Crowds cheer RFK ey tour - Penn Libraries

Ray Pennsylvania!!
VOL. LXXXIV
NO. 12
Heller colls for
fax surcharge,
poverty program
By JUDY TELLER
WALTER HELLER
"Surcharge needed'
Emphasizing the dual importance of the 10 percent surcharge
as a measure to curb inflationary
pressure while also providing
funds for a stepped-up poverty
program, Walter Heller in a
speech here Monday called on
Congress to enact the Administration's proposed tax bill.
Heller was Chairman of the
Council on Economic Advisers
under President Kennedy and
President Johnson, and is now
R egent s* P rofes so r of E c onom ic s
at the University of Minnesota.
Speaking at a Connaissancesponsored lecture, he told an
audience of 700 that the United
States' economy can finance both
the war in Vietnam and the war
on Poverty.
Heller said it was a "mis-take" to sacrifice butter for guns.
"Out of an $850 billion annual
GNP, we have the economic power
(Continued on page 2)
Results of publications
referendum released
A publications referendum included in the UPSG elections last
Wednesday has revealed student
criticism of The Daily Peimsyl
vanian's objectivity but support
for a continued government financial allocation to the paper.
Students also expressed approval of the most recent preelection issues of the Punchbowl
and the Perm Comment and objections to their becoming selfsupporting.
Of approximately 2,500 voters
who replied to the referendum,
700 said that The Daily Pennsylvanian presents objective reports
of the facts in its news coverage,
while 1,713 disagreed.
A minority of the students,
673, felt the paper should not
receive any financial support
from student government, while
1806 voters felt that some form
of UPSG allocation should continue. Over 930 students believe
that the DP should become financially independent, but 1,524
voters
disagree,
the poll
indicated.
On the other referendum
questions, 2,390 said they read
The Daily Permsylvanian daily
or frequently, while only 95 read
it occasionally or never. A
majority of 1,627 students felt
the editorship of the paper should
not be decided by a vote of the
undergraduate student body, but
should continue to be determined
by the outgoing senior-editorial
board.
Of the 2,222 voters who said
the DP has an obligation to concentrate its coverage on campus
news and the activities of campus
organizations, 829 claim the
paper does not fulfill this obligation. Over 1,360 students asserted that the paper does fulfill
(Continued on page 11)
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA
TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1968
Crowds cheer RFK
in De
ey tour
Will speak
here today
in Pa lestra
By WILLIAM K. MANDEL and
ERIC
TURKINGTON
CAMDEN--Thousands greeted
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy at every
stop along his four-hour tour of
the Delaware Valley Monday night
which ended in a jammed-packed
Convention Hall here.
Kennedy, a Democratic candidate for President, and his wife,
Ethel, headed back to New York
City for the night—a change from
his original itinerary--but he will
still address the University at 1
P.M. today in the Palestra.
Six thousand mobbed the Senator and tore off his cufflinks at
a rally opposite Our Lady of
Fatima School, Ridley township.
Minor injuries occured in the
crowd.
Only one other inc idant marred
the tour. Someone in the crowd
at a rally in front of Broomall
SEN. ROBERT KENNEDY and wile, Ethel, arrive at Philadelphia International Airport Monday evening to start camrestaurant, Ridley, threw an egg
paign trip that will lead to the Palestra this afternoon.
which narrowly missed Kennedy
and his wife.
applause.
nominee for President.
At least ten thousand--heavily
Kennedy shifted his campaign
"Would you like a man like
,Negro -- overfilled Convention tact from attacking the Johnson
Richard Nixon to be your PresiHall, stopping his address every administration
to
attacking
dent?" he asked.
few moments with cheers and Richard Nixon, likely GOP
(Continued on page 7)
Watch-in' set for Palestra
McCarthy fans make plans
By RONA ZEVIN
While voters go to the polls
in Wisconsin today in the second
Presidential primary, local supporters of Sen. Eugene McCarthy
will watch the election results
here in the Palestra at 8:30
tonight.
Carly Wade, representative
from McCarthy headquarters in
Philadelphia, said Monday that
they would have a direct line to
Wisconsin and expect a telephone
statement from the Senator some
time during the evening.
Speaking in support of McCarthy at the rally will be Taylor
Grant, news commentator on
WFLN; Henry Sawyer, Chairman
of southeastern Pennsylvania
headquarters for McCarthy; Michael Malin, state committee
chairman; Novril Reece, state
campaign manager, and David
Mixner, national representative
for the Pennsylvania primary.
Mixner said that the real
fight for peace is just beginning.
*'The ballgame is far from
over. The majority of American
people are still hawks, and if a
hawk candidate like Humphrey
comes along they will grab him
up."
"The real fight," he continued, "is to convince the people
that peace is the moral thing. McCarthy stood up all along, and
gave us the courage to take the
issue to the people."
In conjunction with the rally
and the Wisconsin primary, 50
petitions are being circulated
around the University by students
calling for support for McCarthy.
The names from the petitions
are printed today in an advertisement in the Daily Peimsylvanian.
McCarthy headquarters in
(Continued on page 2)
April is big antiwar month on campus and in nation
By DAVlL* KAYE
Like the rhododendron in
front of College Hall, the student
antiwar movement is expected to
bloom this month.
University students are planning to participate in almost all
of the protests, rallies and
strikes scheduled for April despite President Johnson's announcement Sunday night that he
has ordered a halt to the bombing
of most of North Vietnam.
The month's antiwar activities at the University begin today
with a rally in Houston Hall plaza
during which several students
will surrender their draft cards
to participating faculty members.
The rally is preliminary to the
third national antidraft protest
sponsored by Resistance, a militant organization of draft resisters.
Resistance
expects draft
THE UNIVERSITY COMMITTEE ON WAR AND PEACE
discussed its 'Vietnam Commencement' at a meeting in
Houston Hall Friday afternoon.
cards to be returned in most
major cities on Wednesday as
part of the protest, a spokesman
for the group said in New York.
He predicted that the number
of cards turned in may exceed
1000, the estimated number burned or returned to the Selective
Service System on Oct. 16, the
day of the first Resistance demonstration.
Martin Goldensohn, a College
senior and head of the newly
formed campus Resistance chapter, said eight students will turn
in their draft cards at today's
rally.
Eight faculty members agreed
Friday to accept the cards and
place them in envelopes. The
envelopes will be brought to the
Resistance demonstration scheduled to begin at 4 P.M.Wednesday in Philadelphia's Rittenhouse
Square.
Approximately 25 Philade*
phia clergymen are pledged to
receive the cards and mail them
to the Justice Department,
according to Robert Brand, a
Resistance member and 1967
College graduate.
The teachers and clergy who
accept the cards may be liable to
prosecution under existing draft
laws. Merma Marshall, assistant
United States attorney said Monday she could not comment without knowing the specifics of a
particular case. But she said it
is illegal to "aid or conspire in
he hinderance" of the draft laws.
The law requires possession
of a draft card by any male over
the age of 18. The penalty for
breaking the law is five years in
prison and/or a $10,000 fine.
Conversations with antiwar
activists at the University Mon(Continued on page 4)
Johnsons moves surprise Univ. community,
faculty opinion mixed about political future
The halt to the bombing of
most of North Vietnam coupled
with President Johnson's decision not to accept a second term
created as much surprise here at
the University as in the rest of
the nation.
But opinion about the meaning
of Johnson's announcements and
about the course of future events
was far from united.
Mrs. Alice Emerson, assistant vice provost for student affairs, said she "applauded the
gesture," of the bombing halt.
But, Dr. Roger Cobb, political science assistant professor,
:alled Johnson's actions "a
shrewd move."
"He'll get the sympathy
vote," Cobb said.
Mrs. Emerson, on the other
hand, said she thinks Sen.Robert
Kennedy will be the main beneficiary of Johnson's decision not
to accept the Democratic nomination.
"I think I would support (Sen.
Eugene) McCarthy at this point.
But I hope an understanding between Kennedy and McCarthy can
be reached," she said.
Cobb said the bombing halt
could be "a rationalization for
escalation."
"Johnson is wrapping himself
in a patriotic cloak. McCarthy
will be less successful in Wisconsin, ' be commented.
Cobb said the main battle will
be between Kennedy and "whoever Johnson wants."
He speculated that if the
Democratic convention is deadlocked Johnson may step in as a
compromise candidate.
He said that the "left" was
at least indirectly responsible
for Johnson's actions.
"But," he said, "the fundamental problems which created
the 'new left' are still present."
Pochoda added that he doesn't
think antiwar groups should halt
their activities either.
Edgar Perretz, professor at
the School of Social Work, said
the problems of "a lame duck
administration" may increase.
"This clears the way for
someone like McCarthy," he added.
Robert Paul, unsuccessful
New University Party candidate
for UPSG president, said, "I am
tremendously
overjoyed and
stunned."
*'It was most incredible to see
antiwar demonstrations with
flags and people singing the Star
Spangled Banner," Paul, who ran
on an antiwar platform, said.
He said, "Johnson read the
mood of the people."
Joseph Cooper, new UPSG
president, said, "now this will
be an interesting election."
"Candidates will get down to
issues,' ' he commented.
He er
(Continued fron\ page 1)
to do what needs to be done. We
don't have to wait until the war is
over to do something about poverty, about our cities, about pollution," he added.
In remarks earlier to the
press, Heller said he thought
President Johnson's announcement of non-candidacy would aid
the tax bill's chance of an early
enactment.
A vote against the surcharge
is no longer a protest vote against
the Administration or the Administration policy in Vietnam. The
surcharge is the most important
single measure for the economy »>
Heller added that "if restraint
is not exercised from the fiscal
side, inflation in the economy will
necessitate the use of even
greater monetary restraint which
will lead to brutally high interest
rates."
Heller said he did not think
there would be any great change
in the nation's economic policy
even if the November election
brought in a more conservative
administration. "We have commited ourselves to a policy of
expansion and full employment,
a commitment so strong that I
can't see any great change even
with a more conservative President."
Heller did say there were
three areas where substantial
lifferences might exist. He listed unemployment objectives,
policy weapons for economic stabilization and boundaries of economic growth as areas in which
a conservative government policy
might differ from that of a liberal
administration.
Cooper said he did not want
to make any further comments
until he has examined Johnson's
statement. »
Daniel Fiimerty, American
civilization graduate student,
said he was not completely satisfied with Johnson's actions.
"The fact is the war goes on.
I wanted to hear him say he was
going to end the war," he commented.
"If he ends the war I'll take
him for another four years," he
added.
Phillip Pochoda, sociology
lecturer, called Johnson's announcements "an encouraging
development."
