Wc& Batto fflmnsttluamatt > ^- Vol. I.XXXV11I ^ No, 48 'tiilii'Mphia. l'<twwvtvawM W T9 founded 1885 <ViprrmhM97,» Thr H;,j|\ IVnnsylviinii.n Monday, April 24, 1972 Thousands Protest War In New York City Rally By JIM KAHN Special to The Daily Penntflvanlan ?*C£* ACT/OAS* CQ*Ln DESPITE INCLEMENT WEATHER, over B.tM antiwar demonstrators converged em Htm York City Saturday to protest Unite* States' aohVy la Virtaam. The crowd marched from 72nd St. and Central Park West to where they listened to 35 speakers for three DAN KAH Park NEW YORK-- Fifty Uiousand people gathered in cold, rainy weather here Saturday to protest continued American presence in Vietnam. If the march was a test of the antiwar movement's strength, it was a harsh one, as bad weather continued throughout the day. Demonstrators cheered loudly, however, when rally leaders told them "this is only the beginning... we are more determined than ever." Sponsored by the National Peace Action Coalition (NPAC), the demonstration, which remained peaceful as participants marched through the streets of Manhattan and attended a three hour rally, brought groups from as far away as Michigan and Iowa, as well as from many eastern colleges like Pennsylvania, Columbia, and Tufts. Other participants included an Muskie - Humphrey Primary Fight Seen By OUCAPLAN Tomorrow Pennsylvania voters wtl elect 117 of the US delegates mey w* send to July's Democratic and neither Edmund Hubert Humphrey ha* excuse for a poor finish Of the field of which includes Henry Jackson, George Shirley Chisolm. assy Humphrey are going ai out M a contest where no over votes should chwd the busing issue produce a disproportionate vote for Wallace, and no candidate garner votes because of his residence in an adjacent state. What makes winning so important for both, however, is that large industrial Pennsylvania, with sizeable Woes of black and ethnic, blue collar voters, is the kind of state Democrats will have to carry in November if they are to defeat Richard Nixon. Though a victory here will not assure Muskie or Humphrey the nomination, it could provide either U. to Vote Proxy Against Two Shareholder Proposals By MICHAEL The University will cast Ms prosy votes this week against a riashwiin which would require Smith Mine awl French Laboratories to npgradt labeling practices on drugs sold overseas and investigate Oat impart of its domestic adtfrtiahsg Pennsylvania was" also vote against a resolution which wontd reonanr the Gulf Oil Corporation to daiHase and explain the relationships and agreements it has with Oar Portuguese government that rates Angola The Smith Kline and French <SKP. resolution, authored by the Washington DC. based Project an Corporate Responsibility, would require the pharmaceutical firm to include in the advertising and packaging of drugs sold outside of the United States the same warning* required by the US Food and Drug Administration <PDA» for domestic marketing of equivalentprodocts The other SKF proposal whieh the University will vote against requires the company to form a rsmmittii to make a "comprehensive and objective study..mi the extent to which the corporation's advertising marketing and promotional practices may possibly have contributed to the abuse and overuse of barbiturates, amphetamines and other moodaltering drugs " The decision to vote against the Gulf and SKF shareholder proposals were made by the University Trustees' Committee on Corporate Respon sibility. chaired by Bernard G Segal The University owns over 5,000 shares of SKF and over 50,000 shares of Gulf Oil stock. The committee had also planned to cast the University's proxy votes against proposals identical to the SKF resolutions involving another phar maceutical firm, Merck and Co., But committee adviser Robert H. Mundheim said Saturday the University will not mail the proxy statement until he can investigate Merck's overseas practices in light of changes by the Project recently brought to his attention Munmdheim said the University will not vote for the SKF proposal concerning overseas marketing since the committee was satisfied, after speaking with the chief counsel for the Project on Corporate responsibility. that "SKF itself has not apparently done anything improper in its current labeling practices." (Continued on page 3) candidate with strong momentum for the May 9 Ohio primary. Both Humphrey and Muskie are closing their campaigns with tours through Western Pennsylvania today. In contrast. McGovern and Wallace regard any delegates they might pick New* inalyum up here as bonuses McGovern has spent only 140 thousand in Pennsylvania, as compared to several hundred thousand in Massachusetts, another April 25 primary which he says he will "twin" with Pennsylvania to come out with a majority of delegates. However, McGovera's decision to conduct a whistle-stop tour here today may be indicative of Ins desire to garner the 20-40 Pennsylvania delegates his supporters claim he has a chance of winning Unlike Jackson, who has decided to (Continued on page 5) bypass Pennsylvania altogether in order to concentrate on Ohio, Wallace has made some stops here, notably a three day visit highlighted by a wellattended rally in Pittsburgh Saturday. The consensus of observers throughout the state is that Humphrey will take the popularity poll due to his strong support from ethnic and black voters, but that the outcome of the district by district delegate race will be close. On Jan. 25, Gov. Shapp announced county chairmen favored Muskie by "at least 2-1." But yesterday, a Philadelphia Bulletin survey showed only 24 of the 67 supported the Maine senator. Eighteen expressed interest in Humphrey. Also, some see Muskie's selfdeclared position as the second choice of many voters as placing him in a pincer between Humphrey here and McGovern in Massachusetts. The Boston Globe reported Sunday that organization of citizens from Natick, Mass., several veterans' groups, an association of Jewish groups, a number of union representatives a high school band, and a group calling itself the Attica Brigade." The latter group, which carried many National Liberation Front flags and a large but soggy paper mache "imperialist octopus," later broke away and marched into Grand Central Station without incident. At the rally in the streets adjacent to Bryant Park, demonstrators heard 35 speakers including Daniel Ellsberg, David Dellinger, John Kerry and John Lennon and Yoko Ono. The crowd responded most enthusiastically to John and Yoko, who spoke for a few minutes and then led demonstrators in "Give Peace a Chance." Although they had not participated in the many "out now!" cheers during the rally, the older members of the crowd joined in the singing. After waiting for as long as two hours on streets adjacent to Central Park, marchers followed a large NPAC banner proclaiming "Stop the Bombing NOW" while shouting numerous antiwar and anti-Nixon slogans. The march, which followed a two mile route along Central Park West, Antiwar Actions Continue At Univ., Across Country Antiwar activists here voted Sunday night to schedule a rally on College Hall Green at 11:45 A.M. today, followed by an