®lje ^Batlg ^mnsgllianian
founded 1885
VOI..XC
NO. 126
COPYRIGHT
1975THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN, PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA
U. Security
Collects Data
On Activists
By LARRY FIELD
The University Security Office
keeps files on several aiea groups
which may disrupt campus events,
Chief Detective Harold McGrath said
Friday.
The groups include the Progressive
Labor Party, of which Bonnie Blustein is a member, MOVE, the National Caucus of Labor Committees
and the
Palestine Liberation
Organization, McGrath said.
MOVE and the National Caucus of
I,abor Committees have disrupted
speeches on campus during the past
year. The Progressive Labor Party
often gives out leaflets on Locust
Walk.
The disclosure came after McGrath
testified before the University
Judiciary panel hearing the Blustein
case. During his remarks, McGrath
noted he obtained information on the
Progressive Labor Party's activities
from a campus source.
However, McGrath said after his
testimony that information on other
area groups was "basically" confined
to press clippings and occasional
pamphlets.
In addition, the files hold "reports
we've prepared on incidents and on
hearings," McGrath said. "We don't
infiltrate and we don't spy."
While Director of Security and
Safety Donald Shultis said Friday he
doesn't "personally know" of the
security files, he said they weren't
"extensive" or "collected covertly."
Shultis said the security office tries to
keep files to an "absolute minimum."
During his testimony, McGrath
read from a security report on
Blustein's disruption of Professor
Edward Banfield's class last April.
Included in the report were facts on
where the Progressive Labor Party
met and how many members attended the meetings.
The report also noted detailed information on several party members
who demonstrated outside the
security office the day of the Banfield
disruption.
Security officers were able to intervene in the classroom disruption
because they received a tip earlier in
the day that demonstrators might go
to Banfield's sociology class,
McGrath said. Two security officers
were present during the class waiting
for the arrival of the demonstrators,
he added.
McGrath said he also received
information from several Israeli and
Arab groups on events they planned.
He said meeting schedules and names
of speakers were given him so that
security officers could be on hand if
disruption occurred.
MONDAY, JANUARY27,1975
Court Finds Blustein Guilty,
Votes to Withhold Sentence
Joe Sleinfeld
PROVOST ELIOT STELLAR accepts a portrait of Dr. John R. Brobeck,
chairman of the physiology department at the University School of Medicine
from 19SZ to 1970. The portrait, painted by Boston artist Pletro Pezzati, was a gift
of Brobeck's colleagues, and was unveiled during a reception Friday afternoon at
the Faculty Clubs.
Meyerson Criticizes
Proposed Media Body
By EILEEN O'BRIEN
President
Martin
Meyerson,
declaring the proposed Pennsylvania
Communications Council (PCC)
charter "needs some refinement,"
has agreed to name an administration
representative to the PCC "when the
Council has formed and is ready to
begin."
The PCC was established in
November by the Undergraduate
Assembly and the Student Activities
Council to oversee the operation of
radio station WXPN and other
electronic media at the University.
The Council's charter provides for the
appointment of a representative of the
University Trustees, who hold title to
WXPN's operating license.
In a letter delivered Thursday to
Undergraduate Assembly Chairman
Jud Stein, Meyerson expressed reservations about the provision of the
charter requiring a Trustee delegate
to sit on the PCC.
He also urged "reconsideration" of
the charter's preamble, which at
present applies to all ampus elec-
Democrats Seek Candidate
To Defeat Mayor Rizzo
By PETER GINSBERG
City Democratic leaders Friday night began their search for a mayoral candidate who can defeat incumbent Frank Rizzo in the May primary.
A select group of 79 community and political leaders, under the guidance of
Democratic City Committee Chairman Peter Camiel, listened to four potential
candidates explain their qualifications for the party's endorsement.
The group will hear from the rest of the potential candidates Wednesday night.
Rizzo, who has been feuding with Camiel over party control for the past two
years, did not present his case at the 3'z hour meeting Friday at the BellevueStratford Hotel. According to reports,
he received an invitation but did not
accept because he feared Camiel
would use the opportunity to embarrass him.
By IAN BERGER
'Die first three speakers - State
The same people who last week
Senator I<ouis G. Hill, Councilman
brought you Deep Throat, came up
Jack Kelly and Urban Coalition
with fun and games of a different sort
President Charles Bowser - are
this weekend.
considered by political observers to
Penn Union Council iPUCl sponbe the front-runners.
sored seven indoor recreation tournParty officials are weighing the
manets Saturday and Sunday in
strengths of each candidate, deterHouston Hall which drew, with a
mining who can raise the most
minimum of publicity, about 100
money, campaign most effectively
participants,
tournament
coand best unite the city's fragmented
chairman Max Bazerman said
Democratic organization.
Sunday. Contestants vied in a variety
While most people present praised
of "non-physical" sports including air
the open proceedings Friday night, a
hockey,
pool,
chess,
bridge,
few voiced caution about their
backgammon, table tennis and
ultimate outcome.
"botsbair 'table socceri.
One ward leader in the group said
Students competed for the right to
she was told she 'might receive a
represent the University in a regional
phone
call"
from
Camiel's
tournament at the University of
organization telling her "who the
Delaware on February 14. 15 and 16.
candidate will be."
The winners of the regional tourOthers, however, emphasized the
nament in table tennis, bridge and
varied composition of the committee pool will advance to the national
- which includes University Dean of
championships later this year.
Students
Alice
Emerson
and
The idea for the weekend tourPhiladelphia Magazine writer John
nament came from Bazerman and
(luinther - as indicating the enfellow r;.dg» club member Marc
dorsement process will be completely
Nathan, who placed second in the
open.
national bridge tournament last year.
This is the first city endorsement
Bridge and table tennis were the onlyopen to the press.
contests entered by students that
The four candidates considered
year.
Friday, including Judge Joseph
"This vear. we wanted to get the
Glancey, who was represented by
i Continued on page 2i
(Continued on page 5)
tronic media, including any "which
might be started under auspices other
than the Student Activities Council.
The letter's final recommendation
was that nomination procedures for
the Council's membership be spelled
out in the charter.
Presidential Assistant Bruce Johnstone said Sunday the suggestions set
forth in the letter "ought at least to be
addressed," but added the administration's recognition of the PCC may
not necessarily be contingent upon
enactment of all the changes suggested in Meyerson's letter.
Johnstone said a presidential representative to the PCC should "carry
some kind of legitimacy." He said he
was "puzzled" by what he termed "a
fixation" on the part of some PCC
proponents over trustee representation on the Council.
"I have never been, nor has anyone
in the administration been, too enthusiastic" about the PCC, Johnstone
said. "If this is the best student
government can do, fine. We'll do
what we can to help them. But it's a
very clumsy, circuitous way of
•getting' the present (WXPNi station
management."
Johnstone noted "the only recourse
PCC has is to go to the Assembly, the
Student Activities Council, and the
Judiciary," agencies "which know
what there is to be known" about
nagement at WXPN, "have all sorts
of power to act, and have not acted."
Johnstone called the charter "a nice
first draft, but a first draft is all it is."
He said he is "very disappointed"
with the movement to create a watchdog organization to monitor
campus media.
(C ontinued on page 21
By MARTIN SIEGEL
The University Court Friday found
campus activist Bonnie Blustein
guilty of violating the University's
Open Expression and General Conduct Guidelines.
In a 7-0 decision, the eight-member
panel "affirm! ed) that the guidelines
had been violated." Elliot Mossman,
the presiding judge of the panel,
would have voted only in the case of a
tie.
The court voted 6-1 to suspend
Blustein from the University for one
semester, but withheld execution of
the sentence on the condition that she
not violate any open expression
guidelines through fall, 1975. The
decision stated if Blustein were found
in violation of any of the guidelines
during this period, the suspension
would be enacted automatically
during the next full semester.
Blustein was charged with
disrupting an April 24 class taught by
Political Science Professor Edward
Banfield. The hearing Friday was
closed to the general public because of
a disturbance created by Blustein's
supporters at a prior hearing
December 11.
The panel's verdict sparked a brief
confrontation between Blustein's
supporters and University security
officers. Upon hearing the decision,
Blustein charged to the front of the
hearing room and demanded further
explanation of the verdict.
When Blustein was blocked by
security officers, several of her
supporters attempted to help her. In
the resulting confusion, Security
Director Donald Shultis struck one of
the demonstrators, John Halman.
Shultis said later Halman "kicked me
in the shin."
Blustein said Friday night the
sentence was "about as severe as they
think they can get away with," adding
"they're not going to intimidate me."
Blustein said she plans to appeal the
decision to University President
Martin Meyerson.
Blustein requested at the outset
permission to use tapes of the
December 11 hearing to prepare her
defense. Mossman however, revealed
the tapes had been "stolen during the
resulting confusion" at the December
hearing.
The panel spent the morning
hearing testimony from witnesses
presented by the University's Judicial
Inquiry Officer, Jacqueline Pollard
Representative of the Committee on
Open Expression Eva Marie Thury
read the committee's report into the
panel's record. 'Die report charged
Blustein with violating the committee's guidelines by disrupting
Banfield's class.
Thury said the committee was told
the University Security Office that
Blustein was the only University
student involved in the incident
In later testimony, Chief Detective
Howard McGrath said the security
office was only certain of the identity
of two of the six participants in the
incident. He identified Blustein and
one Harry Wood, who was not affliated with the University. McGrath
said the other four individuals could
"possibly" have seen University
students.
McGrath noted the Security Office
had received a tip prior to the
disturbance in Banfield's class
warning of a possible disruption He
said another security officer were
seated in the back of the class when
six individuals entered the room and
attempted to present Banfield with a
"Racist of the Year Award." After
"considerable pushing and shoving."
McGrath said, the demonstrators
were removed from the rlass.
According to McGrath. the incident
lasted "five or ten minutes."
