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Vol. IXXXVIH No. 43 Philadelphia. Pennsylvania
«
U. Postpones
SchoolBudget
Data Release
Information showing "basic instructional costs" here will be made
public later this week University
officials said Friday.
The material was to have been
released April 15, but disagreement
among administrators as to what
information to include and difficulty
in compiling the data apparently
forced the delay.
Dr. Robert Zemsky, advisor to
President Meyerson, said the package
would include:
--Aggregate salary costs and
operating expenses at each school
within the University. Overhead is not
included nor are salaries divided
between faculty and staff. Some
schools are
subdivided such as
Wharton which is broken down into a
social science and a management
division.
• -A faculty profile, showing the
number of fully-affiliated professors
in each school and their average
salaries. Teaching instructors are not
included.
-•The number of undergraduate
and graduate course untis within each
school, the number of undergraduate
majors and possibly the number of
degrees granted by each school.
The information is based on the
1971-72 budget.
Departmental information is not
included in the package, nor are the
operating deficits for each school.
(Continued on page 5)
orientated proposals through its
"Campaign G.M." in I970and 1971.
One of the Chrysler proposals called
on the automobile producer to "Take
appropriate steps to broaden its
composition by nominating women
and representatives of employee
organizations, consumers and
minority groups to the Board of
Directors." according to a summary
message in a proxy statement.
The other Project proposal submitted to the Chrysler shareholders
would require the corporation "to
disclose in its annual report data in
three areas of immense concern to
shareholders and the public: airpollution control, auto-safety, and
minority-hiring and franchising
practices," the proxy statement said.
The University Trustees' Committee on Corporate Responsibility
was established in January, 1971,
primaril to advise the University on
conflicts of interest and proxy votes.
Law Professor Robert H. Mundheim, an adviser to the Trustee
group, said Sunday night that the
corporate responsibility committee
was not in disagreement with the aims
of the Project, but did not see its
proposals as the proper means to
reach these goals.
Mundheim said the committee felt
the proposal dealing with the composition of the board of directors dealt
with "special constituencies rather
than the company as a whole."
The law professor said the committee believed that the data
requested in the second Project
proposal is "not appropriate in an
annual report." He said the committee will send a letter to the
Chrysler board chairman urging that
"Chrysler make vigorous progress in
pollution control, minority hiring,
minority franchises and auto safety."
Mundheim added that the committee believed the company "ought
to inform its shareholders" of such
progress, but through a means other
than the annual report.
The committee also voted to reject a
Project proxy statement dealing with
the composition of the board of directors of AT. & T. that was similar to
the Chrysler proposal. Mundheim said
that a letter would be sent to the board
chairman of A.T. & T. urging more
opportunities for minority groups
The University owns 109,432 chares
of A. T. It T. and 40,000 shares of
Chrysler Corporation according to
December, 1971 figures
The Trustee committee will consider Friday a Project proposal which
(Continued on page 5)
U.S. Warplanes
Bomb Haiphong,
Hanoi In Raids
EDMUND MUSKIE
'What We're Faced WHh Now Is a Wider War'
Muskie Attacks Bombing
Increase in Phila. Speech
By BEN GINSBERG
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie (D.-Me.)
severely criticized President Nixon's
Vietnam War policy and termed the
escalation of the United State's
bombing in North Vietnam "reckless
and irresponsible" Sunday while
campaigning in Philadelphia in his
quest for support in the April 25
Pennsylvania presidential primary.
At a press conference in the
Clearfield
Hotel
in
North
Philadelphia, Muskie said he was
"shocked" when he heard the news of
the resumed bombing raids into North
Vietnam.
Earlier in the day Muskie appeared on ABC television's "Issues
and Answers" and said the bombing
was "a dangerous and reckless thing
to do... what we're faced with now is
a wider war and risk of strangulation
by Russia and Communist China.
The Maine Senator then announced
that he would introduce a resolution
in the Senate Monday calling for the
cessation of "all American military
activity against the territory of North
Vietnam."
In a campaign trip designed
Hi-Rise North Residents Veto
Proposed Day-Care Center
By KATHE ARCHDEACON
Residents of High Rise North voted
106 to 86 last week against locating a
day care center in the basement of
their building, but University administrators say the buildling has not
been ruled out as a possible site.
Director of Community Services
Andrew Sullivan said Sunday that
members of the Day Care Council, a
group of organizers, had not yet
responded to a number of suggestions
made by residents concerning the
implementation of the day care
center.
The suggestions, which represent
points on which residents and
organizers could begin negotiations on
use of the basement, include the
following:
-The Day Care Council should give
first preference to children of
residents in choosing participants in
the day care program. Presently,
approximately 20 children live in the
building, Sullivan said. The center
will accomodate about 30-40 children
between the ages of three and five.
-The Council should help residents
of the building start an additional day
care system for children under three
years of age.
-The Council should pay residents
an undetermined amount of money as
rent, in return for their use of the
basement. The center would operate
five days a week from 8 A.M. to 6 P.M.
Sullivan said most Day Care
Council members were away this
weekend and could not be contacted
concerning the residents' suggestions.
In deciding whether to implement
the day care center, Sullivan continued^ the University now has three
options.
It could locate the center in High
Rise North-if residents are willing to
support it -or at another site on or
adjacent to the campus. Sullivan
pointed to the other two Superblock
buildings as "the only unused space"
the University could conceivably use
for the project at this point.
WAR PROTEST MEETING
BUNKY PODELL
ANDREW SULLIVAN
No Definite Decision
A coalition of local groups ha*
called an open meeting to be held
today at 7:30 P.M. to discuss the
recent escalation of the Vietnam
War and build the scheduled April
22 antiwar protest in New York.
The meeting will be held in
Houston Hall.
forauW 1885
Copyright 1972 The Daily Pennsylvania!! Monday April 17. 1972
Stock Reform Plan
Rejected by Trustees
By MICHAEL SILVER
A special Trustee committee has
decided to cast the University's stock
proxy votes against corporate reformoriented proposals Involving the
American Telephone and Telegraph
Company and Chrysler Corporation.
The Trustee Committee on Corporate Responsibility decided to vote
against the shareholder proposals,
which were drafted by the
Washington-based Project on Corporate Responsibility, but decided to
support some of the basic aims of the
resolutions through letters to the
chairman of the boards of the two
corporations.
The Project on Corporate Responsibility is best known for its unsuccessful attempts to persuade
shareholders of the General Motors
Corporation to vote for consumer-
^9
Another option, he said, would be to
"back off," resume the entire process
of looking for sites, and "forget
about" obtaining the $30,000 in funds
the center would receive from an
undisclosed source if it is in operation
by June 30.
Provost Curtis Reitz, who must
decide whether the University will
implement the day care center, said
Sunday that both the administration
and day care organizers are working
toward getting the day care center in
operation by the end of the semester
(Continued on page 6)
primarily to gain the support of black
voters, Muskie received the formal
endorsement of the Rev. Wycliffe
Jangdharrie, chairman of the
Metropolitan NAACP Council at the
news conference.
Accompaning the Senator in
Philauelphia were Mrs. Myrlie Even,
wife of slain civil rights leader
Medgar
Evers,
Pennsylvania
Governor Milton Shapp, and Muskie's
15-year old daughter Melinda.
During an interview following his
Philadelphia news conference,
(Continued on page 1,
By United Press International
SAIGON •- Waves of U.S. warplanes, flying through heavy antiaircraft fire that knocked down two
aircraft, bombed the North Vietnamese capital of Hanoi and the port
city of Haiphong Sunday for the first
time in four years.
The U.S. command said the pilots
caused heavy damage to oil storage
facilities outside the cities - - the two
largest in North Vietnam.
A command spokesman said one
American pilot was rescued and two
others were listed as missing. Radio
Hanoi said communist gunners shot
down 15 planes, including an eightengine B52 Stratofortress. It did not
mention the fate of the pilots.
The North Vietnamese also
claimed the American bombs
damaged a Soviet cargo ship, the
Simferopol, anchored in Haiphong
harbor and wounded one of the ship's
officers.
The North Vietnamese delegation
to the Paris peace talks called the
attacks near the two cities "foolhardy
acts" and said it could lead to "even
greater defeats" for the Americans.
The raids were the first that far north
since March, 1965, and the first ever
that far over communist territory for
the B52S, which carry 30 tons of
bombs each.
The U.S. command said the raids
were ordered in retaliation for the
new Communist offensive in South
Vietnam.
"Tactical air and B52 strikes in
North Vietnam yesterday (Sunday),
apparently caught the enemy in a
considerable state of confusion and
disarray. Latest reports received
indicate that only two U.S. tactical
aircraft were lost, not withstanding
the fact that The North Vietnamese
fired thousands of rounds of antiaircraft artillery and approximately
200 surface-to-air missiles, "A
command spokesman said
The B52s were used only in the raid
on Haiphong. The attack on the outskirts of Hanoi m made by jet
fighter-bombers, the command said.
The spokesman did not say how many
planes took part in the attacks.
The spokesman said the pilot of one
of the damaged planes bailed out over
the South China Sea and was rescued
but two other uewuieu from the
second plane were listed as missing
In the ground war, beefed up South
Vietnamese and Communist forces
fought desperately for the town of An
Loc, a valuable prize along Highway
13,60 miles north of Saigon. The battle
has been going on for four days and
both sides claim they control the town.
Two Americana were killed, eight
wounded and one other airman was
listed as missing In scattered incidents including the announcement
of a week-old Jet fighter crash in Laos.
Communist gunner* blew up three
ammunition *fffpf in South Vietnam
and launched rocket attaffci MajajsJ
capital city airport* in Cambodia and
Laos.
South Vietnamese relief forces
fought their way into the surrounded
Base Bastogne on the southern road
into the former imperial capital of
Hue, than tamed back another
Communist attempt to seize the
outpost.
Radio Hanoi, In a broadcast
monitored in Saigon, said U.S. warplanes first attacked Haiphong Seven
hours later, they attacked Hanoi, 56
miles to the west, then attacked
Haiphong again Just before dark
Sunday.
(Continued on page Si
Humphrey Predicts Victory;
Criticizes New Viet Bombings
By MARK J. HOSENBALL
Democratic Presidential hopeful
Hubert
Humphrey
criticized
President Nixon's economic and
Vietnam policies in Philadelphia area
speeches Sunday.
Humphrey told African Methodist
Church leaders in Chester that
President Nixon has slowed the
economic and social progress of
blacks "to a crawl." He pledged that
if elected President, he would Install
"an administration with soul."
"Recession for white folks means
depression for black folks," Humphrey told the churchmen. He
charged that since Nixon took office,
unemployment among blacks has
increased 104 per cent, and "at least
100,000 black youths have given up
looking for work out of shear
desperation."
After his Chester appearance,
Humphrey journeyed to a dinner of
the Catholic-school-sponsored
Community Service Corps at the
Sheraton Hotel here, where he made
an attack on the renewed bombings of
North Vietnam.
"All the bombs that you can drop
will not end the war," Humphrey told
about 400 high school students attending the dinner. He called for a
policy of "disengagement," and said
that "military power does not
necessarily mean that you are right,
you are Just."
Humphrey called for the establishment of a new "domestic Peace
Corps" called the Agency for
Domestic Development, which would
help re-order national priorities
toward the solution of Internal
problems.
He added that "a government that
knew how to put you in the Army
couldn't find a Job for you when you
get home," and indicated he might
support the expansion federal "Job
corps" programs If elected.
Prom the Sheraton, Humphrey
went to a gathering of primary
delegate supporters at the Bellvue
Stratford Hotel He told the delegates
"we're gonna win (the April 25
Pennsylvania presidential primary),
you know, we're gonna win this one."
Humphrey made no predictions as
to how large a share of the
"popularity vote" and actual delegate
strength he would receive in the poll.
He also admitted that his campaign
here has "one fifth of the money the
opposition has."
Ha added that "we've got an uphill
battle in Philadelphia - the city
machine is not for us," referring to
City Democratic Chairman Peter
Camlet's support of Sen. Edmund
Muskie.
However, Humphrey said a win in
(Continued on page 7,
Leak in Apollo 16 Fuel Tank
Jeopardizes Lunar Mission
By United Press International
SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON Apollo 16 blasted off Sunday on man's
first flight to the moon's highlands,
but a mysterious apparent leak in a
fuel tank aboard the lunar lander
Orion forced the astronauts to make
an emergency inspection 8 1/2 hours
after launch.
Mission Commander John W.
