individual Liberty (SIL), a splinter group from Young Americans for Freedom, will hold an East Coast "think-in" this weekend in Stiteler Hall. A $7 fee paid at the door provides admission to all activ- ities of the weekend.

Saturday afternoon, the society will hold a lecture on ethics, eco- nomics, and politics including a dis- cussion of such topics as "the morality of limited government" and "laissez-faire economics.'

"Tactics for libertarians" will be discussed Saturday evening and "strategy for creating a free society" will be discussed Saturday evening and Sunday morning at ' 1 A.M. re- spectively.

Frank Bubb, a University mem- ber of SIL, said the group is a libertarian organization which be- lieves in laissez-faire capitalism and individual freedom in all parts of society.

The University Choir under the direction of Leonard Atherton, will give a concert of religious music, tonight 8:30 PJvI., St.Mary's Church, 3916 Locust Streets. The concert includes compositions by William Byrd, Benjamin Britten, John Blow, Henry Purcell, and Dr. George Roch- berg, a professor of music at the University.

"WET AND WILD"

PENNGUINETTES 16th ANNUAL AQUATIC MUSICAL

SHEERR POOL IN GIMBEL GYM 37th & WALNUT

FRIDAY - NOV. 14th - 8:30 P.M. SATURDAY - NOV. 15th - 2:30 P.M.

CAST OF 40!! LIGHT SHOW!! PENNSYNGERS CHORUS !!

ADM: ADULTS .75 CHILDREN .50 TICKETS. GIMBEL GYM - HOUSTON HALL

SEARCH FOR THE NEW LAND "JuliuS Lester has road-mapped the highway followed

by the Vietnam-Black Power-Confrontation generation. His book is necessary to anyone's understanding of the 60s."—JULIAN BOND

In this searing yet compassionate work, the author of Look Out Whitey! Black Powers Con' Get Your Mama! and To Be a Slave

tells how the poison in the American soul has acted upon and created his own generation, black and white.

$4.95, now at your bookstore THE DIAL PRESS

ALTERNATIVES • IN

JANUARY 19 — TO

EDUCATION APRIL 25

CIDOC INVITES YOU TO CUERNAVACA for sixteen seminars aimed at finding ways to free education

from schooling. Seminar leaders will include:

JEROME BRUNER JOHN HOLT PAULO FREIRE IVAN ILLICH PAUL GOODMAN JONATHAN KOZOL

Take the entire progrom or enroll in individual seminars. Take advan- tage of conference and courses on Latin America and of INTENSIVE INSTRUCTION IN SPOKEN SPANISH.

For detailed information write: CIDOC—SPRING 1970 APOO 479, CUERNAVACA, MEXICO

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

U.S. MARINE CORPS Qjflfice-i Selection

ON CAMPUS 14 NOV

PLACEMENT OFFICE

4025 CHESTNUT ST.

PENNSYLVANIA BASKETBALL

UNDERGRADUATE SEASON TICKET SALE BEGINS NOV. 17 FRANKLIN FIELD

ALL HOME GAMES (14) $14.00 VACATION PLAN (10) $10.00

(EXCLUDES 4 GAMES)

PENN HOME SCHEDULE Dec. 1 Muhlenberg (Free) Dec. 6 Navy* Dec. 9 Virginia* Dec. 13 Princeton Dec. 20 Villanova

Jan. 9 Dartmouth* Jan. 10 Harvard Jan. 17 Mass. Jan. 21 Temple Jan. 24 St. Joseph's

Jan. 27 LaSalle* Feb. 13 Yale Feb. 14 EJrown Feb. 27 Columbia Feb. 28 Cornell

• -DATE NIGHT

TICKET OFFICE HOURS; WEEKDAYS:

9am. - 4:30 pm. SAT. 9 am. - 2 pm

Yale takeover (Continued from, page 1)

recipient, was on a 30-day trial period as a new waitress. The dining hall manager John Lewis maintained that Mrs. Williams had quit. She charged that she had been fired.

Mrs. Williams had previously been involved in an argument with dining hall bursary captain, John Myers, in an incident in which he apparently jostled her and she threw a glass of juice in his face.

An SDS pamphlet claimed that she was fired because ' she stood up to the manager and bursary captain when they harassed and overworked her." It had charged that the firing of Mrs. Williams was merely one example of "Yale institutional racism."

Mrs. Williams wasrehiredNov. 4, the day after the building occupation.

The occupation had come in response to university business manager John Embersits' refusal to immediately rehire her on Nov. 3.

He claimed he had not yet had sufficient time to examine the facts.

The occupation began at 2:45 in the afternoon when approximately 30 students broke past four Yale police officers stationed at the personnel office doors. Other students followed them later.

Embersits and three other univer- sity officials were held in the office for several hours.

In suspending the students, Yale Provost Charles Taylor Jr. followed the scenario for dealing with student occupations developed last April by Brewster. At 5:15 Monday afternoon, Taylor told the demonstrators they would be suspended if they did not vacate the offices by 5:35. About a dozen students left before the dead- line.

Taylor waited an additional 16 minutes and at 5:51, he told the re- maining students they were suspended.

The 12 residential college deans were present to identify the students who defied Taylor's edicts. The re- maining students left the building at 6:35 because they feared arrest.

On Wednesday and Thursday, Nov. 5 and 6, the Executive Committee held private hearings on the individual cases. John Wilkinson, dean of under- graduate affairs and chairman of the Executive Committee, said that no one would be penalized for failure to attend his hearing. Nevertheless, 37 of the 47 students attended.

About 200 students at an open meeting on the night of Nov. 5 voted

to circulate a petition demanding the immediate reinstatement of the 47. Over 530 students signed it.

The Executive Committee met through the weekend and on Monday came up with its decision.

It required the formal withdrawal of the 47 students involved in the occupation, but simultaneously com- muted the students penalty to discipli- nary probation the remainder of Lhe academic year.