Pollard also called to testify two
students and Political Science lecturer Janet Pack. Pack was lecturing
In the class when the disruption occurred. All three witnesses gave
BONNIE BLUSTEIN
Plans to Appeal Decision
descriptions of the classroom incident
slmilai to Mi Gratb'i
Alter Pollard retted hei cue,
Bltlftein and her advisor. Robert
Nawef presented a total of eleven
motion! for dismissal of llie case on
grounds ranging from alleged
"contradictory" evidence to the
restrictions on public attendance at
the trial
The panel denied all dismissal
motion before hearing testimony
from defense witnesses in die afternoon.
While at no time denying her part in
the incident, Blustein attempted to
make Banfield's six lal philosophy the
(Continued on page S)
1975 Incoming Freshman Class
Not Guaranteed Campus Housing
ByJKFFBIRNBAL'M
Under the room selection policy for
1975-76 incoming freshmen will no
longer be guaranteed campus
housing, Administrative Director of
Residential Life Mary Beermann said
Sunday.
Beerman said the Residence Office
is no longer "firmly committeed to
house all (incoming) freshmen" on
campus. In the past, virtually all
freshmen requesting housing were
guaranteed a room.
Beermann stated it is "a guessing
game" whether or not the size of the
incoming freshman class will exceed
the number of spaces available for
them in the Quadrangle and Hill
House. She said, however, if the
Admissions Office accepts too many
freshmen, as it did this year, it will be
"unlikely they would be displaced into
Superblock" again
I-ounges in the Quad which were
used to house freshmen this year will
probably be used for bousing again
next year, she said.
In another major policy switch,
students who acquired their rooms
through the retention process last
year will be ineligible to retain them
next year in most University housing
!n residential learning programs like
Van Pelt House, the retention policy
will be left to the discretion of the
faculty housemaster. Beermann Hid
The new computerized double
lottery system in the Quad is also a
major change from last year's
residence policy Room selection in
the Quad begins with a lottery for
those residents who wish to retain
rooms.
A
'general lottery" for all
University undergraduates Banking
Quad housing will follow.
The number of upperclassmen m
PUC Sponsors 'Non-Physical9 Sports Tournament
the Quad next year will remain die
same although they will be "spread
around'' into non-project, freshman
areas such as liutcher-Speakman'28
as well as projects. Beerman said
The number of upperclassmen in
freshmen areas will be raised to 15
per cent.
Beerman said the first and second
Superblock room draws are exactly
the same" as last year She added
students wishing to retain rooms in
Superblock will have a good chance"
becauaa the new one-year retention
rule will reduce the number of
students trying to keep their rooms
Also. .15 per COM of the total
population in each building is allowed
to retain a room
I- ifty additional uppen laaamen ■rill
bj housed in Hill House next year If
Uiere are more than 50 applications
for these positions, prefereru e will be
given to current freshmen wishing to
retain rooms there
Incoming freshmen displaced by
the additional upperclassmen in Hill
House may be p|a< ed in a s|»-c lal two
floor project in Harnwell House along
with :!5 upperclassmen and resource
people.
Beermann said She said
they will probably I be plai I I when
in
irrantl) have the oral hygenist
people." The project was still in the
planning stages."' however, she added
A brochure explainu,g the complete
procedure for room selection compiled by Beermann was distributed in
the Quad Friday and wdl be
distributed to all University residents
shortly. Beerman said All questions
concerning room selection should be
directed to the D n
ry Office to the
main an h of the Quadrangle
STUDENTS PARTICIPATE in a bridge game, part ol a "noo-phy*iral" »port« tournament sponsored b> Prnn Union
Council over the weekend In Houston Hall Other event* Included air horkry. pool, rhrss. backgammon, table tennis and
football
LECn RE TONIGHT
Congraaawomen Elizabeth
Hottaman l> -N V i will deliver
an address tonight at 8 00 in
Irvine Auditorium The speech
will be the first of the semester in
onaiaeenca lecture series.
Holtzman. a graduate of
;ffe College and Harvard
Law School, has served in
Congress since 1972, when she
n Brooklyn legislator Emmanuel Celler She is
currently I member of the House
Judiciary committee
Page 2
Monday, January 27,1975
The Daily Pennsylvania!)
Tu B'Shvat
Penn Consumers Board
in association with Houston Hall
Jewish Arbor Day
Food & Drug
Administration Exhibit
Mon. Jan 27
Houston Hall West Lounge
GRADS
Looking for
Adventure?
Young rapidly growing marketing
and sales company is looking for
ambitious energetic talent to work
with school and community
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rewarding u-.g. help kids get
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equipment)
and
lucravative. For more information
about exciting jobs in exciting
cities nationwide call I*ff Fairfax
on 800-255-7934 or send resume to
NCS, Box 948, Lowell, Mass.
CAMPil* KVrNT6
sponsors a
W Plant & tree
sale
at Hillel
RUGBY CLUB
important meeting 8 00 P M
Tues. Jan 28th m HH, RM I (3rd floor) AM
members and interested persons should attend
VMSim
Jan 27 - Feb 7
OBSERVATORV OPEN
See Saturn, Onon
Nebula, Jupiter etc . tonight and again Thursday
night it the shy n mostly cloudless. 8 9 30 P W
DRL ROOltop J3rd & Walnut
I■ Choice ofFONZO'S
ITALIAN VILLAGE
Tomato Juice, Chef Salad, (l complimentary
■Fruit Cup
dinner with each
W
Soup Du Jour
dinner served)'
| Spaghetti and Meatballs
$5.10
5 Baked Lasagna
$5.60
1
+ Egg Plant Parmagena
$5.80
+ Broiled Chopped Slrloiii Steak $6.10
Lowest Price
I + Choice of 2 Vegetables or Spaghetti
Dinner is Free
■ Dessert: Sherbert. Ice f>oam
GR 2-9930
i
Cake Roll or Jello
EAeverage: Coffee, Tea, Soda
Mirk i*c ID. CABDSMUST
»XTr« /
Bt
BtSHOWN
SHOWN,
|
48th &
CHESTNUT
WXPN NEWS STAFF Compulsary meeting 4 00
P W . at the station New members welcome
PEP BAND
fieri berg
Rehearsal 6 PM
in rm
511 An
CONAIS5ANCE
AND
WOMEN S
ORGANIZATION presentj Elizabeth Mottjman
(D N Y ) 8 P V m irvme Aud
OUTING CLUB Every Monday 7 00 PM
MH.
Camping, hiking, canoeing, climbing and caving
t i>ts get started
The sweetness... the serenity
... the sorrow of solitude
)) . .. captured by the world's
greatest writers
PUNCH BOWL Opening meeting 8 PM Irvine
■" te E Stellar to throw out tirst foke Business
pt-opie needed
smmm
f iNE ARTS CLUB The Fine Arts Club will hold a
'.kptrhing session tomorrow night 7 9 rm 303
Furness. with a model Brmg your supplies.
COMMUTER ACTIVIT6S BOARD
at II 00 A M . Tues. HH. Ivy Rm
To be alone . . what
depths of sweetness, of
bittersweetness. anil of
sadness these three
PUC. &
The Main Point
Present
(Continued from page 1)
WXPN program director Jules
Kpstein said Sunday "someone's
going to have to seek a legal
definition" of the PCC's oversight
powers if no trustee delegate sits on
the council. According to FCC
regulations oversight of station
operations is the province of the
licensee.
Kpstein noted the investigative
Giovanni, Leonard Gohen, arid
many others.
To Bo Alone ... a book for
your most private moments.
Wed, Feb 5 8PM
Irvine
BROAD SWQRD AND SHIELD FIGHTINO
Society lor Creative Anachronism, HH old
cdteit-ri*. 7 30 P M , Tues
Tickets $5.00
H.H. fix Agency
MUSEUM! Sam rjash speaKs. Jan
RESIDENCE COUNSELOR APPLICATIONS
now available in the Quad 117 Bodme. New
deadline hi Feb. IS
PRE VET SOCIETY Br.et meeting. Thurs. Jen
30. HH. Rm 7, 5 30 concerning Saturday's Zoo
Trip
WWUStt
ARE YOU CREATIVE? Create a cover lor the
SC.U E Course Guide. Call the S C U E oMice at
243 6945 or call Steve at EV 2 8818 or 349 7344 at
night
WMUm.
READING IMPROVEMENT The Reading Clinic
offers interviews concerning ways to study more
successfully, in less time and with less anxiety.
Call 243 843 s or come to Room A3, Education
Building, 37th and Walnut Streets
powers of the PCC would not be
hampered by the absence of a trustee
representative, explaining the council
"serves
like
a
prosecutor.
Theoretically anybody can be on it"
for purposes of investigation.
Stein termed Meyerson's criticisms
of the present charter "legitimate,"
jdding "it will probably have to be
rewritten."
"We saw a PCC including a
Tonight
The DP has
two phone lines
Mon Jan 27
Monty Python's
And Now For
Something
Completely
Different
F.A. B-l
7:30 & 10:00 $1
•n anthology selected and illustrated by
Joan Berg Victor, rduor of A Time to Love
Size 01)" x 11" Cloth 10 95. paper 14 95. now at your bookstore,
^^"*»
or send ti hei k or money order to CROWN PUBLISHERS 419 Park
^yt0tmf-'* Sou ih. New York. NY loots
2436581
for Business
7.30 & 10:00
Friday, Jan 31
Midnight Movies
Presents
IACK McGANN MtkS Mil motivated pickers wf*o
■ I*i-(hniqu**s of blues ragtime couniry
II I V A 1640
7040
7Jf>Jw7w
PIANO I ESSONS by e«p
teacher with
servaiory training All level) Call Ki 5 3064
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COUNSELORS, over 19, tor unique Overnight
■
■ ■ ..amp m Penn a Able to instruct one ol
in ioA.no AM Boating. Aatershung. Athletics,
)- rnies. Riliery, Ham Radio. Rocketry.