Young, 41, and Lunar Module Pilot
Charles M. Duke, Jr., 36, began
opening the hatch between Orion and
the command ship Casper at 9:15
P.M. ESTon command from Mission
Control in Houston.
Command Module pilot Thomas K.
Mattingly II, 36, was ordered
simultaneously to break out a color
television camera and to try to give
ground controllers a look at an apparent stream of gas jetting from one
side of Orion, tearing off pieces of
insulation paint in flakes and strips.
During the inspection, the
astronauts found nothing out of the
ordinary in Orion.
"We're going to have to think that
over for a while," ground controllers
told the astronauts after the hour-long
checkout. A Mission Control
spokesman said it was "obviously
reassuring" to find no firm evidence
of a leak.
Apollo 16, which thundered away
from sun drenched Cape Kennedy at
12:34 P.M. EST and hurtled out of
earth orbit toward the moon three
three hours later, was 47,657 miles
away from earth when Young and
Duke entered Orion.
There was no immediate indication
of how the situation might affect the
outcome of the mission, but the
astronauts did not appear In any
immediate danger.
Prom the location of the gas jet
reported by the astronauts, it appeared there might be a leak in one of
the tanks In Orion's steering rocket
fuel system.
The possible leak make it
necessary for the astronauts to crawl
through a tunnel into Orion's cabin
almost exactly 24 hours ahead of
schedule. They went in and turned on
the power to check fuel levels in the
tanks - something they could not do
from outside because all of Orion's
oower switches had been turned off.
(Continued on page 3)
DWIG-1T PAGANO
FORMER STAR - TREKER LEONARD NEMOY, who is currently campaigning
for Presidential aspirant George McGovern, spoke before a capacity crowd of 156
person* In Houston Hall Friday and told the assemblage that everyone should get
Involved in politics. Nemoy's appearance, ip snored by Peaa People for
McGovern, brought many Star-Trek enthusiast, more interested la phoay ears
than politics, however.
I
_—
——
Pag«l
The Daily Pennsylvania!)
$H]e Batlrj fbmmjllianian
IMS
•
1972
THt Newspaper of the University of Pennsylvania
CHAT BLAKEMAN. Editor-in-Chic/
THOMAS PAPSON, Managing Editor
THOMAS EW1NG, Business Manager
SCOTT GIBSON. Editorial Chairman. KATHE ARCHDEACON, New Editor;
STEVEN WINN. 34th Street Editor. PHILIP N SHIMKIN, Sports Editor.EDWARD ROTH. Photography Editor. RALPH POLUMBO. Financial
Manager. MERRY HENIG. Advertising Manager KAREN MIDDLETON, 34th
Street Business Manager ALICE F GOETZ. Production Manager: MICHAEL
STEPHEN GROSS. Credit Manner MARK J HOSENBALL. 34th Street
Associate Editor. ROBERT WEMDCHNER. 34th Street Associate Editor'. BILL
WITTE. AseoetmU Sports Editor: DANIEL A. KASLE, Associate Photography
Editor. ANTHONY KOVATCH. Assistant Sports Editor. BENJAMIN L GIN
SBERG, CofitritMMg Editor. MARK MclNTYRE, Contributing Editor.'
TM Daily Pannsrivan.an is puMnnad Monday through Friday al Philadelphia. Pa.,
during the (all and taring Kmmcrt. except during vacation periods One issue
published in August Subscriptions may be ordered al Sergeant Hall. 34th and Chestnut
Sts., at the rate o»»U Hper annum Second class postage paid al Philadelphia. Penn
sylvenia tvKM Phana* (2ISI S*4aMi Display and Classified Advertising may be
placed at the same address
The Air Attacks
The news that American warplanes are once again carrying out
extensive bombing raids over North Vietnam is painful proof that the
war in Indochina is far from over or even, as some would have it,
"winding down" It is proof also that the Nixon administration's Vietnam policy is deceitful and beset by contradictions that make raids such
as those over the weekend inevitable.
Until an American president is willing to state publicly and in no
uncertain terms that United States military forces - land, sea and air are withdrawing and will no longer participate in military operations,
the war will continue Until an American president is willing to admit
that our involvement there has been ill-advised and immoral from the
start, the righting will continue Until an American president is willing
to withdraw support of the Thieu regime and all it stands for, the war
will continue
But Mr. Nixon has yet to make any of these statements. Instead, he
has relied on a "Vietnamization" plan which is no more than a blueprint
for continued American involvement By making the United States'
withdrawal contingent upon the fighting capability of a rag-tag army
headed by the likes of Mr. Thieu, be has prolonged the war. Vietnamization may change the number of American casualties, but it does
nothing to alter the real arithmetic of the war. People continue to die in
Vietnam and they will until the American government drops its concept
of "victory."
And as his reaction to the North Vietnamese invasion shows, Mr.
Nixon remains firmly commited to the concept of military victory in
Indochina. That victory - in any sense of the word - can never be
achieved in Vietnam seems a fact that the President and his military
advisers simply cannot swallow.
To escalate the fighting at this time can serve only to rain more
terror and havoc on a people that have been subject to the horrors of this
war for too long. It will not bring "victory," nor stability to the Thieu
regime nor win it bring the return of any prisoners of war. The Paris
peace talks - which once could have served as a means to help end the
war and return peace to Indochina - are no longer in operation. Even
when they were they were used as political trump cards Mr. Nixon
could flout to critics at home; but thanks to the President and his new
bombing raids, the chance for a resumption of any meaningful talks in
Paris seems slim indeed
i The Prisiifl, by escalating the war, is iasulling U»e American
people as wen, who have registered time and time again their distaste
for the war and their desire to see it end And the only it will end is when
Mr. Nixon drops the rhetoric of a "Just and honorable peace" and
embarks on the only course with any honor in it at all; one which leads
immediately and directly to the withdrawal of all American ground and
air forces now operating in Indochina.
It is apparent however, that Mr. Nixon is not about to embark on this
course unless he is forced to do so. For too long, the American public and
the antiwar movement in general has ignored his political game-playing
and allowed him to turn the ground war into an air war. He has been
allowed to pursue a patchwork policy of lies, deceptions and contradictions without significant or sustained resistance.
But his decision to escalate the war at this stage should not go unchallenged The first priority of the American people should be. to put an
immediate end to the bombing through whatever means necessary,
whether that be massive civil disobedience, general strikes or through
the indirect use of Congressional power.
Finally, it is obvious, as so many have said in the past that Mr.
Nixon cannot be allowed to enter the presidency for a second term.
Never have the November elections seemed so important, for this man
has boldly demonstrated once more that he is in no way commited to
anything but political opportunism and is not even after three years as
president any closer to an understanding of peace.
F
I
?
A Closer Look at Admissions
l,\ Skip Kvinll
MM!
li.ilpli hilsli'>
Over the past few weeks, a great
deal of concern has been expressed as
to the abnormal working relationship
that has developed between Provost
Curtis Reitt and Dean of Admissions Peter Seely. Aside from the
Provost's directives that have been
termed by the Council Committee oa
Undergraduate Admissions and
Financial Aid as being "inconsistent
with the admissions policies approved
by the University Council," a great
deal of activity has been taking place
behind closed doors.
It is an open secret to concerned
parties that financially disadvantaged
students are not being as readily
admitted by the University as in the
past. Perhaps at this point we might
add that well over 90 per cent of all
black students receive some type of
financial aid To say, then, that this
year's admissions policies are
weighted against financially disadvantaged students is to make a
logical, but oversimplified conclusion.
However, additional evidence can
further substantiate this claim.
During George Schlekat's tenure
as Dean of Admissions, an Ad-Hoc
Sub-Committee on Black Admissions
was established to aid in interpreting
the more subtle points in black applicants about which most whites
would be totally unaware. This
committee then classified these
students according to the directives of
the McGill report. Even though it was
merely an advisory committee, its
recommendations were generally
implemented.
Upon Seely's arrival, the Ad-Hoc
Committee's
dissolution
was
authorized by the Provost and under
this authority, the Dean of Admissions
eliminated the committee. Apparently Seely either felt that his staff
no longer needed to take special care
in its consideration of black applicants, or be was not sufficiently
concerned to fully consider black
students who are applying. Either or
neither of these possibilities may be
correct, because in our opinion,
i
By Joseph Manama
Webster's defines culture as "the
enlightenment and refinement of taste
by acquiring intellectual and
aesthetic training.'! Culture, then, is
an instilling a sense of wonder, a sense
of beauty and worth within the individual. It is an insight gained from a
line of Shakespeare's. It is an understanding and appreciation of a
symphony. It is a serenity achieved, a
communication with one's entire
being occasioned by a painting.
Culture is, in short, an elevation of the
human spirit above and beyond the
daily routines which confine him. Our
educational system, our universities,
are failing to instill any sense of
culture.
American culture once consisted of
a belief in a fundamental equality
among people, a creed of liberty and
justice. We could always look above
our tasks and believe that, beyond
earning a living, we were somehow
serving the ends of democracy; we
were proving to the world that an
equitable and just system of government, one that represented its citizens
instead of dictating over them, one
Letters to the Editor
CULTURAL IMPERIALISM
Isn't There Some Simple Word For All That?"
neither was the reason for the committee's dissolution.
In its more subtle task of
classifying black students, the Ad-Hoc
Sub-Committee categorized a black
student's basis for admission as being
"academic, diversity," or "socioeconomic." AIT of these are specially
called for in the McGill report, and all
of these receive special admissions
shelters. With no Ad-Hoc SubCommittee, the final authority for
classification rests within the
discretion of the Dean of Admissions.
In practice, this means that a
financially disadvantaged student
with two 675's on his SAT's and in
financial need could be either
"academic, diversity," or "socioeconomic."
In viewing the recent admissions
directives from Provost Reitz, great
care has been taken to show that the
University still maintains the
"liberal" admissions policies that
were established by the University
Council. Accordingly, those affected
by the rollback were "diversity"
students; the center of the applicant
group that ostensibly bears a purely
heterogenous composition. Yet
somehow 40 black students were
affected by the rollback; a fantastically disproportionate number.
Since only diversity students were
rolled back (in accordance with the
Provost's directives), it can only be
assumed that the number of black
students in the "diversity" category
had been artificially inflated for the
express purpose of denying admission
to qualified blacks.
to charge that admissions
decisions were based on racist
criteria would merely be stating the
obvious; it is the motive that must be
examined.
The much publicized University
operating deficit is clearly the reason
behind the current chaos in admissions. The ability of the student to
finance his own education was a much
higher priority than it has been in
recent years. In short, the University
has prostituted itself to the State of
EUROPE
Pennsylvania for an additional
1700,000, at the risk of losing even
more of what little prestige still
remains. Students now paying the
highly inflated tuition rates stand to
gain a badly deflated "prestige"
degree.
The answer to the University's
financial problems certainly does not
lie within the Admissions Office. The
imposition of such harsh directives
upon the talented and dedicated individuals in the Admissions Office can
only result In a disservice to these
administrators and to the University
in general.
By not rolling back athletes, who
as a group "require a high proportion
of financial aid," and by accepting
academically marginal but financially able students, the University
sacrificed the much needed and better
qualified students as well as the
socially disadvantaged student for the
trickle of extra revenue that the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
would grant if a higher number of
state students were to be admitted.
The activities of Reitz and Seely, in
violation of University Council
authority can only be viewed as a
method of altering admissions policy
in the short run in preparation for new
admission criteria that will replace
the McGill report.
Perhaps revising the budgets of
those departments with only a handful
of undergraduate majors, or cutting
back on departments that are artificially supported by requirements
may be a place to start. But the
wastefulness and inefficiency of the
University should not be the cause of
denying admission to qualified
students.
Ralph Easley, a junior in the
Wharton School, is a member of
the Council Committee on Undergraduate Admissions and
Financial Aid and the Commonwealth Relations Board.
Edward Everett, a junior in the
College, is a member of the
Student Affairs Committee.
Culture on the American Scene
f
a>
Monday April 17, 1972
Sir: Opponents of the language
requirement are at it again. Some of
their points are valid, but I must ask
some questions.
What would be the effect of doing
away with the requirement, here and
elsewhere, on high school foreign
language study, on foreign language
knowledge in this country?
Why is opposition to foreign
language study characteristic of the
U.S. student, as opposed to his
European counterpart?
Why, in such horror stories about
the future as Huxley's "Brave New
World" do we end with only one living
language, English?
Is there such a thing as cultural
and linguistic provincialism? Cultural
and linguistic imperialism? How
would the statement that an educated
"Yank" need not be bothered with
learning a foreign language go over in
Hanoi or Havana?