LawSchool set
to consider
readmission
The Law School's statement
on a readmission policy for students going to jail or getting draft
deferment jobs in place of military service will be ready for
faculty consideration before the
end of the semester, Paul Mishkin, a professor at the law school,
said Monday.
"We're working out," he said,
"a formal statement of policy of
leaves and admission for the Law
School. We should have one or
more drafts ready for faculty
consideration within a very short
time.
I can't tell you exactly
when they will be ready, because
we are still working on them."
The law professor was certain
the proposals would be finished by
the end of the semester.
Mishkin is one of four members on the committee reviewing
the law school's readmission
policy. The other members are
Dean Jefferson Fordham, Vice
dean Theodore Husted, and Robert Gorman, assistant professor
of law.
"Many students are concerned about their position," he
continued;
"In the past there
wasn't really a formal policy."
"This is not just for students
going to prison, but also for students coming back to the law
school from jobs which give deferment," he added.
McCarthy
(Continued from page 1)
Philadelphia is also having an
ice-cream and a lunch-snack
truck on the University campus
to raise funds for the campaign,
according to Michael Karp, a
McCarthy volunteer who is on a
leave of absence from the Graduate School of Fine Arts. The
trucks, which are expected to be
the primary source of money for
the campaign, will be located at
the foot of Locust Walk on 36th
Street during the day, and will
circulate around the dormitories
at night, according to Karp.
He added that the trucks will
appear today outside both the
McCarthy rally and the speech
by Sen. Robert Kennedy at 1 P Jvl.
in the Palestra.
Saiiy Pennsylvania!!
TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1968
PAGE TWO
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THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIA
TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1968
PAGE THREE
COME AND WELCOME
SENATOR ROBERT KENNEDY
TO THE UNIVERSITY
TODAY, ONE P.M.
AT THE
PALESTRA
SUPPORT
KENNEDY
E. Digby Baltzell
Seymour Mandelbaum
Herbert Callen
Murray Murphey
Joel O. Conarroe
James Ross
Anthony Garvan
Morton J. Schussheim
Richard Jeffrey
Henry Teune
Robert Lucid
Robert Zemsky
Wilfred Malenbaum
Michael Zuckerman
Peter J. Conn
PAGE FOUR
TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1968
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIA
Balalaika concert salves soulful Slavs
Rare is the performance when
the audience is pleased even
before the curtain opens. Rarer
still was the feeling of Slavic
soul generated by the Penn Balalaika Orchestra et al in concert
at Irvine Wednesday night.
Slavic folk music is admittedly esoteric to begin with; the
Slavic Department, which sponsored the concert, is small
enough to be squeezed into grotesque Potter Hall, with which
few students are familiar anyway.
The audience, however, because of excellent area publicity,
was drawn from .many surrounding communities, and happily
filled the auditorium's three
downstairs sections. For the
most part, it was not a student
audience, but a family audience,
tied together by Slavic ancestry,
and in many cases, knowledge of
Slavic languages.
There was an obvious current
594-7535
of impatient expectancy before
the dancers had taken a single
step, mainly because of the intended scope of the performance.
In past productions, because of
seemingly limited appeal, the
Balalaika Orchestra has played
to a handful of Russian majors
in one of the small rooms upstairs in Houston Hall. Much
effort was expended to make the
combined groups' concert a fullsized affair, and it was an admirable success.
Many years of research, study, and practice went into the
formation of the groups to assure
adherence to ideals of the Russian folk orchestra and authenticity of costume, dancing, singing
style, and instruments. A comprehensive explanation of equipment and technique of the
Voloshki Ukrainian Dancers,
Odum Bandura Chorus, and Igra
Balkan Performers was a study in
IIIIIIIIIMillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
ACTION LINE
11111
11111(14
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QUESTION: The water cooler on the third floor of Speaxman does
not cool water. It is plugged inl -- Steve Binder
ACTION: Joe Regan, residence inspector, had the University Dlumber
check into the situation.! he plumber found that someone had kicked
in the front panel and it would take several days to repair. The
water fountain should be fixed right now. Evidently someone on
your floor thinks he is Moses and can strike an object and have
flowing water. Action Line suggests an immediate visit to the
Psychological Social Worker for the misguided individual responsible.
QUESTION:
Why doesn't the campus bus go to 46th Street— the
official boundary of the campus? Can service be extended?-Louis Guda.
ACTION: Karen Romer, assistant dean of women, explained that
the primary pu*-pose of the bus is to transport women to and
from the various residence halls, rather than to a specific
boundary. Any suggestions for next year's service are welcome. Call 594-8596.
QUESTION: Why does the University use Social Security Numbers
fop identification when it says on the card: "For Social Security and Tax purposes -- not for identification"? -- C.W.
ACTION: The Social Security Administration in the West Philadelphia office explained that this statement refers to the card,
which cannot be presented as proof of age or existence. The
Social Security Administration has authorized the University
to use these numbers for a convenient coding of all students.
Incidentally, the military is the only other known source beside
universities authorized to use the Social Security numbers. Is
there some sort of connection?
itself.
The 25-piece Balalaika Orchestra and folk dance club was
more impressive than it ever was
in Houston Hall. It was partly
due to the harsh, czar-like grandeur of I rvine, but mostly because
of the richness of the music, the
delicate nuances of playing, and
the increased variety of the program.
The costumes were handmade and beautiful, the dancing
intricate, powerful, and smooth.
The talented Voloshki completed
the performance with the Hopak
The only disappointment was
the announcer, who alienated
himself from the beginning by
his stiffly American dress, but
also by his ill-chosen jokes and
lack of coordination.
Special credit goes to Steve
Wolownik who founded the Balalaika Orchestra, directs it, and
coordinated the program. In the
two years since its founding,
the Orchestra has never presented such a colorful or enjoyable evening of Slavic folk
music.
Vykhor familiar to most Slavs
Don't
miss
Robert Kennedy
in the
Palestra
Lecture
and an equally competent encore.
Indeed, it would not be an exaggeration to say that the entire
cast returned the compliment
Peter the Great, an ardent Westernist, once bestowed onEurope.
Finer dancing and singing can
only be seen in the Soviet Union
itself.
today
Professor Morton Smith, of
Columbia University's History
department, presents an illustrated lecture on "Archaelogy
and Magic in Ancient Greece
and Rome" today at 3 P.M. in
Rittenhouse Lab, room A-8.
,
at 1P.M.
Antiwar month
(Continued from page 1)
day revealed that they do not
consider the President's surprise announcement of a bombing
halt a sufficient reason for an end
to antiwar activities. Some said
there is now more reason than
before to demonstrate for peace.
"We are pleased," Goldensohn said, "but this does not in
any way mean that there is or
will be peace."
"We are not saying this is a
false peace attempt." Our demonstrations are an "endorsement" of the bombing pause,"
Brand said.
But, Goldensohn commented,
"Only the bombing of 28 percent
of Vietnam (North and South) has
been stopped. Most of the war
effort continues."
Student antiwar activity this
month is expected to culminate
in an international student strike
which may bring a temporary halt
to classes at more than 100 colleges.
The university's Vietnam
Week Committee voted Tuesday
.0 participate in the strike scheJuled'for April 26.
The University Committee on
War and Peace, a faculty antiwar
group, has endorsed the strike
and will work to convince faculty
members to cancel classes scheduled that day.
The strike was called for a
a conference, attended by 900
student activists from the U.S.
and several Latin American
countries, of the Student Mobilization Committee, a national
antiwar group.
A mobilization spokesman
here in Philadelphia said 1,000
Temple University students will
participate in the strike. The
students who do join in will walk
out on classes at 10 A.M., he said.
Other antiwar events scheduled for this month include:
o Resist, the group of adults
who support resisters and which
includes Yale Chaplain William
Sloan Coffin and pediatrician
Benjamin Spock, has called for
"academic days of conscience'
on April 15 and 16. Groups
from 400 colleges are expected
to hold seminars and lectures
about the war and the draft ac-
cording to Monroe Engel, Harvard English professor and a
coordinator of the demonstration.
The University Committee on
War and Peace has decided to
participate here.
• A Vietnam Week Committee rally is planned for April
23 to urge a vote for withdrawal
in the national, Time magazine
sponsored student referendum
slated for April 24.
• Students for a Democratic
Society (SDS) has declared April
21-30 "ten days to shake the
empire." Many local and national
protests — including most of the
above — are scheduled during this
period.
The whole "ten days to shake
the empire" effort and particularily the student strike have been
called "Communist" by Rep. Edwin E. Lewis (Dem. La.), chairman of the House Un-American
Activities Committee.
"The whole established order
is being challanged," Brand said.
SUDDENLY THERE'S HOPE IN AMERICA
QUESTION: The windows in the 1st floor bathroom of Brooks are
nailed shut. We think the situation stinksl — Rog, Pete, and Ted.
ACTION: Ambrose Davis of the Residence Office was unaware of the
situation, but he promised to have it fixed as soon as possible.
Meanwhile, we have learned that you have taken the opportunity
to rectify the situation yourselves. Action Line commends this
forthright action and will be in touch with you when future residence demands require immediate service.
QUESTION: Could you please tell us what the various degrees
listed after President Harnwell's name in the catalogue stand
for? These include Ph.D., Sc.D., L.L.D., Pd.D., and L.H.D.
Also whose of these, other than the Ph.D., are earned degrees
and what were the sources of the unearned (honorary) degrees?
—Jim Allen, Dick Lennig
ACTION: Action Line consulted a biography prepared by President
Harnwell's office. President Harnwell received the degree,
Doctor of Philosophy from Princeton University. He holds
honorary degrees from the following colleges and universities:
Doctor of Law: Ursininus College, Princeton University, Dropsie College, University of Pittsburgh, Columbia University,
Washington College, Harvard University, Northwestern University, Brown University, Swarthmore College, College of William,
and Mary, Duke University, the University of«Saint Andrews
(Scotland), University of California at Los Angeles, Occidental
College, and the University of Pennsylvania; Doctor of Science:
Temple University, Haverford College, Hahnemann Medical
College and Hospital of Philadelphia, Franklin and Marshall
College, the University of Southern California, and Drexel
Institute of Technology; Doctor of Pedagogy: La Salle College;
Doctor of Civil Law: The Divinity School of Philadelphia;
Doctor of Science of Pegagogy: Elizabethtown College; Doctor
of Humane Letters; Wilkes College, Jewish Theological Seminary of America, and Yeshiva University.
QUESTION: Why doesn't the University plant "astro-turf" in front
of College Hall since nothing else will grow?—E.George Cross III
ACTION: F. Roy Ford, the university horticulturist, told us that turf
would grow if people would not trample it. Astro-turf is out of the
question since it costs about $2.25 per square foot, and it keeps
the rain from getting to the tree roots.