"Since it was the first time this has occurred at Yale, and as there was some confusion about the Uni-

versity's response," Wilkinson said, "this time only we decided to show mercy." He emphasized that the penalty in all future cases of this nature would be a required with- drawal from Yale.

Letter (Continued from, page 4)

when considering budget re- quests.

(E) Determination of financial requirements of individual activities

(F) Other sources of activities funds.

IV. University Services - How ser- vices such as Buildings and Grounds, the DiningService.etc. might better serve various ac- tivities at reasonable rates.

The above mentioned areas have been suggested as concerns around which the task force should initially be organized. Suggestions about other areas of concern are welcome. For- mation of committees to discuss the above mentioned problem areas is now in progress. Anyone who wishes to participate may sign up in 117 Logan Hall. Initial committee meet- ings are anticipated within the next two weeks.

Proposals formulated by the task force will be presented to the Activ- ities Council for action and will de- termine the manner in which the Council will function in the future. The success of this endeavor de- pends on maximum participation of activities members. You as well as any members of your organization are encouraged to participate so that the Activities Council might become a viable body responsive to the needs of the constituency it serves.

The Dally Pennsylvanian is published Monday through Friday at Philadelphia, Pa. during the fall and spring semesters, except during vacation periods. On* Uiu. pub- lished In August. Subscriptions may be ordered at Sergeant Hall, 34th and Chestnut Sts. gt the rats o( $12.00 per annum. Second class postage paid at Philadelphia Pennsylvania 19104. Phones: f21 5) 594-658 1. Display and Classified Advertising may be placed at the same address.

s rrBH"o"fl~o"o B"5"8'8"B"O' 00006000 fl"6"fl~u~ff"ff"B 0 8 0~0~B~d~o~o 0 0 fl 0 00 o"(t"H~ttH~0~B"o'

4 Cafe' Internationale

Tickets ON SALE

2

o o

o o

WEST ALCOVE, HH TODAY

AND MONDAY

1-5 pm

CAFE' IS NOV. 19

4 PM

TICKETS -

50C

I

:

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 OOOOO OOOOO0QQfl0fl0Q0QBQ00B9gg999999999999999g

CMgOtf

O* ,4M,

••0* %CN,

Our product is pharmaceutical our business is people If you work for Syntex you're really in the people business.

Our products are revolutionary drugs and other pharmacological products created and marketed especially for the public's health and welfare.

Our scientists developed the first orally-active progestational agent which became a basic ingre- dient in several of the early oral contraceptives. A number of significant anti-inflammatory agents and anabolic agents have also come from our labora- tories.

Our customers are physicians—healers who look to us for the best ethical products.

Our company? We've been making history for the past 10 years. Growth has been excellent. Our executives aren't hindered by tradition. They're young and aggressive.

We have a post-doctoral research program which is unprecedented in size and scope for an indus- trial laboratory. Our post-doctoral fellows and staff scientists are encouraged to publish often to main- tain close contact with colleagues at universities and other research centers.

We continually keep our eyes open for talent and actively seek out individuals who are aware of their social obligations.

William Landau will be on campus November 12th Please contact the placement office to arrange for a personal interview.

We are an equal opportunity employer.

SYNTEX SYNTEX LABORATORIES, INC.

Page 6: Yale's building takeover divides faculty members

Page 6 The Daily Pennsylvania!! Friday, November 14, 1969

Campus events Blast-off to moon

OFFICIAL NOTICES

GRADUATE STUDY IN BUSINESS FOR NEGROES: A representative of the Consortium for Graduate Study in Business for Negroes (comprising the following University: Indiana, Rochester, SouthernCalifornia, Washington, Wis- consin) will be on campus on Tues., Nov. 18, from 1:30 P.M. to 5 P.M. to interview Negro students planning graduate study in business. For appointment call Office of Fellowshiplnformation and Study Programs Abroad, 18 College Hall, Ext. 8348.

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY: Mr. Michael Horo- witz of New York University Graduate School of Business Administration will be on campus on Mon., Nov. 17, to interview students planning graduate study in business administration. For appointment call Office of Fellowshiplnformation and Study Programs Abroad, 18 College Hall, Ext. 8348.

UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN: Mr. James F. Filgas of the University of Michigan Graduate School of Business Administration will be on campus on Mon., Nov. 17, to interview students planning graduate study in business administra- tion. For appointment call Office of Fellowship Information and Study Programs Abroad, 18 College Hall, Ext. 8348.

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH: Mr. Walter M. Rltenour, Director of Special Programs, University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Business, will be on campus on Wed., Nov. 19, to interview students planning graduate study in business. For appointment call Office of Fel-

lowship Information and Study Programs Abroad, 18 College Hall, Ext. 8348.

CAMPUS AGENDA

BUB: Cafe needs foodl Want to cook? Call Rosalie X-5452 or Shirley X 5348.

BUSINESS PRACTICE SERVICE: The Rev. Jesse Jackson, Fri., 8:30 PM. University Muse- um; Floyd McKissick, Sat., 9:30 AM. Sylvania Hotel.

DORM CONCERT SERIES: Chamber Music Concert on Sun., Nov. 16, at 8:30 in Hill Hall Formal Lounge.

HILLEL PSYCHEDELICATTESSEN: Hungry? We offer deli meats and guitar music every Sun. night 6 P.M. - 12. Starting Sun., Nov. 16 - low prices.

INTERESTED INMAKING MONEY?: The Daily Pennsylvanian needs advertising salesmen. For Information contact the business office 594-6581 or Mimi at 561-7645.

MANAGEMENT SCIENCE CENTER: Open lec- ture by Sir Charles Goodeve, "Participatory Democracy, A Challenge to Social Scientists." 1:30 P.M. Fri. Nov. 14, Rm. B-26 Stiteler Hall.

PENN DRAFT COUNSELING: Hassled by the draft? Info, for all draft related problems - registration, deferments, appeals, etc. Open daily 10-5 basement Houston Hall.