I speak for myself; some of my
colleagues object to this introduction
of political issues, but I think there are
political and moral problems involved, and hope they receive consideration. I am still for the
requirement, not for the crass
motives some attribute to language
teachers - falsely, and the imputation
borders on character assassination but because, for example, of the time
in a drugstore in Montreal when I
asked for aspirin in French and was
told by the English pharmacist, "Why
don't you speak white?"
Vive le Quebec libre, et Vivent les
langues estrangeres!
FRANK PAUL BOWMAN
that provided equal opportunity to all,
could work.
It was, we believe, precisely our
idealogical foundations which made
our country great, and we could point
to this heritage as proudly as the
Frenchman could point to the bouvre
or Versailles or as the Dutch to
Rembrandt; we could feel the same
sense of elation as any of our
European
counterparts.
Unfortunately, we had little else; when
our ideaology proved so painfully
false, we were reduced to the roles our
workday routines imposed on us; we
could no longer claim that our nine-tofive jobs, our house in the suburbs, our
new car was part of a greater
humanistic, meaningful scheme. The
European will still feel a surge of
pride and speak of the glories of his
country; the American turns on his
television set and silently eats his T.V.
dinner.
Perhaps it is due to the American
stress on consumption; perhaps it is
due to our relatively short history, but
the spiritual malaise in American, the
dissatisfied quest for meaningfulness
in life, seems to end here with more
barren results than could be hoped
for. Ours, the potentially richest of all
cultures with all our ethnic diversity,
is the most barren of all cultures with
the dollar and a faltering economic
system remaining as our major
contribution to the world. When we
revolt against materialism; when we
decry the hypocrisy of our stated
ideals, we are left with nothing.
Why? Can't we stress the individual's abilities, cultivate his
appreciation of his potential and what
he could achieve as well as cultivating
his wallet and technical skills? Can't
we instill an honest appreciation of
spiritual values, a sense of the
aesthetic, of pride in self-fulfillment?
And with one-third of all youth passing
through universities, with all of us
passing through the primary levels of
the educational system, wouldn't that
same educational system be an ideal
place to start?
Others may argue that our whole
liberal arts education: our English
courses, our history and sociology
courses, are geared toward instilling
a sense of culture within us. But are
they? When we read a work of
literature, are we taught how to appreciate its style, the way it conveys
the message, or are we taught to
accept the professor's pronouncements that this is what the author
meant to say; don't bother with trying
to figure out the art by which he said
it, forget it all after the exam.
In a word, are our critical abilities,
are our sensibilities being developed
or is just an endorsed interpretation of
what the author meant to convey in
this particular book merely being
passed on to us? Further, is a lecture
a suitable medium for 'developing
abilities within the individual or only
of conveying what the professor has
thought of? And just what purpose
does a lecture serve, especially in a
University in which the students are
paying {3,000 a year to be "educated".
Perhaps a* part of our education
should include sensitivity training, a
sensitivity toward others, toward art
and literature! a training toward
greater, not less, self-expression,
training toward a greater appreciation and testing out of our
various abilities, of the hows, not the
whats. This training is at least as
important as the factual knowledge
we are supposedly acquiring in our
classes.
This real knowledge would last
within us rather than dying after the
exam because it would reawaken our
sense of being, our sense of wonder,
our sense of wanting to and being able
to do, to build, to appreciate, instead
of to consume, to meaninglessly
switch on the set. It would reinstil a
sense of committment, of exploration,
instead of indifference. Shouldn't the
American educational system,
shouldn't the universities, especially,
make up its remiss contribution to
American culture, toward the
fulfillment of the individual?
Shouldn't education concentrate on
encouraging differing individual
abilities instead of encouraging us to
accept and memorize "the word"
from on high?
Joseph Hanania is a student in the
Graduate School of Arts and
Sciences.
ONLY 460 round trip
Ad Travel
4058 Chestnut St.
Sight Point
Institute
Sight Point Institute H an experimental
summertime com
mumtv ol scholar! which it b*ir>a
MI up by a poop of Reed Col
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on a Inn on the coett of Nova
Scoiia. and m aiter.ee will be a
imaN community of no more
than iwenty fi.e ilurjentl who
havt foiten together to live in
the country and itudy with one
another during the summer in
a 'roe and informal elmotphere
If you are interested in comma.
write lo Alan Welworlh. Bo.15*. Bead Collet*. Portland.
t>a #7202.
For your private parties at
home or food concessions
in fraternity houses Call:
CARIBBEAN
CATERERS
Also taking reservations for
graduation parties.
Call after 6 in the evening
EV 6-2047
presents
.MOVIES.
THE KING
AND I
WED,APRIL 19
7&10
FANTASIA
SAT., APRIL 22
7 & 9:30
SKIMMER
THIS WEEKEND
APRIL 21 800
SAVOY BROWN
MALO
JOHN BALDRY
TICKETS AT H.H.
$3.50 TIL 4:00, 4/18
$4,00 4/19-4/21
HILL HALL FIELD
(NO GLASS)
TONIGHT
NAT'L. LAMPOON
ED. DOUG KENNEY
SPEAKING IN
FA-B1. 8:00
FREE
MORGAN STATE
ART EXHIBIT
BY
PAUL COLLINS
H.H. BOWL ROOM
GET IN
YOUR SPORTS
CAR
RALLYE ENTRY
BLANKS
SKIMMER 72
CONCERT.
MOVIE. RACES.
FOOD, MUSIC, ART,
FUN
penn union council
informolion
594-5284
special
graduation
rate
ilNOLES PROM S1S.OO
DOUBLES PROM SIB.OO
Raaarvatlona Raqulrad
So that your family and friends may have the finest
accommodations while in town for commencement, we
have planned this unusually low room rate.
They will receive our personalized attention while
enjoying the modern comforts of Penn Center Inn . . .
which includes FREE self-service indoor parking,
Color TV. in-room Coffee Service, cocktail lounge and
restaurants.
For sight-seeing, theatres, museums and fine restaurants, Penn Center Inn's central location makes your
family's visit convenient as well as pleasurable.
Penn Center Inn
20th and MARKET STREETS. PHILADELPHIA. PA'. • (215) 569-3000.
or call S00-AE 8-5000 (loll traa)
■"■■
Page a
The Daily Pennsylvania!!
Monday AprU 17, 1972
News in Brief
STOUFFER TRIANGLE
HIGHLIGHTS OF THIS WEEK'S MENU
McGovern Criticizes Bombings
_-...._
..
.
By United Preiis Inlernalional
Senator
George
McGovern
denounced the renewed bombing of
North Vietnam as "a moral outrage
and dangerous gamble" Sunday in
Los Angeles.
Antiwar groups and at least two of
McGovern's opponents for the
Democratic presidential nomination
joined the South Dakota senator in
criticizing the Nixon administration's
decision to bomb the Hanoi and
Haiphong areas.
But Senator Robert Dole of Kansas,
the Republican National Chairman,
defended the action and criticized
McGovern and Senators Hubert H.
Humphrey of Minnesota and Edmund
S. Muskie of Maine for their antiwar
statements.
Senate Democratic leader Mike
Mansfield, en route to Peking with
Senate GOP leader Hugh Scott.
♦
nrcdirlpd that "the war will hp
predicted
be
lengthened " Scott had no comment.
The White House referred all
inquiries about the bombing to the
Pentagon, which had no immediate
comment on the action.
(h<>u En-Lai
Denounces Bombings
HONG KONG -Chinese Premier
Chou En-Lai Sunday denounced the
U.S. bombing of Hanoi and Haiphong
as the "old track of war escalation."
The Chinese Premier and ViceForeign Minister Han Nien-Ling
Sunday evening met with Tran Binh,
Interim Charge D'Affaires Ad Interim
of the Embassy of the Republic of
South Vietnam (Viet Cong) in Peking.
the New China News Agency (NCNA)
said.
Chou told Tran the Chinese people
"firmly support the solemn and just
BRING THIS AD AND YOUR FAVORITE
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Apollo 16
(Continued from page 1)
"What we are concerned about is
that one of those RCS( Reaction
Control System) tanks may be leaking
and affecting the thermal protection
blanket on top, said Mission Control
spokesman Douglas Ward.
After the power was turned on,
engineers in Mission Control said they
could not see any low tank pressures the normal indication of a leak - in the
data being radioed back.
"From what we're looking at, the
system "A" pressures look okay,"
capsule communicator Donald H
Peterson told the astronauts. "We
don't see any problems with the
tanks."
"Okay," Young replied slowly.
"But it sure is something strange
coming out of there. I never saw
anything like that on LM (Lunar
Module) 4. I'm not normally a rabblerouser, but there is just something
funny going on here."
LM 4 was the landing craft in
which Young flew to within 10 miles of
the moon in May, 1969 aboard Apollo
10.
■LOOD DONORS WANTED
Fee Paid
Write: BLOOD DONORS CLUB
■U RltteakMMe CtarMge
Pkila ,P«. 1I1U
Ghrei
BA 2-2245
Offtr Good At Lon, Ai You Htv. Thu Ad
^—r
stand" of Vietnamese Communists
and "warmly congratulated" the
"brilliant victories" on the battle
fields.
/
THIS WEEK ONL Yl
The
EFFECTIVE AS OF APRIL 17, 1972
Monday
Dinner
Roast Beel au jus
Poik & Sau eikiaut-«/ Dump Iings
Spanish Ma ckeiel - Baked Filet
Tuesday
Lunch
Veal Parme gian
Individual Chicken Pol Pie
Fool long Chi 11 Dog
Dinner
Chuckwagon Steak w/ Giavy
Sauleed Be el. I ivei smoiheied in Onions
Roasi leg of Veal »/ B.ead Diessmg
Wednesday
Lunch
Cheese Sie ak on Hoagm Ro 11
Stuffed Gr een Peppei
Chicken a la King on Toast Points
Dinner
Fr ied Shr i mp w/ Cockt aiI Sauce
Roast Turk ey w/ Dressing 8 Cranberry Sauce
Cubed Beef Steak w/ Onion Gravy
Thursday
Lunch
Fried File I of Fish
Stacked Ro ast Beef on Kaiser Ro
Franks & B aked Beans
I
Dinner
80*
85*
75*
Honey Dipp ed Chicken
Roast Lom of Pork
Spagbett i w/ Meat BalIs
Friday
Lunch
70*
55*
65*
Apple Frit ters w/ Van11 la Sauce
Meat Ball Hero
Tuna Chow Me in over Rice
Dinner
. 65*
65*
75*
Surf Cakes w/ Tartar Sauce
Baked Meal Loaf
Pot Roasf of Beef
filadelphia smiling
hummer
ffia
smiling
hummer
will be sold for
The New, low
price of
50 <
STOUFFER TRIANGLE DINING HOURS:
Contract and Unlimited Purchase
Dining Room ■ Formal Dining
Room ISecond Floor)
Hreakfnst
Dinner
Monday - Friday
7:30 am to 10:00 am
11:30 am to 1:30 pm
5:00 pm to 700 pm
A la carte Dining Room ■ Rustic
Dining Room IFirst Floor)
Breakfast
Lunch
Dinner
Monday - Friday
7:10 am to 10:00 am
11:30 am to 1:30 pm
5:00 pm to 7:00 pm
■<
smiling
hummer
Thousands sold 9t out tegular price of *2.00 each!
Available only at the U of P Bookstore and
at every Penn Dining Service facility.
Unlimited Meal Purchase Prices
Breakfast
$ 1.25
Lunch
$1.75
Dinner
$ 2.50
».
Lunch
It
Application's are now being
accepted for graduate
fellows at Stouffer
College House.
What is the Hummer?
The Hummer it a discount
coupon book. Merchants from the Penn campus and downtown Phi la.
area are giving you valuable discounts just to introduce you to
their stores and restaurants. Simply tear out the coupon, give
it to any one of over 100 area merchants, and receive generous
discounts at their stores.
Recover the entire cost of the book with one using;!
Here are examples of our fabulous discount coupons.
Save $1.00 on the purchase of 2 $5.98 or JU.98
(list price) records at Jerry's.
Get 2 regular cones for the price of one at Just
Ice Cream.
Get 3 pecks of 5 Wilkinson blades for only 89c
*
*
"
(a $2.17 value) at Oil's on 40th Street.
Save $1.00 on Smokey Joe's famous Steak-a-Bob
Platter.
Get 20* off any purchase at The Card N' Gift N
Party Shop.