organizational meeting in Irvine Auditorium at noon. Leaders at the meeting will attempt to form "task forces" for continuing antiwar activity and for gaining support in the community, Student Mobilization Committee i SMC (spokesman David Kutzik said Sunday. Antiwar organizers plan to also Students Elect At-Large Council Reps; Fisher9 Lloyd, Easley. Sama Chosen About 850 students elected four atlarge representatives to the University Council in a runoff election Friday. Chosen were Eric Fisher. College '74; David Lloyd. Wharton '74. Ralph Easley. Wharton '73; and Anita Sama CW '73. Fisher received 240 votes, followed by Easley with 237, Miss Sama with 231, and Lloyd with 221. In addition, the dans of *73 officers were announced at Hey Day ceremonies Friday. The officers are Ralph Easley. president, Raymond Mooney. vice president. Todd Gnesin. treasurer; and Richard Zucker. secretary. The following school representatives were also elected Sam Garst. College; Richard Galloway. Engineering; Adrienne Binik. Wharton; Jill Goessling, CW; Kathryn Grado. Nursing; and Diane Langsam, SAMP. Class officers and class representatives were chosen in Tuesday's balloting. Over five hundred juniors voted this year. In Tuesday's election for Council constituency seats. Ruth Ann Price, CW '74, captured the top spot with 276 votes, counting both constituency and non-constituency votes. Following Miss Price were Easley with 258. Edward "Skip" Everett. College '73. with 245; Larry Fine. Wharton '73. with 222, and Curt Foster, College '75. with 218. Other runoff candidates and their vote totals include: Maurice Obstfeld, 2M; Robert Waxman, 196; Gary G. Hicks. 186; Walter Tsou. 171; Denis Seventh Avenue, and Broadway, lasted 90 minutes. Protestors urged the numerous onlookers, many of whom wore antiwar buttons, to "join us;" a specially enthusiastic "1-2-3-4, we don't want your fucking war!" was directed to onlookers under the Americana hotel marquis. Demonstrators cheered when news of the demonstration and Vietcong victories was flashed on top the Allied Chemical building in Times Square. When the march reached 51st Street, a number of NPAC members with large cardboard barrels "* emerged and made their way into the crowd as a sound truck urged protestors to "give for peace." At the rally, where demonstrators stretched back one block three ways from a large wooden platform, Ellsberg and Dellinger praised demonstrators for coming despite the weather. Vietnam Veteran John Kerry told the crowd, "We have to guarantee we don't replace a Richard Nixon with a Edmund Muskie or a Hubert Humphrey," and NPAC , National Student Association, and Student Mobilization Committee leaders urged marchers to participate in future strikes, demonstrations, and moratoriums until the President is forced to end American involvement In the war. (Continued on page 3) Cohen. 161; Diane Willing, 155. Also: Janet Millenson, 143; Laureine Knight. 124; Regina Feldman, 109; and Nicole Reinsberg, 69. This year, the class of '73, has been allocated $1200-1300 in Activities Council funds, and each board of class officers has considerable leeway both in deciding how this money can be spent. In past years, the money has gone toward cocktail parties, movies and more parties. Aside from advising President Meyerson in se lee ting Commencement speakers, advising University Chaplain Rev. Stanley Johnson on baccalaureate services, and making plans for Hey Day and Ivy Day, the senior class officers are free to do as much or as little as they want with their offices. talk with President Meyerson about academic arrangements for students involved in the strike, and to hold a candlelight vigil at 10:30 P.M. The vigil, from St. Mary's church to the peace symbol at Van Pelt Library, will follow an antiwar meeting at the church at 8:00 P.M. Plans to join engineers at the General Electric plant at 32nd and Chestnut Streets, who Kutzik said, reportedly plan to strike Wednesday in protest of the renewed bombing in Vietnam, are also being formed. Meanwhile in New York, 637 students from 113 colleges and 32 high schools met Sunday at an SMC-sponsored antiwar conference and voted to use campuses as "community organizing centers" for protest activity. The conference also endorsed mass demonstrations in all major cities on Saturday, and a national moratorium and strike May 4, commemorating the killings at Kent State and Jackson State two years ago. Around the Ivy League, most campuses were quiet over the weekend, as schools held strikes and rallies Friday. Meetings to discuss future action were held Sunday night or will be held today at most of the eight schools. In addition to the large rally in New York, smaller demonstrations in Chicago, Los Angeles, and San Francisco drew several thousand (Continued on page 3) Hey Day 1972: A Unique Mixture of Politics and Pleasure V a/ %•• i Antiuar Drmoii^lralor* Mingle \\ iili lift l)a\ Participant* I ll'li I "Mil III \ . nsn. . ... .__..____-.__ W almtl St. Traffic Sklt'S By CHAT BLAKEMAN Friday was the kind of day at Pennsylvania that must drive the columnists who are trying to figure out the mood on campuses crazy On the one hand, there were stndents in ties and jackets following the band through the Quadrangle demonstrating, so tradition has it, that they were ready to assume the responsibilities of the senior year. Right alongside them were thirty or so antiwar protesters shouting slogans about the increased bombing and waving resistance flags. And as an anticlimax to the whole affair, most students went on with business as usual and managed to sit for an hour or two in the warm afternoon sun. The tone of the day on campus, friendly, a bit bemused and occasionally angry about the war, is understandable considering the planning that went into the day. First, there were the traditional ceremonies: The Cane Walk, the Hey Day awards ceremony and the picnic an the Green. And also the Moratorium: Rallies, speeches, a prayer meeting and a demonstration that blocked traffic, on Walnut Street. Throughout the day. the two intermixed and it was hard to tell who on the Green was there to protest the war and who was there to celebrate Skimmer. At any rate, most people believed that class attendance was a bit sparser than usual, though again, Friday attendance is always low this time of year. Demonstrations against the war began early, and small groups were picketing in front of the library before 9:M A.M. At one point some demonstrators locked hands in front of College Hall, but nobody was prevented from entering. Later in the morning. Director of Student Activities Jerry Condon went out and asked the protesters to make sure the library remained open to anyone who wanted to enter. Shorty after ll-«Jt A.M., the University Marching Band began to travel (Continued on page 3) l)i'IIIOII»tratOI> Block ED ROTH A GROUP OF UNIVERSITY stadrnt* expressed their opposition to IIsited States' psury hi Southeast Asia by staging a sit-In oa Walnut St. Friday aftemnoa. The demonstrators su. (reded in blocking up traffic as far bark as Center Ciiy during their 45 minute sit-down. The most visible form of antiwar protest on campus