SCHOOL OF NURSING: Thanksgiving Drive to benefit needy families. Bring clothing and non- perishable food to Morgan Hall Lobby. Ends Nov. 24.

UNDERGRADUATE ANTHROPOLOGY AD- VISING: Questions about courses? Call: Kent EV 2-6268 or Dave EV 2-9783.

UNIV. OF PENNSYLVANIA CHOIR: Director: Leonard Atherton presents a Concert of Choral Music by Purcell, Blow, Byrd, Rochberg, and

Britten Fri., Nov. 14, 8:30 PM. St. Mary's Church, 39th and Locust Free and Open to public.

WHARTON ADVISING: Wharton SCUE will be advising for pre-registratio. —> Nov. 10 thru Fri., Nov. 21, in the Wharton Li... —»-aduate Lounge, 10 AM. to 2 P.M.

ACTIVITY NOTICES

AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY -STUDENT AFFILIATES: All chemistry majors and under- graduates interested in chemistry find out ad- vantages of being American Chemical Society -

STUDENT AFFILIATE. Organizational meeting, Fri., Nov. 14, 3:15 PM. Rm. 107 General Labs! Building.

HILLEL REFERENDUM: Referendum open to all Jewish students on draft sanctuary. Bring cards you recieved in the mail. Vote! Tues., and Wed. Nov. 18 and 19, 9 AM. - 7 PJvt.

CIRKLE K: A division training conference will be held this Sun., at 1:30 at Philadelphia Textile College for officers and heelers, for whom attendance is mandatory. Contact Gary Beauchamp (EV 2-4896) for transportation ar- rangements. All members strongly urged to come.

Classifieds

Miscellaneous ID PHOTOS, RESUME PHOTOS, PASSPORTS - Creative photography. Custom Photo Studio,4515 Walnut St., BA 2-4145. 3899

CHRISTMAS CARDS ADDRESSED IN MY HOME, stamped, mailed too. $.05 first 100, $.03 100 and over. BA 9-9147. 4742

DON'T FAT OFF THE FLOOR. BUY A KITCHEN or dinette set instead - cheap. Call GR 3-3501. 4683

TEACHERS: COLLEGE, PUBLIC, OR PRIVATE SCHOOL. Let us help you find the teaching posi- tion you seek. Now is the time to register for January, 1970. Call Fisk Teachers Agency, KI5- 1745. 4737

!»♦♦<>♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦♦♦♦»♦♦♦♦»♦»

Wanted »♦#♦♦♦♦♦»» ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»:»»»»»»

TELEPHONE INTERVIEWERS. . .TO CONDUCT Market Research telephone surveys. P/Tassign- ments available immediately both day and even- ing. All work to be done from our office in West« Philadelphia. Salary $1.85/hr. Call Mrs. Clancy, 748-2000. Ext. 552. Chilton Research Services, Chestnut and 56th Sts.. Phila.. Pa. 19139. 4529

MALE ROOMMATE WANTED FOR GARCAN- tuan furnished, carpeted, campus apartment at 4040 Baltimore. Safe area, reasonable. Call Sandy. EV 2-1850 Nowl 4740

APARTMENT FOR ONE OR TWO - 42ND & Chester Ave., 15 minutes walking distance of HUP. Contact Betty Krechel, Endocrine Clinic. Tues. & Fri., 8:30-4:30. Home, BA 2-2433. 4681

EFFICIENCY APARTMENT TO SUBLET - Available January 1st. $58/mo. plus utilities. 41st & Locust. Call EV 6-3791 after 6 P.M. 4682

FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED FOR ATTRAC- tive apartment in Cermantown. Rent only $30. Own room. Close to train, trolley, bus. CaU VI 9-0919. 4743

EFFICIENCY APARTMENT - $65/mo., with TV; 3 1/2 room apartment — $85/mo. Both have pri- vate entrance. To be furnished, redecorated. Utilities included. 47th «. Chestnut. LU 3-5058.

4741

ROOMATE WANTED - MALE MBA WISHES someone to share 2 bedroom, furnished apart- ment, 44th & Locust. Newly redecorated. BA 2- 7171. 4745

ROOMMATE WANTED - SPACIOUS 2-GIRL apt., furn. 43rd near Spruce. Own room if de- sired. $55 each incl. util. EV 2-1744. If no ans., call SA 4-4895.

INTERESTED IN MAKING MONEY? THE DAILY Pennsylvanian needs advertising salesmen. For Information contact the business office, 594-6581 or Mimi at 561-7645. 4559

VOCALIST NEEDED MALE OR FEMALE (MUST dig blues, rock, country -- no Janis,Morrison -- only good music), f-xperifnee helpful. EV 2-4640.

4734

ARE YOU 21 OR OVER? INTERESTED IN THE securities market? Part-time? Full time? Sum- mertime? Men & women. We will train you. . . free. Positions row available. Call Univest Cor- poration, KI 6-7232 or write Univest Corporation, 1700 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. 19103. 4678

♦♦»♦♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦♦♦♦»»»«

TYPIST, ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER. PAPERS. Master's Theses, Doctoral Dissertations, Arts arid Law, Greek and mathematical notations. Fast, accurate, reasonable. DIANE, GR 7-0797.

4710

4a*A4a4AAi ► ♦♦..♦♦♦;

For Sale

TYPISTS >»♦»♦»»♦♦♦♦»<»»♦*>»•#•»•<

PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER SPECIALIZING IN Master's and Doctoral Dissertations. Sample work in all area colleges. Flora Carlin, 279- 2211. 4704

TYPIST - ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER. MANY years experience. Term papers. Master's, Doc- torates on form, etc. References given. Fast service. Mrs. Robbins, HI 9-5130.