And ow 100 mn fm bonum & pemtl
Available Only to Hummer members
Why this neW, lo\V price?
Our new management believes
the 50c will let every Penn student and faculty member enjoy
these fantastic savings at local stores. We hope that this will
be the permanent price of ""The Hummer"!
All those interested should
bring a resume,
two references and
an essay expressing your
reasons for living at
Stouffer.
Huny and buy youf Hummer discount book!
Remmberl
After this week, the Hummer will not be sold
anywhere until the New 1972-1973 book is
published in September.
to rm. 104 College Hall
M
..jift&a
Page«
ylvanian
SYMPHONIC FANTASTIQUE
ft*
<$&**
■MM!
Emil Gilels
Pierre Monteux
Vladimir Horowitz
Sviatoslav Richter
Fritz Kreisler
Arturo Toscanini
■ fj«
.*s
l'A
\V
•
Eugene Ormondy
Bruno Walter
George Szell
David Oistrakh
Glenn Gould
Walter Gieseking
Pablo Casals
Alfred Brendel
Wilhelm Furtwangler
Felica Blumental
Jascha Horenstein
H
"///MM//
Wilhelm Kempff
Guiomar Novaes
NOLST: THE PLANETS
LEOmOSTOKOWSIU
A#
.
.Odyssey
Records^ M
Ite U. Aapln PMkmujk Dntotba
1«0"*£»«*,
>«<'»•*• ■0-3
;->••'■
ergs*
tH»"°
Artur Schnabel
Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
Otto Klemperer
Sir Thomas Beecham
Sir Malcom Sargent
Claudio Arrau
Leopold Stokowski
'GT3 •<•■:■■
- >iiyui
" *ofl
.SgWHIM
Quantities limited.
Come early for
best selection.
ft
m
g ran
m
nonesuch
WA
♦*>
\l„ ml l/iiiutil.
records
VANCUARD
Felix Swarowsky
Jean Martinon
Charles Munch
Pierre Boulez
Jean Pierre Rampal
Istvan Kertesz
, EVERYMAN
Iff
Vladimir Golschir
Josef Krips
Deller Consor
„•■•««
^
7
STEREO Treasury? semes
Herbert Von Karajan
Ernest Ansermet
Antar Dorati
Wilhelm Backhaus
Rafael Kubelik
Fritz Reiner
««
Joseph Sziget
Sir Adrian Boi
m
kpril 17, 1972
:——
The Daily Pennsylvanian
Page 5
Corporate Responsibility
University of Pennsylvania's
ANNENBERG CENTER
for Communication Arts and Sciences
In a form letter sent to the
presidents of all Universities holding
stock in the target companies, the
Project's director, Philip W. Moore,
asserted, "We urge you to caivfully
consider our proposals and to consult
the entire university communityincluding students, faculty, employees, and alumni in deciding bow
to vote.
"The project believes that
universities-committed as they are to
the betterment of mankind-have a
special obligation to make sure that
the companies in whom they invest
are acting for the public interest," the
letter said. "We hope you will support
our proposals."
The Trustee committee is currently
readying guidelines for future investment decisions regarding issues
of corporate responsibility. Mundheim said that committee members
are examining a tentative draft and
hope to have a set of guidelines for
publication in time for the May
meeting of the full Board of Trustees.
Meanwhile, the Tristees of Yale
University last week adopted investment guidelines which reportedly
give Yale an "activist" role in issues
of corporate responsibility.
The new guidelines are based on a
book published by a Yale professor
last month entitled "The Ethical
Investor."
The book suggests the University "take shareholder action to deal with
company practices which appear to
inflict significant social injury." It
defines "social injury" as "a violation
or frustration of domestic or international legal norms meant to
protect against deprivations of health,
safety or basic freedoms."
It onlinurd from pane I)
•Smith. Kline It French
UibaratariM-another University
•weed atatfc- to "conduct a com■rdtwtw and objective study of the
extort to which the Corporation's
advrrttMMg. promotional, and
warfcetasg practices may possibly
hove coNtributed to the abuse and
overawe of amphetimines. bar
bttorste* and other mood-altering
dr«g».~
Aaadkcr Smith Kline & French'
proposal requires "the company and
Mo afaMdaartes to include in their
lobrJiog and advertising for drugs
mjswfactured and marketed in
foragst coaatrtes at least the same
■'oraJagj 'including dangerous side
effect*' aa are required by the Food
aad Drag Administration."
While the Project's proxy statement
notes that "it has no evidence" of any
"objartlaaabh practices" in this area
on the port of Smith Kline and French,
it points la practices of other drug
caassxsaita and claims it "believes
that the policy declaration is appropriate lor all companies that
engage hi the foreign market."
The University owns over 5,000
shares of Smith Kline * French stock.
The Project is also continuing its
throe-year battle with the General
Motors Corporation with proxy
statements catling for a study of
whether CM.C. should be divided into
two or more companies and an attempt la make the nation's largest
corporation more responsive to public
The University currently owns only
272 shores of General Motors stock
faisMhaf the sale of over 32,000 shares
The recent Chrysler and AT. k T.
leeioions are in line with the
Budget
Uwverstty-s vote against last year's
i CM. proposals to make the
(Continued from page I)
"We've decided," Zemsky said,
"not to release information by
department at this time." He said
there are idiosyncrasies within the
budgets which are not explained by
the figures themselves.
As an example, he said that wellestablished departments have higher
faculty salaries than newer ones,
because faculty members have had
time to move up in rank.
Zemsky said the material was not
being released in response to
demands made at the sit-in several
weeks ago, but that the administration would have disclosed the
information anyway.
> giant's board of directors more
representative of various groups.
ExpmMng: the CM. vote, commatee member John W. Eckman
•aid, "It was the overriding feeling of
the committee that a director must
wprsatat the best interests of the
aatire corporation and not a special
fcstcreet or constituency."
Pshawing last year's CM. vote, the
committee wrote CM. board
chairman James M. Roche noting its
concern that the corporation make
advancements in minority-hiring,
pollution control and automobile
safety. It requested that the
MukktUkri be informed of the
r's efforts in this behalf.
the I'hilomathean Art Gallery
Invites You To
An Opening Keception'
TONIGHT, 7-9 P.M.
Tickets: $3
Free with U. of P. Identity Card
Box Office Phone: 594-6791
GRAPHICS 72
■ ■
THE PLOUGH AND THE STARS
THE COST OF WAR AND CIVIL STRIFE
By M.F.A. Students in GRADUATE
An Inquiry into the Causes and Consequences
School of FINE ARTS
at Penn.
Exhibit runt until May 16, Mon - Fri. 12 - 6
4th Floor, College Hall
IT
3729
Refrethments Served
LOCUST WALK
The Plough and the Sun niiet issues
attempting to hold her family logethcr
it urfenl today at when O'Catey
during a period of military occupation
produced hit masterpiece. These touch
upon the responsibility for armed
and civil violence
siruffte ... the illusions thai make men
Panels
Tight and die . .. the realization that
there it no way to step aside. To examine
Now on Sale at the Bookstore...
such ittuet the Annenberg Center for
Communication Arts and Sciences
offers a tenet of discussions, panels, and
Thin Weeks
films. The public it invited and admission
■ free.
Films
Best Seller List
The Play ho v of the Wnlern World
"... a iipc and rousing lilin of Syngc's
great comedy! Classic piece of strong,
sarcastic humor, bubbling and bursting
lorcc ol character. I very lover ol Irish
theatre should sec this handsome
I
THE WINDS OF WAR. Wouk
S
THE WORD Wallace
.
I
81
1
4
film*"
•'.
THE EXORCIST. Blitty
•
THE DAY OF THE JACKAL. Forty*
S
a
WHEELS. Hailey
4
Theatre with Barbara Stanwyck,
•
a
f
4
14
«
u
a
THE ASSASSINS. Kazan
7
THE BLUE KNIGHT. Wambeugh
•
THE FRIENDS OF EDDIE COYLE. Higjrtni
t
THE BETSY. RobMnfl
MONDAY THE RABBI TOOK OFF. Kemelnun
t
GENERAL
I
THE CAME OF THE FOXES. Farago
I
II
t
THE DEFENSE NEVER RESTS. Bailey with Arwuon
4
i«
4
OPEN MARRIAGE. O'Neill
8
4
4
ELEANOR AND FRANKLIN. Lath
8
8S
•
THE DOUBLE-CROSS SYSTEM. Mattenaaa
4
7
•
TRACY AND HEPBURN. Kanln
8
18
7
A WORLD BEYOND. Montgomery
8
THE MOON'S A BALLOON. Niven
•
I'M O K.—YOU'RE O.K. Harris
14
REPORT FROM ENGINE CO 82. Smith
and theatrical background of
B
meaning of a contemporary production of
... .'
10 OOp m (lollowing the perlormanceof
considered arc the Irish literary revival,
The Plough and the Sun)
the Abbey Theatre, (he place of OTascy
Zcllcrbach Theatre. Annenberg ('enter.
in twentieth century drama, and the way
the director has conceived of this
36811 Walnul
production in relation to its history
PANEL: Problems in Producing
and its effectiveness for a modern
Tuesday. April 25
I mn li Braler. Attislant Protestor of
l.nglish, moderator
Thomas Oucncwald, Director,
4 00 pin
IMOVatoui
Studio Theatre. Annenbeig Center.
of the play into lurlher consideration
him. depicting the Algerian rebellion
of the naiuic ol personal responsibility
against the Trench between 1954 and
1957. Won 11 international awards,
in a social upheaval Men and women
"caught up" in war and civil sinle
including the Best Picture Award at the
beyond Ihi'ir contiol
Venicejilm festival Pontccorvo
staged totally convincing scenes of
do intenl, conscience, and moral
massive street demonstrations and riots.
The staggering, newsrecl-likc authenticity
course''
of the performances and camerawork
l.arry (.rocs, Assistant Prolcssor ol
( ommunii ,iii..nv moderator
gave The Bailie of Algiers a unique
(•eorge (icrhnci. Profoami "I
dramatic impact
Communications
Shame. (Skammen) Ingmar Bergman's
II ( ol I JUS K Rutland. Astoiuic
I'rolesvn ol Military Si icint
confrontation with wai
non-political
8
another. It is his look at the universe
violent and unknown
16X0 Walnul
FILM: Shame (Skammen)
Friday. April 28
what part
imagination play in plotting their
and without allegiance to one side or
Thursday. April 27
4 00 p.m
The Bailie of Algien A highly influential
of these scenes and the vital spontaneity
FILM: ih. Batik .»i Akkra
The Plough and the Sun
The discussion will extend the experience
Philip PIKIIIKIJ. Assistant PriwVttni
ol Soi lolory
4:00 p.m
Studio Theatre. Annenberg (enter.
3680 Walnul
FILM: Open City
10.00 p.m (lollowing the performance ol
Ihi Hi-ugli and the Slam
/.ellerbach Theatre, Annenberc Center.
368llWjlnul
PANEL: Who is Responsible'"
with survival a
CALENDAR
keystone of human behavior.
I
Thursday. April 20
maslcipiecc revolutionized post-war
4 00 p.m
I uropcan film slyle Anna Magnant is
Studio Theatre. Anncnbcre ( ClMCf,
memorable as a mother unsuicessfully
UNIVERSITY OF
PENNSYLVANIA
BOOKSTORE
The Hough and the Sun
audience.
Who is Hetpoi.sihle7
Barry I tt/gcrald
Open Cily. Rosscllim's nciwcalistic
Sf-r our special display at
Saturday. April 22
The Plough and the Sun Issues to be
Gerald Wcakrs, Prolessor of l.nglish
Preston I oslei, Ward Bond, and
I
I
FILM: The Hough and the Start
Sean O'Casey's work at it informs the
of l.nglish
4
IS
This discussion will focus on the literary
Joel C'onarroc. Associate Professor
elastic film version (1936) ol the play.
starring members of Dublin's Abbey
4
Problems m Producing The Plough and
the Stars
4:00 p.m.
Studio Theatre. Annenberg (enter.
3680 Walnut
Studio Ihealie. AniH-nhetg (enter,
\ew York Times
The Hough and the Sun I ohn I urd's
a
World
Friday. April 21
with wonderful lolk imagination and
FICTION
FILM: The I'layboy ol the Western
The Annenberg (enter production of
The PUiugh and the Sun will be
performed in the /ellerbach Theatre.
Monday through Satuiday evenings.
April 18 through April 29. at 7: JO p.m.