Friday was a sitdown demonstration at the corner of 34th and Walnut Streets which blocked rush hour traffic for about forty-five minutes. The demonstration began at 4:30 P M and lasted until George Fencl, head of theCivil Disobedience section of the Philadelphia Police Department, arrived with several squad cars and asked the demonstrators to clear the street. After talking with Fencl. the demonstrators remained in the street for another five minutes singing and chanting and then moved to the sidewalks to watch the backlog of cars pass steadily by. There were no arrests The actual demonstration barely got off the ground, as there were only a dozen protesters at the outset They moved into the street several times in 'infiuccessful efforts to stop traffic before finally sitting down to stay The chain of bodies did not extend all the way across the street and not until a sympathetic driver pulled his car near the only open lane and stalled it did traffic slow to a crawl. Several minutes later a post office truck attempting to turn west from 34th Street (Continued on page 3) ■ ■ ■ I The Daily Pennsylvania!) Pig a Monday, April 24, 1972 ■LOOD DONORS WANTED ft* Pali is BLOOD DONORS CLUB SMI UBSMSMIM OnrMga PMa.Pa. Itltt The Dichotomy of Protest 1885 • 1972 The Newspaper o/ the University of Pennsylvania STUDENT TRAVELS APPROVED AGENT CHAT BLAKEMAN, Editor-in-Chie/ THOMAS PAPSON. Managing Editor THOMAS EWING. Business Manager A.D. TRAVEL 4068 CHESTNUT STREET BA 2-3676 StWTTCIBBON. Editorial Chairman. KATHE ARCHDEACON, News Editor. STEVEN WINN, MM Strtel Editor, PHILIP N. SHIMKIN, Sports EditorEDWARD ROTH, Photography Editor, RALPH POLUMBO, Financial Monaf.r, MERRY HENIG. Advtrti.in. Mana«tr. KAREN MIDDLETON 34th ?VZll??ff "ff! Myt*r ALICE F.GOETZ. Production Manafer. MICHAEL STEPHEN GROSS. Credit Mana>«r. MARK J HOSENBALL, J«h Strttt A*»octoto Editor. ROBERT WEMISCHNER. Mth Street Associate Editor, BILL YirTE'.A£KS!,.,SR2! S"°,; DAN'EL A KASLE, Associate Photo,raphy Edttor; ANTHONY KOVATCH. Assistant Sports Editor. BENJAMIN L GINSBERG. Contributing Editor MARK McINTYRE, Contribute Editor. BOOK SALE ALL BOOKS 70-80% OFF Over 300 Titles Bwdwhutalls Kinetics and Con text Morris' Grant Legal Philosophers Ooffman's Strategic Interaction. Logsn Hail, Rm 12 April 24 - 28 9-6 Daily The Daily (^nmrlvenien it published Monday through Friday at Philadelphia. Pa., during me tall and taring temettert. except during vacation periods One issue PuoSHhed m August Svtec riot ions may be ordered al Sergeant Hall. 34th and Chestnut Stv. al the rate o< 11} 00 per annum Second class postage paid at Philadelphia. Penn sylvenie 1*104 Phones (315) SW tstl Display and Classitied Advertising may be placed at me same I ■■rill. gpwwws&gyasaaga McGovernfor President After the spring flurry of antiwar activism has passed, there still remains the question of who will occupy the White House next year. Clearly the issue is not only one of finding a candidate who is opposed to the war in Vietnam - - most major candidates are already on record to that effect - - but also of selecting one who has consistently come up with answers to other problems this country faces. We feel Senator George McGovem has shown himself to be the most qualified candidate for the Democratic nomination and we urge students to vote for him in the state primary here Tuesday. In the area of foreign policy, McGovem first spoke out publicly against U.S. involvement in Vietnam in 1963, the first year he was a member of the Senate. Since then, he has stood firmly behind all major antiwar legislation and was co-sponsor of the unsuccessful HatfieldMcGovem bill in 1988. He now pledges that U.S. troops will be withdrawn from Vietnam 90 days after he takes office and he. is the only major candidate who does not make American withdrawal contingent upon the release of American POW's. Instead he has recognized that their release will only come about when American forces are no longer involved in Indochina. McGovern has also recommended cutting significant amounts from the Defense Department budget, calling the ABM system and other Pentagon-sponsored projects unnecessary to American defense needs. The Senator has also supported or sponsored nearly every piece of civil rights legislation to pass through the Senate since 1963. He has demonstrated his concern in this area by working to see that state delegations to the national convention include women and minority group members. In addition, he has sponsored an enormous amount of legislation in the area of conservation and pollution control. He was behind a bill which gives consumers the right to bring action against big-time in- dustrial polluters in federal court He has also backed bills which protect the wetlands, and worked diligently for the establishment of the National Wilderness Preservation. Besides his outstanding voting record, McGovern's personal honesty and perseverance make his case compelling. He has long fought conservative die-hards in the Senate and appealed to a constituency relatively uninvoived with machine politics. He was the first candidate to publicly disclose names of contributors to his campaign fund this year, and as his stand on Vietnam indicates, he has not been afraid to stand up for a position long before it was politically advantageous to do so. Under new voting laws, University students could help get McGovern three more committed delegates from this district, no matter how he does in the rest of the state. If nothing else, the last four years have shown how having the wrong man in the White House can damage this country's political and moral integrity. Here is the perfect opportunity for the University community to show its opposition to the war and to help put a man in the White House who is eager for a new direction. Given the state of the country now, that new direction must come and George McGovern is the only candidate who we feel will see that it does. Chess Players! THE FRANKLIN MERCANTILE 1 OAK KMttH li) Bell Gil islierg It was a wierd weekend. I found my traditional cynicism about the value of antiwar protests taken away by a rather righteous indignation over what the leaders of my country were doing. Sitting back apathetically had left me frustrated, so I acted. Friday we had been in the stately Capitol Hill offices of the men who "control the purse strings" of the United States We had been there with the other Ivy League newspaper editors to express our concern. The attitude we found was rather demoralizing. Thirty-six hours later we were sitting in New York watching the evening news. They announced that 50,000 demonstrators had marched that afternoon. We were encouraged. It had been a cold, wet, dreary day. A day much more incusive to sitting by a fire reading than it was to marching. Fifty thousand with a belief and a commitment is a large number. While the events of Saturday left one feeling rather optimistic, the realization that lobbying in Washington on Friday was significant reduced one to the existential conclusion that it is time to review the value and strategy of mass antiwar protests. It is time to recognize the exact obstacles antiwar