TYPIST, ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER. FOREIGN symbols — Ph.D. specialist. Also thoroughly experienced in all departments. Fast, depend- able service. Excellent references. DORIS, MI 9- 6684. 5206

Sea^a^UJUYidL

FOR VINTAGE CLOTHES CIRCA 1850-1950

WIN A REAL RACCOON COAT

FOR X-MAS-^-, drawing St. Dec. 20 ^^ * DROP THIS AD AT

THE STORE

TUES. thru SAU 1-6 PM

NAME

ADDRESS

PHONE Beaded Bags - Camp Furs - Furn. old Mags.

727 SOUTH ST.

i4*AAAJkAJhAAAA*AAAAAA*4AA<

SPECIAL SALE: FOR U. OF PA. 1968 CORONA 4-door sedan, automatic trans., radio, heater, reclining bucket seats, vinyl interior, nylon car- pets, tinted giass, white walls, wheel discs, bumper guards, interior trunk carpeting, 100% warranty, immaculate condition. $1637. Central City Toyota. GR 6-1200. 4731

SPECIAL SALE FOR U. OF PA.: 1969 TRIUMPH 250 Roadster - 4-speed trans., white walls, immaculate condition. $1595. Call Central City Toyota, GR 6-1200. 4732

1968 MGB RD -EXCEL. (ONI).: RADIALTIRES, hard top & soft top, stereo tape, low mileage. Call after 6:30 P.M. CH 7-6409. 4723

TELEVISIONS, RE 9-5948. 21" WITH UHF, $49 up; Portables, $35 up; 21" Consoles & Table Models. $29 up; RCA Color, Easy Terms. Open: 10 A.M. to 10 P.M. METROPOLITAN TV. 3322 Kensington Ave. 515°

AMCIV Orson Welles'

THE MAGNIFICENT

AM6ERS0NS Based on Booth Tarkington's Novel About A Turn-of-the-cen- tury Aristocratic American In- dustrial Family.

Tuesday 18 November 7&9P.M.

Fine Arts Auditorium $1.00

Call up- or shut up!!! if you don't participate in

2 WAY RADIO WCAI1121

You're not involved Call

MO7-0500-TE9-6790 - TE9-7000

BAHA'I WORLD FAITH MEETING: Monday 8:30 PM. Houston Hall Rm. 3. Join the Soul revolution.

KITE AND KEY SOCIETY: There will be a meeting this Sun. evening in the Franklin Rm. of Houston Hall, Members 6 P.M. Associates 7:30 PM.

HILLEL: Students observant of Sabbath and Kashruth who wish to go to Washington on Nov. 15 should call Hillel. Ext. 7391. Accommodations will be found for you.

INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: Meeting - today at 7 P.M. In the 2nd floor lounge of the Christian Assoc.

INTRO TO PENN: Meeting for heelers and staff members 4 PM. Nov. 19 Pennman Rm., Houston Hall.

RNSA: General meeting today 3 PJvI. Rm. 302 Morgan Hall Mrs. James Burke of Kistler Agency speaking: Types of Life Insurance.

STUDENTS FOR INDIVIDUAL LIBERTY: Libertarian conference tomorrow and Sunday for East Coast members of Students for Individual Liberty and all interested students. Starts to- morrow at 12 noon. Admission fee call Frank Bubb at BA 2-9057 at B-6 Stiteler Hall.

TALKING POINT: HASSLED? HUNG UP? Visit the Talking Point. Sun. - Thurs. 8 PJvt. - 11 PJvt. at Hill Hall, Houston Hall, or McClelland Hall, or call anytime 839-3437.

YAF: Will meet at 11 AJvt. Tues., in the Bishop White room of Houston Hall all interested people are welcome.

TICKETS

The 'Laundry' - Nov. 21, 22, Dec.

5,6. Arthur Hall, Afro Dance Ensemble

Nov. 21 Jefferson Airplane - Nov. 21

Brooklyn Bridge - Nov. 23 Elizabeth Schwarzkopf - Nov. 23

Rolling Stones - Nov. 25 Osipov Music Festival - Nov. 25

Phila. Orches. - Nov. 29 Montovoni - Nov. 30 La Boheme - Dec. 2 Chambers Brothers - Dec. 7

Theatre of Living Arts Recruiting Officer

ALSO

mputer tickets, Phila. Flyers.Phila

76'ers,Phila. Chamber Orches. Phila. Coffee Concerts.

Houston Hall Ticket Service Houston Hall Info. Desk

Call 594-5610

(Continued from page 1)

the earth, and during the second orbit, at 2:09 P.M., will re-ignite the Saturn 5's third stage engine to blast Apollo 12 onto its course toward the moon.

Starting at 2:47 P.M.,a65-minute live television show in color is sched- uled from the soaring spacecraft. The astronauts will aim their camera at the receding earth and the spindly- legged lunar landing spacecraft Intrepid, docked nose-to-nose with the command ship, called Yankee Clipper.

In all, at least 10 telecasts are scheduled during the mission.

Apollo 12 is due at the moonMon- day night and Conrad and Bean are scheduled to break away from Gordon in the command ship and land Intrepid on the moon at 1:53 A.M EST Wed- nesday.

At 8:30 A.M., the astronauts' first walk on the moon surface will be telecast in color for about 31/2 hours. A second walk of the same length will be shown beginning at 12:43 A.M. Thursday.

During their 32-hour stay on the moon -- 10 hours longer than Neil Armstrong and Edwin Aldrin stayed during the Apollo 11 mission — Conrad and Bean will make two three and one-half-hour walks and set out a package of five experiments. A nuclear generator will be used for the first time to power the experi- ments and radio reports back to earth.

The experiments include meas- surements of lunar earthquakes, the moon's slight magnetic field, its ex- tremely thin atmosphere, and the presence of electrically charged gas particles streaming out of the sun.

The Apollo 12 astronauts will also collect about 100 pounds of rock samples, twice as much as Armstrong and Aldrin brought home, and, if their landing is on target, will try to hike to the Surveyor 3 Robot space- craft which made a soft landing in the same area in April, 1967.

Conrad and Bean are scheduled to liftoff from the moon Nov. 20 and rejoin Gordon in lunar orbit. The three astronauts will spend a final day taking pictures of three sites being studied for future Apollo land- ings, and then blast out of moon orbit, Nov. 21 for the trip home.