I6XH Walnul
Admission to play $3
FREE WITH U. of P. IDENTITY CARD
Box Office Phone 594-6791
Admission lo lecture, panels and films it free to public
41
Monday April 17, 1972
The Daily Pennsylvania!!
PageG
Campus Events
ae**
OFFICIAL
PHILA . 19107
WESL
4040 LOCUS1 SI.
PHILA. 19104
923-8799
382 - 1363
1129 PINE SI.
CAREER
ALTERNATIVES
ADVISING: VVH.il do you want 10 do alter
Peon? Talk it over at the Advising Center.
II? Logan Hall. 5*4 6596.
PROFESSIONAL COUNSELING: For
lull time Univ. students without tee. 3812
Walnul St.. * A.M. 5 P.M.. 5*4 7011.
CAMPUS EVENTS
THE PLOUGH AND THE STARS* by
Sean O'Casey. directed by Thomas
Gruenewald. In Zellerbach Theatre. 1680
Walnut St.. previews today, shows April 17
29 at 7:30 P.M. Tickets: S3 general, tree
with U of P. I D. card. For information
call 5*4 67*1
COMMUNICATIONS
COLLOOUium
Julian Hochberg. Prof, ol Psychology,
Columbia Univ., speaks on "World Beyond
the Screen - Visual Perception and Moving
Pictures" at 4 P.M. In Rm. 126. Annenberg
School, loday. free.
C.A. EATERY: Corn Bread Tamale Pie
will be served today from II 30 J 30 in the
C.A. Basement. As always, sandwiches,
danling desserts, "veggie" specials, and
daily soups are on sale. Also sandwiches
and drinks are available at Philadelphia's
only sidewalk cale, located on Locust Walk.
Tomorrow: Egg Foo Young with sweet 'n
sour veggies
CATACOMBS:
Business meeting,
tonight at 5 P.M. All you people we never
see. now's the time to come around1
CLASS OF 1*7): Elections for class
officers and executive board will be Tues.,
April II In Houston Hall. High Rise South,
High Rise East. Dietrich Hall and Van Pell
Library.
FOREIGN
LANGUAGE
REQUIREMENT: Help us abolish It. Sign up
at COS office, or call Denis at E V 2 4644
NEW SALES - REPAIRS - ACCESSORIES
HE COMPLETE WHEELMAN
ii
Bomb Raids
Trying to find the blue and white
underground?
GENERAL
HONORS
PROGRAM:
Today. Ivy Rm.. Houston Hall, dinner and
discussion concerning our program.
^.APPLICATIONS ARE NOW BEING
accepted for graduate fellows at Stouffer
College House. All those Interested should
bring a resume, two references and an
essay expressing your reasons for living at
Stouffer to Rm. )04, College Hall.
KUNDALINI YOGA CLASS: Taught by
Baba C, change of schedule. Previously
held Wed.. 8 PM., High Rise South Rooftop
Lounge; now held Mon , I P.M., reading
room. High Rise South.
GSAC MEETINGS: All gradstudents and
club representatives are Invited to attend
every Tuts., at II A.M. In the Franklin
Room, 2nd fl., Houston Hall.
GIVE BLOOD: Tomorrow at Phi Kappa
Sigma, * A.M. 5 P.M.
INSTITUTE OF CONTEMPORARY
ART: Presents Susan Sonlag's film, "Duet
for Cannibals." att:30 P.M . Wed.. April 19,
In the Fine Arts Building.
It's easier than you think. Follow
your nose to the "CLEAN SCENE"
in the Quad-right next to the
QUAD GRILLE.
Grand Opening Tuesday,
April 18th at 4:30!
THE JOURNEY OF THE FIFTH
"ORSE by Ronald Ribman will be per
formed by Penn Players in Houston Hall
Aud.. April II 22 at I P.M.. free.
LAW SCHOOL FORUM: "Is There A
Role for the Organized Bar?" Informal
discussion with Alexander Unkovlc,
president, Pennsylvania Bar Assoc.: Hon.
Roy Willnson. chairman of the stale board
of law examiners. William Klaus, of the
National Legal Aid and Defender Assoc..
today. 3 P.M. Moot Courtroom. Law
School, pre law students Invited.
McGOVERN: The only worthwhile
alternative. Foot and phone canvassing
daily, plus office work, at our Penn office at
3733 Walnut St. Phone: EV 7 2*41.
MYRA STAUM. In a program of
chamber music for flute of Telemann.
Mozart, Bartok, and Poulenc. Sat., April 22.
I P.M.. Annenberg Center, Rm. 511. free,
open to public.
PIR VILAYAT INAYAT KHAN, head of
the Sufi order, will teach at St. Mary's
Episcopal Church. 3*01 Locust St., on lues..
April II, 7.30 ».30 S2.
PHILOMATHEAN ART GALLERY
Invites you to attend their last opening
reception of the year for an exhibit of
oraphlcs by grad students of fine arts at
Penn Tonight, 7 9 P.M . College Hall, 4th fl.
PRINT SALE: Graphics, Illustrations
on sale in Houston Hall West Lounge, 117
P.M. on Wed.. April 19th
ROY BUCHANAN: In concert. April 23.
Skimmer Sunday, at the International
House. 37th and Chestnut, 7 and »:30 P.M.
General admission tickets, 12.50 at Houston
Hall. The Seed. Jerry's Records.
SAVE YOUR NEWSPAPERS, MAGAZINES. CAROBOARD: Recycle them from
noon. Frl., April 21 to noon, Sat., April 22 at
High Rise North parking lot, 40th and
Locust.
SKIMMER WEEKEND: April 2123.
concert. April 21. Savoy Brown. Malo. and
John Baldry. I P.M.. Hill Hall 'Field
Tickets S3 50 til 4 P.M Tues ,14. Apr.l 19 21
M H Sports Car Rallye. Frl ; Fantasia, Sat.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE Is setting
up a Junior Year Abroad program in
Grenoble, France. Students interested
should contact Prof. Bowman In Romance
Languages. 217 Logan Hall, extension 6315
or EV 6 4413.
TEACH NEXT FALL: For Parkway
Program High School, meeting In High
Rise East, seminar room, Thurs.. April 20
at 7.30 P.M or call Charles Jaffee, EV 20770.
UNIVERSITY OF BRNO ACADEMIC
CHOIR in concert (Czechoslovakia), at I
P.M.. Wed., April I*. International House
Aud.. SI.
STUDENT CONSUMERS BOARD:
Open 24 hrs. Call EV 2-1313.
WOMEN'S LIBERATION OFFICE:
Now open in C A. Room 13.
PROBLEM PREGNANCY: Call Jim or
Barbara. EV 6 0724 at the C.A.
SEX COUNSELING CENTER: Apt 604.
High Rise East. EV 2 5271 Mon Thurs.. 3 5
P.M. for information and referrals
TALKING POINT: Sun. Thurs., I 11
P.M. at Van Pelt. Houston, McClelland or
call 13* 3437 day or night
ACTIVITIES
ARMENIAN CLUB: Final meeting,
Tues., April II. 11 A.M.. Houston Hall.
Harrison Rm . 2nd fl Elections
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
ORGANIZATION: Meeting. 11 A.M.. Tues.,
Houston Hall, Ivy Room. Everyone
welcome.
HISTORY 574: Today's movie is "In
vaslons of the Body Snatchers" (1»S6,
Siegell In FA B 1 at 4 P.M.
JUNIORS: Are Invited to Sphinx
smoker, 7 P.M.. Houston Hall Bowl Rm..
Tues.. April II.
MEETING
FOR
PROSPECTIVE
MANAGERS for next year's championship
soccer team at 7 P.M.. Thurs.. April 20. at
18th fl. lounge of High Rise South.
ORGANIZATIONAL
MEETING:
Today, I P.M. Rap Room, C.A, (or War
Crimes Convention featuring Hubert
Humphrey. 4 P.M. Tues.. Irvine.
RALLY FOR VD AWARENESS: Noon,
today, JFK Plaza.
SPHINX AND KEY: All. new and old
members, please attend a dessert party,
Sun., April 30.1 P.M., 10th ft lounge of High
Rise South. Old members bring dues and
cookies, cakes, etc.
STAGE BAND: Tues., at 7 P.M. in the
Ivy Room in Houston Hall.
SPRING IS HEREI Women's lacrosse
arrived with It. All are welcome. Mo
Thurs., 4-6 P.M., Hill Hall Field
URBAN STUDIES: All Interested In
fieldwork program for fall term see Ann
Lowry, 127 GSFA. Meeting today at 7:30
P.M. High Rise East rooftop.
UPMUNC '73: Important organizational
meeting Tues.. I P.M. at IAA office. 3*05
Spruce (back door). All Interested persons
invited. Suggestions requested for next
year's conference.
VD TREATMENT
Confidential diagonosis and
treatment of venereal disease are
available free of charge to
everyone at Venereal Disease
Counterattack centers
throughout Philadelphia. For
information, call LO 7 - C151.
P.U.C. CAMPUS CURATORS
Artist, may register
FRIDAY. 21 APRIL
FINE ARTS PLAZA
11 A.M. - 5 P.M.
llOCollegeHall
Classifieds
FOB
SALS
*ENOER TELECAST**
-rRFBCT
one year old
tef-a white body
Maple neck
Two pick new
Custom
hardwood case
Asking S2M Vf »•
4171 after * 30
4471
COMPLITI HOUSEHOLD, IVKV
thing has to go
Reds, fable*, rues,
cnelrs,
dishes,
etc
Terrif.c
Mr
gain 712 4074. evenmet
em
'64
VW,
RADIO.
Sir
CLIAN.
very good cond, latest intaac. Wick
er. new tiras. best offer
732*4*1 a
Jf4 SU7
407}
WHERE ARE YOU
GOING TO
LIVE NEXT YEAR?
Come SM us - UiwewKty City
Housing Co. Wo hat* the finest
housing in the campus area.
Eff•ctency - 4
eHttMVOTe}
-
B*BV**M
fTcWMeVt,
arVVl
apt
to
11 a.m. - 7 pen - E V 2-2966
BOGEN PA AMP
ii*
SEP BASS.
Treb
Mic 4 MH If***)**
14* 7*e*
after 7 P.M. ■akart.
4*77
1*4* KAttMEN OMIA CONVERTIBLE
Excellent condition, new lap. AM fM
New snows and regular tires Sports
group, ski rack, stereo wired. Ask
ing SI700 evenings Dang E V 24177.
TYPISTS
PUBLIC
STENOGRAPHER. SPECIalizing In Master's Thesis, Doctoral
-Dissertations,
Manuscripts,
Re
•aarefi Papers. Samples of Work In
Area Libraries. Flora Carlln. 279
2311.
2675
TYPIST, IBM, PICA/ELITE. TOP
Qualify
dissertations.
manuscripts
and term papers In all fields. Foreign
symbols excellent faculty references.
DorlsGR7aMl.
4721
WANT YOUR TYPING WORK DONE
with electric typewriter. Call EV A
7HS.
4597
TYPIST, IBM ELECTRIC
TYPEwrlfer.
Professional
quality
term
papers,
manuscripts.
Theses,
and
Doctoral Dissertations Foreign sym
bals Experienced ALL Departments.
References DIANE, GR 7 0797.
4716
TYPIST-ELECTRIC
EXECUTIVE.
thoroughly experienced Thesis, report, term paper. A 1 work. Prompt,
Accurate, reliable. Call 'Roi' GR 7
IMS.
4(72
WANTED
WANTBD: MUSCULAR GIRLS INTER
esfed in joining two week bicycle trip
in Juno call EV 7 1210.
4*64
MALE:
PREP. MAN-FAST
FOOD
operation. Mon. Frl. day shift nite
shut, apply In person-.The Woods,
3*fh t Chestnut
4971
FEMALE: PART
TIME-FULLTIME
counter
work-fast
food operation,
apply in person The Woods 36th a
Chestnut.
4972
CHESTNUT NEAR 43rd
6 & 7 rooms, hall, 2 baths
wi CHEVELLB
ss-Aia/ powaa,
automatic. 4S4
C.I . stereo tape.
white black vinyl tap; 13.8*0 miles
Perfect 82**4} Call Ai af 1MM1I
TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE '71 PEP.
fact condition. 170* ml. Call LO 4
3S37 aft S P M
4*54
ENORAVED WEDDING INVITATIONS
350 samples to choose from without
obligation 2* lenermm type stylos in
eluding script Sample* fa your home
Fast Service Barbara or Graver WM
Its. BA 3 2*44
4(42
3 rooms & bath
200
*125
VO 44732
BIOMEDICAL EDITOR SUPERVISOR
for medical research center. Sc
lentlflc editing, some typing: super
vision of 4 people Only those with ap
proprlate training (College graduate
preferred), and experience need apply. Salary
negotiable;
excellent
fringe benefit program. Apply In per
son. Wlslar Institute, 34th and Spruce
SfS
4959
compmthf rmom$* i badVm.
apt.