"O or Tennis Write Camp Director 1)6
RrrtRambler O'.e ..atayette Mill. Pa 19444 7044
F.A. B-l $.50
Advertising
Committee
Meeting
FORTRAN PROGRAMMER eiper.enf.ed With
varied i O formats lo code one program Com
pensa»ion negotiable
Call Sttvt EV
I %W
is weekends!
Wed. Jan 29
7:00 P.M.
Present members and
all those interested
please come.
PUC Office
STEREO BROKER Students needed to *«
7S
->*ior brands o* stereo eouipment 20 SO per cen»
Houston Hall
>* No nvestmen* |N3>I3?)26S
161 TO Iff PER WK PART TIME U' ,m led
. im.nj potential >n addressing envelopes at home
LO"iCV'e% pay lop money tor that ■Personal'
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• <*•, w.th these companies send 17 to
- . Advertising, P O Bo* 1170,7. Atlanta. Ga
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70 SJ
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WANTED
t.peren.ed center oTy ggita'
• tot beginners References Please can 'J2
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2112
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Prolession6i References Diane. GR 7 0797
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»os SO 47TH ST Large Furnished Elticiency >n
( lean. Qii.et Bidg See 'o appreciate SI00 mo 1
tie* lappro. 14 00' Cell alter « OOP Ml NE 7
S?ll
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lulchen
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Apartments
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apartment, hv.ng room kitchen bath bedroom.
air ronditioned February I. lease negotiable
Evcn.ngi. 349 tV4 deyt. 84? ajet
3059
FEMALE CHAD STUOENT desires place to I've.
near school Ca'taoe SS4 nia
2'I3
ATTRACTIVE APT. 4»th t. Spruce Cpnven.ent
student pret Call ')) 1S42 tor appt Ret req
»S4
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UNDERGRADUATES needed lor a
simple psychology et?perlmenl.
Call Judy at 732-3320 6 P.M. - 10
P M. any day. $2 50.
EXCEPTIONAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
Vaimomdes Residential Center haschlld care worker counselor positions available this summer,
and opportunities lor .ear round employment m umgue programs lor emotionally disturbed and
mentally retarded children and adolescents Sponsored BY Maimonides institute, the oldest
leading organuat.on under Jewish auspices conducting schools, residential treatment centers,
day treatment centers and summer camps lor special children Campuses in Far Rnckaway and
Wonticello. New Vor«
For information and application, please write Maimonides Residential Center.
Department. 14 01 Molt Avenue. Far Rockawey, New York 116*1.
Personnel
Spend spring vacation
in London dining and
theatre-going.
Spend only $399
going Air-India.
Air-India has a tour that can (ill your University of
Pennsylvania spring break (depart March 8, return
March 16) -without breaking your budget
For only $399 (plus 3% tax), you get a serene
round trip New York London Air-India 747 flight,
airport hotel transfers, 7 nights at London's Regency
Hotel (room with private bath, of course), escorted
sightseeing, tips and taxes. At your hotel, you'll enjoy
Continental breakfast every morning which you
might expect -and dinner every evening, which you
wouldn't expect for such a low tour price As for
theatre. Air-India gives you two theatre tickets to plays
or musicals of your own choosing
Call your travel agent or Air-India for details at
LO 3-0480 Or mail the coupon And this spring, pop up
in London the same time the daffodils do in Hyde Park
Prices based on 2 sharing room 10-person group
must be attained Fares subtect to government approval
THE
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?43 7S?Q,
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fl.mn9uli.amai.
Copyright t»75 The Daily Penmyiven.en No
Dart thereof may oe reproduced .n any torm. in
whole or ,n oart w.thout the e«press written
consent ol the Business Manager
The Daily Pennsylvemen ,s published Monday
through Friday at Ph.ladetpn.e. Pa . during the
tall and spring semesters,
e.cept during
e.am.nat.on and vacation periods One issue
push shed during graduation week and one issue
puB.sneo >n the summer Second class postage
paid at Ph.iaoeipnia Pennsylvania 'vio<
SvBscr.ptions may be ordered at the rate ot
SIS 00 per acaoem.c year at Sergeant Han. lath
1 Chestnut Streets Philadelphia. Pa letoa
Business phones rjlSiJaleMi News phones
UIS: >4]ssis Dip,), and classified advertising
may be placed at the same address Subscribers
should send change ol address notification a>
least thr„ .atu ,„ advance
Tell me more atxxjt DreaKing away to London this spring
without breaking my budget
EJJ3 EC
cTQQfi ^JiBa^i^ii^tW
Keep America Beautiful
7:10 8:40
10:10
P' ■ !
JI
Lai—-■■■»-* jas-oiesl
'1
I
i
I
I
J
Live Band
R -32?
BeOS ;Dovt»e 6 S «gie> VeXsw
C Mi^ets Boo*
.-\ . - •-*
• -. | |
(Continued from page I)
University more involved by participating in more events," Bazerman
said.
With publicity, space and funding
provided by PUC, the tournament
became a reality. The co-directors
said they were "very satisfied" with
the turnout.
Play proceeded very informally,
with no officials directing the games.
"We just let the people play,"
Bazerman said, adding "everything
depended on their cooperation and it
worked out."
Bazerman said we hoped this won't
be the end of indoor recreation this
year. He said he is attempting to form
a permanent tournament and games
committee under PUC in order to
"have events like this more often."
Bazerman said this past weekend's
competition was generally "very
good, but the most important thing
was that the people involved had a
good time."
And so they did,
Eva 7400 Elt >7«
U Of PENN STUDEN' OR FACUL '"■' Z ■ E
use the
WANT ADS
representative of the Board of
Trustees as a credible organization,"
Stein said. "Apparently he (Meyerson) thinks that a representative
would make it credible."
Stein added he believed Meyerson
was "worried" that the preamble
"says something about classes taught
by cable TV."
Jerry Marcus of the Undergraduate
Assembly said Friday he would be
"happy with a presidential appointment at this point."
Marcus said there is "an amendment (to the PCC charter! in the
making which would put Nominations
and Elections Committee in charge"
of selecting student delegates to the
Council. "I don't expect any objections," he added.
There is "a possibility" all
amendments necessary to a compromise with the administration will
be adopted at this week's meetings of
the Assembly and the Activities
Council, Marcus said.
Tri baf Dancing on Stage
Cornrowing on Stage
resv/ts...
% Racket
EV 70707
PROF STEWART. CITY PLANNING 739, UR
BAN STUDIES 25 Will meet Monday January 27.
m Williams Hall Room 3 NOT Fine Arts B 6
Food ^ Fashion Show
'*Tf 7IP
M •*
2119
Ve^-lX
DEADLINE FOR RESIDENTIAL STAFF AP
PLICATIONS has been extended to 5 00 P M ,
Monday. February 17. 1975 Applicants lor the
Quadrangle, Hill House and Superblock should be
sure to have applications complete by that time
AFRICAN CULTURAL NIGHT
Sat. Feb. 1st
International House
NAUDAINa.il Ne*u«uryJII 1 bdrm Sub et J
tS to S 14 Renewable Drest,c reduction S715 ■
• es Siego'.ab'e PESJetS
2057
PRE VET
STUOENT
V our
\e '
■g ' raoe ,sd'*gust'ng i* *ou
f
MARY AMANDA WOOO LECTURE Speaker
Or
ivar Giaever. Topic
"immunology and
Surface Science". Wednesday. Jan 29, 4.00 P.M ,
David Rittenhouse Laboratory Aud. A I
L
» .>•-> 5.
TO
I™'* Vim HjuvlonHll
tcvefcte*. Wer-**-»-•*.
ifif'K ftcloi /Corv-f-hs.
[►-li»!nvi»j.li.- •
TYPIST
Electric executive,
thoroughly p*
penenred Theses, dissertations, manuscripts AI
ywotk Prompt, accurate, reliable Ro/477
JJ0S
701S
2125
MAIN LINE PHYSICIAN NEEDS mature female
Mjdent to do light cooking and limited babrs ItlAfl
•or 'tvo young teenage daughters PfM room and
n le >oom house. 3'i acres, swimming
pool rtt f ivc blocks trom Merion S'a"on 71
■ | trom school by public transportation
Sa>ary regotaoie Call LO ) MSJ
20SS
fc Penn Ur*o« Couirt a
PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER • Speoai.x.ng m
Doctorates Masters. Manuscripts Sample work
in area Libraries Flora Carlm 279 2211
1743
2IJ2
DEPRESSED
AND
NONDKPRESSED
UNDERGRADUATES needed for a
Problem Solving Experiment.
(ail Bob at EV 6-1581 any day
between 6 PM -12 PM
Takes 45 minutes — $2.50
ACTIVITIES COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVES
Two elections to be held at next meeting
one
Council representative to the PCC. one member ol
the Council to the Steering Committee Sign up in
the Student Activities Olfice by January 27
Tournament
243-6585
for News
AUDI 72 AM *-M 4 SPD4 DR 24,0ui orig miles,
eac cond Ask S1700 (609) 4?i 4787
208'
Jixli.7Jiil£7Jbisl
Irvine $ 1
Call
<CUAI
Thurs. Jan 30
Slaughterhouse 5
CHUG iVRi begins Tues • Jan 28, 5 30 to 6 30
P M at Hillel, 2Q6 S 36th Street sponsored by
Hamagsinmim
UNDERGRAOUATE ASSEMBLY There will be a
meeting of the Under graduate Assembly on
Tuesday. January 28. at 7 30 in the Bishop White
Room in Houston Hail
fUIIi'M
UNIVERSITY
HA VS IN EDUCAIiON For Secondary School
Certification Applications tor p-ogram starting
Spring 76 are available in Room 117 Logan Hall
Some openings for Fail 75 still available See Dr
Oaskm
Pennsylvania Communications Council
are the many sides of solitude, as seen
and expressed by such gifted writers and
poets as Audcn. Frost. Hesse. Yevtushenkn.