Come to the
Wisconsin watch-in
TONIGHT
-8:30 THE PALESTRA
SEE RETURNS VIA HOTLINE
FROM WISCONSIN
SUPPORT EUGENE McCARTHY
THE EDISON ELECTRIC, WOODY'S TRUCK STOP,
TAYLOR BRANT, HENRY SAWYER, MIKE MALIN,
NORVILLE REASE
AND MANY OTHERS.
$1.00 DONATION
TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1968
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
With America's sons in the
future under challenge here at
world's hopes - for peace in
believe that I should devote
PAGE FIVE
field far away, with America's
home, with our hopes — and the
the balance every day, I do not
an hour or a day of my time to
any duties other than the awesome duties of this office — the
Presidency of your country.
Accordingly, I shall not seek - and will not accept - the
nomination of my party for another term as your President.
-Lyndon Baines Johnson
i!§!OLM jmmmm -mm mm mmm m m SS mnS
Photo By DANIEL WOLFE
and MARTIN SMITH
1885
Jaiiy Pennsylvania!!
PAGE SIX
A pennsive view
1968
An overage day in A/larch
TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1968
By MARK LIEBERMAN
• A courageous act
Undoubtedly, the decision announced by President Johnson Sunday evening not to seek reelection was not an easy one. Not only was it
difficult, it was courageous. It is not easy to
give up 37 years of work. It is not easy to admit
a mistake and reverse a policy, but Johnson did
both Sunday.
There may be many reasons to dislike Lyndon Johnson, reasons concerning issues other
than the war in Vietnam. There is no need to
repeat the case against him here. But at a time
during which he has performed a courageous
act, he deserves commendation.
There are those who doubt the Presidents
sincerity, who have labeled his action as "political,*' and who are still not convinced that he
is honestly seeking peace in Southeast Asia.
To those skeptics, we can only ask that
they examine themselves.
When have they
last sacrificed anything for a cause? When
have they suffered criticism from all sides?
And, when have they last acquiesced to follow
a course, any course, dedicated to the resolution of a seemingly interminable conflict?
Lyndon Johnson did all these things and
more Sunday night. Whatever our opinon about
his past policies may have been, we respect
him for his decision Sunday night and trust
that he will use his remaining nine months in
office working in the apolitical manner he indicated toward a lasting peace in Vietnam.
No classes for RFK
Robert Kennedy will speak at the Palestra
this afternoon. That fact has been well advertised. Unfortunately, the Kennedy speech today
will conflict with scheduled classes, and will
prevent many students from taking advantage of
the unique opportunity to hear one of the two
major candidates for the Democratic presidential nomination.
This year is an extremely important one to
both this country and the world. Robert Kennedy
is one of the men who will shape the destiny of
the world. Hearing him this afternoon will be of
educational value far greater than spending 50
minutes in College Hall.
Classes at Pennsylvania are rarely if ever
cancelled. When the funeral of the late John F.
Kennedy was held, classes were cancelled only
in the morning. Now his brother has returned
with something to say, something important to
say. Both as a means of completing a long
overdue tribute and as an important service
to the educational process, we urge teachers
with classes scheduled to conflict with the Kennedy speech to cancel these class meetings and
urge their students to hear the New York Senator.
CHARLES A. KRAUSE
Editor-in-Chief
BERL N. SCHWARTZ
Managing Editor
MARK LIEBERMAN, Editorial Chairman; ERIC T. TURKINGTON, Editorial Chairman; WILLIAM R. BURCHILL, JR.
News Editor; WILLIAM K. MANDEL, Associate Editor';
BARRY JORDAN, Sports Editor; STEPHEN D. RUTTER
Executive Editor; DANIEL H. WOLF, Photography Editor';
PHILIP S. ARKOW, Associate Features Editor; NORMAN H.
ROOS, Associate Sports Editor*
STANLEY H. BERKE
Business Manager
JULIA B. WEINBERG, Assistant Business Manager; ELLEN
M. COIN, Financial Manager; KEN R. DROSSMAN, Advertising
Manager; JILL P. MESIROV, Production Manager.
The Daily Pennsylvanian i» published Monday through Friday at Philadelphia, Pa. during the fall and spring semesters, except during vacation
periods. One issue published in August, Subscriptions may be ordered at
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Phones: (215) 594-7535. Business and advertising: 594-7534 (If busy call
1594-7535).
Sunday was an average day for most Americans. Mo.r. of the country was enjoying the
nicest weather 1968 has offered for a weekend.
Philadelphia had three straight days of warm
sunshine for the first time since anyone could
remember.
While all this was occuring, Lyndon Johnson
was going through torment. He had a major address to the nation scheduled for that evening.
"It'll just be a rehash of the same phrases,"
a middle-aged woman was saying in Boston.
"He won't say anything new," her husband
echoed. And that's the way most people felt.
Lyndon Johnson has been President of the
United States for four-and one-half years. It
hasn't been an easy time. He has suffered
through repeated domestic crises, and one major ever-recurring international crisis - Vietnam.
Sunday was the last day of March, the day
before April Fool's Day. Whatever Lyndon Johnson said on television would not reach most
of the public until that magic day when no one
says anything believable.
When the speech began, there was an immediate hint that the address of March 31,
1968 would be different. Shock followed shock
unilateral bombing halt, effective de-escalation
of the war, active attempts at negotiations. And
then the shock to end all shocks — "Accordingly, I shall not seek, and I will not accept, the
nomination of my party for another term as your
President."
Johnson always referred to himself as ''your
President." His fondest dreams were to be a
popular Chief Executive. In 1964 when he dominated the public opinion polls his pockets were
jammed with the results of the efforts of the
George Gallups. By Sunday night, Johnson's
name was barely visible in the results of the
Gallup questioning.
And the President, your President, had to
do something.
When he delivered the punchline though, even
Johnson's staunchest critics were stunned. McCarthy, campaigning in Wisconsin for today's
primary vote there, broke out into a big smile
saying he was totally surprised by the Johnson
move. Kennedy called a press conference for
Monday morning in New York City.
These were the initial reactions of two of the
people most directly affected. Countless mil
lions are affected indirectly.
Johnson's announcement leaves several quest-
ions unanswered—the most interesting of which
is who will run as a Democrat to succeed him.
There are two announced candidates for the job-Kennedy and McCarthy. But a third candidate-Hubert Humphrey—waits in the wings.
Humphrey sought the position for himself in
1960 only to lose to vibrant John F. Kennedy.
In 1964, he became Johnson's vice president,
and people lamented that "poor Hubert" who
had done such an admirable job championing
liberal causes in the Senate had been thrust into
the thankless, do-nothing post.
Humphrey is a key man in the Johnson strategy.
There is nothing Lyndon Johnson would like to see
less than Robert Kennedy as President. Knowing
his dislike for critics, he probably doesn't relish
the thought of McCarthy in the White House next
January either. So he can turn to Humphrey.
The vice president has been a quiet follower,
yet loud vocal supporter. Now Johnson can use
whatever political muscle he still has to move
his friend into another thankless, wearying job.
But what about Johnson's "political muscle?"
What is left of it? The aftermath of what he
said Sunday, and the steps he has taken toward
peace in Vietnam will surely have an effect on
what happens in Chicago, at the Democratic Convention, in August.
What Johnson said Sunday was basically that
hundreds of thousands of young men were giving
their lives for peace in Vietnam, and that he
could certainly give his political life to the same
cause. Johnson is a vain man. As it stands now,
history will record him as the President who
ruled, and left office, during a time of bitter
internal strife in this country.
Johnson does not have the overriding sense
of history his predecessor had, but if he did,
he would realize that Sunday he rewrote the page
about Lyndon Johnson. This could very well have
been Johnson's own profile in courage.
For the next nine months he has no political
ties to bind him. He can freely work towards the
goals of peace in Vietnam- and in the United
States.
Politically, his move throws the Democratic
nomination further up in the air than it already
was. Kennedy is more alive than ever, but so is
McCarthy, and then there's the Humphrey factor
to consider.
In the world outside, the President's pronouncements will virtually force North Vietnam
to the conference table. For months, international critics have been urging this country to
take the first steps toward peace. Now those
steps have been taken, and the next move is up to
the Vietcong.
ftiifiiiitiiiiiiiniiiiiiitiiiiiittiiiifiiitiittiiiiiiiftiiiiiitititiitiiiiiiiiiitiiiifiiitiiiiEitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiitiiiiitifitiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiitittiiiiiiiiiiififiiiititiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiMiiititiiiiiiiiiiifii
Letters to the editor
IfllllllfllltlllllllllllllllltllltllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllfllllllllllllllllllfllllltlllllllllllllllllllllflllllllfllllllllllllttlllltllllllllftltllllllllllfltllllllflllffUllllllllllllllllllll
MISLEADING MANDEL
lowing.
Change is inevitable.
Sir: The article in the DP yesterday (March 27) containing the
subtle criticism of "those two
girls" who are only "marginally competent" as leaders of the
McCarthy movement is a dis
graceful one. As an active member of the McCarthy movement
at Penn, I give great praise to
these two girls who have taken
charge of the entire movement
with such grace and indeed competence.
It is quite true that the organization is lac king professional
smoothness, but is this not to be
expected of such a type of organization after only one week in
existence? Mr. Mandel's statement that these two girls are
capable of running nothing is far
more than just a gross error—it
is in itself a nothing statement.
I am indeed sorry to read such
an untruthful and misleading article.
Claude Amarnick
College '69
SMELLY CROWD
Sir: Last week's UPSG elections were the climax to a battle
that was long fought between the
political parties on campus and
the independent politicals. The
.sometimes questionable dictates
of the Red and Blue elections.
committee made things even
more interesting. The new heads
of UPSG are not the stereotyped
party members to which Penn
students were accustomed to fol-
But there must also be a
change in the student body if
there is to be hope in the new
government. Barely one third of
all undergraduates bothered to
cast ballots last Wednesday. This
lack of student interest is typical
of a rotten situation that exists.
It must be corrected.
The controversial issues at
stake gave the elections "the
roar of the greasepaint," but
"the smell of the crowd" was
STUDENT
APATHY -- and
believe me, that STINKS.