forces face. Friday's experience in Washington clearly pointed up the fact that internal (and closed) policy games Congressional and Adminstration leaders play are the greatest roadblock confronting antiwar advocates. It was extremely disconcerting to go into the office of a liberal Republican Senator with a cirong antiwar voting record and be told that in the game of politics, he may personally abhor the war but wouldn't consider opposing Richard Nixon for reelection. After all, he's the head of the senator's party and this is the only way a twoparty system of government can survive. By the end of the day, we had been reduced by the distinguished leaders of the country to a state of confusion; walking around in little circles staring a t the tips of the shoes. The problem is that these gentlemen insist upon dealing with the politics of problems instead of looking at the problems themselves. Being a leader in the sphere of American politics does not equate itself with providing moral leadership for the people of the United States To say that the overall Nixon policy overshadows an admittedly morally reprehensible war policy is as wishywashy as it is irresponsible. Until the nominal leaders of this country can show more than a verbal intellectual concern about the "immoral" war in Southeast Asia and appreciate that a sense of urgency is mandatory, the war will continue. The march Saturday was fun. It was novel because it was in the rain and the crowd generated its own special kind of excitement. But despite all this, just as the gentlemen in Washington play a type of game, the protest march is a different kind of game. I suppose a case can be made for the value of mass antiwar protests. They are a show of strength (if you can forget that perhaps i/20uo of the country participates); they attract at least a limited number of new adherents to the cause; and it is psychologically reassuring to see that others feel the same way you do. But they really don't have much effect in the long run. Marches, such as Saturday's, do not really affect those who matter -the policy makers. They are a bit like mosquitos bugging a drowsy napper on a hot day. They must be i dealt with, but even if they bite. \ makers merely scratch for a couple M days and then forget them This is not meant to iHsrisiifi marches or say they should net be continued. It is to say that there seem to be a potentially dangerous tendency today to gauge (he effect «f a march by its size. A AmmmkttMm cannot be judged ineffective af m/M people participate and effective af 200,000 participate, for example The size of a march is irrelevant The ultimate purpose of a march, or any demonstration, is to make these fa control realize there is deep apposition to particular policies and that they should be changed Unfortunately, it appears that mass protest marches are ineffective far reaching the ultimate gaal af changing policy. Mass demonstrations are accessary for reasons already listed. Bat judging from the experience at* this past weekend, it would appear that a much more effective tactic maid be to actively lobby the mtsabsis M Congress. The president will net be affected by much of anything, legislators are not nearly so I as this. It is easy for a senator la justify disgust for the war and support (or 1st President at the same time. But bring that politician out into the spew and make him justify his argusseats la a one to one exchange and he wfll probably be uncomfortable And M is when a Congressman is made te feel uncomfortable that he wiH start la think about changing. If the sense sf urgency that the antiwar oVwen strators feel can be transposed late the chambers of Congress, than a change in policy can be won do know one thing; I am sick of a war that has drained the United States of its young men while at the same time severely weakening our economy. I have never been involved in active protest against the war and I was thinking about that fact last week, when I heard about the demonstration that was to take place on Saturday, April 22, In the past, I have read about demonstrations and protests with the thought in mind that none of this ever does any good except that some kids have a good time. Then I thought that for every person that goes to a demonstration there must be thousands of apathetic 'Sh! Don't Laugh Till After He Leaves' people like myself that stay home. Then I thought what would happen if all the apathetic people went to a demonstration for once. That would be a large number of people, which as a body would represent a power with which Richard Nixon would have to deal, a power which could demand the end of the war and get it. So I went to New York City, Saturday, to make my opinion known. Staying home represented tacit approval of Nixon's decision to continue the war. We marched, we listened, and we chanted "out now", in a cold and continuous rain. We told President Nixon how we felt. This Saturday, April 29, there will be local demonstrations across the country. I urge you to attend. Make your opinion felt. You do have the power to end the war. STEVEN A. STRUNK Wharton '73 CORPORATE RESPONSIBILITY C7.»7****»r«B»-«^ SMBSM Sir: Friday's editorial showed a clear ignorance of the function of corporate and investment management namely, the terminal wealth maximization of current shareholders through capital gain and income distribution within the boundaries of practical social responsibility. Some of the proxy proposals would help this goal - for example, full disclosure of information - but the others would be detrimental to the individual corporation in a competitive industry unless the standards were enforced on the whole industry. Unless the "consumer oriented proposals" on the ballots of Individual corporations - GM, Chrysler, AT&T, Smith Kline & French - can be applied to the whole motor, telecommunications and chemical industries, then those proposals discriminate against individual corporations, put them at a competitive disadvantage, and harm the corporation, the employee, and the Shareholder. To make Chrysler act responsibly is laudable but if it costs the Chrysler product out of the market so we all buy a GM product - or British Leyland - then the result defeats the object of the original proposal Club Is The Place Where Its At For Chess! Vistors Welcome St. James Hotel 13th & Walnut Street Ki 5-8989 DRUGS CURRENT VIEWPOINT APRIL 25,10 P.M. Discussion with: Mr. Richard Atkins, HELP Clinic Dr. Sidney Schnoll, HELP Clinic Dr. William Wieland, Director, Addictive Disease Services, City of Phila. PHONE - in questions: 594-5601 Sponsored by Talking Point pre%s*ris MOVIES Letters to the Editor DEMONSTRATIONS ah: We have been Involved in the Vietnam War for over a decade. After ten years of having heard about the war, I think most of us have grown Insensitive to the full implications of the battles, the faanaHttss, and the deaths that we skim over in the newspapers everydayNorth Vietnam stepped up its offensive and launched a larger attack against the South recently. President Nixon responded with heavy bombing of the North. I am not questioning the wisdom of this decision because I