They are scheduled to splashdown in the Pacific Ocean at 3:38 P.M.,

Altogether the three major net- works will provide about 30 hours of live coverage, compared with the 51 hours given Apollo 11 a variety of reasons are behind the cut in cover- age, including expense and the reali- zation that Apollo 12 does not have

the novelty of Apollo 11, industry sources said.

Showers and occasional flashes of lightning occurred in the moonport area Thursday and weathermen pre- dicted showers, low clouds and 23- mile-an-hour winds for launch time. These conditions were acceptable for blastoff but may ruin the view for thousands of persons gathering in the area to watch the shot.

President Nixon will be among those on hand at the Cape to see the launch. He'll be accompanied by Mrs. Nixon, Vice President SpiroT. Agnew and the wives of two of the astro- nauts: Jane Conrad and Sue Bean.

Bean, the mission's lunar module pilot admitted the outlook had seemed bleak for a launch Friday to the moon's Ocean of Storms when the eager astronauts first learned of the trouble Wednesday.

"It looked at first like it couldn't be done," he said. "Then it looked like a 100-1 chance. But they did it, and it must have taken a lot of effort. We've got some really sharp people in this program."

The rest of yesterday's schedule was a light one, with the astronauts going to bed early. They were to be awakened at 7:15 A.M. today for breakfast and to begin suiting-up in their white space uniforms. Their schedule calls for them to climb into their capsule atop the 36-story Sa- turn 5 booster at 8:42 A.M.

At its peak, more than 20,000 in- dustrial firms employing more than 350,000 persons worked on some phase of Apollo. The average automo- bile contains about 3,000 functional parts, while the 12-foot high command module alone contains more than two million parts, not counting wiring and skeletal components. It contains about 15 miles of wire.

The Saturn 5 launch vehicle con- tains about 2 1/2 million solder joints. If just 1/32 of an inch of extra wire and one drop of extra solder were used on each of these joints, the ex- cess weight would equal the payload of the rocket.

There are 47 rocket engines on the entire machine, which uses liquid fuel. The display console in the com- mand ship has 24 instruments, 40 event indicators, 71 lights and 566 switches.

In the environment control sys- tem -- the section that circulates and cleans the air the spacemen breathe and keeps them and the space- craft cool -- there are 180 parts. The average home window air condi- tioner contains about eight.

PROGRAM 2 ••••• • • ••••

• • • ••••• ••• • • • • • • • • • • • ••••

• •• • • • • • % • • \ • • • • • • •* •

• •

• •• •

• •

•••■

• •••• •••< •• • • • • • • • •

At ! • • • • • • • • • •

Sunday, November 16,

Irvine Auditorium. 7:00 8(9:30,

All Tickets $1

More brilliant, new short film imports from this unique three-part international festival of creative and provocative cinema achievements from 9 nations

....among them.... French Student Revolt "Paris Mai 1968." ■ Julie Christie and Michael Caine in "Tonight Let's All Make Love in London." ■ Collage Graphics from Czechoslovakia ■ Wild Japanese Dada Comedy.

STILL TO COME... PROGRAM THREE Thursday, November 20, 7:00 & 9:30 Irvine

Page 7: Yale's building takeover divides faculty members

Friday, November 14, 1969 The Daily Pennsylvanian Page 7

Statement of Cornell athletic director

Special to THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN

(THE FOLLOWING LETTER was mailed Nov. 10 to the editor of the Harvard Crimson by Robert J. Kane, Athletic Director at Cornell Univer- sity.)

The Crimson article written by John L. Powers on October 23 accused Cornell University and its hockey coach of violating Ivy practice rules and this is to state unequivocally there was not one word of truth in it. Let me reply briefly to the several accusations.

1. Cornell did not practice hockey on Saturday morning, October 18. In fact, there was no one on the Lynah Rink ice Saturday morning, October 18. I repeat: no one. The rink was not open until Saturday evening and then specifically for recreational skating. Why don't you check with the Harvard varsity soccer players? They dressed in Lynah Rink Saturday morning for their game at 11:30 A.M. which took place on an adjacent field.

2. Ned Harkness has an office in Lynah Rink but he was not there Satur- day morning, October 18.

3. The Cornell hockey team did not practice before the permissible date of October 22.

4. Cornell does not violate Ivy rules, nor ECAC, or NCAA rules. This was a bum rap, Mr. Powers and the Harvard Crimson. The irre-

sponsibility of it is appalling.

Tryouts to begin Monday for football Penn's reinstated JVprogram

Tryouts for Penn's first JV basketball team in years will take place Monday at the Palestra, 7 P.M.

Sophomores, juniors, and seniors all are eligible for the program, which will be directed by Ray Carazo. The JVs will play a 10-game sched- ule, including a meeting with Navy at Annapolis and a home-and-away series with Princeton.

*'We won't be running a com- plicated offense," commented Carazo, who returned to the Univer- sity in September after a five-year absence. "We'll be practicing two- or-three times a week the first couple weeks to get the guys in shape. But once the season starts, I have responsibilities with the freshmen and the varisty as well as scouting, so we'll be working out just once a week, maybe twice if the guys are out of shape.

"It's no picnic, we'll play to win. This isn't intramurals," continued Carazo, who captained Penn's basket- ball and baseball teams in 1964,

winning the Class of 1915 Award as the Most Ideal Quaker Athlete. "If we play for fun and lose, it's no fun anyway. We'll try and go as hard as we can, despite the time element."

Selected to the All-East first team as a pitcher and second team as an outfielder in 1963, Carazo was MVP of the Red and Blue basket- ball Ivy champs of 1964 and was selected as the Big Five's outstanding player for leadership, scholarship, and sportsmanship.

"I went into chemical sales right after graduation," said Carazo,"But in the back of my mind I wanted to get into coaching, so when the oppor- tunity came here, I took it."