Neol B. Bobys
Wharton '69
'HALF-BAKED' SHAME
Sir: I was sorry to read last
Thursday of your paper's misconception of the organization
to which I belong. Your reference to the symphonic band as
being a "half-baked" group certainly does a grave injustice to
the 70 members and especially
to Mr. Rittenhouse, our conductor. Perhaps you are unaware of
the band's 10-day good will tour
of the South this past vacation,
during which time it helped
spread and increase the fine
reputation of this University. Believe me, the band has contributed more to this cause than all the
athletic teams and campus publications put together. Whether at
Parris Island Marine Base or in
Jesup, Georgia, we put on performances worthy of the num-
erous standing ovations we
received. Thanks to the band,
people in Hampton, Virginia, and
Durham, North Carolina know
there is a difference between the
University of Pennsylvania and
Penn State. It is shameful that,
despite our unselfish labor, The
Daily Pennsylvanian finds it necessary to perpetuate myths
about what is the most dedicated
organization on campus.
Douglas Pollock
College '71
NO SYMBOLISM
Sir:
The news that President
Johnson would not seek the Democratic nomination was met
with wild jubilation on campus
last night. Despite the gutteral
blast from fraternity row, ever
striving to exemplify their graces in rowbottoms while students
sang "America," the demonstration was most moving. But I
could not help feeling a certain
sadness in spite of America's
good fortune. Certainly the forces to stop the inertia of stupidity
in all phases of our government
will not leave with Mr. Johnson.
The change will be, at most, a
figurative one. It is up to those
Americans who still believe in
life to continue their confrontation. We should not be content
with mere symbolism, but decisive and immediate change. To
that end we should devote all our
efforts.
TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1968
THE DAILY PENNSYLVAN1AN
Kennedy
PAGE SEVEN
Barber says he was stymied by iudqe
.onti.nu.ed from
from page
na.ee 1)
1)
(Continued
*
Dr. Benjamin Barber, political
science assistant professor, said
Tuesday that although it was the
Democratic Party which challenged his eligibility to run as a
delegate to the Democratic
National Convention, it was actually an unfriendly judge who prevented his candidacy.
Speaking
at Theta Rho
fraternity, Barber said the Democratic Committee ruled him
ineligible because they claimed
he had not been a registered Democrat for several weeks in 1967.
Two
consecutive years of
membership in the Democratic
Party is a requirement for candidacy in Philadelphia.
Barber appealed the Committee's decision, but before the
scheduled hearing "the Democratic Party offered our lawyers
a deal. We had challenged their
labor party delegate in another
district and they told us that if
we lay off him, they'll lay off us,"
he said.
Barber said he agreed to this
settlement but the judge insisted
on hearing the case anyway.
According to Barber, it was
impossible to prove that he had
not been registered but was
equally impossible to prove that
he had been. The judge, Barber
said, despite all precedent which
the lawyers presented, decided
that he had the burden of proof.
Commenting on the judge's
decision, Barber said, "his attitude was that anyone who is
really interested in American
politics wouldn't spend two years
The Senator called for negotiated settlement in Vietnam,
saying in Convention Hall"Everywhere the American
people seek not revenge but reconciliation. They seek both at
home and abroad solutions of
friendship, not force. They seek
an end to the war in Vietnam,
not through withdrawal or escalation, but through a negotiated
settlement in which both sides
put away the tools of violence and
killing, and labor instead at the
conference table for an honorable
settlement."
Kennedy aso said that the
Vietcong should be included in
negotiations.
Kennedy's speech at the Palestra today is free. The doors
will be opened at 12:30 P.M.
(Persons holding tickets for
reserved seats on the floor must
enter via the ramps at the wes
end of the Palestra.)
The New York Democrat^
address--promised by his aides
to be his first major speech since
D
resident Johnson announced he
will not run for President again-is being co-sponsored by Connaissance and The Daily Pennsylvanian.
Kennedy accepted invitations
to speak at the University from
The Daily Pennsylvanian and the
Young Democrats.
Kennedy will come to the
University from a 12:15 P.M.
rally at Fifteenth and Chestnut
Streets.
BENJAMIN BARBER
'Probably my hair..."
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Spectacular International Show
FRI., APRIL 5, 8 p.m.
$2.00, $1.50, $1.00
The Friends of JudyNetzky,
an
organization formed last
spring in honor of the late University coed, recently donated
$1000 to Dr. Eugene A. Hildreth,
Chief of the Allergy and Immunology division of the University Hospital.
The contribution, comemorating what would have been Miss
Netzky's 22nd birthday, will be
used by Hildreth and his
associates for research on allergic and auto-immune diseases.
The organization was formed
as a memorial to Miss Netzky
for the purpose of raising funds
for medical research.
Miss Netzky died during her
junior year at the University.
SHAPIR STUDIOS
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in Europe/' and that "probably
my hair had some effect on his
decision.**
Turning to the national campaign, Barber predicted that "the
New Hampshire victory will go
down in history as a turning
point," not because it was a vote
against escalation, "but because
it was a vote against the credibility of Johnson.*'
After the New Hampshire victory, Barber said, "Kennedy
suddenly realized that there was
a chance," but "this wasn't opportunism," he continued, "because before New Hampshire
Kennedy had no chance to do anything except destroy his political
future; however, Kennedy is taking a big chance, because if he
fails, he will probably be dead
politically."
Barber also said Kennedy has
a better chance at the nomination
than does McCarthy because he
has firmer control of the party
machinery. He noted that Kennedy does have "real problems
with trade unions and big business," which "areliabilities,but
they are not insufferable."
Barber said that he thinks
President Johnson will continue
the bombing of North Vietnam
this summer to try to destroy
the position of peace candidates.
He continued, "The Viet Cong, if
they have any sense at all, and I'm
sure they do, will see to it that
June and July are very bad months
for the U.S. Between the probable
riots, the Viet Cong, and the gold
crisis, it is likely to be a bad
summer for Johnson. The worst
fault of Johnson is his personality," Barber added.
Barber also discussed fraternities at the University.
"College is one of the few opportunities to get out of a pattern,
but fraternities, as long as they
restrict their membership, destroy that aspect of the University," he asserted. He urged
the creation of small living units.
Quality Portraiture
Applications L Passports
On the campus at
3907 WALNUT ST,
BA 2-7888
BUB
HENRY'S
-»*■
Cleaners,
Launder*
ers, and now Tuxedo
Rentals.
WE'RE BACK AGAIN
THE
p^lLY
A REPRESENTATIVE OF
Pennsylvanian
formerly of229 S. 40th St.
WILL SOON BE LOCATED AT
4207Chestnut St
will be in the alcove of the West Lounge of Houston Hall
Today from 11-12
to take Display Ads, Classifieds, Action Line and all
other DP business.
Look for us under our banner in the West Lounge Alcove.
>
—«
^
--
i
■ i
We hope you will pay us a
visit at our new, modern
plant.
u,
SAME OLD PRICES!
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1968
WITH
Through New Hampshire, Wisconsin,
Indiana, Nebraska, Oregon, and
McCarthy, candidate for President of
Chicago, we will stand with him.
He stood with us when
PhlUp Pochoda (Sociology)
Peggy Hoffacher. Sec'y. Wh.
Hugh ^. Clark. Col. '70
Mary McCutcheon. Evening Sch
William G. Cohen, Col. '70
Evelyn Hahn, (Business ft Applied Econ.)
Andrew R. Ftnkelsteln. Wh. '70
Gay Levine. Wh. '69
Aland Soller, Col. '70
Joel Horowitz, Col. '71
Janis Wilcox
Bill DiCanzlo, Col. '71
John Ockenga, Col. '6»
George H. Newman, Col. '71
H. Michael Nelditch. Col. '08
Bruce Lynn. Wh '71
David Handler, Wh. '69
F.J. Flanlgan (Mathematics)
David Handler, Wh. *69
Leslie Green, CW '69
William Gordon. Wh "69
Phil LegenBy. Col. 68
Joseph J. Ranallo, Grad.
E. Calabl (Mathematics)
Arty Rubin. Col. '68
Ken Roberts, Wh. Grad.
M. Gerstenhaber (Mathematics)
Nancy Zurich. CW '68
Dennis Wllen. Col. '68
Barry Horwitz. Grad.
Lynn Applefeld. CW '71
Jim Cowln. Col. '68
Rona Glasser, CW '70
Ariel Sohngen. CW '67
Paul Studer. ASC
Ben H. Orr. USMCR
Ted Hake, ASC '68
Fred Gurtman. Col. '70
Janet Rudolph. CW *69
John H. Clippinger. ASC '68
Thomas Stacks. Wh. '68
Lorna Brown. Grad.
Bob Anyon. Col. '69
Robert Ltpkin. Col. '69
Steven Gayle. Col. '71
Gordon Bitter. Wh. Grad. '69
Steven Zarit, Grad.
Robert DeLaurentis. Wh. Grad. '68
Steven M Lieppman, Col. '69
Lenna Kaplan
Donald A. Kawash. Grad.
Bart Sttchman, Col. '70
Nancy Goldman, CW "71
Sal Fusaro. Grad.
Howard P. Kenlg (philosophy)
David Flttlngoff. Col. '69
Alexander Zlss. Grad.
Eileen Schwartz. CW '70
Joan Rudel, CW '70
Brian Macreery, CHE '70
Leslie Lichstein. CW '70
Edward H Zorensky, Col. '70
Wendy Niven. CW '70
Andrew Clearfield. Col '71
Bill Travis. Col. '68
Sanford Schuman. Col. '71
Lucy L. Conger. CW *68
Pamela Fletman. CW '69
Richard P. Sabreen. Col '68
F. Hilary Conroy (History)
Linda E. Perle. CW '69
A.P. Hess. Jr. (Economics)
Russ Nichols. ASC '70
Julian Wolpert (Regional Science)
Ann S. Brody. CW '69
Raymond Duvall. Col. '69
Jonathan Day, Col. *68
Charles Otto. Col. '70
Carole Sheridan. CW '68
Sheldon Kwiat. Wh. '68
Linda Garber. CW '69
John Seley. Col. '69
Susan Applegate. CW '69
Howard S. Alenier. Col. '69
Harry Hirsch. Col. '68
Barbara Tlerney. SAMP '71
Gilbert Kreldberg, Wh. '70
•Judith S. Kinestone. CW '68
Peter Truitt. Col. '69
Judy Halpern. CW '68
Leonard M. Hendrickson. CHE '68
Patricia Foster. CW '69
Susan Ellerin. CW '70
Michael Koplove, CHE '70
lngrid Philipp, CW '69
Roger P. Harman. Grad.
Vivian H. Singer. ( W '69
Eileen Appelbeum, Ur
Anne Hanna, CW '69
Philip S. Schuman. ASC
Jill Smerling. CW '68
Al Aladjem, G
A.J. Litwinko. Jr., Grad.
Diana B. Nlles. CW '69
John Burok (English)
Edmund Mantell (Economn
Jay Wilson. St. Mary's Church (C.A.)