dont have enough knowledge of the dotation to criticize his actions, but I gsaaaaaar! because the consumer results in subsidizing another corporation that has arbitrarily escaped the attention of consumer advocates. In order to implement socially responsible actions, therefore, one must either impose standards upon whole industries through legislation and regulation or reward socially responsible corporations through consumer education and the power of the purchaser. In view of the nature of your country's legislature and government, I suggest that the latter is the more feasible solution. In conclusion, then, the University is fully justified in voting its proxy in favor of management whenever a proposal arbitrarily places a corporation at a competitive disadvantage against other equally irresponsible corporations. Because Yale, in a moment of unenlightened weakness, adopts a different policy is no reason for Penn to use its proxy in an arbitrary vendetta against certain companies. In closing I hope that the DP's concern for management's social and community responsibility will be relayed to its own Business Department so it can be guided on whether it should accept abortion referral agency advertisements, and whether its differential advertising rates should discriminate against low budget activities in favor of corporate giants and high budget campus conglomerates that inundate the paper with large advertisements which drown the announcements of smaller groups, thus discouraging full involvement in the community by suppressing easy and inexpensive communication throughout this campus. TIM ALSTON Wharton'72 REASON V8. PASSION Sir: Mr. Chat Blakeman's display of venom in April 19th's DP was truly remarkable since it came from someone who considers himself a University student. One would think this implies being a civilized human being. While blind hate in any form Is ^m disturbing, his column, coupled with me absence of any logical thread after the first two paragraphs, can only be described as frightening. To reply to some of his objactlsas: Mr. Humphrey's achievements are anything but dubious. They are very real and to dismiss them as iHlmnise without substantiation is nothing short of irresponsibility. There is alas no insult In Mr. Humphrey giving a campaign speech. He is campaigning and while Vietnam is an Important issue, it is not immoral to also address other ones. Mr. Blakeman states that a* Mr. Humphrey had devoted time to endorsing the upcoming demonstrations, the heckling would not bat* been warranted. I don't thank attempting to drown oat a figure who is attempting to . himself to the people hi ever warranted, even if he doesn't allocate his time and support in a manner of which you approve. Mr. Blakeman attempts to show the shallowness of Mr. Humphrey's morality by quoting him as teflasg a student that he knew the pain tt war, having lost an election because of h\ In reality he said he had suffered more from the war than the outraged student. He probably has. I could go on but to what purpose? Man of passion and moral outrage are notoriously unsusceptible to i persuasion and besides, why someone who condones heckling allow this voice to be heard? NEILSHACHTER Csttege'78 HEY DAY HECKLER* Sir: The antiwar demonstrators who heckled Bob Litan when he was presented with the Royal Society of Arts silver medal on Hey Day might be interested to know that Bob Is a conscientious objector and Is presently serving bis alternative service. IRVROSENTHAL HOWIE FINE Wtmrtmlt ■M MON.. APRIL 24 7 4 10 00 STORY OF A 3 DAY PASS WED., APRIL 26 7 8.9:30 CONTEMPT SAT., APRIL 29 7 & 9:30 IRVINE SUGGESTIONS FOR NEXT YEAR'S FILMS CALL 594-5284 DORM CONCERT A WOODWIND QUINTET SUN, APRIL 30 8:00 HIGH RISE SOUTH ROOF LOUNGE FREE ART EXHIBIT HIGH RISE SOUTH READING ROOM DAVID ITCHKAWICZ SEMINAR ROOM EXHIBIT BY CARNES MORGAN STAT ART EXHIBIT PAINTINGS BY PAULCOLLINS HOUSTON HALL BOWL ROOM *nn onion coon* in lor motion r 594-5284 mm mmm Page 3 The Daily Pennsvlvanian Monday. April 24, 1972 Antiwar Protesters March in JN.Y. [Continued from page 11 Messages were read from Congresswoman Bella Abzug, and an IRA head in Dublin, who told of a concurrent anti-Vietnam demonstration in the Irish capital. Other speakers included Congressman William Fitts Ryan, former Congresswoman Jeanette Rankin. entertainers Ben Gazzarra, Ossie Davis, and Ruby Dee, Socialist Workers' candidate Andrew Pulley, and a few union leaders. Demonstrators expressed anger at Nixon for his "escalation" of the war; one elderly lady said her husband, son, and grandson had to go to war and she was "afraid my greatgrandson will have to go too." Participants also voiced satisfaction with the demonstration despite the weather. "People really have guts to come out here in the rain," a student protestor said. Protest at U. (Continued from page 1) FD ROTH ANTIWAR DEMONSTRATORS MIXED WITH members of the L'ajvenlty band Friday during Hey Day festivities. The protesters followed band members on a march through the campus and finally to the Hey Day awards ceremony. There protesters attempted to disrupt the proceedings by chanting antiwar slogans. Hey Day 1972: To Each His Own (Continued from page 1) through campus on their way to the Quadrangle and were joined at 36th and Locust by a group of fifty demonstrators who followed the band into the Quad. The band then marched, along with the demonstrators, up 37th Street and across to Aimenberg Plaza where President Meyerson, Provost Reitz, and visiting dignitaries were on hand to present the annual senior awards and the Undbach teaching awards. The demonstrators sat in the front row during the ceremony and asked each person presenting an award how he felt about the war. Most responded that they hoped it would end soon. During the ceremony, the following people were presented with senior awards: Robert Morse, the Spoon Award; David "Corky" Calhoun, the Bowl Award; Stan Startzell, the Cane Award; Jamie Green, the Spade Award; Linda Magoon. the Althea K. Hottel Award; Claudia Cohen, the Harnwell Award; Ann Fleming, the Goddard Award; Robert Litan, the Class of 1946 Award and the Royal Society of Arts Silver Medal. Provost Reitz also presented the Undbach awards for distinguished teaching to four professors. They were: Dr. Roger Allen, assistant professor of Arabic; Dr. William Hamilton, assistant professor of inassociate professor of history. Four professors in the medical area were also awarded Lindbachs, though the announcements were not made Friday. They are: Dr. Martin Goldberg, professor of medicine; Dr. Arnold Rawson, professor of pathology; Dr. Richard Bartholomew, assistant professor of medicine; and Eugene Michels, assistant professor of physical therapy. Outgoing class president Howard Walnut St. Sit-Down (Continued from page 1) was forced to stop and the driver left the truck amid cheers from the crowd. It was not until the demonstration ended that any more cars passed freely through the intersection. The number of demonstrators in the street remained small, although the crowd of observers grew to several hundred. Traffic was reportedly blocked back to center city. Several