Since it will be his first team, Carazo is quite enthusiastic about the JVs, sight unseen.

"This will be good exposure for me, a good chance to break in. I'm really looking forward to it. I just hope we have enough guys to field a team. Anyone who's interested should certainly try out—it sure can't hurt." RAY CARAZO

People in sports

JEFF STERLING

PETE BLUMENTHAL

s m JEFF SCAVRON

ALMOLLOY

JEFF PETRIE, Princeton's All- Ivy basketball star and the loop's scoring champ the past two seasons, has been hospitalized due to an in- jured back and may miss part of the upcoming campaign.

The Tiger captain entered Delaware County Memorial Hospital only las t Saturday, although he suffered the injury, diagnosed as a ruptured disc in the lower back, about three weeks ago while playing pool in the Cottage Club, a campus eating house.

A Princeton spokesman said that as of now the senior's status is doubt- ful for when the Tigers open defense of their Ivy League basketball title against Penn at the Palestra, Dec. 13.

Penn's squash season will "sort of" start this weekend, when MASON GERHART, ANIL KAPUR, and PALMER PAGE travel to Canada for the Montreal Invitational Men's Tournament.

"It's not just a college event, it's the best in the Northern Hemisphere,'' commented coach AL MOLLOY. "But that doesn't mean I'm surprised the boys were invited."

This is the first time Penn has sent anyone to the tourney.

For their football performances last week against Yale, defenders JIM FUDDY and MATT LAWLOR re- ceived honorable mention All-East recognition. It was the third and second time, respectively, they were selected this season.

Other Quakers who have been picked for honorable mention are: PETE BLUMENTHAL, JOHN BROWN (once on offense, once on defense), MIKE CHWASTYK, STEVE KENOYER (twice), CHARLEY KETCHEY, GREG LEAVITT, BOB MONAHAN, and JOHN TREMBA (twice).

Two Quakers have been accorded first team honors—PHIL PROCACCI for his play against Brown (he was also ECAC "Sophomore of the Week" and "Ivy Back of the Week")and Ketchey for his play against Bucknell. The ECAC format is to pick a first team each week, granting mention to the other nominees.

**«

Each week, the Red and Blue grid coaches name an offensive an de- fensive player of the week. JOHN

FMEE INFO EXPO

EMOIITY USEMESS

YMFOS1UM THE REV. JESSE JACKSON

University Museum Friday, 8:30 p.m.

FLOYD McKISSICK Sylvania Hotel

Saturday, 9:30 a.m.

Also: Black Business Leaders Services, Aids, And Opportunities

Sponsored by:

BUSINESS PRACTICE SERVICE

BROWN, who won the award for de- fensive efforts against Bucknell, was the offensive winner at Yale, complet- ing 12 of 25 passes for 139 yards. With nine unassisted tackles and num- erous assists, MIKE CHWASTYK won the defensive award.

Other defensive winners; JIM FUDDY (Brown), BEN GIFFORD (Dartmouth), STEVE KENOYER (Lehigh), JOE SMUGERESKY (Princeton), and MARK WARNER (Harvard).

Other offensive winners: JOHN TREMBA (Bucknell and Dartmouth), PHIL PROCACCI (Brown), JOHN CURLEY (Lehigh), and GEORGE JOSEPH (Harvard). There was no offensive award following the Prince- ton game.

SHORTS: the PENNGUINETTE show Saturday will begin at 2:30P.M. and 8:30 P.M. Friday, a half- hour later than originally announced. The site is the Sheerr Pool, Gimbel Gym.

The Perm-Philadelphia Club RUGBY game will be Saturday's feature on the AstroTurf. It will be the first time rugby has been played on Penn's synthetic surface and may be the first game ever on the nylon. There is no way of knowing.

(Continued from page 3)

Columbia is in the same boat. "They were real quick. They just overcame our line," Navarropointed out about the Dartmouth team that trounced the Lions, 37-7, last week. "The Penn defense is very experi- enced, too."

With nine sophomores and seven other newcomers in the starting line- up experience is something the Baby Blue lack. Sophomore Bill Flyim, who managed but three completions against the Indians, will be the Columbia quarterback, gettingthenod over two other sophs. All are a far cry from All-Ivy signal caller Marty Domres who now plays for the San Diego Chargers.

''They're not the dangerous team they were last year with Domres," Odell commented, "but they can still hurt you."

The Quaker offense will likely be without the services of tight end Dave Graham, who has a hip pointer. Sophomore Pete Luciano, who caught five passes at Yale, will start for the second week in a row although Graham may be available for some duty if needed.

Defensive end Charley Ketchey (hamstring pull) and linebackerMark Warner (charley house) are also on the injury list, and neither is expected to play. Stan Rishkofski gets the call in Ketchey's place, while BillOaker- son will call defensive signals for Warner.

Penn will be shooting for its third straight win against the Lions, winning the last two games at Frank- lin Field. Columbia won the last meeting in Baker Field three years ago.

Saturday's contest figures to be a defensive battle, but as Navarro said, "It's difficult to make a prediction."

As far as Odell is concerned, *< the Columbia game is a must for his

players. "If they don't know it, they're stupid," he said.

PHIL PROCACCI

■ -■:.■-:■■■

ALAN SHELBY

BOB MONAHAN JEFF BRYER

cratt

I ■ Phila

m All cushions W loose and zippered,

jt hand rubbed frame ... oak or walnut... blend form

plus function, comfort and craftsmanship ... Naturally from

Form & Function 2020 Chestnut St.

Philadelphia, Pa. 19103

Frosh (Continued from page 8)

by Pat Sharkey, who has six inter- ceptions this season. Sharkey also handles kickoff and punt returns for the Lions.

If the Baby Blue win today, it will be their first winning season in freshman football since 1958. All they have to do is get by the Quakers, who were extremely impressive in last week's triumph.