Phil Arkow, Col. '69
Cindl Weiss. CW '68
Woodrin Grossman. Wh. Grad. '68
John l». 1 .utz (Finance)
Stan Schwartz. Col. '69
David Lawrence, Col. '68
El Rashied El Bashier
Judd Reiss. Col. '70
Eileen Brumbaugh. CW '69
John P. Walker
Diana Brown, CW '70
Richard Rubin. Col. '70
I'.-i. Ri
Robin Wishner, CW '70
Emily Kramer, CW '70
Victor Bender, Col. '69
Lynn Rachel Mollick, CW '71
David Cohen, Harvard *69
Thomas Allaway, Grad.
Gordon Buzley. Col. '70
Harry L. I'aplin. Grad.
Susan Berland. CW '69
Mary Knuth, CW '70
Louis J:i> Silvi
Mary Slotsky, CW '71
Michael O. Albertson, Grad.
Ricki Swanson, CW '68
Phyllis H Subin. CW *68
Herb Karasin, Law '67
Benjamin R. Barber (Political Scien
Nina DeMartini, CW '68
Peter Vallinos. Col. '69
Jim Htuser, Grad.
Ruth Bleuze. Grad.
Paul Krissel. Col. '71
Saundra Dillio, Grad.
Donald H. Skubecz, Col. '68
Royce E. Walter. Grad.
James L. Cutler, Col. '71
Janet Muehsam, Sec'y, Wh.
Ellen Mueller, Evening Sch
Dewey Slater Kingsdale. Col. '70
CW '69
Vlco E. Baer, Wh. '69
Boo Murray. CW '69
Barry Magid. Col. '71
Colin A. Hanna. Col. '68
Charles Howard, Col '71
Morey B. King. EE '71
Rich Gold. Col. '71
Dottie Moore. CW '68
Stu
Gardner Young. Wh. >68
Lloyd R. Zlff. Col. '68
Carole Greenberg, Grad.
Timothy Lane, Grad.
Daniel B. Gould, Jefferson Med '71
Essie Federman, CW '70
Percy Tannenbaum (ASC)
Ralph Ginsberg (Sociology)
Anne Fisher. CW '71
Conni Finnerty, CW '68
Kenneth Kramer, Col '68
Louis T. Requard. Wh. Grad. '68
Michael Esterson. Col. *70
Michele Blanchard. CW '70
Susan Goldman, CW '68
Chris Bamford, ASC '69
Susan Morganroth. CW '69
Libby Fischer. CW '71
Nick Wechsler
Peter Marco, Wh. '69
Barry Hampe (ASC)
Jane Nagler, CW '68
Scott Sandford. Col. '68
Fred S. Kleiner. Col. '68
Allen Blase, Wh. *70
Elizabeth Turner (English)
Howard Llpman. Grad.
Hiram Haydn (ASC)
Colin C. Dlckson, Grad.
Mark Gelberg, Col. '69
Sandy Kartzman, Col. '68
Col. '69
Jane Purcell, Grad.
in< e J. Dupre, (irad.
. CW '71
,n)
r Bender. Col
,rad.
iftulin. G:
Myron S. Kaplan (Mathematics)
David A. Conn, Col. '71
Dennis H. Novack. Col. '68
Sue A. Heinberg, CW '69
Frances Flnkelsteln (Economics)
N. Oler (Mathematics)
Joyce Smith. Sec'y. Economics
E.L. Verner, Col. '68
Joslyn B. White. Sec'y, Wharton
Alkls Tsolakis. Col. '70
Joseph Lauinger, Col '68
Stanley Epstein. Col. '70
Lewis Finkelstem, Wh. Grad. '70
Jerry Kaidan (Mathematics)
Ervin Miller. (Finance)
Lee Benson (History)
Thomas Block, Wh Grad. '68
Mary Ellen Costigan, Wh '69
Michael Abramson. Wh. '70
Britton Harris (City Planning)
Cheryl Cobln, CW '70
Amy L. Galen. CW '71
Dell Hymes (Anthropology)
Gordon Kinder. Col. '70
Douglas Sobel. Wh. '68
Jeannette P. Nichols (History)
Sue Sobelson. CW '71
Lorna N. Campbell. CW '68
Harold Lewis (Social Work)
Jean Goldschmidt. CW '71
Edward L. Snyder, Wh. '68
Emily Johnson. CW '69
Sharon R. Wolfgang. CW '68
Stuart L. snberstein. Col. '68
J.R. Goldenberg. Col. "68
Allison Carter. CW '70
Ann Vivian. CW '70
Helen S. Rosenau, CW '70
Mike Kaiser
Felice Kane, CW '70
Lois Carson. CW '71
Tom Rafael. Col. '69
Dale Horn
Richard Toll. Col. '70
Kathryn Slott, CW '70
Mike Kaiser
Kenny Rothsteln. Col. '69
Tom Rafael. Col. '69
Penny Bernstein. CW '69
Dale Holman, Grad.
John V. Moore (German)
James Taylor (ASC)
Leslie Silverman, Wh. '69
Margaret Harvey. CW '69
Katie Lovett, CW '69
Dewey Norton. Grad.
Eliot Lewis, Col. '70
Andrew M. Woods, Wh. '68
John Flynn, Wh. Grad.
Don Yoder (Religious Thought)
Richard Fein, Col. '68
Janet M. Taplin. Grad.
Irv Fink, Col. '68
Lynne Lamatein, CW '71
Al Barton, Col. '70
Neal Gosman. Col '69
Carol Morgenstern, CW '71
■Richard Brennan
Larry Simon. Col. '69
Daniel Finnerty. Grad.
Sylviane Boucher. CW '69
Joel I. Epstein. Col. '71
Lawrence R. Dellisola, Col '69
Larry Ochs. Col. '71
Bonnie Krasnow. CW '70
Sharon Katz. CW '68
RoruHd Schwaeble, Col. "68
Myra Bobman. CW '67
David Henkel. Col. '69
George Bean, Col. '70
Thomas Siolek. Col. '70
Suzanne Chatam. Nur. '68
Martin J. I.ewin. Wh. '70
Michael Ackennaa. Wh."69
David Anderman, Col. '71
Bob Waterhouse. ASC '68
Sol Worth (ASC)
Peter Wiesner. ASC '69
John Mizzl, EE "69
Ward H. Goodenough (Anthropology)
Michael Studdert Kennedy (ASC)
Rudolph S. Raugh. III. ASC '68
William J. Williams, M.D. (HUP)
..an Freeman, Grad.
Wendy Wolf. CW '71
Bernard Marinelli. Col. '71
John E. Haley. Col. '68
Robert Grafstein. Col. '69
Jill Novik. SAMP '70
Jonathan S. Kaplan, Col. '69
Daniel Lerner. Col. '69
Mary Just. Barnard College
Toni Buchln, CW "69
Robert H. Levy. Grad.
R.G. Nathan. Law '70
Herbert S. Wilf (Mathem
Nancy Hano. Wh. '68
Charles Snowdon. Grad.
Alan Priedman. Wh. '71
Michael Sohngen. Col. '67
Lucy C. Behrman (Political Science)
Richard M. Rosen. Col. '70
Debbie Pollock, CW '69
Jurgen Peters (German)
Rona Glasser, CW '70
Phyllis Liu, AMP '70
Flo Schreiber, CW '69
THIS AD HAS BEEN PAID FOR BY THE ABOVE. H. Michael Neidith, 3932 Walnut Street, Philadelphii
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
TUESDAY. APRIL 2a 1968
PAGE NINE
STAND
ONEST MAN
Pennsylvania, Massachusetts,
California, we will stand with Eugene
the United States. All the way to
we were alone.
J.W. Smith, Drexel Faculty
Harry Anderson, Col. '69
Arthur Shostack. Drexel Faculty
Robert Berley. Col. '70
S. Zlenkiewicz
RJkl Rothschild. CW '71
Jay Freedman
Egnert Krlspyn (German)
Richard S. Dunn (History)
Peter Hook. Grad.
Anne Allen. Gr«d.
Robert Lewis Shayon (ASC)
Ellen Weintraub. Grad.
J. Patrick Michaels. Jr.. ASC 'b&
James. E. Gibson. Col. '70
Chih Han Sah (Mathematics)
Ronald Amlnzade, Col. *71
David Evans. Col. *68
Joel Sherzer. Grad.
David Berman, Grad.
George M. Parks (Industry)
David A. Singer. Grad.
Nancy Steele
C.T. Yang. (Mathematics)
Gordon M. Park
Robert Whitton. Grad.
Gordon M. Blehl, Jr.. Wh. *68
Stephen S. Shatz (Mathematics)
David Heiser. Wh. '69
Jane A. Hardyck (Psychology)
Neil Levy. Wh. '69
R. Weintraub. Grad.
E. John Ward. Wh. Grad. '68
Howard Fisher. Grad.
Jon Taklff. Col. '68
Jole Angermeler. CGS '71
Judith L. Mitchell
A. Steven Perelman. Wh. '68
Nicholas Muhlenberg (Landscape Arch.)
Thomas Sherlock. Drexel '67
David C. Howell. Col. '69
Cynthia Weisfeld. CW '70
Kenneth Spilman (C.A.)
Frances Pintzul. Sec'y.
Irma S. Lustig (English)
Frank Bowman (Romance Languages)
Clifford M.
John Braltraan. Col. '68
Jerome S. Rauch (Medical Library)
Howard Simkowitz (Operations Research)
Darrll J. Wegscheid. Grad.
Mitchell W. Smith
Stuart Samuesl. (History)
David J. Seltzer. Col. '69
Ralph J. Katz. Wh. Grad.
David Bloomgarden. Col. '68
James M. Meyer. Wh. '68
John R. Hanson, II, Grad.
Kate Merritt. CW '69
Toni Beth Young. Wh. *69
Norman Glickman, Grad.
Eric Turkington. Col. '68
Steven A. Taube. Col. '69
Larry Grewe, Wh. Grad. "69
Hohn S. deCani (Statistics)
Richard A. Block. Wh. '69
Theodore Case. Jr. Wh. Grad. '68
Henry M. Hoenigswald (Linguistics)
Neal Blen. Wh. '69
Bruce W. Morgan (Finance)
James B. Pritchard (Religious Though)
Raymond M. Lorantas, Drexel Faculty
Lillian Lublnski. Drexel Faculty
Adolph Klarmann (German)
Richard E. Green. Drexel Faculty
W.M. Hollis. Jr.. Drexel Faculty
R. Patrick McCallogh. Drexel Faculty
J. Theodore Peters, Drexel Faculty
Sandra R. Speers
Harry S.C. Chen. Drexel Faculty
Frances Shafer
Paul Fenske. Drexel Fa.