Panelled Itvrm , Vf, bath*,
new formica top kitchen with
garbage disposal
New wiring.
intercom,
TERRACE,
modern
furniture, air cond. available
EV 2-2986
LOST
LOST:
0OLO
HUP CHARM
BE
tween DRL or Infarnafianal House and
Quad REWARD Call Starr Ev 2 249/
TRAVEL
OVERLAND
EXPEDITION
INDIA
Leaving London June 64)35 Brochure
Encounter overland. 23 hSener House
Drive, London NW4 Also September
expedition transAfrlca
457}
TWA YOUTH PARE CARDS (OIS
counts on all domest.c eirlmesi valid
ated IMMEDIATELY! Also FREE Gate
way card and fravef brochures EV 3
1171 whenever
t\H
STUDENTS FOUR WEEKS IN BXCIT
Ing London, credit, theatre, eicurs
ions, lecture*, parties, leisure. Meals
accommodations
modern
residence
hall, inclusive (except fere) 6470
Symposium, 114 Park Town* West,
Ptvle , Pa i»'3»
4*06
JOBS EUROPE GUARANTEED AND
salaried England. Belgium and Swil
lerland. Yearreund. Trainees (general
help) hotels, restaurants, supermark
els, hospitals,
department
stores,
summer
England
holiday
camps,
France Camp counseling. For details
and applications send SI.00 with a
stamped self addressed business site
envelope to Princeton Research, Dept.
C. Box 44166, Panorama City, Can
fornie *1402
42*1
SUMMER. PART OR FULL TIME
work: Expanding N.E
Philadelphia
and Suburban REAL ESTATE CORPORATION needs competent men a
women, all ages, who desire to earn
fantastic
commissions
(average
S400 00)
Free training program for
Pa
Real Estate License. RA 5 9300,
DA 4 SI 16
4402
MALE TEACHER PH.D., 34 YEARS
five figure salary, likes United States
and desires 10 settle down perman
ently. possible only It married to a
United States citlten. Prefers a beau
fiful working girl. Call Bobby after 6.
EV 2 215*.
4*79
TELEPHONE INTERVIEWERS: TO
conduct Market Research telephone
surveys. Flexible P/ T assignments
immediately available, day and even
ing (including weekends). Min. 30 hrs.
per weex All work to be done from
our office in West Phila
Call Mrs.
Chlvers. 74* 2000, ext. 546.
4653
OVERSEAS JOBS FOR STUDENTS.
Australia. Europe, S. America. Af
rica. etc. All professions and occup
ations, S700 to S3.000 monthly. Expenses paid, overtime, sightseeing.
Free information-write Jobs Over
seas, Dept. 11, P.O. Box 1S971, San
Diego. Calif 92115
4720
AGGRESSIVE, CLEAN-CUT MAN TO
sell to
business people.
Potential
earnings very high. Full/ part time.
Call Mr. Segal MA 7-8047.
4SS1
HELP! JUNIOR MATH MAJOR WITH
extensive writing and editing expert
ence and Phi Beta Kappa membership
seeks summer |ob preferably full
lime with faculty research project.
Call 382 9476
4BS4
HOUSE FOR RENT. POWELTON, 6
bedrooms, 4 baths, washer, dryer,
furniture
Investment.
S300.00/ mo.
(utilities not Included). June lease,
EV 7-4533.
*»47
SUMMER SUBLET-LARGE 4 BEDroom apl. 2 large living rooms. - Safe
area near campus. Available May 15.
Call EV 7 0394.
4951
SUBLET: 5 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE
furnished,
quiet
neighborhood.
2
blocks from campus, Fall option,
$240/ month EV 7-0716.
4954
-—
3*34
SANSOM--S66/ PERSON/ MO.
(Utilities included), full summer or
summer school. 5 bedrooms
bath,
living, dining room, kitchen, .urnlshed. Call EV 2 6714.
4953
SUMMER SUBLET--4 TO 7 PEOPLE
May-August. Whole house or indlv
Idual rooms. 3*45 Baltimore. EV 7077*.
4926
SUMMER
SUBLET -3
BEDROOM
townhouse. 10 minute walk from cam.
pus, living room, dining room, kitchen, washer and dryer, 1-1/2 bath
rooms, large basement S165 utilities
included. Available May 15 or June 1
through Sept. I. **5 1040.
4*24
JUNE
SUBLET SEPTEMBER
OP
lion unfurnished apartment with bedroom, living room, bath, and kitchen
with adjoining study nook. Safe quiet
building with students and young
couples
Right on trolley route. Rent
Si23/ month negotiable.
4600
block
of Baltimore. SA 6 3105.
4*23
APARTMENTS
FANTASTIC APT. IN LARGE. SAFE
bldg. 41st & Baltimore.
Bedroom,
living room, pullman kitchen, bath.
$75' mo. with possible option for next
year. EV 2 0250
4945
SUMMER SUBLET: 4llh A SPRUCE,
2 bedrooms, living room/ kitchen, safe
bldg., will negotiate price Call 349.
7574.
4*46
BEAUTIFUL, LARGE. WELL FURNIshed 2 floor apt., sublet 4/ 1 to */1,
39th & Pine, 3 bedrooms, living room
11/2 bathrooms, large modern kitchen, accommodates 3 5 comfortably
5225,362 4449.362 1174.
4*73
TYPISTS
CLKKKS
STKNOGKAl'HKKS
Work 2 or more days per week
on assign, in c.c. and university
area.
Exp'd.
necessary.
Begin
immed.
kMFICK AUDITIONS,
1015 Chestnut St.
MA 7-2848
COED SUMMER LIVING IN MODERN
Fraternity House. Large, furnished,
private, single and double rooms available. Call 362 2610 or 222 9387.
4*74
SUMMER SUBLET WITH SEPTEM
ber option, air condit., turn, efficiency, carpet, view of city, nr. 20th and
Chcstnut,S144/ mo.L07-23*l
4*40
TWO ROOM EFF. APT. FOR RENT.
S100.00 mo. .plus utll. 106 N. 34th SI.
Call EV 6 0946.
4945
SUMMER
SUBLET -5
BEDROOM
house 3*21 Baltimore Ave. For Info,
call EV 7 2348.
4941
SUMMER SUBLET MUST SEE TO
believe! Townhouse 3 bedrooms, or
any part. A/ C nice furniture, pvt.
street, trees, 10 minute walk to camp
us, modern kitchen. 985 1043. 6-7,
mldnlte.
4*76
2 BEDROOM APARTMENT. MOD
ern. safe, quiet, air conditioned, fully
equipped kitchen, parking space, furniture
Investment.
Rent. S200/mo.
Call EV 2 32*6
4962
SPACIOUS FURNISHED: I BEDROOM
living room, kitchen, bath. Excellent
security. Near conveniences. Ideal for
two, S125. 4404 Chestnut, EV 2 6992.
eveningx.
4969
SUMMER
SUBLET-NEW
CENTER
City Townhouse. 3 bedroom. 2 1/2
bath, air cond., dishwasher, washer/
dryer, private parking. MA 7 2501
4*17
SUMMER SUBLET
34th and Sansom
4 bedroom, 2 bathroom. Available May 20th. Air Conditioned,
renovated.
EV 2-3376
SUBLET
GRAOUATE
TOWERS
apartment
single, furnished and
decorated with cooking unit and re
frigerator. May 15 Aug
31 or there
abouts. 349 9055.
4931
ROOMMATE WANTED TO SHARE A
partment at 39th and Pine for the
summer. Call EV 2 6023 afler 9 P.M.
_
4*35
SUMMER SUBLET: AIR CONDITION
ed townhouse 3 stories. 2 bedrooms
5 minute walk to campus Free light
ed parking $160/ mo. Call Robert or
Jack 5*4 5433
4949
SUMMER SUBLET WITH OPTION,
furnished, air conditioned,
1
bed
room, living room, and kilchen. on
44th St. $130/ mo. plus gas and elec
trie (or best oiler) living room can
be used as bedroom. Call 34* 9565
4950
SECOND CHANCE: REAVAILABLE.
3 bedroom apt
air conditioned, gar
bage disposal, wall to wall carpeting
June lease Modest furniture invest
ment Rent $182 45th a Pine SH - 8
1906.
4946
SHARE RENT FOR THE SUMMER
or longer, female student who likes
kids, suburban apartment, Inexpen
sive. Call 734 1042 after 6 P.M.
4938
FOR RENT: EPPIC. APT. S9S.66,
good location. Avail. May 1. Come
evenings after 7 to 4240 Osage Ave.,
Apt. 22B.
4916
BEAUTIFULY FURNISHED CENTER
city rowhouse. Available for rent to
couple May 1 Aug. 15. Convenient,
safe.air conditioner 985 9577
4*11
SPPUCE HILL COURT APTS. 43rd
a 44th a Spruce, modern, spacious 2
a 3 bedroom apts. Avail. June or
Sept. S165.00 per month. BA 2-6254
or EV 2 1300.
4*09
TOWNHOUSE 3*ltt a PINE. 4 BED
rooms living room, dining room, kitchen 3 baths June or Sept. BA 2
6754 or EV 2 1300
4906
I
WOULD LIKE
TO LIVE
IN
A
friendly co ed house next year. Any
openings? Call Joel EV 2 6705
4899
FOUR ROOM FURNISHED APART
ment two bedrooms,
living
room,
kitchen, bathroom 41st a
Chester
Ave.. summer sublet with Fall op
tion. Call 349 7398 evenings.
4897
SUMMER
SUBLET- 2 3
PEOPLE.
inexpensive, big, nice, convenient lo
cation Laundromat in basement. Call
363 4705.
4691
Day Care
(Continued from page I)
He said the day care center "may
need funds" from the University "at
the outset," adding that the
University was prepared to provide
some initial funds but that he hoped
the program would eventually
become "self-sufficient".
The exact amount the University
would allocate to the planned center
"would depend on the nature and the
size of the operation," Keitz said.
Tom Miller, the manager of High
Rise North, said Friday he felt the poll
gave a good indication of feeling about
the center, even though approximately 25 per cent of the
building's residents responded.
"Most of the people either don't
want it or are indifferent toward it,"
Miller said. "If there were strong
feelings toward the day care center,
more people would have voted for it."
WORKS
CAN BE
SOLD
present the
SKIMMER OUTDOOR ART SHOW
at
Jack Russell's office
(Continued from page 1)
The broadcast said eight U.S.
planes, including a Bi2, were shot
down over Haiphong during the first
attack and two were downed in the
second wave. Five were also shot
down over Hanoi, the broadcast said.
Haiphong, North Vietnam's second
largest city with a population of about
500,000, has not been bombed since
March 30, 1968. Hanoi has not been
attacked since March 11, 1968.
Despite their vulnerability to the
missiles, the U.S. Command said no
B52 has ever been shot down in
Vietnam.
U.S. planes have never bombed the
harbor at Haiphong, principally
because there are usually a number of
foreign ships - - including those from
the Soviet Union and China -•
anchored there.
The command said before the
pilots left for the raids they were told
to bomb only facilities which help the
North Vietnamese war effort --oil
storage areas, truck parks and
warehouses.
SUMMER SUBLET: LARGE, I BED
room apt., living rm., kitchen, bath
for 2 or 3 people. 4040 Spruce. Rent
negotiable. EV 7 4292.
4*20
SUMMER SUBLET: ONE ROOM EF
ficiency. Kitchen and bath, 40th and
Locust. Rent negotiable. Call Sue.
349T7W.
4*1*
LOVELY, REMODELED LARGE ONE
bedroom apts. Wall to wall carpeting
tile bath, modern kitchen, Individual
thermostat* control. BA 2-3068, or
GR4 73**.
.
4871
CO-ED
SUMMER
HOUSINO-61S6.-May 23 to Aug. 25. Furnished, kltchen facilities. Half summer S7S. Call
EV 2 0203
4674
APARTMENTS ON CAMPUS
Eastern States Realty Co.
Apartments On Campus
EV 6-0922
SUMMER SUBLET WITH SEPTEM
ber option. One bedroom apartment,
living room, kitchen, bath. Furnished
42nd a Chester. SI 10/ month a Utilities. Call EV 7 3555.