So far this season, Quaker quarterback Gary Shue is completing his passes at a 46 percent clip, and has 529 yards and six TD's. Half- back Rich Mel lor is the leading ground gainer for the Penn frosh, with 136 yards in 22 carries and 4 TD's, for a 6.2 average. He is followed by Ron Dawson, who is 26 for 132 yards and two touchdowns, for a 5.1 average. Mellor also leads the receivers with nine catches for 110 yards. End Tom Corbin has the most yardage on receptions, with five catches for 119 yards.

Today's contest on the AstroTurf should be a crucial game between two evenly - matched teams both needing a victory to salvage a win- ning season.

For Students? we

make concessions $12 Single -$18 Double

The Biltmore in New York digs students...and they dig us! Our groovy rooms (newly decorated by a way- out guy named Jacques)...our restaurants...our hospi- tality... and our "in" location. The Biltmore is on the East Side "where the action is."

Want to swing the New York way? Then stay at the Biltmore, baby...the only hotel that makes concessions without any student demands.

For reservations-. In Continental USA call free 800-221-2690 In New York State call free 800-522-6449 In New York City 340-2776

THE MEW A REALTY HOTEL

BILTMORE "A Famous Hotel With Great Tradition"

Madison Avenue at 43rd Street New York, N.Y. 10017

Other Realty Hotels in New York

The Barclay The Roosevelt

The Commodore

t*M

Page 8: Yale's building takeover divides faculty members

Page The Daily Pennsylvania!!

Friday, November 14, 1969

Penn, Lions: crucial Baker brawl

By MARVIN DASH

Columbia is 0-7 and Penn is 3-4, and each team has bid farewell to any hopes of an Ivy League title, but from the way Quaker coach BobOdell and his Lion counterpart Frank Navarro are talking about Saturday's football game you might think the national championship was at stake.

Actually, there will be nothing more than an old-fashioned victory up for grabs when the two teams take to the turf at Baker Field in New York, but both coaches realize that a win would come in handy at this juncture of the schedule.

"I expect a real toughballgame," Odell forecasted Thurdsay afternoon. "We're both in a position where we must win. They're kind of like we are --close, but no cigar."

"We're at the point where we're really frustrated," Navarro related over the telephone. "We'd like to win this one, but so would Penn."

There are a lot more similarities between the two clubs than their desire for victory. It's almost as if Odell and Navarro are coaching the same team.

Like the Quakers, the Lions have been hit with numerous injuries this season. According to Navarro, four regulars will be missing from the Columbia starting lineup Saturday, and the Lions have but 46 players left in the entire football program, except for freshmen.

The injuries were a big reason for Navarro's decision to switch defensive formations in mid season. The Lions shifted to a five-man line following their 41-6 losstoYale, inserting a monster back, Joe Daurio, as the Elis do.

The move hasn't paid off yet in the win column, but it is enough to keep Odell worried since the Yale defense kept the Quaker attack so bottled up last week in New Haven. At least part of the reason was the Red and Blue's failure to block as the Bulldog defenders charged through the Penn offensive line like the cops at Harvard yard last spring.

"We're taking a very hard-nosed approach this week," explained the Penn skipper. "We feel we've got to block people. We can't theorize. We've got to block."

"We have a grim, determined bunch of offensive football players who are out to prove they can move the football."

(Continued on page 7)

BILL VITKA JIM FUDDY dives for Columbia QB Marty Domres in action last year at Franklin Field. Penn won, 13-7.

Frosh face'top Columbia squad this decade' today

GARY SHUE P.N CHAKKAPHAK

By PHIL SHIMKIN The season ends for the Penn

freshman football team today at 2:00 PM. on Franklin Field. The frosh (2-2), who destroyed Lehigh, 65 - 16 last week, will square off against what many consider to beColumbia's finest freshman squad in a decade.

The Lions have compiled a 2-1-1 record, including impressive wins over Yale, 35-26, and Brown, 34-20. The tie came against Princeton, 28-28. The Red and Blue frosh lost to the Tigers, 27-14. Last week Rutgers beat Columbia, 10-6.

Don Jackson is the Ll >n signal caller, and he is a good one. The 6-1, 170-pound passer has thrown for a total of 799 yards and seven touchdowns in four games. The Stuyvesant (Manhattan) H.S. grad is a roll-out quarterback who can also run the ball. Against Yale, he sprinted for 119 yards and a TD. Columbia coaches have pinned great hopes on Jackson, and pick him as the Lion quarterback of the future.

Much of the passer's success has been due to a fine receiver, Jesse Parks. The sure handed Parks (6-1, 170) has 19 catches for 402 yards and four touchdowns. Columbia's speedy end should be a real test for the Penn secondary.

On defense, the Lions have an excellent pair of linebackers in Paul Kaliades (6-0, 210), and Ken McKenzie (6-0, 185). Kaliades is a "good strong kid who's all over the field," according to frosh coach Gary Witten, and he is also the Lion place kicker. McKenzie blocked three enemy punts in the first three games this year.

The Columbia secondary is led

(Continued on page 7)

DP swamis: dear old Ivy Brown- Harvard

Columbia- Penn

Cornell- Dartmouth

Princeton- Yale

S.?vett

Prown 21-14

Penn 21-10

Dartmouth 35-14

Princeton 21-14

Pearlman Dash Garr Schlesinger Rothbard Levene

Harvard 21-7

Harvaid 21-17

Harvard 27-10

Harvard 24-7

Harvard 20-7

Harvard 20-6

Penn 14-3

Penn 17-7

Penn 10-7

Penn 14-7

Penn 10-7

Penn 9-7

Dartmouth 28-3

Dartmouth 31-10

Dartmouth 31-14

Dartmouth 28-7

Dartmouth 27-14

Tie. 24-24

Princeton 42-10

Princeton 28-14

Princeton 17-14

Princeton 31-14

Princeton 17-13

Princeto 21-10

Cohen

Harvard 23-6

Penn 14-3

Dartmouth 35-10

Princeton 26-10

Shabel

Harvard 27-7

Penn 20-7

Dartmouth 32-10

Princeton 30-20

This weeks' guest swamis are JEFF ROTHBARD, STEVE LEVENE, CLAUDIA COHEN, and FRED SHABEL. Sophomores Rothbard and Levene, who report soccer, will be swamis next year; judging from performance of this fall's regular prognosticators, practice for the underclassmen may well prove valuable. Cohen also a DP soph reporter, lends her wide experience as queen of the Belmont Park horse racing scene. It is our hope that Shabel, as Director of Recreation, will soon in- stitute pari-mutuel betting at the University.