Robert Graves, Rod McKuen, Nikki
The Return of
Leonard Cohen
Coffee Hour
GAYS AT PENN Tuts ,7PM 2nd floor lounge.
C A GAYS AT PENN ollice hours MOn, Wed .
ThurS
1 S P M
simple words evoke. Mere.
in one sensitively illustrated book.
WHARTON WOMEN'S ASSOC
Ms Karen
Games, editor of "The Almanac", will discuss
"Communications and Women in Business" in
VdnceHaH. rm B 7. 4 30 on Tues .Jan 28
10. a P M
tNTERFAiTH COUNCIL
Sponsors panel
discussion on "Changing Role ot Women in
Religion" Franklin Rm , M H 7 J0 PM
INTERESTEO IN SECURITY? Audience par
ticipants needed lor penn Video panel discussion
on u security CAM Mike EV 2 0903
An Equal Opportune, Employer
COLLEGIATE ASSOC FOR THE RESEARCH OF
PRINCIPLES "Critique and Counter Proposal to
Marx's Labor Theory of Value", lecture 4
discussion Jan 28, I2noor 2 P M , Ivy Rm , HH.
2nd Floor
PRE uAW STUDENTS The Pre Law OMice will
be closed on Wednesday mornings throughout the
Spnng semester Wednesday hours will be l 00
5 00 P M
7:00 8:30
10:00
ANIMAL CRACKLRS
<W.
r:15 8:55
10:25
Page 3
The Daily Pennsylvania!!
Monday, January 27,1975
News in Brief
Congress to Debate Ford Oil Tax
WASHINGTON i UPI | - Shoved into
speedy action by President Ford,
Congress heads this week toward a
showdown on the administration's decision to tax imported crude oil.
The House Ways and Means Committee voted last week to suspend for
90 days any imposition of the threestage, $3 a barrel tariff. It attached
the suspension legislation to a bill increasing the debt ceiling which Ford
must have.
The measure - the first major bill of
the 94th Congress - is expected to
reach the House floor late in the week,
although there is a possibility action
could spill over into next week.
It will provide the first indication of
the strength of the heavily Democratic new Congress, compared to the
administration.
The Senate, meanwhile, is expected
to approve a resolution Monday
creating a select 11-member committee to investigate the CIA, the FBI and
other intelligence gathering agencies.
The committee must finish its work
by Sept. 1.
international conference, ignoring
American suggestions that talks
initally should be confined to producers and industrial powers which
consume most oil.
Egypt Calls on U.S.
To Pressure Israel
i UPI) - F.gyptian Premier Ismail
Fahmi Sunday called on the United
States to pressure Israel for a newproposal on troop withdrawals in the
Sinai desert.
"America is the only country able to
put pressure on Israel because of the
special and exceptional relation
between the two," he said in an interview with the Beirut magazine Al
Usba Al Arabi.
In Israel, meanwhile, the Ma'ariv
newspaper called President Ford "a
mouthpiece for Arab threats"
because of increasing U.S. pressure to
make territorial concessions. "All
President Ford's threats are directed
at Israel and none at the Arabs,"
Ma'ariv's editorial complained.
Oil Import Nations
To Meet With OPEC
Senate to Vote Today
On CIA Investigation
ALGIERS (UPI) - The world's
major oil exporting nations agreed
Sunday to take part in an international conference with consuming
industrial powers and developing
countries to tackle global energy and
economic crises.
Ministers of the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries
rejected claims that huge oil price
rises were to blame for the economic
ills but said the "current economiccrisis constitutes a growing threat to
world peace and stability."
They accepted a French proposal to
include developing countries in the
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The congressional investigation into alleged
abuses of the CIA and FBI is expected to pick up momentum Monday
with an anticipated Senate okay of a
new select investigating committee.
Approval by the Democratic controlled Senate is considered a foregone conclusion following a 45-7 vote
last week by the party caucus.
Senate Democratic leader Mike
Mansfield will name the chairman
and five other members to the 11member committee, which is to
report back by Sept. 1.
THE MASK AND WIG CLUB
presents
Supply Ships Reach
Sieged PI mom Penh
PHNOM PENH i UPI) - The 28-day
rebel stranglehold on Phnoin Penh
was broken early Sunday with the arrival of nine supply ships that survived a fierce ambush along the
Mekong River route to the Cambodian
capital.
Rebel gunners fired 33 rounds of
rockets into Phnom Phenh's Ponchentong Airport, seven miles from
the city, in a continuing attempt to
isolate the capital from outside
support.
UPI correspondent Alan Dawson
said six river freighters carrying rice,
two ammunition barges and a tanker
carrying badly needed gasoline
reached Phnom Penh port early
Sunday.
MVST
LOV
CO
10 Year Oil Shortage
Predicted by Morton
871*
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Interior
Secretary Rogers C.B. Morton said
Sunday that energy conservation is no
short-term thing: either Ford's import tax increase or Democrats' gas
rationing will run at least 10 years.
Morton, Ford's top energy adviser,
said energy independence will cost 10
years of self-denial, 10 years of tripled
natural gas prices, 10 years of replacing a high-priced Arab barrel of
oil with an American high-priced
barrel.
Morton was interviewed on UPIAudio's Washington Window.
"There is a 10 to 15 per cent potential saving that can be accomplished
by the American people without any
real serious economic fallout, any
real serious deterioration of the
economy or the quality of life.''
Morton said.
Avoid the Weekend Rush Drink on Monday eve's
(it's worth it)
Bull & Barrell
ilJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH
RUGBY CLUB
Important meeting
I
8:00 pm Tuesday 28th Jan.
in Houston Hall,Room 1(3rd floor)
All members and interested persons
should attend.
niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimn
A
gomfi 7Vi~0>-S«-7a
BRISTOL
'\\w fntir** enq«io*'nwiil o( the
Nl W YOKK
SHAKESPEARt FESTIVA1
production ot
"A DOLLS HOUSI
sMrnng LIV ULLMANN is
COMPLETELY SOLD OUT
l( there are any returns <>r
cancelUlums.lhcy will <ju
on salt* 45 minutes In'tore
each pertorm.in. v
ND phone reservations
STUDENT NIGHTS
Jan.3l,Feb.7,l2,l3,l5,20 8:30
at the CLUBHOUSE, 310 S.Quince St.
Tickets at Houston Hall, call 243-5610
rhtra is sl(" B limited nutnlH'r
of ticket! available toi the last
New York Shakespeare 1 ea
tival Production ol 111 II I
BLACK SHEEP" produc«d
by Joseph Papp
Feb.27,28,Mar.l
8:30, ANNENBERG AUDITORIUM
Tickets: Annenberg Center Box Office,
call 243-6791
Zellerbach Theatre •
my
IIII
We think a great deal
of Marantz quality
gamfe *7om«4<u*>*
NEW
HAMPSHIRE
150 GIRLS
130 BOYS
AGES 6-15
AGES 7-15
Interviewing interested
men and women for
summer staff positions.
CONTACT: Eric Scoblionko
382-2669
Membeis Assoc. of Private Camps
American Camping Assoc.
jl/V/73/Ton and the Arts/Perm Players Present
Weeknights and Sat. 8:30 P.M.,
Fri. 6:30 & 10:00 P.M.
"Let's hear it for
'Company', the slickest
thing in town.
As smooth as the cte«>'
glass buildings of
Mid town Manhattan
and as jumpy as an
alley cat."
JAN 29 - FEB 1
FEB 5 - FEB 8
Douglas Watt
- Daily News
Tickets'
If price were no object, most people who
really know audio would buy '.' u II '
But in this day and age price is not
only the object, it's the major subject
So f
month, our Music Men r.t..
taker ':: tonal Marantz quality andlock- I it I i heavy dose of savings
The- result is an exceptional value in
the M II mtz 2015 AM/FM '•
• " ill the featuf-- ; erf rn
and : .•.••' , .
■■•■ : I Ii .•■ a pair of
: • | Marantz 4G speaker sys•f the best selling most
ndabli
irntabli the BSR
260-AXE
• : • ••■ with base I I oovtod Sh -••
i |i i •
irti : ;■ and
you come oi.' .•. II i I '•• '• '■
. ,tem
And S85 m savings
O■
•
fine . '• in We
think you'll agrei I
ney .'d buy even
if pro .-.• •>
This month, only
Per- <?♦
I
...s $2.50
Weekends $4.00
Pei... SrtH«*"tS ^300
CENTER
S379
■
Wpukninhti: ^3.50
ANNENBERG
Harold Prince Theatre
So here's
a great deal on
Marantz quality
ionldin
1125 CHESTNUT ST
PLYMOUTH MEETING MALL
EXTON SQUARE
ECHELON MALL
SPRINGFIELD MALL
P'
NESMAMINY MALI
'Classic Issue, Classic Failure'
By Larry Field
1885 • tJ975
The \rnspiiprr aj the I'nivrrxitX <'f I'liuisvli iinia
Monday..January 27, 1975
Page 4
MITCHELL HANI) BERGER, Bxtcutlv* Bdlto
I / E LEVINS, Managing Editor
JONATHAN I- /.IMMAN. Business Manager
J CHRISTOPHER " NNEWEIN. N«wt Editor
ELEANOR A NOHF.lKA.Atior Managing Editor
PETERR GINSBERG Editorial Chairman
MICHAEL K ROSENMAN. /'holography Editor
■BRIAN I' FRIEDMAN. Advertising Manager
THEODORl J Ml 1/CiER, AMOC Sports Editor
HOWARD P NEWMAN. Comptroller
STEVEN A WIOOD Credit Manager
ANDREW I. FFINHFRG. Ulh Street Co Editor
» GERARD BISSINGER III. Sporff Editor
K SCOTTSHECOON Ml FinancialManager
WILL/AMC CIFID.IR .ProductionManager
JOSEPH I S I FINFE1.D. JR.. Assoc Photography Editor
STEPHEN GARRISON RIDDLE. City E.I.tor
IKWYN APPt.F.HAUM. Hth Street Ca-F.ditor
SARAH M D'NSMORE. Mth Street Buslneu Manager
Merciful Justice
The University court deserves a proverbial slap on
the back (or not taking strict action against Bonnie
Hlustein in her recent trial.