Vietnam veterans and antiwar activists called for the demonstration during ceremonies on the Green Friday afternoon. They announced from a sound truck that there would be a "Festival of Life" in Walnut street at 4:30 P.M. and gathered around the statue of Benjamin Franklin, whom one of the protesters called "the greatest draft dodger of all time." Most motorists questioned seemed symphathetic to the group's aims, but annoyed that they were personally being delayed by the demonstration. A chauffeur for TV. personality Mike Douglas noted, "It's a damn inconvenience...Everyone has a right to his opinion and I know we're losing a lot of boys over there, but some of this stuff they're doing just isn't the greatest." From the beginning the protest spokesmen said they did not want a confrontation with police and it was generally agreed that the demonstration would break up when the police arrived. Fencl said afterwards that he was pleased that confrontation was avoided and added "some of those kids are my friends.' One accident resulted from the demonstration when a car on 34th Street passed through the intersection and collided with one turning to 34th Street from Walnut. Damage was minor to both cars. Most drivers who were able attempted to turn south to 34th Street to avoid the line and to take Spruce Street as an alternate route. Several cars were allowed to pass through the line of demonstrators when the drivers said they had to take someone to the hospital or were facing particular emergencies. One driver who said he was in a rush to get to the Annenberg center was told to take Spruce Street. Jerry Condon, director of student activities and the only administrator present during the whole affair, said he was pleased the demonstrators had agreed to disband and commented, "They did the only thing they could have done." During the demonstration and following, the protestors handed out yellow daffodils, flashed peace signs, and waved to motorists. Fine also introduced newly-elected Senior Class President Ralph Easley and the new board: Raymond Mooney, vice president, Todd Gnesin, treasurer, and Richard Zucker, secretary. Fine also introduced class representatives, about half of whom were present. SMC leader David Kutzik was also allowed during the ceremony to detail antiwar plans for the following day In New York. Following Kutzik's speech, the group of demonstrators left for a rally on the Green, and the remainder of the people moved to the McNeill Building to view the Ivy Stone, which was designed by Cathy Gable, a College for Women senior. Following these events, the action moved to the Green, where for the next several hours there were speeches against the war and other protest activities. Alfred Rieber, professor of history, told the crowd "What we must do here is rededicate ourselves to long-term activity, to unrelenting antiwar efforts." Allyn Rickett, associate professor of Chinese, said he "was horrified that a country sees no contradiction . between welcoming ping pong players and pandas and carrying out enormous amounts of aggression" in Indochina. A number of other professors, including Professor of Romance Languages Frank Bowman and former city councilman David Cohen, also addressed the crowd. Late in the afternoon Sociology Lecturer Anthony Campolo called students to join in a prayer meeting at the Peace Sign in front of Van Pelt Library. Persons representing several denominations addressed the crowd, which was quiet and subdued throughout. Campolo said, "War is destructive, not only to human beings but to the human spirit.. .something is radically wrong in this country." While the prayer meeting was going on, other groups on the Green listened to folk music, or just lounged around drinking wine and eating box lunches sold by the Hey Day organizers. Late in the afternoon, a group moved to stage a sit-in at the intersection of 34th and Walnut street, though most students remained on the green and only moved to the intersection once traffic had been blocked. ""bicyGie^ 1129 PINE ST. PHILA . 19107 923-8799 (Continued from page 1) The law professor noted that he had consulted with Medical School Pharmacology Chairman George B Koelle and Anasthesiology Chairman Robert D. Dripps who told him that FDA warnings were often "overcautious and irrelevant" and "much greater than would be thought appropriate." Mundheim claimes the American drug companies doing business overseas have "have higher quality controls" than their foreign com pctitors and that warnings placed only on American products might result in a loss of business to the other companies with less stringent controls. After Mundheim was informed Saturday that the Project claims Merck has engaged in deceptive practices in its foreign labeling, he decided to withhold the University's proxy vote until he can investigate the group's allegations. The Project charged that while Merck warns domestic consumers of the possibility of an attack of acute gout, intestinal discomfort and the need for supplementary potassium when using the drug Edecrin. "some of the foreign package inserts omit reference to these warnings and sideeffects." A project statement claims: "The 1969 Italian label states that Any side effects which may occur are almost always mild ones.' " and the Spanish label states "In general, many patients do not need a potassium supplement..." While the American label discourages the use of drug for in- ANY DAY OF THE WEEK °m llJU R/T WEST 4040 LOCUST ST. PHILA. 19104 DAN KASLE A LONE DEMONSTRATOR TAKES a stance against the war In Saturday's march on New York. An estimated 50,000, including a number of University students, participated in the protest in rainy, 40-degree temperatures. The line of marchers at one point stretched over 20 blocks, according to some reports. U. Casts Pro-Management Proxy EUROPE FLY THERE ON A 747 i, $1Qf| \ iASL participants each. Bad weather may have held down participation in these and other smaller demonstrations. Protests were also held in the capital cities of many countries in Europe and in Tokyo. Sunday, about 80 demonstrators from Philadelphia gathered at the entrance of the U.S. Navy pier at I-eonardo. N.J., and said they planned to block the sailing of a Navy ammunition ship reportedly bound for Vietnam. Eighty of the demonstrators were arrested when they tried to scale a fence and get onto the pier. Antiwar leaders in Salt Lake City called for a "no work, no school" strike today with a march to the federal building. University of Illinois students, returning from a Chicago rally, blocked streets in Champaign Saturday night. At the University of Maryland, where some 175 were arrested in demonstrations last week, the campus remained relatively quiet throughout the weekend. fants, neither the Italian nor Spanish labels do this or mention the possibility of a gout attack. The Project admits it has "no definite proof that the 1969 labels are presently in use. The proxy statement states "It ithe Project) has requested respective companies to send copies of current labels, but it has not received any responses from these companies." Mundheim said he will attempt to