Judith Teller. Wh. "71
Saul GOTO (Moore School)
Wallace E. Da vies (History)
Arle Hermelin. ASC '68
Christopher Speeth (ASC)
R. Duncan Luce (Psychology)
Roland M. Frye (English)
Harris B. Savin (Psychology)
Werner L. Gundersheimer (History)
Richard L. Hoffman (English
Ellen Fleysher, ASC '68
Samuel Maitln (ASC)
George Thomas. Grad.
John Myers. Wh. '68
Ted Hershberg (History)
Joseph R. Mackey. Col. '69
Fred Jackes. Grad.
Peter Freyd (MathematlcsO
O.K. Hildebrand (Statistics)
Arthur Scouten (English)
Edward B. Irving. Jr. (English)
Joseph LaCavera, Col. '69
Jonathan Fox. Col. '70
Kathy Borgeicht. CW '70
Patrick N. Mullone. Wh. Grad. '68
Richard F. Bergman. Wh. '68
William T. Degener. Col. '70
Aaron Oschrln. Col. '70
Grace Dotterer. Nur. '69
Arlene Gray son. CW '69
Amy Lewis, CW '70
Malcah Yaeger. Grad.
Samuel S. McLeary, Drexel Faculty
Llla Stoll Rolsman. ASC '68
Joseph A. Raffaele. Drexel Faculty
Michael F. Eleey
Eugene J. Rosenbaum. Drexel Faculty
Bd Effros (Mathematics)
Herbert J. Nlchol. Drexel Faculty
Carl Weisman, Grad.
Jack Becher
Alan Hopenwasser. Grad.
Martin Killman. Drexel Faculty
K. Michael Rossman, Grad.
Philip H. Salapatek (Psychology)
David Zerling. Gr
Ada Katz
lames c. Davi- (History)
Dorothy S. Lynn
J. Robert Caldwell
Dorothy Knr>u
H. Peter Norman, Grad.
Natelie D. Terrell (Van Pelt)
P. Cherenack. Grad.
Margaret C. Nolan (Van Pelt)
Berger. Wh. Grad. *68
Geoff!
'70
iw, (Ind.
■ Bennetts. CW '70
."1 H. Maurizi
Jeffrey Schwartz. Col. '68
Gordon Lusky Alum.
Pasquale B. Iocca Grad.
Joel Katzen Grad.
Jim Firtz Grad.
Barrle Kane Herbold CW '71
Jane Rich (ASC)
Sharon Lauver CW '70
Bernhard Kreten Grad.
Michael Ward Col. '71
Neda Westlake (Van Pelt)
Sabine Von der I.uhe CGS
John Hamilton Grad.
Elizabeth H. Nobel (Van Pelt)
R. Donald Abbott. Wh. '68
John Scott (C.A.)
Morris Mendelson (Fin)
Arnold E. Brown. Wh. '69
Edward S. Herman (Finance)
Harry A. Scarr (Soc.)
Joseph H. Cooper. Wh. '69
David Seymour (C.A).
Thomas C. Hough Grad.
Kenneth D. Meskin, Wh. '68
Fred S. Roberts
David L. Levin Grad.
Robert Schiff. Wh. '69
David T. Johannesen. Wh. '68
William G. Whitney (Eco.)
Herbert Braverman. Wh. '69
John D. Verstandig. Wh. '70
Oliver P. Williams (Pol. So.)
Sandy Engel. Col. '69
Bernadette Lai
Jon Hlllsberg Grad.
Claude Amarnick. Col. '69
Sante Como
James A. Dunn. Jr. Grad.
19104. Chairman, Friends of Eugene McCarthy, McCarthy Committee (Committee in formation).
Jeff Schoenwald Grad.
Mike Griffin Col. '71
John A. Russell. Jr. (C.A.)
Klkins. CW '69
Fred M. Herrmann, Col. '69
Maximus Cupeluar. Grad.
Marilyn B. Horen (Van Pelt)
MI
Bruce L. Sanft
David M. Robinson, Col. '70
William H. Blasberg. Col. '69
Joyce Wolpert. CW '70
Barry Sussman. Col. '69
Patrick N. Mullone. Wh. Ga
Roslyn Abt, Grad.
C.C. Stempie
Stanley J. Brown Grad.
Jill Malamud. CW '70
Lester Kershenbaum, Drexel Faculty
lei H. Murphy. Wh. Grad. '68
Clyde De L. Ryals (English
Robert McCracken. Wh. Grad. '68
John Fought (Linguistics)
Daniel R. Murpg
Richard G. Cook Grad.
Howard Benoist Grad.
Helen S. Hardin
Barbara Schatz. CW '70
Roger L. Sisson (Statistics)
James E. Walters
Marshall Swain (Philosophy)
S.J. Johnson. Wh. '68
Many Read Knott (Van Pelt)
Jerry Rothstein Research Asst.
G. Douglas Solomon. Wh. Grad. '69
lie Mertz. CW '68
Jules Splaver (Van Pelt)
Jane Willis Bennington College
Elizabeth Maraffino. Grad.
Bette Perelstein. CW '69
Eric Roberts
Henry Rosenfelt
Martin Rosenzwelg (Statistics)
Bovita Trumbule
Linda WHson. SAMP '71
George S. Pappas Grad.
Daniel Ashler Grad.
Richard L. Solomon (Psychology)
Richard R. Lang. Col. '69
Marc Klrsch
Daniel Goldberg Grad.
Patty Dinneen. CW '70
Robert Allen. Grad.
Peter Van Deekle Col. '68
Jean Crockett (Fin.)
Jamshed Ghandi (Finance)
Charles E. Rosenberg (History)
Jan Wood
Myron F. Steves, Jr. Grad.
Alicia Kline
Rosemary Mclntyre. CW '70
James C. Hunter Col. '70
Lyman W. Riley (Van Pelt)
Joel Balsham
Holden Furber (History)
Elizabeth W. Fenske (Drexel)
Randoli Hirsch (Van Pelt)
Alys Llppman
Charles Vi . Bassett (English)
Albert K. Ando (Econ.)
Gertude W. Schlorer (Physics)
Steven E. Brawer Col. '71
Alan Hayes Grad.
Ike Roberts Col. '69
Yevonne Grimes CW '69
I
H. Baldwin Hoffman
John E. Cahlll WH '70
Erick Holmes Col. '68
Roger Katz Col. '71
Dorothy Bassett CW '71
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
PAGE TEN
iifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiuuiiiiiiiiiiiiitiitiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiittitiiiitiiiitiiifiiiiitiiiiiiatcititiiitiiiiiiitittiiiiiiiiiiia
Campus events
11111 f 111111 f III 111J111 f I f 11 f I f 1111 i I f 111S1111 It
I )l I It 11J111 r 111111111111111111111 i * ft II1111II1111 f 111 tl f It 11«1111111111111111111111111111111 i II11111111111111 f 111111111111111111 • M1111
CAMPUS AGENDA
CAMPUS PERFORMANCE
SOCIETY: C.P.S. will present an
evening concert for International
Week, 8:30 P.M. tomorrow, Exhibition Space, New Fine Arts
Building. Free.
CAMPUS PERFORMANCE
SOCIETY: C.P.S. will present
its free weekly coffee concert,
4:30 P.M., Thursday, Room 100,
Hare Building, Coffee and admission free.
DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN: A
representative of The Daily
Pennsylvanian will be in alcove
by West Lounge, Houston Hall,
to take display ads, classifieds,
Action Line, campus events, and
all other DP business.
GENERAL HONORS: Evening
seminar with Dr. Riasanovsky,
"Russia on Slides," 7:30 tonight,
Franklin Room, Houston Hall.
All students welcome.
HILLEL: Shelomo ben-Israel,
political editor for the Jewish
Daily Forward and U.N. correspondent will speak on "Israel
and the Arab World Today" today,
4 PM.
HILLEL REFORM SERVICES:
Rabbi Samuel Cook, director of
Union of America Hebrew Congregations College Department,
will speak following services
Friday evening, April 5. Services begin 7:30.
HISPANIC HONOR SOCIETY:
Hispanic Honor Society presents
Dr. Gonzalo Sobejano speaking
on "La Vida Literaria en la
Novel a Espanola Contemporanea." Friday, April 5, 2 P.M.,
Franklin Room, HoustonHall.
HOUSTON HALL TICKET
SERVICE: Tickets available now
for Phila. Orch., 4/6 and 4/8;
Artur Rubinstein, 4/4 and
Handel's "Messiah," 4/10 at the
Academy of Music.
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS GRADUATE ASSOC:
"American Foreign Policy" discussion. Profs. Rubinstein, Kintner. Tonight at 8, Room 1, Houston Hall.
SOCIETY
FOR ADVA
NCEMENT OF MANAGEMENT:
Mr. Sidney Amira will speak on
the topic of Portfolio Management tomorrow, 4 P.M., Stiteler
Hall C17, All are welcome.
STUDENTS FOR MCCARTHY:
Come to the "Watch-In" tonight
for the Wisconsin Primary results. 8 P.M., Town Hall, Broad
and Race Streets. $1 donation.
All night party. Register first
in Room 33, CA.
STUDENTS FOR MCCARTHY:
Women need to pass out literature Mon., Wed., Fri., 10 AJvl.noon and noon—2 P.M. Interested
students contact McCarthy headquarters, 1001 Chestnut St., WA
2-6810.
STUDENT TUTOR SOCIETY:
Provides free undergrad tutoring.
Tutors assigned Mon.-Fri., 1-2
P.M., 206 College Hall.
SYMPHONIC BAND: SOUNDSATION: The U. of P. Symphonic
Band in concert, 8:30 P.M., Saturday, Irvine Auditorium. E.
Dennis Rittenhouse conducting.
Tickets available HH Ticket Service, Band Office, HH, and Door.
ACTIVITY NOTICES
BRIDGE CLUB: Masterpoint
game Wed. in the West Lounge,
Houston Hall at 7 P.M. Open Paris
next week.
CIRCLE K: Dinner meeting
Thursday, 6 P.M., Drexel Activity Center, 32nd and Chestnut
Sts. Induction of new members.
CIRCLE K: Meeting Thurs.,
7:30 PJvl., Room 1, Houston Hall.
Elections of officers.
COALITION FOR PEACESTUDENTS FOR MCCARTHY:
Meeting tomorrow night, 8 PJvl.,
for canvassing information. A-H
111111111111111111M
in CH 200, I-N in Dietrich W-l,
P-Z in Dietrich W-51. Everyone
welcome.
COMMUTER ACTIVITIES
BOARD: Meeting today, 11 AM.,
Room 1 of Houston Hall. All
commuters invited.
I.A.A.: Elections tomorrow,
8 P.M., Christian Association.
Attendance requested of all members.