While the court panel was correct in finding Miss
Blustem in violation of the open expression code, they
showed good sense in not suspending her from the
University. Instead of taking overly authoritative
measures, the court gave Blustein the right to continue her education
However, the panel members must not fool
themselves into thinking they have made a definitive
judgment regarding the central issue - a professor's
right to say controversial things without disruption.
The decision will not deter Blustein. let alone another
demonstrator, from violating the open expression
guidelines in the future
Only in the most serious circumstances should a
student be forced to leave the University. Plagiarism
is one criterion for dismissal, an intentional act of
violence is another. Disrupting a class, as Blustein
did, is a serious offense, but in no way can it bo interpreted as a grounds for suspension.
Miss Blustein has been given a second chance, so to
speak She is able to remain at the University and
continue her personal struggles. The court has made
her accountable to the open expression guidelines, as
it should
Using good judgment, the University judiciary has
brought what could have been a long and bitter trial
to a quick and rational end.
On Basket Madness
"Mr. Dooley" was a journalistic character created
in (he late IHOO's by a Chicago newspaper writer.
Finley Peter Dunne. Armed with a wealth of
parochial insight, the elderly, Irish-born Dooley
worked as a bartender in a neighborhood Hirish bar.
His Irish brogue and his wit. which prossessed a
knack for bringing confusing world events down to
the level of those living everyday life, held a continuing conversation with the American public, in the
form of weekly articles, until 1926. His incisive
harangues both drew laughter from delighted
readers and pricked their consciences
It has been recently found that Mr. Dooley did not,
in fact, disappear with Dunne's demise. As
precocious and stubborn as ever, the old bartender
was reported to be wandering about the countryside
for years, exchanging his verbal pearls for liquid
gold. After the recent LaSallePenn contest, in fact,
freshman l.arry Merion took part In an encounter
which proved that even if Mr. Dooley is dead, he
certainly isn't finished kicking.
+++
Downy-Cheeked Larry Merion felt more depressed than he
could remember. "Why do I exist?" he extolled a puddle;
"What is reality''" he asked a crumpled newspaper. I.aSalle
had just beat his team, his heroes.
Stumbling and crying, he felt the need for some
philosophical reinforcement. After being carded and turned
away at Smoke's and the Bull, he found a place at Clyde's
Bar "Woe is me!" he moaned, "(live me a double." He
poured the scorching liquid down his innocent gullet, emitting a large burp "Whew!" he croaked. "You don't learn
that in school."
MR. DOOLEY SAYS
"Indeed ye don't, lad." came a voice from beside his ear.
Larry turned to find a pug-faced, white-whiskered man
sidling up next to him "Is it that ye're heart is in need of
solace?"
"I follow basketball," sobbed the frosh. "and we've been
destroyed by a Catholic school." Dooley ifor this is who it
was), uncertain of his meaning, queried. "Ye spind ye're
time chasm' afther a ball''"
"No. that's not it," Larry stammered. "I root for our
basketball team. I'm a fan. a Pun man." "Oh." cried
Dooley. "an enthusyast, are ye'' The only sich I know Iv are
bullshevicks. like Finley, the bartender, thyere, and the'
corp'rate whizards-thun that're otherways known as thieves
n cutthroats Finley. espeshyally, is a verry enthusyastic
sort, '(iive me a dollyar.' he says t' me th' other day, 'and I'll
set yet free,' he says, iv th' evils of capitbilasm. But give me
two dollyars.' he goes on. and I can drink enough so's to
dream of dear soshyalism.' An' I give it him, as 'e was pinin'
fer 'is native land.
But. lad. 1 was at that game ineself. and I must confess
I'm worried about the youth iv th' counthry. ltd been so long
since I'd gone to an orgie iv youthful tashthes, that I thought
perhaps the plcasyores iv thir societhy d advance more'n my
simple minthality cud cope with.
"But I was wrong. Sich contridict'ry behavoor I niver seen.
The playurs cudn't decide between puttin' th' ball onta th'
floors, or thrnwin' it inta th' air. Some iv thim were eavychesthed 'n' squat, an' other iv thim were tall like pitzels. But
this, 'twas notliin' compared to those that weren't invyolved
in th' game.
"That was most confusin.' If they'd gone to watch th'
game, they cudn't, as ivrywan was jumpin' up so' no wan cud
see. If they'd gone to hear it, they was shoutin' so's they
cudn't listen. So th' crowd, which had bin rejooced to th'
smsibilities iv th' deaf n' blind, was obsarvin' th' 'hole thing
with as much success as I have in knowin' whar Clyde gits
this pore excuse fer beer.
It seemed to me pore eyes that manny iv thim that came
did so jus' to make a spictacle iv thimselves. If there was a
push on th' court, they'd have to go wan better, an' punch a
stray face. Whan th' players began t' sweat in th' heat iv th'
contest, these fans pulled on sweathers so's to put out thir
own foul smell. 'Hotdog,' they'd yell, and eat wan. 'Tis
alright, though. Thim rah-rah types weren't there to see th'
game annyhow. They just wanted to win. Thim's the kind
that'll only go vote if thir vote's th' decidin' wan.
"(iittin' drunk seems to be th' point iv the whole thing, to
tell th' truth. Whan the game is done, they all sing iv highballes 'n' nightfalls, an' thin go like ye to drawn thir
dayprissed faces. They're sccrethly daysirin' to lose, so's to
drink more. Whan I were young I didn't need such extravagint excuses to go 'n'tip one 'r two.
"And at least th' crowd did git a chance to view th' mayhur
iv Philadontya, th' hon'rable Yo Yo himsilf. He came out at
th' half an' took a few attimpths at th' basket. O' course, th'
mayhur'd niver take a shot if it wasn't undher-handed 'n' a
foul shot."
ljirry mournfully poured Dooley another glass. "WatehuV
that game,' continued the Irishman, 'was as clarifyin' as
hsinin' to our grate Presydunt Kerd. Just th' other day, he
says. 'On th' wan hand. I might declaire ware.' he says, 'but
on th' other. I niver said anny such thing. An' Vient Nam's
fine indipindentfightin' forces are oblitheratin' th' inimy," he
cries pashyunatel), but I'm askin' > ere permishyun to blow
th' Commie hellions off th' face iv th' arthe. by smotherin'
thun with dollyars.
" 'An.' he says, now is th' time fer austerity.' he says, 'so
our bayloved free market systhem can survive. An' to make
sure iv this.' he says. I'm cuttin' back soshyal security, so
yell be freed iv th' burden iv goin' to market. Charles.' he
says, this whole divilish mess has me dipressed. Bring me
skis and porthable mountain to me."
Dooley and young l-arry sighed deeply, both sunken in
unhappy thoughts. "Tell me. lad." said Mr. Dooley at last.
"Have ye got a baseball team here?"
Gary Dymski is a weekly columnist for the Daily
Pennsylvania^ He appears every Monday on the
editorial page.
Letters to the Editor
Bowie and Reed Just Don't Mix
Peter Oliver's 'Farewell to Rock
n' Roll i DP. Jan. 231 makes the awful
mistake of grouping I-ou Reed with
David Bowie as the all-trappings and
no-substance heirs of the vanished
legacy of the Beatles. Jefferson
Airplane and Hendrix There's a vast
difference between the two current
stars, not least of which is that Reed
creates music.
Oliver evaluates the change in the
rock idiom in terms of media unage
rather than music Bowie's movement into glitter seems flashy and
forced m comparison with the spontaneous flashiness of the sixties
groups and of Woodstock. However. I
remember an Airplane concert during
which huge papier mache phalluses
were lowered from the ceiling at Fillmore East-it's a matter of choosing
your obscenity.
Reed, it must be remembered, has
been around as long as any of them.
leading the velvet Underground
through the late sixt:°s It might not
be presumptuous to say that the
Velvets were the best progressive
rock group. This hasn't been recognized because their music
eschewed the compromising (lament!
which made other gi oups popular and
got their songs radio play
Velvet music couldn't be appreciated on the radio because its structural
complexity necessitated a more faithful sound system: it was layered,
dense, and dissonant, approaching the
qualities of avant-garde jazz It was
physical, its driving, insistent, manic
force demanding body movement. At
the same time it was intellectual, with
the first album dedicated to Delmore
Schwartz, and Reed emerging as a
genuine street poet whose lyrics and
singing both sounded remarkably as if
tiny were constantly being improvised.
John Cale's electric viola and what
lie learned in his study under John
Cage introduced contemporary
classical elements into their music
long before Keith Kmerson began
screwing up the old masters. Velvet
music never borrowed-it was always
fresh and disturbing This sense of
disturbance, or cultural holocaust, the
anxiety of being an individual in
today's world pervades Velvet music,
written mostly by Reed, as it does no
other rock of the period. The music at
Woodstock fostered togetherness and
ignored introspection. Even the
■ nee of the V> h ".'- ItSge) :t had
little to do with the n
Townsnend's artistic aims
The Velvets were the only rock
group whose work explored the
frontier of contemporary art. Artistically they were on a par with the few
living artists who try to isolate and
improve on the essence of their
chosen art. In this sense their work is
far more revolutionary than. say.
Airplane's "Volunteers." Most sixties
rock performers covertly saw as their
goal what Alice Cooper in the seventies has blatantly proclaimed: the
pursuit of wealth.
Reed has continued to create art in
rock, though his work has taken
different directions since the Velvets
disbanded.