Playoff-bound booters face tough Blue unit

By STEVE LEVENE For once it seems as though Penn's

varsity soccer team won't have any- thing else on its mind than just plain winning the game.

Tomorrow's match on Bugler Field at Columbia won't decide an Ivy championship--Harvard has pretty well wrapped that up--and won't de- termine a national playoff bid. Last week's loss to Yale put the Red and Blue out of the running for the league crown but still kept the Quakers in the slot for the NCAA regional matches, which beginTuesday against Montclair State on the AstroTurf.

Perm's soccermen will have nothing to contend with except a very good Lion squad. Columbia has lost only two of nine contests this fall and was considered by many to be in the running for Ivy honors.

"I really think that Columbia could be the big spoiler in the league this year," said Harvard coach Bruce Munro a few weeks ago. "They've got the power and the skill to pull a few upsets."

Perm varistyco?chBobSeddonjust hopes that the Lions aren't too fero- cious-minded tomorrow, however.

"They're very good, and just might be tougher than Montclair," he worried." They have a lot of foreign talent in the lineup."

The Baby Blue have geographic representation from West Africa, Lebanon, Australia, Greece, Argen- tina, Ghana, and Venezuela. Co-cap- tain Frank Kodah is a small (5-5,135 pounds), speedy lineman from Accra, Ghana and last year's leading team scorer. In addition, Italian-born junior Rocco Commisso a 1968, second team Ivy Selection is an im- portant cog in the Lions' defense

from his halfback-fullback slot. However, one of coach Joe

Molder's biggest scoring threats, lineman Omar Chamma, will miss the weekend action with a broken collar- bone.

Penn was forced to come from be- hind at Dartmouth and Princeton last month, two teams that Columbia handily defeated. After a sluggish showing of catch-up ball against Yale last week, The Red and Blue aren't really sure what to expect in New York.

"We were sort of listless with Yale," throught Seddon. "But this week, 1 don't think we are looking past Columbia."

The Quakers are currently 3-2 and in third spot in loop play. The lions are even at 2-2 and in fourth place.

Seddon, who has spent the past week interviewing and touring high school soccer stars plus scouting Montclair against LIU, sees to- morrow's encounter as a tune-up for the NCAA opener.

"The Ivy standings still mean a lot however," he said. "The last two games (Columbia, and Cornell next week) are very important.

The Red and Blue booters, who are 8-2 overall, made the number 13 spot on the final national soccer coaches' ranking chart for the 1969 season. Penn has moved as high as fourth two weeks ago, but subsequent losses to Harvard (now second-ranked) and Yale dropped the unit.

"Oh, they don't really mean much," nodded Seddon about the standings. "We have to prove our- selves in the game."

Bugler Field would be just the per- fect place to do that. ,

P.J. KRAPE

BOB WATKINS charges goal against Brown in vain attempt. Penn will need more scoring this weekend than in Ivy tilts with Harvard and Yale when the Quakers could score but once.

Once-beaten frosh booters meet Lions

By BRUNO ANTHONY

To the Beatles happiness is a warm gun; to Snoopy, it's a win over the Red Baron. The freshman soccer team will be gunning for a win at Columbia today to make Duncan Hub- ley's first year at Penn equally happy.

A trip to New York is nice, but a victory over the Lions would be sweeter. The result would be the best record for the Penn frosh (7-1) since the present seniors were freshmen. Last year's team, studded with varsity stars Stan Startzell, Tom Liebermann, and Bob Watkins, could only compile a 5-2 slate. It would also mean the continuation of the yearling booters* mastery over Columbia, and the best record of any fall team.

Everyone on the potent attacking line has scored. Left wing Barry

Pritchard leads the way with two goals and seven assists for nine points. Pritchard makes the team move and sets up many scoring opportunities with his speed and drib- bling ability. Right wing Steve Crum has poured in five goals, tops on the team. Rounding out the forward line are Dave Naughton (four goals), Dick Ferrell (four goals and two assists), and Craig Pippen (two goals).

Although protected well by full- backs Jeff Winokur and Andy Gill- man, goalies Jim Miller and Bruce Sturman have had to come up with the big play to give up but eight goals in seven games.

If not for a lapse of five minutes in the Pierce game, when three goals were scored, the booters would be shooting for an undefeated season today. But even Snoopy doesn't win them all.

HENRY POPKIN

FROSH SOCCER squad (left to right: Steve Gum, Craig Pippin, Scott Harrington) fights for ball in action Saturday on the Turf. Pierce Jr. College, won, 3-2 to remain unbeaten; it was Penn's first loss.

B-ball tix go on sale Monday

Season tickets go on sale Mon- day for the 1969-70 Palestra basket- ball season, with the price hiked to one dollar-per-game at all Big Five schools.

Since there will be four home battles during Christmas Vacation, Penn will offer two season ticket plans: a $10 booklet for all non- vacation games and a $14 booklet, good for all 'games. Under the cheaper plan, undergraduates would miss tilts against Villanova, Dart- mouth, Harvard, and Massachusetts.

Admission will be free to the fifteenth home contest, Dec. 1 against Muhlenberg, and to a freshman-var- sity scrimmage Nov. 22, 15 minutes after the Penn-Cornell grid game ends.

Only 1200 season booklets will be available. The Franklin Field Ticket Office is open weekdays from 9 AJvI. to 4:30 P.M. and Saturday from 9 to 2.

\