obtain information about the current practices of Merck and Co before the annual shareholders meeting Thursday. He noted that if he does not have sufficient information by Wednesday, the University may have to abstain from the voting. The University owns not shares of Merck and Co Mundheim said he had not known of the Merck vote until Friday morning and therefore did not have time to research Merck's activities in overseas marketing as he did with SKF. He said that although the University voted against the SKF proposal which would establish a study to investigate its advertising practices, he added that committee chairman Segal will write a letter to SKF urging an industry-wide study of the problem. "I don't think you can get much out of a study by a single drug company." Mundheim explained. The Council for Christian Social Action of the United Church of Christ had urged the University to vote for the Gulf disclosure proposal because it believes that 'lulls involvement in Angola, including payment of taxes, benefits the Portuguese government as it seeks to retain control over colonial Angola in the face of a national war for independence." The group's proposal would have required the detailing of Gulf's financial involvement with the Portugese government in a "full written report to the shareholders within four months" of the annual meeting on April 25 Mundheim said the University will vote against the proposal because Gulf had assured Segal that the requested information would be published soon in its shareholder magazine. "The Orange Disc." The law professor said Segal will write to the Gulf board chairman requesting ten copies of "The Orange Disc" so trustee committee members can be informed of the company's activities in Angola The letter will also urge the company to disclose the findings of an independent group that • lull sent to study the Angola situation The committee also voted against a shareholder proposal which would force New Kngland Electric to con sider every site in New England before locating a nuclear power plant on a peninsula in Khode Island. Mundheim said the committee felt it was unreasonable to force the utility to "explore every conceivable site" but instead will write a letter urging New England Electric to consider the environmental impact of new facilities Vote Tuesday! A Contemporary Israeli Comedy SALLAH Starring TOPOL International House Hopkinson Rm. Admission 75 MONDAY. APRIL 24 7:00 AND 9:30 382 - 1363 We need your help NEW SALES - REPAIRS - ACCESSORIES "THE COMPLETE WHEELMAN" MING THIS AD AND YOUR FAVORITI PERSON FOR LUNCH TO INDIAN RESTAURANT YOU GET 28% OFF YOUR BILL " May Be Worth Walking The Dit'anct OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK N.W. Corner 40th & Saniom BA 2-2245 Offtr Good As Long Ai You Have This Ad ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ DEPART FROM ANY MAJOR U.S. CIT\ EUROPEAN CITY OF YOUR CHOICE. AND ARRIVE IN THE ALL FLIGHTS ON SCHEDULED AIRLINES. . KLM - PAN AM ■CMC. If VOU HAVE A tUROM Sl/lir PHOHI I M '(•HIRE 10 OO. HOW IO Gil IMI HI III NS1S WITH IIJ rOOHG EXPERIENCED IHAVIl SIAII HELP YOU SOIVI THEM OUH GOAL IS IO MAKE YOUH VACATION HASSt I FREE WE CAN ALSO PROVIOE VOU WITH IMI FOHON IN'". SERVICES INTRA I UROPEAN CMAHIfM FLIGHTS CHASES FAKES CAR LEASINGS RENTALS PUR EURAIL PASSES STUOENT RAIL TRAVEL BOOHS VISA A PASSPORT Come and be part of the Undergraduate English Club. We are beginning spring course evaluation and need people to distribute forms in their classes. MEETING 11:00 Tuesday Morning Bennett Hall Room 12 Ground Floor MMMMTHM TO SERVE YOU IN EUROPE. NSTS HAS AFFILIATE OFFICES IN EVERY COUNTRY SO VOU SEE. ME RE MORI THAN JUST A FLIGHT TO IUHOPE m HI A ruLl SERVICE TRAVEL AGENCV NATIONAL STUDENT TRAVEL SERVICES 2025 WALNUT ST. PHILA. PA. 19103 (215)561-2939 Student Input Starts Here Page 4 Monday, April 24, 1972 The Dally Pennsylvania!) Now on Sale at the Bookstore. Thi$ Week* Campus Events One Pint Blood BfrffctoJbrlrBhaii frit HifcU to OFFICIAL BOOK SALE: All University Press books. 70 80 per cent off April 24 28,9 A.M. 5 P.M in Logan Hall. Room 13 CAREER ALTERNATIVES AD VISING: What do you want to do after Penn? Talk it over at the Advising Center. ■ 17 Logan Hall, 5*4 8596. PROFESSIONAL COUNSELING: For lull time Unlv students without fee. 3813 Walnut St. 9 A.M. 5 P.M.. 5*4 7021. Best Seller List FICTION I THE WINDS OF WAB.. Wouk I I THE WORD. Wallace S Give Of Yourself. • THE EXORCIST. Matty 1 4 WHEELS. HeJSey ( • THE ASSASSINS. Kuu • B • THE DAY OF THE JACKAL. Forty* 4 M T THE SLUE KNUHT. Waakaaah T B • THE t SB • THE FRIENDS OF EDME COYLE. HlalM • B . IB a BETSY. RooMa* MONDAY THE RABBI TOOK OFF ■BMJJBBl . M CAMPUS EVENTS BLACK STUDENT LEAGUE PRESENTS: Poet, Larry Neal. The Vanguard Poets, Les Danseurs Noire Ensemble Tonight. 730 P.M , Univ. Museum Aud. THE PLOUGH AND THE STARS by Sean O'Casey, directed by Thomas Gruene wald Running now through April 29, 7:30 P M.. Zellerbach Theatre, 3680 Walnut St.. free with U of P ID card, 5*4 6791 THE COST OF WAR AND CIVIL STRIFE: Part of an inquiry series presented In connection with the Annenberg Center production of "The Plough and the Stars" Film: Gillo Ponlecorvo's award winning "The Battle of Algiers." Tues.. 4 P M free COLLEGIUM MUSICUM AND PENN CONTEMPORARY PLAYERS: In con cert; music of the 14th. 15th, and 16th centuries, and Richard Wernlck's A Prayer for Jerusalem and George Crumb's Ancient Voices of Children. Prince Theatre. Annan berg Center; 8:30 P.M.. free. C.A. EATERY: Today's special Is whole wheat spaghetti with vegetables, sure to cure the munchies. Served from 11:30 2:30 In the C.A. Basement. The sidewalk cafe Is open also Tomorrow try our baked chicken with vegetables. ELEUTHERIAN SOCIETY: Dr. Alfred Rieber. history department chairman and Dr. Richard Pipes. Harvard, will discuss American Soviet detente: opportunities and dangers. Tues.. 7:15 P.M.. Rooftop Lounge, High Rise South. EXHIBIT ON ISLAM: Now through May l. West Lounge. Houston Hall. Book and crafts will be sold today. April 24. SYMPOSIUM ON ISLAM: 4:15 Seminar on symbolism In Islamic art; Seminar on Islam as an ecological system. Schedule your voting so as to be there! 7 P.M. - Seminar on the world's religions; how they approach the world's problems and how they view each other. Participate In the dialogue! Houston Hall. 3417 Spruce. BIRTHDAY OF THE PROPHET, MUHAMMAD: Wed.. April 26. Milad or celebration at 7 P.M.. Houston Hall. GIVE BLOOD: Tomorrow at Houston Hall. 10 A M. 5:30 P.M. LASt CHANCE IO WIN AI RIP TO EUROPE AND OTHER PRIZES Houston Hall GENERAL I THE GAME OT THE FOXES. Fan*) 1 IS 1 ELEANOR AND FRANKUN 4 SB Leak a THE DEFENSE NEVER RESTS. Bailey wttk Aroaaoa S IS 4 YKACY AND HETBURN. Kaala • ■ OWN MARJHAOK. Q-NaBl B 8) THE MOONY A BALLOON. Met* • T THE DOUBLE-CROSS SYSTEM. Mllllill I S as a a s a a 8 BRING ME A UNICORN. ItBBBBBjf B A WORLD BEYOND 14 Mmtaiiiry 7 TUES, APRIL 25 10-5:30 P.M. i THE BOYS OT SUMMER See our special display at UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA •OOKSTORE LOST Classifieds LOST: BLUB BOOKBAO WITH chltectur* books and magazines. perately needed for termpaper. 