LATIN AMERICAN STUDENT
SOCIETY: Meeting for all members at 7 PJvl. today and tomorrow. Christian Association. All
welcome.
RESISTANCE: Meeting
tomorrow of the University Chapter of the Resistance, 8 PJvl.,
Franklin Room, Houston Hall.
ROMANCE LANGUAGES
CLUB: TONIGHT! - See Part I
of 'The New Cinema," a collection of brilliant short films by
directors of the '60*s. Irvine
Aud., 7 and 9:30 PJvl. (Part II,
same time tomorrow night.)
(Continued on page 11)
REGISTER NOW
TRAVEL 1A
COMPLETE FREE COURSE! HOW TO GET THE
MOST OUT OF YOyR TRAVEL TIME & MONEY.
•
•
•
•
•
GROUP + INDIVIDUAL TOURS
AIR + SHIP RESERVATIONS
EUROPE - EURAIL PASS
HONEYMOON - FULL PLANS
STUDENT TRAVEL EXPERTS
WE SPECIALIZE IN SERVICE, PERSONALIZED, CONVENIENT. WE CARE. ASK US.
UNIVERSITY CITY TRAVEL SERVICE
3331 CHESTNUT
EV
2-2928
Professors to talk on
U.S. foreign policy
Dr. Alvin Z. Rubenstein and
Dr. William Kintner, professors
of political science at the University, will discuss "American
Foreign Policy" tonight at 8, in
Room 1, Houston Hall.
The discussion, sponsored by
TUESDAY. APRIL 2, 1968
the International Relations Graduate Students, is open to theUniversity community.
Dr. Rubenstein, a well-known
Soviet specialist, is the chairman
of the International R e 1 a t ions
Graduate Group. Dr; Kintner,
whose special interest is American foreign policy, is the deputy
director of the Foreign Policy
Research Institute.
Coffee hour
today
11:00 Vest Lounge
Houston Hall
IS COMING
Classifieds
BIG 2 OR 3 MAN APT. CONVENIENT
campus location. 2 bedrooms, living room
& den. Will sell very reasonably. Call
EV 2-1587 after 6 P.M.
4338
BIG 2 OR 3 MAN APT. (2 BEDROOM,
giant living-room) Hamilton Ct.,convenient
location. Will sell very reasonably. Call
EV 2-1587 after 6 P.M.
4340
POETRY WANTED FOR ANTHOLOGY.
Please include stamped return envelope.
Idlewild Publishers. 543 Frederwick, San
Francisco, California. 94117.
1348
STUDENT ECONOMY EUROPEAN TOUR21 days $499., complete. Visiting London,
Paris, Zurich, Amsterdam, Frankford.
Write for brochure: c/o Box 202, Wayne,
Pa. 19087.
2139
A TO Z TYPING SERVICE. EXPERT
theses typing. Work guaranteed. 20 minutes
from campus. Tel: 609 TI 5-2792.
3439
FOR SALE - BSA 350 CC. $275. CALL
EV 2-8875 or EV 2-8129. Ask for Howie or
Steve.
5406
PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER SPECIALIZING
in masters, doctoral dissertations, term
papers. Sample of work in libraries of
all area colleges. Flora Carlin. 7922 Rugby St. LI-8-4124.
2090
SUMMER SUBLET - 4412 OSAGE.NEWLY
furnished 1-bedroom apartment. Garbage
disposal, tile bath. EV 2-1721.
5413
FOR SALE - VESPA 125 CC. MOTOR
Scooter. Best offer accepted. Call Mike,
EV 2-3948.
5425
HUGE APARTMENT - SUMMER SUBLET.
4 rooms. Hamilton Court. Beautifully furnished, Danish Modern. Pieno, CastroConvertibles in living room. 2-4 people. EV 23428, EV 2-0955. x
4346
BABYSITTER NEEDED FOR3MONTHOLD
in West Phila. area. Tues. and/or Thurs.,
9:00- L'00.$1.00/hour.GR 4-8329
5408
HAMILTON COURT APARTMENT. AVAILable for next year. 3 large bedrooms, fully
furnished. Reasonable rent. Call EV 28494.
5402
LOST - MAN'S TORTOISE SHELL EYEglasses in Lippincott or Wl Dietrich Hall.
Reward. R.E. Dornbush, Grad. Group in
Business, El 15 Dietrich Hall.
5410
CAMPUS APT. - SUBLET OR TAKE OVER
lease. 1 bedrm., fully furnished. $100 incl.
utilities. Call EV 2-0335 after 5 PJvl.
Avilable May 15th. 4119 Walnut St.
5412
SUMMER SUBLET -CENTERCITYTOWNhouse. 3 bedrooms. End of May to Sept. 1.
$175 mo. Call KI 5-0990 evenings.
5424
SUMMER SUBLET - SPACIOUS 6 ROOM
apartment. Fully furnished, air-conditioned,
major appliances.Suitable for four. Flexible
inexpensive terms. Call Bill, EV 2-5074.
5416
ROOMATE WANTED - GIRL TO SHARE
furnished air-conditioned apartment on
Rittenhouse Square in high-rise building.
For more information call PE 5-7977.
5423
SUMMER SUBLET - PENTHOUSE, FURnished and wood panelled. 3 or 4 persons.
3 bedrooms. 40th and Spruce. Reasonable.
EV 2-3164.
5421
1966 BULTACO FOR SALE - 175 CC.
Mercuric Call EV 2-5429.
5418
TOWNHOUSE - 36TH ST. NEAT WALNUT.
Summer sublet for 2 or 3. Unbeatable location. EV 2-0365.
5417
''TED - FEMALE ROOMMATE FOR
two-bedroom apartment. West Philadelphia.
Beginning in May. Call EV 6-4686.
541r
EDROOM APT. ON CAMPUS AVAILable May 21 for 3 or 12-month lease. Call
EV 2-5367 evenings.
5409
Photo Contest
ATTENTION:
jbue to tUe utietLfiected ttumbeA, o£ fzltatod tltat Itave beett 4^tbntitted tUesie w-ill be a jiieli+ninaiy eli+ni+tatia+i tltiA. w-eeJz. Q+ilu,
tlte 100 keA,t pltatoA, taill be exhibited d+tii+ta tlte week of /lixlil
lite- Silt, ilte place ol tlte etltibitio+t w-ill be a+t+iou,+iced latesi.
Philomathean Society
THE MARINE CORPS OFFICER SELECTION TEAM WILL BE IN HOUSTON HALL ON THE 3RD AND 4TH
OF APRIL TO PROVIDE INFORMATION RELATIVE TO MARINE OFFICER TRAINING PROGRAMS.
QUALIFIED SENIORS WHO ACCEPT THE CHALLENGE OF MARINE LEADERSHIP TRAINING WILL BE DRAFT DEFERRED UPON ENROLLMENT UNTIL THEY HAVE MET REQUIREMENTS FOR THEIR DEGREE AND UNTIL SUCH
TIME AS THEIR CHOSEN 0CC CLASS CONVENES. THERE ARE OPENINGS IN BOTH FLIGHT AND GROUND PROGRAMS BUT THE NUMBERSARE LIMITED - INQUIRE TODAY!
TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1968
Cind ermen
(Continued from pcge 12)
workhorse" is coach Wetzler*s
description.
Junior Joe Ryan, who won the
mile and was second in the two
mile last year against Penn is
another top performer, while
soph hurdler Bernie Poiesz also
has excellent credentials.
It is the season opener for
both teams.
ARNOLD HOLLAND
Night Editor
MARY EWING
Night Assistant
PAGE ELEVEN
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIA
Events
(Continued from page 10)
ROMANCE LANGUAGES
ROMANCE LANGUAGES
CLUB: Direct from Paris! The CLUB: All members invited to a
famed troupe, "Productions party, Thursday, April 4,8 P.M.,
D'aujourd'hui" inMusset's play, Smith-Penniman Rooms, Houston
"On ne Badine pas avec Hall.
PENN COMMENT: All editors
L'amour." This live production,
directed by Andre Gintz Berger, meet at Ben Franklin for photowill be presented on Sunday, graph today at 11:00.
PENN COMMENT: Mandatory
April 7 at 2:30 P.M. in Irvine.
Tickets are on sale at Houston meeting for all editors and staff
at 7:00 P.M. Wednesday at 4th
Hall.
ROMANCE LANGUAGES floor Bennett Hall office. Bring
CLUB: Today at Hill Hall from completed copy and/or progress
11:30 to 1:30 there will beConti- report.
VIETNAM WEEK COMMITnental Conversation Tables.
Come join us and meet foreign TEE: Meeting to plan anti-war
students. French,Italian,Spanish activities will be held tonight,
7:30, Stiteler B-21.
and Portuguese spoken.
Referendum
(Continued from page 1)
this obligation.
A majority of 1,863 voters
approved of the principle of students evaluating the DP.
The
referendum revealed
sharp disagreement on the quality
of the February issue of the
Penn Comment. Approximately
1,160 students rated the issue
as excellent to acceptable and
1,094 gave it a rating of poor to
terrible.
A margin of 117 voters was
responsible for the consensus
that the Perm Comment should
not become financially self supporting.
The most recent issue of the
PunchBowl received a rating of
excellent to acceptable from
1,326 students and a rating of
poor to terrible from 1,061. A
majority of 1,176 felt the magazine should not become financially independent, while 1,057
said that it should.
The final question ot the referendum revealed 970 in favor
of a Penn Comment-Punch Bowl
merger and 1,288 against such a
move.
Romance Language Club
PRESENTS :
DIRECT FROM PARIS
ON NE BADINE PAS
AVEC L'AMOUR
by Alfred De Musset
ONLY PHILADELPHIA APPEARANCE
SUNDAY, APRIL 7th, 2:30 MATINEE
Tickets: $4.50, $3.00, $2.50, $2.00 - Special rates
for groups of TO or more
Reservations: Phone 215-594-87T3
THE
UNIVERSITY of PENNSYLVANIA
^ f&^
SYMPHONIC BAND
^sn
(_-<on cer
STORE WIDE CLEARANCE
E Dennis Rittenhouse. Conducting
Sat., April 6,1968
Men's Wear
8:33 P.M.
IRVINE AUDITORIUM
We are running our Clearance SALE.
34th & SPRUCE STREETS
IMATION:
S1.00
AT HOUSTON MALL TICKET SERVICE
IAND OFFICE. HOUSTON HALL
SI.SO
AT TIE MM
Ve have slashed prices on all items on Men's Wear
Your Dollar will go far on many famous brands
VARSITY SHOP
OPP. MEN'S DORMS 3711 SPRUCE ST.