On "Transformer"
marred by Bowie's production | and
"Sally Can't Dance" he satirizes
various aspects of the above-and
underground cultures In Berlin" he
has created a coherent, corrupt love
story which musically and lyrically
explores the psyche and emotions of a
tortured, unrequited lover. It is
terrifying, beautiful, and possibly the
best thing rock has produced in the
glittery seventies If this will go down
as the Reed era in rock, let it be due to
his musical artistry rather than his
• makeup
JAV ROGOFF
Colic g| 75
Photos bv
M.Kc ScliKoll
Daily Pennsylvanian staff
reporter Larry field attended
last Friday's Bonnie Blustein
trail. Below are his observations
of the proceedings.
Was the Bonnie Blustein trial a
convincing victory for the principles
of "Open Expression" and academic
freedom to say what you want? Not
really.
Was it a moral victory for the
campus radicals who contend
Professor Edward Banfield should not
have the right to teach here? Well, not
really.
Stating it simply, neither side really
presented its case. A classic issue, a
classic failure.
But each side failed in a different
way. And that's what makes the Blustein trial interesting.
Not surprisingly, University officials shied away from discussing the
crucial question of what, if anything,
justifies disruption of a lecture or
speech. Surprisingly, the record
showed that most University officials
involved in the case were reluctant to
bring it to University court in the first
place.
Banfield refused, the day his class
was disrupted, to press charges
against any of the demonstrators.
Law Professor Curtis Reitz, a former
University provost, filed the original
complaint against Blustein in November - seven months after the incident.
The Open Expression Committee,
after reviewing the facts, reported
during the fall that the open expression guidelines were "apparently
violated."
And, according to Blustein, University Judicial Inquiry Officer Jackie
Pollard, who presented the University's "case" Friday, told her a strong
case for suspension could not be
brought against her.
It looked as if Pollard really didn't
want to bring a strong case. Her
presentation of evidence was sketchy,
her questioning cursory. Oddly, it
appeared Pollard was restraining
herself.
Unfortunately, Blustein conceived
of the trial as a political show rather
than a trial over political issues. Her
repeated attempts to be an
"outrageous" radical, complete with
court-room antics, obscured the veryreal issue of academic freedom.
Much of what Blustein did during
the hearing was obviously designed to
anger panel members. Instead of
resolutely challenging the evidence
and defending her right to violate University guidelines in fighting for a
higher good, Blustein and her counsel
continually attempted to put Banfield,
the panel and the security guards on
trial.
Blustein insisted the real, movable
wall of the small hearing room be
opened. She claimed to be afraid that
security guards were behind it.
After demanding a document be
given to her "immediately," she
strode up to the panel's table and
grabbed it furiously. But she didn't
look at it until the lunch recess.
When panel chairman Eliot Mossman turned around once to ask
Judicial Administrator Richard
Sherman a trivai question, Blustein
demanded to know what was said. She
almost looked embarrassed when she
heard.
And when she ran out of her own
witnesses, Blustein called Banfield,
Reitz. Mossman and Pollard to
testify. Naturally, the panel wasn't
too pleased.
This emphasis on show rather than
gut political issues was frustrating,
especially when Blustein and her
counsel were questioning their witnesses.
As they were making good points in
her behalf, they would be asked
pointed questions regarding Banfield's political views. Almost every
witness, on both sides, was asked by
Blustein's counsel whether they
approved of selling welfare babies to
the highest bidder.
The question is not whether you
approve of a policy. The question was
- and still is - do you have the right to
stop someone else from advocating it?
Monday, January 27,1979
The Daily Pennsylvanian
Suspect Arrested in Attempted
University Bookstore Robbery
By DKL'SIF. MENAKER
The University Bookstore was the
scene of an attempted armed robbery
early Friday afternoon.
At approximately noon, plainclotheddetective Jack Loasby noticed
a young man carrying a "large plastic
bag" through the bookstore.
University security chief detective
Harold McGrattl said Friday.
As the suspect exited onto .'(8th
Street. Loasby attempted to apprehend him. McGrath said. The man
then "stuck a fully loaded .22 caliber
pistol" in the detective's stomach.
Loabsy then "wrestled the suspect
to the ground" and •disarmed him.
'Hie gun went one way and the man
the other." McGrath explained.
The suspect fled down 38th Street to
a waiting car with I.oasby in pursuit
in which "two female companions"
were waiting McGrath said.
A student observed the license plate
number and the suspect was later
arrested in a "mustang with a white
top and a dark body," McGrath said.
The suspect was then turned over to
the West Philadelphia police station
for detention and questioning.
Detectives there refused to comment
on the case.
Inspection of the "plastic ban"
revealed $200 worth of sweaters
identified as Bookstore merchandise.
McGrath termed Loasby'g performance as "cool calm police work"
He commended Loasby for protecting
innocent bystanders in the crowded
bookstore by not firing his weapon.
In another campus crime last week.
a locker room at Class of '23 rink
being used by the Philadelphia Flyers
hockey team during a practice session
Blustein Trial
(Continued from page I)
key issue in the case. During a recess
in th": hearing, Naseef said "at issue is
not her act itself, but the content of the
act There is no hiding the fact that
Banfield's leaching encourages
racism in this country."
Blustein attempted to call for
testimony from Banfield and
University Counsel Curtis Reitz, who
brought the charges against her on
the University's behalf. Although both
received letters requesting their
presence at the hearing, neither were
in attendance.
Neseef said in his summation if
Blustein were found guilty, "we will
charge you all with genocide." He
said Blustein will continue her
political activity despite the panel's
ruling.
Matmen
After all the witnesses had been
heard, Neseef again moved the case
be dismissed because of the "sloppy
evolution of the charges" their
"extremely vague" character, and
because neither Banfield nor Reitz
were present to testify. The panel
denied all the motions and began final
consideration of the charges at 5:15
P.M.
They deliberated until 10:15 before
emerging from the caucus room. In a
subdued voice, the visibly tired
Mossman read the panel's two-page,
hand-written opinion.
Following adjournment of the
hearing, security officers escorted
panel members from the Houston Hall
hearing room.
Mayor
(Continued from page !)
State
Representative
Robert
O'Donnell, were each given 15
minutes to present their cases.
Several questions from the group
followed.
They all criticized the Rizzo administration, especially in the areas
of housing, patronage, crime, gang
problems, and public education.
Rizzo. according to observers, may
make an appearance at the Wednesday meetings. Announced candidate Muhammad Kenyatta and
Judge Lisa Bichette may also seek
endorsement.
there last Wednesday was robbed.
$400 in cash was taken from wallets
belonging to four players. Orest
Kindrachuk and Tom Bladon each lost
$50. Rick Macleish and Andre DuPont
lost $120 and $80 respectively.
McGrath explained.
He said "everyone in the building
could be considered a suspect"
because there were no witnesses.
Flyers Coach Fred Shero was "very
upset" by the robbery and the apparent lack of security. McGrath said.
He added the Flyers "have their own
security." Shero was later reported to
have threatened to stop practicing at
the rink.
Flyers general manager Keith
Allen refused to comment on the incident or its consequences for oncampus practice sessions.
LIZ STEIN
Night Editor
ELLIS KRIESBERG
Copy Editor
LEE FRANKEL
JORDAN MINT/
Sports Copy Editors
/Continuedfrom page 6)
course, I would have liked to win all
three matches, but under the circumstances what with the injuries and
such, were were at a disadvantage.
And after this kind of a tournament, it
seems to me that any one of our opponents for the rest of the season
should be that much easier."
Things can't get much rougher than
they were on Saturday.
Tracksters Snap Lafayette 15-Meet
Winning Streak with 84-49 Triumph
By DANNY SIII Kit
"(Coach Jim I Tuppeny told us we
were 16 point underdogs before the
meet." said sprinter Mike Seitz
"That was probably a psychological
maneuver."
It probably was. When it was all
over, the score read: Penn 84.
Lafayette 49. BockneO 36. and Gettysburg 6. In beating I-afayette by
almost 40 points, the Quakers I3-2I
snapped a 15 meet Leopard win streak
and became the first team ever to
beat Lafayette In its new fieIdhou.se
Quaker winners came in all shapes
and sizes. Greg Cortina marked his
return to competition with a 55'3'4"
toss in the shot put, while Egbert
Perry surprised everyone with a 47'3"
triple jump. Hal Schwab's 1:11.6 in
the 600 set a fieldhouse record, and
Gary Bessette registered another
upset by beating I.afayette ace Steve
Pcldman in the 35 pound weight
(53'9"l. "It's not how far you throw in
these things," commented assistant
coach In- Mondschein. "The important thing is that we beat their big
!
Tuesdays
BylBASHl (KF.B
Even with Quaker number-one
player Joe Swain excused to play in a
tournament, the Penn squash team 141)1, as expected soundly thrashed
Army. 9-0.Saturday afternoon at West
Point
Most of the Quaker racquetmen
overpowered their opponents in the
minimum three games Top Penn
seed Ciil Mateer overcame Cadet
number-one Jim Armstrong. 15-10,159, 15-10 with surprising ease.
Mateer, psyched by the shocking
loss he suffered last week at Dartmouth, the first in his two-year-old
varsity carter, look the offensive and
set the pace for the match, committing far fewer costly errors than
his opponent Armstrong in the
process Indicative of the way the
match went was that Mateer had no
need to rely on his brilliant groundskimming serve, his "bread and
butter" shot to win favor
freshman Rick Raman made an
auspicious debut as a member of the
Red and Blue varsity. Despite occasional lapses, Hemsen, playing
eighth, took his opponent In three
straight games and in doing so
provided an encouraging note for the
future
People can stop it.
D.O.T.
(Dialogue on Thought)
Spend a weekend
with:
ELIOT STELLAR ,
ANN YORK ,
• Jewish Life Cvcle - Traditional and
Modern Approaches
Free Catalogs and Registration:
Call MfrttWlTH'TflTlli
CWAsst. Dean
ANN BEUF
Feb. 28 - March 2
Assistant Professor - Sociology
• Anti-Semitism - 1975
• The Economy of Israel
• The Writings of Maimonides
• The Special Life of Hasidism
• Being a Jew in a non-Jewish World
• Changing Priorities of the Jewish
Community
• Jewisii Women - Where From?