4845
EXTRA LARGE EFFICIENCY. SUM
mer sublet, separate kitchen, porch
a yard, convenient location 40th a
Spruce Call John EV 7 3541 or BA 2
♦045. Leave message.
4841
SUMMER
SCHOOL SUBLET MAY
27 Aug
12 (approx.) air conditioned
4 room a
basement,
attractively
furnished a clean. W. Philly near
Penn. 6120 Incl. utilities BA 2 0585.
4*18
SALE: 463S WALNUT STREET, 26
zoned lor Fraternity with 14 modern
apartments and public lounge, com
plies with all city codes. Beautiful
condition! Asking S125.OO0.O0.
4836
SUMMER SUBLET/FALL OPTION.
Living room, bedroom, bathroom, kit
chen. Furnished 6*0/ month, 45th a
Osage Call EV 7 2408.
4*40
C.C. TOWNHOUSE AVAILABLE MAY
15. 10 minutes to campus. 34 people
Furniture Investment. Cheaper than
Superblock with twice the space Call
5447357.
4831
NEWLY PAINTED, NICELY FURNIshed 3 rooms and tile bath with show
er, 3 large closets- reasonable, call
BA 2 4051
4*34
SUMMER
SUBLET:
TOWNHOUSE.
515 S. 13th 3 bedrooms furnished. A
vallable May 20 6150/ month. Marty.
John. Dave, or Mike MA 7-8535.
4*43
SUBLET-ROOMMATE
NEEDED
through August own bedroom, large apartment rent $56 25 call Len EV 7171* 3418 Chestnut St.
4*44
REALLY NICE APT. 4 BEDROOMS.
Enormous
placet
Only
6200
mo.
Worthwhile
furniture
Investment.
4314 Chestnut St. Apt. 108. Call EV 7
245* anytime.
4*42
SUMMER SUBLET -4SIM a SPRUCE
bus line. 3 i people. 3
safe area
bedrooms, 2 baths clean GR 4 5423.
4956
SUMMER
RENTAL:
4S37 OSAGE
Mid May through August. 1 bedroom
furnished. 690/ mo. utilities included.
Call: 471 6304 after 10 P.M.
4*57
APARTMENT WANTED BEGINNING
June 1 with fall option. Must be very
quiet, safe, spacious. Prefer a/ c One
or, two bedrooms furnished
Maxi
m«m$190 EV 2 2055 after 3
4*63
AIR CONDITIONED! SUMMER SUB
let 3 bedrooms never lived in. Furn
ished, backyard with swings 41st and
Pine Call EV 2 0165, 349 7511.
4967
MODERN I A 2 BEDROOM APTS.
with private patio
Also 1 efficiency
TR 7 5*24
4*70
TOWNHOUSE, 3 BEDROOMS, NICE
ly furnished A/ C. dishwasher, dis
posal. private street. 10 min walk fo
campus. Modern kilchen.
Summer
sublet. 6 7. after midnite 965 1043.
4604
SUMMER
SUBLET (W/FALL OP
tion). 4254 Chestnut. 1 bedroom. Ilv
ingroom. kitchen, (urn
or unlurn..
8100/mo .
call
Amy
349 9798
or
EV 7 3015. available May IS.
4895
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Muskie Seeks Black Vote
(Continued from page 1)
Muskie pulled the three-point
resolution written on blue United
States Senate stationary from his
pocket. He then explained that his
plan called for: "First, the termination of all American military
activities against North Vietnam;
second, that the president order the
ambassadors to the Paris peace talks
to resume negotiations for POWs in
exchange for a United States withdrawal; and thirdly, we have Included
a provision that forbids interruption
once the withdrawal has begun on the
part of the President "
Muskie said earlier in the day on
"Issues and Answers" that his
resolution "would commit us to get a
response to get POWs back and to
withdraw in safety."
In bis bid to capture the large and
possibly decisive black vote, Muskie
sharply attacked President Nixon's
economic polices at the press conference. Surrounding himself with a
number of prominent black civic and
political leaders, Muskie pointed to
the Sunday launch of Apollo 16 and the
escalation of the Indochina air war,
charging that the Nixon administration "spends billions of
dollars dividing us and diverting us
from the needs at home."
"Add up the costs of the war and
the space program," Muskie told his
news conference, "and you have the
answer to the question of why we
aren't dealing with people."
In announcing his support for
Muskie, Rev. Jangdharrie blasted the
Nixon Administration's policies
saying, "The years under Nixon have
been literally hell for most
Americans, especially black people.
Nixon has used every trick in the book
and out of the book to make things that
way."
Questioned on the significance of
the earlier presidential primaries,
Muskie commented that "the siniplest
and most direct message to come out
of them is that the majority of people
don't like the way things are going and
feel powerless to change things in
their day to day lives. The primaries
are their protest."
Muskie said he was disappointed
that he had not done better in the
previous primaries but that he "still
expected to receive the democratic
presidential nomination." Asked how
his campaign strategy had been
changed as result of his setbacks, he
admitted that he was now trying to
focus more directly on certain issues.
"Perhaps we have spread ourselves too thin by attacking too many
problems instead of concentrating on
what's really important," he said.
Muskie maintained that "although
you may see us Democrats fighting
among ourselves, my main target is
still to defeat President Nixon in
November."
Muskie said Uut one of the biggest
strategic errors of his campaign had
been the use of the media. "Those 30second spots are an abomination," he
related. "They aren't effective. We
didn't need them. We should have
concentrated on five-minute blocks
instead."
The 1968 Democratic Vicepresidential nominee was also asked
if a defeat in the Pennsylvania
primary would be fatal to his candidacy. "I think we can survive the
result," he said.
"I've answered this question at
least 100 times in the past week.
Maybe this answer will work. Just
remember that Hubert Humphrey has
never won a primary in the three
different times he's run for President
(1964,1968, and thus far in 1972) and
he's not being written off," be said.
Following his news conference,
Muskie visited the International Folk
Festival at the Civic Center and then
attended a reception at the Franklin
Motor Inn given by the American
Federation of State and City
Municipal Employees. He returned to
Washington Sunday evening.
Humphrey
(Continued from page I)
Pennsylvania is important to the
momentum of his campaign. "If we
win this one, it's like a great rolling
stone."
A campaign aide later was asked
what would happen if Humphrey lost
the Pennsylvania race. "Not very
much," the aide said, but later he
asked that his comment be changed to
read, "We're not planning to lose."
Humphrey came to Philadelphia
after earlier Sunday meetings in
Detroit and New York. He will remain
here tomorrow, and will campaign in
other parts of Pennsylvania later in
the week.
Poor, Poverty Stricken Doug Kenney Was
14 Years Old Before He Had His First
Ride In A Lincoln Continental. What
Could Be Worse? He Was 16 Years
Old Before He Owned His First
Pair Of Florsheim Shoes.
Doug Kenney, World Famous Editor
Of NATIONAL LAMPOON And
(Continued from page 8)
Bruce Collins returned to action
and emerged with double victories in
the 120-yard high hurdles and the 220yard dash. His 13.9 clocking in the
hurdles tied the school record, atibutable in part to a strong push
from freshman "comer" Larry
Lewis, who "came back" an hour
later to anchor the victorious mile
relay. Classmate Bernard Gansle
continued his sub-ten second 100
victories with a 9.8 clocking. Bob
Burns, Pete Toohev. and Pete
" (Abridged But
Unexplicated.)
MONDAY. APRIL 24
8 P.M.
FINE ARTS B
FREE
Morse, Porter Delight Fans
As Hometown Heroes Explode
(Continued from page 8)
awarded the MVP award for the
Philly stars, scoring a team high 21
points on 9-14 shooting from the floor)
and Corky Calhoun and the two
Villanova stars. "It was all for fun.
Netmen Victors
Twice During
Weekend Play
By NEIL FRIEDMAN
Penn's tennis team continued to
roll, picking up two more victories
over the weekend at the Palestra
courts, burying Yale 8-1 on Friday,
and dispatching Brown by an Identical
margin yesterday morning in a match
rescheduled from Saturday's rain.
The wins raised the squad's record to
8-1.
Al Molloy's racketmen were led by
John Adams, Larry Loeb, and George
Rork, each of whom picked up three
wins. Adams, at first singles, defeated
both Neil Allen of Yale and Mike
Powers of Brown in straight sets.
Second singles player Loeb matched
his teammate with a pair of straight
set victories, and teamed with captain
Adams for an easy win at first doubles
against Brown. Rork continued his
fine play at sixth singles, taking a 6-3,
6-1 win against Yale, and adding
another two-set triumph against the
Bruins, playing one notch higher. He
and Bill MacDonell provided the
weekend's only excitement with a
come-from-behind, 5-7, 6-4, 6-0 first
doubles win in Friday's match.
"The weaker teams play extra
hard against the stronger teams,"
assessed the Quakers' Jayson Schwartz. "They keep coming at you,
never giving up. We thankfully played
well all weekend."
Track
INTERNATIONALLY Acclaimed Author Of
"How I
Page 7
The Dally Pennsylvanian
Monday April 17, 1972
1
Pozefsky swept the 440, and the 440relay team won In a rout.
Two-mile record holder and cocaptain Karl Thornton and lanky
Dennis Lunne splashed to a 1:54.4
half-mile win, while Julio Piazza and
Denis Fikes coasted home by 100
yards in the mile in a leisurely 4:14.8.
The tone of the meet was aptly
summed up by a shellshocked Knight
as he retreated past the puddles
toward the team bus: "I don't think
we could have caught these guys even
if we'd had outboard motors and
water wings."
....
—
During the season the fans get carried
away sometimes with the rivalries.
These guys I played with tonight-they're supposed to be your enemy
for so long you start looking at them
as objects. Then you play with them
and you realize they're just like you.
When you meet one of them you say to
yourself 'How can I hate him?."
But getting to the game itself you'd
have to say Kevin Porter of St.
Francis stole the hearts of the fans,
(in a different respect that his
Villanova namesake almost stole the
hearts out of the whole event last
season by copping out at the last
minute.) The 5-10 squirt (bloodbrother
of Archibald, Calvin Murphy, and
Earl the Pearl), picked up his second
Most Valuable Palestra Visitor award
this year by virtue of his 29 points,
multiple-gear acceleration and
panoply of circus moves that defy
credibility.
Behind Porter, the visitors spurted
to a 14-4 advantage, which reached 2619 before the locals put on the clamp.
Behind Morse, Calhoun, (14 points).
and Temple's Ollie Johnson (17
points), Kraft's charges countered
with a 27-5 outburst during a six
minute stretch beginning with 10:20 to
go in the first half, which turned the
contest into a runaway by halftlme.
Unfortunately the overwhelming
rout had to puntuate the absense of
three U.S. All-Stars, who reneged in
the interim between their verbal
promise of participation and the event
itself - - Harold Fox of Jacksonville,
Bill Chamberlain of N.C. and Steve
Hawes of Washington State. Only
Hawes supplied coordinator of the
benefit game, "Speedy" Morris, with
a letter of regret.
EUROPE'
H.Y THERE ON A 747 i, $1Qfl
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SEMINAR:
M0N.
APRIL 17
7:30 P.M.
ROOFTOP
LOUNGE
HIGH-RISE
EAST
FIELDWORK
SURVEY ON LANGUAGE AND DISTRIBUTIONAL REQUIREMENTS
An Academic Option
Hugh Zimmers - Planning And Architecture
Frank Furstenberg - Sociology
Jay AnYon Minority Business Development
Norm Glickman - Urban Studies
The faculty of the College «nd College for Women will soon be considering
proposals to eliminate language and distributional requirements. It will
be extremely helpful to them to have a measure of student opinion on these
requirements. Please fill out this survey and return it by Tuesday to
the box in the SCUE Office, 17 College Hall or the l.'PCos Office, Houston
Hall. Thank you.
i
Plus Other Faculty To Talk About Options In:
■
.»
School_
Major_
Year
CUM
.
Public Policy, Education, Black Studies, Health, Law,
Environmental Studies, Psychology, History...
I
INTERESTED IN HELPING PEOPLE?
1.
Do you favor the language requirement?
2.
Have you fulfilled the language requirement?
3.
If you have, how did you fulfil It? 1.Achievement Test
2. Placement BcMU
3. By taking course at Penn
4.
Why did you take a language at Penn?
1.
3.
5.
>
ALTERNATIVES
Interest
Grad school requirement
Other (specify)
2.
Yes
No
Yes_
Undecided
No
Undergrad requirement
A. Career requirement
5.