COLLEGE GIRLS
3<X
SUMMER JOBS
x*c
Pennsylvania Triangle
i+tiUteA oil ineHtMeAA. o-l the
SUMMER JOBS AS AN OFFICE
to an organizational meeting
for the 1968-1969 school year
7:30 P.M.
Room 3 Houston Hall
WORKER IN ONE OF AMERICAN
FORESIGHT'S BRANCH OFFICES.
BRANCH OFFICE LOCATIONS
MANCHESTER, N.H.
and
ALBANY, N.Y.
All students interested in
writing
photography
design
or any other aspects of journalism
are urged to attend
FOR AN INTERVIEW IN
Philadelphia CALL MISS GRACE
(215 BA 2-2340)
Lc
DiK
3**C
:XK
2i*C
:XK
2*K
UK
5iK
:XK3
Makler retains title-, swordsmen finish third
By MARK PEARLMAN
"We came a long way since the first meet at Rutgers where we
trailed 6-3 after the first round."
This is how an exhilirated Todd Makler described one of the
most satisfying seasons in the history of Penn fencing which was
climaxed this past weekend when Makler retained his NCAA sabre
championship while leading the team to a third place finish behind
Columbia and NYU.
The senior co-captain's back-to-back weapon titles, a virtually
unprecendented feat, was accomplished through a truly amazing
three-day exhibition of fencing skill.
Makler competed against 33 other sabremen during the three
days of the championship which was held at Wayne State University
in Detroit. He won 31 of these, losing only one bout on the first day
to Bruce Hube of North Carolina State, who finished in seventh
place in the competition, and one on the second day to his archnemesis Frank Lowy of Columbia, who finished second with a 29-4
record.
In his 33 bouts the Merion, Pa. native allowed himself to be touched
a mere 53 times, while scoring an astounding 160 times on opponents.
DENNIS LAW
TODD MAKLER
Of the 31 victories, only one was a close 5-4 bout, and eleven were
1st
team All—American
2nd team All—American
shutouts.
However,
Makler
was
by
no
———
means the only hero of the weekend for coach Maestro LajosCsiszar's swordsmen. Both Dennis
Law and Jim Wetzler made the
trip to Detroit and gave a good
account of themselves, as they
finished sixth and seventh reBy BOB SAVETT
spectively in foil and epee.
man soared 15* 1-3/4", but at
LaSalle athletic teams have
present he is concentrating on
Law, whose sixth place finish
gave him an automatic place on not fared successfully against
academics,
l m hoping he'll
be back for the big meets,*
the second All-American team, Pennsylvania this year--theyare
combined with Makler, who was 1-6 - and things may well get
said Tuppeny.
named to the first team, to pre- worse for the Explorers before
sent the Maestro with two Ail- they get better.
I PAGE TWELVE
Americans for the first time
Today at Franklin Field, LaTUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1968
since 1959.
Salle
grad Jim Tuppeny's
The Hong Kong native won improved Quaker track contin29 of his 39 matches in the more gent will attempt to duplicate
popular foil division to finish last year's 92-48 pasting of Tupbehind Gerald Esponda of San peny's alma mater.
Francisco, who won 37 bouts,
Only four of the 26 Quakers
Jeff Kestler of Columbia, Mike who dumped the Explorers last
By HOWARD TOPEL
Gaylor of NYU, the defending year have graduated, leaving
seph's breaks. But calling it
champion,
Bill Borkowsky of Tuppeny with 22 returning letStaying power. That's basequits isn't a characteristic of
CC
YU
and
Ted
Sieja of Princeton. terman, several top sophomores,
ball lingo to describe that inthe 1968 Penn baseball team.
tangible quality of making a game
Wetzler
fenced
very well and even a few new faces making
Coach Bob Murray's charges deagainst the top two epeemen in their initial appearances on the
out of a seemingly lost cause.
cided to stay around, and nearly
the championship, Don Sieja of Penn track scene.
If nothing else, Penn's baseball
pulled off a fantastic upset.
Cornell and Burt Pearlman of
team displayed staying power in
Among the new faces is basAfter retiring St. Joe's withColumbia,
but
had
a
lapse
against
Monday's 10-7 loss to St. Joketball
captain Pete Andrews,
out a run in the top of the seventh,
some of the less skilled competi- attempting the triple jump for
seph's.
the Quakers batted around for
tors
in the epee division to finish the first time. He has been
When St. Joe's came to bat
four runs in the last half of the
with
only 24 victories in 36 bouts. joined by teammate Ken Leeson,
in the top of the seventh inning,
inning. Jim McFillen and Marc
Also finishing ahead of the who is trying to return to the
leading 10-0, you had to wonder Schoenfield drew walks to start
Penn
junior were Jim Davidson form which brought him a New
what Penn's players were doing
the inning, and both scored when
of Navy, George Masin of NYU, Jersey state high jump champout in the field. Over the first
Pat Wolff lined a triple to left
the
defending champion, Dick Od- ionship with a 6*6" leap, plus
six innings Penn's pitchers had
center. Brian Kochunas drew the
ders of Wisconsin and Arnold football players Chris Lambertyielded seven walks, the fieldthird base on balls in the inning,
Messing of CCNY.
ers had committed three errors,
sen, Glenn Eichman, and John
and then Tom Harlowe scored
The
Quakers'
total
of
84
points
Tremba.
and everything that St. Joe's hit
Wolff with a single to left. Koput them only three points behind
either found its way through the chunas tallied Penn's fourth run
"It gives the team a psychothe
deposed
champions
NYU
and
Quaker infield or fell just belogical lift to see them out there
when Hawk shortshop Billy Deonly eight behind Columbia which trying," said Tuppeny. "It keeps
yond the reach of hard charging Angelis booted Pete Wisniewski's
placed all three of its fencers on us from giving away points."
outfielders. And to make matters
grounder.
the first All-American team.
worse, the Quakers had been able
But there aren't many events
Penn picked up three more
to muscle up only three meager
this
year where the Penn track
runs in the eighth as Rich Deats
JIM POLLACK
team
will
be
giving
points
away.
hits against the Hawks' Carl
Complete
recovery?
beat out an infield hit and Mike
Vogt Lowell and John Smith. Linn singled to left. Wolff, who
Not with performers such as
Another potential weakness
It would have been underco-captains Earl Andrews and
now has five RBI's in the last
is in the javelin, where two of
standable if Penn had preferred two games and has raised his
Rick Owens, Jerry Williams,
the top three hurlers are into bury itself in its dugout beGeorge Lokken, and Jim Pollack
season average to .306, deliverjured, leaving junior Jed Olmaround.
fore that seventh inning. They ed Deats and Linn with a double
stead the main Quaker hope.
The Varsity Sailing team
Andrews, Owens, and Wilcould have called the game on to right center. Harlowe, who
Olmstead has been practicing
opened its spring season at Anliams came up with last year's
account of the brisk wind whiphad three hits on the day, drove
only since wrestling ended in
napolis this past weekend.
ping across Stewart Field, or in the game's final run with a
top performances. Andrews ran
early March.
Co-captains Leonard Henon account of too many St. Joa 4:11.6 mile, Williams a 1.51.5
long double to right field.
"It will be hard to improve
drickson and Steven Simkin and
half mile, and Owens a 20.8
on last year's record," declartheir respective crews of Jerome
school record 220. This winter,
ed Tuppeny. "We have to beat
Doherry and Keith Gordon chalWilliams and Lokken reached
either Rutgers, Cornell, or
lenged the University of Michithe recordbooks, with a 4:08.1
Princeton plus the four schools
gan, the nation's number one
mile and a 9:11.2 two mile,
we beat last year. Rutgers is
team, plus twelve other teams
respectively.
the New York Metropolitan dewere entered in the Middle AtPollack won the J00, 220,
fending champ and has their best
lantic Spring Invitational Regatta.
and broad jump in every meet
team ever. We haven't beaten
The battle for first place durlast year as a sophomore, until
Cornell in years and Princeton
ing the two-day event focused on
a
hamstring
pull
against
is always tough."
Navy, Michigan, and Penn.
Princeton sidelined him for
Against the Explorers, TupIn the end, the Middies capthe season. His 6.3 clocking in the
penv will be experimenting with
tured first place with Michigan
60 yd. dash this winter seems
a revised lineup in the distance
and Penn coming in a close
to be a sign of his complete
events.
Williams, Bill Caldsecond and third. The rest of
recovery.
well, and possibly injury-prone
the field was left far behind.
Last spring the cindermen
soph Dave Ladanye will move
Both Hendrickson and Simraced to a winning season. It
up to the two mile so Tuppeny
kin finished second as high point
was a momentous occasion, gocan see "how versatile they will
skippers in their respective diing 4-3 after the 5-23 record
be later in the season," while
visions, despite sailing in an
of the previous four campaigns,
Lokken, Bob Acri, and Bill Kelunfamiliar type of boat.
and Tuppeny calls his 1968 squad
so will run the mile.
This weekend, Coach Bruce
"better."
The Explorers are in the
PENN FIRST BASEMAN TOM HARLOWE s tagged out at home
Birkholz will send one team to
"We'll miss Henry Smith in
in the fourth inning in Monday's 10-7 I as to St. Joe's. Harl owe
midst of another "rebuilding
Boston and one to Annapolis in
the shot put and Ernie Liebercontributed 3 hits and 2 RBI's to Penn's ten hit attack.
year," according to their coach,
an effort to lead Penn to the
man in the 440, and we're weak
Jim Wetzler. Their best event
Middle Atlantic number one rankin the pole vault," said Tuppeny.
is the discus.
ing.
"but individually, all our boys
Versatile Mike McGowan is
Todays sports
have improved. Each boy now
the LaSalle star. He vaulted 14-3
Results
Golf vs. Lehigh
is doing better. We can't ask
last year, high jumped 6-3, broad
Baseball
1:30 P.M.
Lehigh
Meeting today at 11 A.M. for
for more."
PENN.7
St.
Joseph's
10
jumped over 22' consistently, and
Track vs LaSalle
all varsity and freshman fencIn the pole vault, Tuppeny,
Golf
also triple jumped and ran in hur3:00 P.M
Franklin Field
ing team members in the fenchowever,
has
but
one
vaulter—
PENN
5Vi
LaSalle,
1%
dle and relay events. "A real
Frosh tennis vs. Fr. Judge H.S.
ing room. Election of captain
soph Nils Olsen. This winter,
PENN 5
Villanova 2
3:00 P.M
Palestra Courts
will be held.
(Continued on page 11)
soccer captain-elect Rett Stur-
Penn cindermen host
The
Daily
LaSalle squad today
SPORTS
Quaker nine fights
back before bowing
Sailors third
behind Navy
at Annapolis
Sport Log
Fencing