Where To?
• An Appioacn to human Sexuality
• Problems of Kibbutz Education
• Mental Health from the Jewish
Standpoint
• Yiddish
Feb.21 - 23
Provost
* Rites-de-Passage in Jewish Life
* Hebrew
* Reconstructionism: A Jewish Way of Life
Wednesdays
Thursdays
Mateer Stars in Easy
Squash Win vs. Army
pollution.
Courses include:
!
weeks"
People start
We believe that we must search out our Jewish ji
roots if we are to create a meaningful existence
for ourselves in the future.
We invite you to join us.
I
getting started." noted the junior,
Who ran 8 « in the event in high
school "I'd like to lose about 20
seconds in the next three or four
Mermen
SPRING 1975 J
Mondays
shot."
Peno'i Dave Memck resumed
competition alter a year and a half
absence bj taking second in the two
mile in a time at I 1:> "We're just
(Continued from page 6)
Rivalries abounded Saturday as
Penn's Robbie Cragg and Bill Heinz
resumed their own "feud". Although
Heinz was able to extend his winning
streak to five in the one-meter diving
(324.15) his margin of only 13.19 points
indicate the comparative closeness of
the two AU-American divers. Cragg
was able to return the favor by surpassing his nemesis in the threemeter boards (337.50). So the rivalries
continue, at individual and team
levels, between the two Ivy schools. It
may not be too long before the team
balance is tipped in the Quakers'
favor.
Jewish Free
University And
PENN HILLEL
I
I
I
I'age 5
DP Sports
An informal gathering at the New Boltonj
Center - Kennet Square with a faculty member
and family.
\
Open to Grads and Undergrads.
For further information
and applications contact:
Student Activities Office
2nd floor east
Houston Hall
243-bb33j
Deadline for applications Friday,Feb. 7
••■■■■■■iBaV
Panel
The Daily Pennsylvania!)
Monday, January 27,1975
What Penn Choke? Icemen Digest Cornell...
B> DAYIDl NGF.R
it wasprobabl) the most exciting, if
nut the greatest regular season
Quaker hockey victor) of the decade.
The Perm hockey team 17-6-1. 6-6-1
1 ( AC I. 1-2 Ivies 1 ended its fourteen
game winleea streak against the Big
Red of Cornell 1104-2, u-l-l ECAC 1.2:i Ivies skating to a 3-2 overtime
triumph Saturday night at the Class of
23 Kink.
The contest, which was pre-titled
> <nj bet your life it's a big name"
turned out more like can you top
this," as the Red and Blue skaters
looked to surpass the tension and
exi itement that their counterpart
hoopsters created earlier Saturday
with their one point decision over
Providence.
And indeed they did.
With the score tied at one going
into the final stanza on goals by Penn
captain Mark Irwin in the first period,
and Ithacan Bill Weber in the second,
one felt something had to give.
At the 18:16 mark of the third
period, it was Weber again, connect-
II A IN T IN THERE, I'AI. - Confused Cornell goalie Dave
Christina Cheeks his glove while a Mark Irwin slapshol
enters (he upper corner of the net 1 arrow 1 behind Chrastina,
for the opening goal of Saturday night's thrilling .'1-2 overtime
win over the Big Bed at the Class of '2.'1 Rink. Virus-stricken
Irwin went on to register the tying score with just 26 seconds
ing on a pass from linemate Mark
Trivett for his second score of the
night, and more importantly, what
looked to be the clincher.
Those who left the rink at this
juncture trying to beat the crowds
missed what proved to be the most
inspired two minutes and 17 seconds
of hockey ever played on the west side
of Philadelphia.
Irwin, playing with a temperature
of over 102, was not to be outdone by
his Big Red opponent. With goalie
Tony Ciresi pulled to put extra for-
Photos by Jirttm Schecriter
left in regulation time and the Quaker net empty, and then
HIP linemate Id Parkinson (10), behind Chrastina and
celebrating the score with Irwin 114) in inset, upper right)
sealed the first Penn ice victory ever over Cornell with a tally
.'13 seconds into the sudden-death period.
ward Sam Taggart on the ice, the
Quaker captain tallied his second of
the night with just 26 seconds left in
the contest, sending the battle into a
sudden-death overtime period.
Duplicating their performance of
Wednesday night against Merrimack,
the Quakers then proceeded to end the
game as quickly as possible.
With just 33 seconds elapsed in the
overtime period, appropriately it was
Irwin's blazing HIP line that executed
Cornell and sent the Quakers and the
capacity crowd into a frenzy. Winger
Ed Parkinson took passes from Jaime
Hodge and Irwin to register the
winning goal, an effortless 10-foot flip
under desperate Cornell goalie David
Chrastina's pads.
"This has to be the greatest win I've
ever had," commented a weakened
but ecstatic Irwin amidst a joyous
lockerroom celebration. "Although
they weren't like Cornell teams of the
past, we gave them one hell of a
game. This is the first time we've
knocked off a top contender (Cornell,
ranked ninth in the country). It's wins
like these that can turn a season
around."
"The HIP line has to be as good as
any line in the East," praised a
jubilant Penn coach Bob Crocker.
"This has to rank as one of the
greatest Penn wins ever. We finally
have the monkey off our backs-it
feels terrific."
The Big Red, coming into town
touting an explosive offense that had
tallied 79 goals in just thirteen
division contests, were almost totally
neutralized by the exceptional play of
the Red and Blue defense, led by
junior goalie Tony Ciresi and a host of
hustling Red and Blue defensemen
and backchecking forwards.
"All the credit has to go to the
defense and the forwards as they
muffled Cornell's attack," noted the
Quaker's premier netminder. "It was
a relatively easy night for me, with
most of the shots coming from the
outside."
Ranked with 1973's ECAC playoff
triumph over national power Boston
University, this victory, if anything,
has proven that the pre-season prognosticators must have been out to
lunch. With Penn now sitting in the
shaky position of eighth, the ten
division games remaining do not look
to give the team as much difficulty as
its first thirteen.
Tonight, the Quakers do battle
against one of those easier opponents
in the Red Raiders of Colgate (4-11; 28 ECA I) at 7:30 P.M. at the Class of
'23 Rink.
The Red Raiders, led by forwards
John Bartnett (8-19-27) and Joey Cyr
110-12-22), do not look to stop the
Quaker streak as the Hamiltonians
have given up a whopping 86 goals in
ten league contests.
"It's going to be extremely tough
1 tonight) after the let-down from the
Cornell win," commented a wary
Crocker. "Colgate beat us twice last
year so it's going to be important."
In times of inflation, even greatness
is often over-rated. But calling the win
over Cornell the greatest Quaker
regular season hockey victory ever
would be deflating the praise at that.
HIPPER THAN HIP
CORNELL
PENN
0 110
10 11
FIRST PERIOD 1. Penn, irwin (?) (Hodge.
Taggart). 13 20 Penalties stoKes. C, 8 08.
Guarino. P. 8 3J. Sands. C. 1J 13. Guarino, P.
15 57. D Weber. C. 15 57
SECOND PERIOD i. Cornell, B Weber (71
(Groulx. Tomciyk), 8 55 Penalties Stokes, C.
1 54. Roche. P. 1.56, Jessiman. p. 5 &,
Young, C. 12 59 (double minor); Nicholls. p.
12 5«
THIRD PERIOD 3, Cornell, B Weber (8)
(Trivett. Groulx). 18 16 4, Penn. Irwin (8)
(Siba, Parkinson), 19 34 Penalty Baiinski, C,
12, ?8.
OVERTIME 5. Penn, Parkinson |9) (Hodge.
Irwin), 033 Penalties none
Norbcrt Seifert
BOBCROCKER
Rid of a Monkey
Goalies Chrastina, Cornell. Ciresi. Penn
Attendance 3000
...Five Swallows Friars in Rare Feast
By EDWIEST
Qf the DP Sporta Staff
PROVIDENCE, R.I. - The visitors
Streamed into the Penn lockers after
Saturday afternoon's game at the
Civic (enter here. And as they did.
Ron Haulier's voice came through
loud and clear
"The Quakers are back,'' beamed
(lie t^-8 center, "and running at both
ends "
Providence College 110-4) had just
lust its first of 43 non-tournament
basketball games at the three-year
"Id arena And it was Penn 111-41 - inconsistent from the time of the
Rainbow Tournament, supposedly
finished when John Engles' right knee
crumbled during the l.aSalle defeat
that did the Job. beating the Knars 6665 on a 15-foot Jumper by Haigler with
36 seconds to no in the contest
We played the best defensive
game we have all season," noted
Penn coach Chuck Daly. "We earned
it all the way." High scoring, longShooting Knar guard Joe Hassett was
able to exploit the outside for 24 points
to lead all scorers
But Haigler. Hob Higelow and
Henry Johnson controlled the inside
most of the game They outrebounded
I6th-ranked i AP) Providence 19-18 in
the second half. The Friars were
shooting 17 for 4(1 from the floor in
those 20 minutes Against a 17 for 29
performance by Penn, it wasn't
Perm's power on the boards showed
up early as it jumped to a 15-8 lead in
the first six minutes of the game.
Haigler scored 11 of his Quaker best 19
113 rebounds) during the opening
spurt, hitting four field goals at close
range and scoring thrice from the foul
line.
Six straight points by freshman
Bruce Campbell 115 points for the
game i led a Providence resurgence as
they began to snag second shots.
Campbell lied the game at 20 and 22
by 6:10 to go; Bob Cooper 112) gave
1
anft -annfl
sm '..anwlafl
PBs^r Jyff^B?
r-F
r,-, .jBnenl
W^ 4i-k
Kj^flW
enough.
Bigelow arid Johnson further
proved John Engles was not an indispensable man in Red and Blue as the)
scored 16 points each and hauled down
ten and eight rebounds respectively.
nTvTfp
BOB BIGELOW
Seven-Eleven
the Friars their first lead of the afternoon, connecting from short range at
5 04 to go to make it 24-22.