If you took the course to fill the language requirement, did you
lake it pass/fail? Yes
No
6.
Comments on language- requirement?
1.
Do you favor the distributional requirement?
2.
Have you completed the distributional requirement?
3.
why did you take the courses that received distribution credit?
1.Interest
2. Undergraduate requirements
3. Grad school
requlrement_
A. Career requirement
.5. Other (specify)
A.
How many distributional courses did you take pass/fall?
How many for a grade?
5.
Comments on distributional requirements?
requirement?
Why do you favor or disfavor It?
PSYCHOLOGICAL SERVICES
FILM
The Meaning And Commitment In
Counseling, Clinical, School,
GROUP
SESSIONS
Public Psych. And Social Work
10 Resource People
Tues. April 18 7:30 P.M.
LOUNGE HOUSTON HALL
Yes
No
Undecided
Yes
No
_
Why do you favor or disfavor the
™
Solow Efforts Not Enough
As Laxmen Fall to Champs
By GLENN UNTERBERGER
The Burton Celtics had it. So did the Green Bay Packers.
Some people call it poise, but it's more than that. It's an
undef inable quality that comes with a winning tradition, that
allows a certain team to be in control of the situation no
matter what the score. And it's the big reason why Cornell'*
|uad (5-11 was able to come from behind to subdue
n's (2-z t upstarts in overtime Saturday at Franklin Field,
11-10.
"This was as good a game as you could have seen
anywhere," commented Quaker coach Jim Adams when the
68-minute fltruggle was over. "It just couldn't have been any
closer.'*
He was right on both counts The 9-7 advantage the Red
and Blue enjoyed with five minutes remaining in regulation
{along with a 7-6 third quarter lead) was the biggest margin
separating the two squads all afternoon. But it was here that
the savvy and aura of being the country's fifth-ranked stick
squad (as well as defending NCAA champs) took over, with
Cornell negating the Quakers'superb effort all afternoon and
making it seem as though the hosts were fortunate in simply
forcing the contest into overtime.
But Pern's laxmen were even more fortunate that they
had a player named Steve Solow championing their cause. At
the end of the first frame the score stood Cornell 3, Solow 3, as
the dimunitive junior found the range twice unassisted and
once on a feed from attackman Tim Lyon (with the ten a man
up) to offset scores by the Big Red's Jim Skeen (twice) and
Frank Davis (bis first of three).
Second-period scores by the Red and Blue's John Sheffield, Steve Cohen, and Lyon left Penn ahead at the half, 6-5,
and the Cayugans received more bad news when AilAmerican defender Bob Ellis sustained a pinched nerve
shortly before the break.
Solow again moved his teammates out of the gates fast In
the third stanza by connecting on the first shot of a Penn
power play. The Big Red started their comeback with a goal
while two men up, and then literally got a good break when
Quaker netmlnder Geoff Hoguet cracked his stick, allowing
them to knot the score. But unlike their other loss this season
to Yale, there was no collapse, as scores by Mulvey and JohnBock with" IS and three seconds left pushed the lead back up
to two.
The Quakers spent the fourth period trying to hang on, but
Cornell never lost that poise. A score by Davis with 4:43 to go
was offset by tallies by the Big Red's Bob Shaw and Craig
Bolllnger which gave Cornell the lead back. The Quakers
pressed, and with time running out, the ever-present Solow
scooped up a loose ball, raced down the sidelines, and found
Cohen in front of the net for the tying goal with only nine
seconds left.
Overtime was almost an anti-climax, as basketballer
Glenn Mueller showed he could rebound better in this sport
by knocking in a loose ball with 20 seconds to go in the first of
the two extra periods. The Quakers had one last chance with
a man advantage, but the gods that had smiled upon winners
in the past were still enjoying themselves as they watched a
shot by (you guessed it) Solow ricochet off the post to leave
the score at 11-10.
"Their experience paid off for them at the end," Adams
admitted later. "Everyone played well for us, but we just
couldn't come far enough."
Moran, meanwhile, was extremely impressed with how
far the Quakers have come. "Jim's done a remarkable job
with these young kids," he admired. "I'm glad we only have
to play them once a year."
Lightweights Laugh at Traditions as
Quakers End Twenty Year Drought
GndermenTri uinph;
Collins Ties Record
By STEFAN
RANDY WILSON
It was Jackie Glesson who once
remarked, "The only thing I can't
stand about eating is that it spoils my
appetite." Perhaps be should have
followed the example being set by the
Penn trackmen this season, who
continued to gobble up every teaun of
thinclads in sight by trouncing the
Scarlet Knights of Rutgers, 11136, ins
Franklin Field splash-a-thon Saturday afternoon.
Dapper Quaker coach Jim Tuppeny, resplendent in his yellow foulweather gear and Baggie wiapped
anklets, mmnagmA to shepherd his
brood in and out of the cold drizzle Just
long enough to capture 14 of II events
and deny a disappointed Rutgers
squad the dubious honor of equalling
Princeton's (last week's victim)
meager point total of 36.
Freshman Len Stachitas staited
off the windshield-wiper afternoon by
leading a Penn sweep In the long
jump, while Willie Clark and Irv
Graham puddle-hopped to a one-two
Pem finish in the triple jump. Pole
vaulter Tom Blair found that the
weather dampened his inspiration and
was more than willing to alt back
while teammates Mark Mondschein
and Steve Raab won his specialty st
144. Blair, after clearing 16-6 In
practice this week, took a third even
though dropping out at 13-6. Quaker
high jumpers Mike Sperger, Charles
Buddington, and Jeff Fried fell victim
to their own over confidence and the
upset winner, Rutgers' Tom Howell.
Down on sponge-like River Field,
DWIGHT PAGANO
CROSSFIRE - • Quaker attackman John Bock lets loose on best performance of the year but just fell short, losing to the
an angle shot that found the upper left-hand corner against defending NCAA champs In overtime, 11-10.
Cornel) Saturday at Franklin Field. The Quakers put in their
soph spear-chucker Fred DePalma
continued his winning ways with a 228foot heave in the javelin, and Red and
Blue freshman Stew Belts out-tossed
the field in the discus. Big Ed
Markowski threw his weight around in
capturing the shot put by a hefty six
feet.
By KEITH MERRILL
Perm's lightweight crew team does
not claim one of the nation's longest
winning streaks. In fact, the ISO's
boasted a two decade losing streak
over the West End Food Control
Channel at Cornell.
After 20 years of drought, Perm's
lightweight shells (2-0) defeated
Sports
Inside
Monday April 17, lt72
(Continued on page 7)
PSB>
Cornell in Ithaca, retaining the Dodge
Cup earned last spring on the
Schuylkill. Fred Leonard's varsity
and J.V. split races with the host while
frosh mentor Pete Mallory watched
both his first and second shells score
victories.
"They thought they were a good
team, at least two or three lengths
Bulldogs and Rain Mean No Penn Wins
By JOEL SHAPS
Yale's powder blue uniforms,
Penn's batgirls, a stereo blaring
between Innings and a two-run
Quaker lead in the top of the ninth
inning weren't enough for victory
Friday as the Ells (3-10) downed the
Red and Blue (4-3), M on River Field.
In a game where it seemed at
times like nobody wanted to win,
Penn's sophomore pitcher, Andy
Laurits, had trouble in the first two
innings. The Bulldogs drew first blood
on a three-run homer by Yale second
baseman Karl Lutz In the first inning
and a fourth tally in the second inning
on a fielding error by Quaker second
baseman Ken Mulvaney.
The next three Penn batters walked,
allowing two runs to score, and then
rightfielder Henry Boyd managed an
infield hit to third base that drove in
the Red and Blue's final score of the
stanza.
Down by one run the Penn nine
struck again in the fourth, adding
three more runs to their total. With
two outs, shortstop Jack Walter*
slapped a base bit to right, Boyd
walked and Laurits beat out an infield
hit to drive in a run. A throwing error
by the Yale third baseman on Gary
Ozga's grounder opened the door for
the Quakers' final two runs.
Nursing the 4-4 lead, Bob Seddon's
nine held off the Yalies until the ninth
inning, where Laurits and Frank Koza
split the pitching duties and gave up
four runs on a couple of long doubles
and a base bit. The game ended 6-6
and Penn coach Bob Seddon reflected,
"We should have beaten that team,
this game was the most disappointing
loss of the season."
The batsmen's chance to redeem
themselves was scheduled for the
following afternoon in the hope of
defeating Brown In a doubleheader,
but the contests were postponed until
yesterday because of rain. The
baseball gods were merciful to the
Penn nine, opening the skies again
Sunday In the third Inning with the
Quakers on the short end of a 3-0
score.
In the bottom of the second the
Quakers had a rally of sorts, scoring
three runs on only two hits. Lef tfielder
Ken Fetter led off the inning and was
hit by a pitch, catcher Paul Park
rapped a base hit to center field and
Robin Bradbury hit Into a fielder's
choice, leaving men on first and third.
We
Need
YOU
(and your blood)
Tuesday April 18
faster than last year," Leonard said
after his varsity scored by one-and-ahalf lengths in 6:06.3. "They felt they
rowed a good race and they really
came out after us but we still beat
them."
The margin might have been
bigger if not for the Big Red drawing
the preferred lane. The Quakers flew
off the start and powered to a threefourths length advantage before
settling Into race pace. By 1500 meters
the edge had grown to open water and
the Red and Blue were moving away.
After passing the final bridge the
crews reached Jie major turn in the
course and the Red and Blue lead fell
to one length as the lane markers
forced the Quakers Into a wide turn.
"We lost about three seconds
because the course wasn't properly
staggered," coxswain Jim Seltzer
recalled. "The moat important thing
for me to do then was to let the guys
know that Cornell had moved back.
We took a power ten coming off the
turn and that sort of steadied things.
"We followed our race plan perfectly," Leonard declared. "Bruce
Mallenbaum kept the stroke down at
34 per minute and Seltzer coxed a nice
race. I'm very pleased with the
progress we're making."
The J.V. was foiled by the final
turn in the only black mark in an
otherwise bright day. The Big Red
second shell, rowing a full second
faster than their varsity brethren,
erased the Quaker lead and sprinted
to a three second victory.
The frosh, most of them not even
bom the last time a Penn shell won at
Cornell, packed away tradition in
short order with two easy victories.
The first shell with John Phelps in the
stroke seat earned a ten-second
victory in 6:15.5, while the second
shell swept off to an 18-second margin
for the biggest win of the day.
Locals Afford
U.S. All-Stars
Little Charity
BREAK, PITCH, BREAK - • Quaker pitcher Andy Laurits Not many pitches avoided Lutz' bat, however, as he led the
hopes for the best that his pitch will avoid the bat of the Yale Bulldog attack with a borne run, a double, and a single,
first baseman Kari Lutz in Penn's 8-4 loss to the Ells Friday.
Phi Kappa Sigma
SPHINX And FRIARS
HONOR SOCIETIES
3539 Locust
MEETING FOR
PROSPECTIVE MEMBERS
9:00 - 5:00
7:00 P.M. TUESDAY, APRIL 18th
BOWL ROOM
HOUSTON HALL
OPEN TO ALL JUNIORS
m
By TONY KOVATCH
DP Aist. Sports Editor
Hopefully, no unsuspecting
humanitarian found his way into the
Palestra Saturday night to be indoctrinated Into the practice of
i watching Philly basketball. If YoYo
and the Mad Hatter had been there,
any newcomer to the 33rd Street
bandbox would have felt like Alice in
Wonderland.
Yes, thankfully, they made a
travesty of Palestra basketball in the
second annual Multiple Sclerosis
Charity All-Star game won by the
locals, 126-96. The warm-hearted
spectacle was like a busted valve,
letting out the pressure that had built
up over a long emotional season.
To see Chris Ford hit Corky
Calhoun with a perfect pass was
almost as amazing as to behold the
Quaker dancing and cavorting with
the Wildcat or Steve Honzo giving the
benefit of the doubt to the trailing
Palestra visitor. Frank McGuire,
coach of the visiting All-Stars and
Jack Kraft, director of the home town
favorites, received a pair of Zlnk
sausages wrapped In aluminum foil
during the post game presentation of
awards, before hordes of teenagers
abandoned David Cassidy (for one
night at least) and attacked Chris
Ford and Hank Siemontkowski for
autographs. Later they tried to knock
down the dressing room door.
'"Ihe whole thing was great,"
smiled Alan Cotler, who started with
old teammates Bob Morse (who was
(Continued on page 7,
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