The Quakers then switched into the
1-2-2 zone used Tuesday to beat St.
Joseph's. It further shut off the iaside
-but opened up sharpshooter Hassett
around the Civic Center's ABA-style
25 foot circle. Thus freed, the Providence native scored the last six Friar
points of the half-including a jumper
at the buzzer to give the hometowners
a 30-29 lead.
' Hassett's one of the finest shooters
I've ever seen," admitted Daly later.
But it wasn't the virtues of the 6-4
guard the fourth-year coach discussed
between halves. "Coach Daly,"
Haigler explained, "told us they were
making things happen. He told us to
tighten up-we could beat them."
Bob Bigelow, on his way to 16 points
and a seven-for-eleven shooting day
on the floor, showed he listened,
scoring six straight points to put Penn
ahead 35-34 at 18:27. Friar flurries led
by Cooper and Hassett gave them as
much as a five point lead again;
Beecroft and Bigelow then led an 11-6
spurt that ended with Penn up 58-53
with 7:58 to go.
The Friar's own man-to-man had
shut off Bigelow and Haigler by that
point. So, Henry Johnson took over.
I .eft alone under the Penn basket by
the PC defense, the 6-11 junior sank
three straight easy baskets off the fast
break, ending an 8 for 11 shooting
spree with a two-pointer 4:01 before
the finish. "After the I-aSalle game,"
laughed Daly, "I called him (Johnson) a cream puff. Now he's Puff the
Magic Dragon."
Sarinelli, Waters Bright Spots as
Matmen
Find
It Tough
at Temple
ByDAVESCHRAOBR
„ „,,„.., «., „
,.„„ 5ri,,.„
..-.-..•.
. ,.A\ .
livery Perm team this winter seems
!o have its individual leaders. In
varsity basketball, it's Bon Haiger
Freshman hoops has Keven McDonald, Hockey's stars are Mark
Irwin and Kd Parkinson And the
Quaker wrestlers are no exception
Raj Sarinelli i 150 lb. class) and Eric
Waters ■ 1181 have put on spectacular
shows all season, and Saturday was
no different as the two matmen
-bowed the) rank with the best in the
nation
It's just too bad the rest of the team
can't claim as much as the other
^rapplers (3-3) had a pretty
lackluster day, defeating only Notre
Dante 4-5 > and losing to Kentucky
19-3i and Temple 18-1-11 in a quad
meet Saturdav at tne Owl's
i:il match was more
inro competitive.
ir
that
Waters. Sarinelli. Pete Ingersoll, and
Don Halnes all came up winners
(Sarinelli with a pin), but it just
wasn't enough to overcome three pias
by the Owls as Temple won, 26-17.
Perm coach Larry Lauchle believed
his team would have won. however,
had it been at full strength. "This was
the one match where the injuries
really affected us." Lauchle commented.
The Quakers did salvage at least
something ixit of the day in their last
match, outbattling the Fighting Irish.
26-18 Waters started the Quakers on
their way with his easiest win of the
day, 17-3. and Penn was never headed.
Sarinelli, on paper, should have had a
tough time with his opponent, Dave
Boyer, supposedly the best wrestler
on the Irish, but the undefeated
Quaker senior wiped him up, 6-1.
So Saturday for Penn turned out to
lie pretty much a showcase for the
talents of Ray Sarinelli and Eric
Waters Lauchle. after seeing the way
the two wrestled at Temple, claimed,
"They both could start on almost any
team in the country. They are two
tremendous athletes and every match
we've played in this year bears that
out." About his team's performance
on Saturday, I<auchle added, "Of
(Continued on page S)
McGonlgle Hall.'
The first tlung to go (Prong for the
Quakers was ttiat old injury nemesis
Starters Andy Sefter and Mike
Knesvitch were both disabled and this
took something out of the Red and
Blue attack The second thini; to go
against Penn was simply the luck of
!raw Penn wrestled against
Kentucky first and the Wildcats just
' a| pen to be one of the best teams in
the entire country.
Kentucky totally manhandled the
Quakers. 36-", led by Olympian
Junim Carr, who pinned Dewey Golkin of Perm in 0:53 and his brother.
Joe,'who pinned the Quakers' Ron
I uui- at 3 17 The only 'we \ictories
I j Penn were by you guessi l it. the
Win Twins. Sarinelli and Waters
Temple wa- theft) I anil Blue I next
opponent and as could be expected,
SOW I VEGOTYA -PeSB'S Eri< Waters appears to hate things well In hand in
ii lion taken fron ■ quad meet held Saturday at Temple. Haters defeated his
Temple opposition pictured here handily. 11-3. as he did his opponents from
Kentucky and Notre Dame. The rest „| the team didn't (are as well, however
letting destroyed b> Kentucky dropping a dose match by Temple, and
sah aging only one win out ol the day. against Notre Dam
With Penn leading, 64-63, the referees took charge- calling six fouls
in the next three minutes to finish off
what some thought was an outrageous
performance. Two jump balls after
Haigler's final basket and a final out
of bounds call with five seconds remaining, followed by an immediate
foul by Hassett on Haigler that
resulted in no elapsed time on the
clock added to the fun.
But that didn't seem to matter after
the officials ruled Campbell's 15 foot
basket after the buzzer no good. "The
first half, I played with a case of what
you might call the big game jitters,"
admitted Johnson. "But I realized
that we could win this game if I played
with more determination."
With half a season gone now, the
Quaker record looks like a bad case of
big game jitters. Yet, they've won
one now. They're determined to win
others.
And with that, they still might, just
as Haigler predicted, come back.
PROVIDENTIAL WIN
PENN
Haigler
Bigelow
Johnson
Beecroft
Lonetto
Stetanski
Frank
Jones
TOTALS
FG
FGA
7
7
fl
18
11
II
4
9
?
0
0
0
71
6
1
0
1
17
FT
S
3
0
1
2
0
0
0
10
FTA
7
4
0
1
7
0
0
0
14
11
13
K
1
0
3
1
0
1
41
P
19
16
It
9
6
0
0
0
66
Personal fouls 10 Fouled out N lone
PROVIOENCE
Hassett
Santos
Cooper
McAndrew
Campbell
Misevicius
Eason
TOTALS
FG
17
3
6
2
5
3
1
3}
FGA
FT
FTA
73
II
17
1
IS
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
7
a
9
■3
>
R
4
0
1
4
6
0
14
44
p
24
6
12
4
10
6
3
•i
Personal fouls 1? Fouledout N one
Technical fouls Cooper
Halftime
Providence 30. Penn 79
Attendance 8«3v
FIRST STEP - Penn's Ron Haigler (14) duels with Bob Cooper of Providence
(32) on the tip opening the second half of Saturday's game between the Friars
and the Quakers. Cooper won the tap for the home Rhode Islanders, but Haigler
had the last basket and the last laugh, sinking a IS foot jumper with 36 seconds to
go to beat the Friars, 66-65, and cinch Providence's first loss in a non-tournament
game at Providence Civic Center.
Penn Mermen End Up "Second" Best
As Princeton Tigers Flood Their Tank
By ROBIN LIPP1TT
Never could a tenth of a second
have meant so much. Sure, hoop fans
can talk of that last second shot that
won the game, or how about the field
goal in the final minute of a NFL
playoff that meant the difference
between victory and defeat0 But when
it comes to swimming, minutes and
even seconds seem like eternities. The
Quaker mermen i 2-2) found that out
the hard way Saturday in their 65-48
loss to the Princeton Tigers (34).
Although Penn was to take only five of
the 13 events, the meet nearly went
down to the final relay.
"We gave them hell," Coach
George Breen asserted. T think the
whole team swam great-sure, some
were disappointed, but we have to
learn to live with that. The tenth of a
second that gave John Brethwaite
third instead of second in the 200 individual medley really hurt pointwise, but it happens."
Not at all displeased with his performance was freshman sensaUon
Gary PlanUer. who edged out Princeton's Joe I-oughran by half a second
in the 200 freestyle 11 43 81 to set yet
another freshman record. "I'm glad
that event ended when it did. It was a
painful race, if it had gone any further
I probably wouldn't have won."
remarked Planner The Pennsburv
native also captured the 100 freestyle
148.5i and four minutes later, in quite
an exhibition of endurance, placed
second to Ixmghran in the 500
freestyle.
"I've been swimming with Joe since
I was nine, so you might say we have a
friendly rivalry going," Plantier
commented. "The whole team was
behind me and that makes all the
difference. A losing meet isn't so bad
if the team swims together and we all
support one another." Another bright
spot for the Quakers was the 2.01.0
time turned in by Alex Kazickas in
w inning his first 200-meter backstroke
at Penn.
(Continued on page 5)
Sub-Varsity Succumbs
To Big Red Freshmen
By PALI. BURGER
While most Penn students were sitting in front of their television sets watching
the hoopsters squeak by Providence Saturday, the Red and Blue JV hockey team
Was taking to the ice with the hopes of upsetting an impressive Cornell freshman
team Somehow, things didn't quite work out that way.
.Although Cornell's 11-1 win over the junior varsity sounds like an utter romp,
the Quakers did play a solid first two periods of hockey before allowing the Big
Red eight goals in the final stanza. "Cornell has four lines, we have but two,"
Penn coach Larry Davenport explained. "We're not making excuses, but they
just had more players and wore us down in the third period."
The story, however, does not end there. Because of an Ivy league rule, once a
varsif player drops down to JV, he is no longer eligible for varsity competition.
As a result, the JV has been forced to use a freshman at goalie. Jeff Lupowitz.
who has tarted at that position since only his junior year in high school. "It's not
his fault, ' explains Davenport. He has a great attitude and works hard If he
started playing goal when he was a kid..."
It's a difficult and unforunate situation But all the sub-varsity can do is
prepare to tetter its J-2record on Tuesdaj Sf ainst Princeton
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