3 weeks ago. Probably near Arts. Reward. No questions. EV 7 0**o after * PM. ARDesLost Fine Call SON LOST WEST PMILA. FEMALE. GermShep. 1-1/ 2 years. Collar Iden tlflcation Colub. case 5471 o Re word SSOO.OO. tete LO 3-OSM. S07f FOR SALS SALE -'it NORTON COMMANDO. 7S0CC fastback, Carlanl front and, Dunsteil exhaust, genuine leather saddle, chroma. SI 100. Weekdays Be tween 105. piaeeso six -a* f M VW CAMPER POP TOP AM/FM extras. Excel, cond. S2200 VI »■ 92*0 alter a. 50*7 WHERE ARE YOU GOING TO LIVE NEXT YEAR? Com* see us • Urtiirersity City Housing Co. We have the finest housing in the campus area. Efficiency • 4 bedroom apt. Baltimore - Walnut. 39th to 46th 11 i.m.-7 p.m.-EV 2-2986 UTAH II" SPEAKERS, SSI.IS FOR pair (good condition) and Gerrard 40b automatic changer, S25.00. Call Russell or Judy at Ja7 4778. 5050 MUST SELL FURNITURE? DOUBLE beds, carpets, desks, bureaus, air conditioner, etc. Vary moderate prices. After S P.M. (weekend anytime) OR 4-elll. SMS TAPE RECORDER: PANASONIC. reel to reel, 4 speaker system, ex cellent condition, many tapes to be sold. Suzy. weekday evenings EV 2 3674 S07S ENORAVED WEDDINO INVITATIONS 350 samples to choose from without obligation. 71 lettering type styles in eluding script. Samples to your home. Fast Service Barbara or Grover Wil lis, BA 3 3946 4S42 FOR SALE HONOA 1171 CIIHK), green with sissy bar. luggage rack. Call EV 2 1307 before II P.M. 4191 FOR SALE: '47 VOLVO P1880S. 44.000 ml. very good condition, 4 speed, automatic overdrive. S1400 or bast offer. Can Vkkl EV 7-1835 5040 1**7 RAMBLER AMERICAN WAOON VS automatic, 41,000 mi., vary good condition, 349 6564 or 594 8520 30S7 SERVICES MUSIC STUDENT WILL TEACH classical guitar. For info and appt call PE 5 3799 after 6 P.M. 5117 PHOTOGRAPHY FOR CREDIT THE private photography classes I have taught for 5 years near Penn tr9 now being offered for credit Sign up now for Fall Semester Class size limited. Beginning and advanced classes Call Michael Smith 201 •** 2*02. 4919 WANTEO PERSONS OF VARIOUS OCCUPA tlons regarding N American and Overseas opportunities, up to S2400 00 monthly. For complete information write to Job Research, Box 1253, St* A, Toronto, Ont. Enclose S3 to cover cost. 5135 COUNSELORS, OVER 20 FOR UNIque space age overnight summer camp in Penna. Able to instruct on* of the following watersafety, waterski ing, boating, athletics, golf, riflery. ham radio or arts A crafts Write Camp director. 131 Red Rambler Drive Lafayette. Pa 19444 5107 JOBS FOR STUDENTS MALE OR FEmele Sell water Ice in Center City. May Sept. No exp. nee. Apply now: Mr. Lee. Lulgi Co. PO S-M32. 50*3 SUPER CNBAP SUMMER SUBLET 7 rooms (4 bedrooms) 44th A Walnut. SI90/ month EV 7 193* after *. ^ 512* APARTMENT FOR NEXT YEARSpacious. 2 or 3. A/ C. Parking back yard. Near campus. 41 st Spruce Call soon EV 2 9236 5114 OVERSEAS JOBS FOR STUDENTS. Australia, Europe. S. America, Af rlca, etc. All professions and occupa tlons, S700 to S3.000 monthly. Ex penses paid, overtime, sightseeing. Free Information-writ* Jobs Overseas. Dept. 11. P.O. Box 15071. San Diego. CalM. WHS. 4720 WANTED: TWO ROOMMATES FOR coed apartment * bedrooms, 3 baths, kitchen. S55 per month. Furnished, utilities included EV 2 03*3 or EV 20(24. 5128 FURNISHED 4 ROOM APT.LOCAT ad 45 A Locust. Available June 1st Private entrant* 2 bedrooms. Call EV * 3708 after 5 A all day/ Sal urday A Sunday. 5113 ATTRACTIVE APARTMENT-JUNE sublet-September option -spacious kitchen with adjoining shady area, living room, bedroom, bath-quiet, safe building with students A young coup les 5 minute trolley ride or 20 minute walk to campus good landlord no hassles 4639 Baltimore -S123/ month NEGOTIABLE SA 6-3105. 5115 APARTMENT 2 BEDROOMS. KITCH— en. bath A living room. 4100 00 a month plus utilities 227 S. 45th St. Call TU 41*28 5132 FOR RENT LAROE FURNISHED Apartment 1 bedrooms A kitchen and living room. Available now. 41st and Spruce St. area. CL * 2738. 5055 SUMMER SUBLET 41st B SPRUCE. Furnished efficiency with kitchenette, bath, double bed in safe building. June 1 August 31. $85/ month. EV 74470. COED HOUSE. 4Srd A PINE NEEDS roommates for September, maybe June. Community food, own room, S*5 a month EV 2 834* 5127 SUMMER SUBLET 44th A BALTImore across from Clark Park. Ef ficiency, quiet, sunny, cheerful, fur nished. Rent negotiable. Call late evenings EV 7 2310. 50*8 CHESTNUT NEAR 43rd" TELEPHONE INTERVIEWERS: TO conduct Market Research telephone surveys. Flexible P/ T assignments immediately available, day and even Ing (Including weekends). Min. 30 hrs, per week. All work to be done from our office in West Phlla. Call Mrs. Chlvers. 74* 2000. ext. SM. 4*53 * EARN S2S-S0.II FOR FEW HRS. work. Wardrobe twice annually. 471 540* aft. 5 P.M. 594 5553 14 P.M 5023 STUDENT NEEDED FOR EVENING telephone work from our office. 6 8 hrs. a week $3/ hr call EV 6 4*90 SMI HAVE ANY PHOBIAS, OBSESSIONS, compulsion, anxiety reactions, recur rant doubts? Wa are studying these problems and need your help S3/ hr. call EV *-4*T0 5032 Completely renovated 3 bedrm. apt. Panelled livrm.. new formica top kitchen with garbage disposal. intercom, New TERRACE, wiring, modern EV2 2986 TWA VOUTH FARE CARDS (Discounts on all domestic airlines) validated IMMEDIATELY) Also FREB Get away card and travel brochures. EV 2- , 1171 whenever. 4135 SUMMER SUBLET: 4*87 BALTImore Ave. One Mock from Ronnie"*! 8 single bedrooms, dishwasher, wash er, dryer Alr-conditloned! Low rent. Call EV 7 1*39 5131 STUDENTS: FOUR WEEKS IN EXCITing London, credit, theatre, excur. sions. lectures, parties. leisure, meals, accommodations modern residence hall. Inclusive (except fare) 8470. Symposium. 714 Park Towne West. Phlla.. Pa. 19130. 490* CHEAPESTI SUMMBR SUBLET PER *q. ft. Clean, furnished 3 bedroom apt. with large living room and kitch en. 42nd St.. .deal public trans. You can't afford to mis* this Call EV 2 1051. 5124 TYPISTS TYPIST. IBM ELECTRIC TYPEwrlter, professional quality term papers, manuscripts. Theses, and Doctoral dissertations, foreign symbols. Experienced ALL Departments. References. DIANE. GR 7-0797. 4714 PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER, SPEC laiizing In Master's Thesis. Doctoral Dissertations. Manuscripts, Re search Papers. Samples of Work in Area Libraries. Flura Can in, 2792211. 2*75 GIGANTIC APT. (Almost 2.000" square feet), 4 huge bedrooms, (one 23' x 13*), Large livingroom, kitchen. Pantry, Den, 25' x 10' terrace, tile bathroom. Furniture available. $265. EV 2-2986 2 BEDROOM APT., LIVING ROOM, kitchen, bath, 44th A Pine, Available June 1st. EV 2-1135 evenings. 5101 SUMMER SUBLET; LAROE BEDroom (1 or 2 females), living room, kitchenette, bath, air conditioned "•High Rise North 470/ mo. Call or visit R m. 609 349 910*. 5097 SUMMER SUBLET/FALL OPTION-2 B.R. furnished apt. on 42nd St. Living room-large kitchen. Summer price 5135. mo. Call EV 7-2470 eve nings. 5096 LARGE MODERN 2 BEDROOM SUBlet aval able mid May S ■pt Pi rking ■V 2 available . 44th A Walnut. Call 5085 6056 Ml* PINE: YARD * PRIVATE porch; two rooms, furnished efficl ency. Available May 10 August 31. Rentnegotlebte. EV 7 3*54 5120 PRICE VERY NEOOTIABLEI SUM mar sublet with Fall option. Spacious quiet, furnished double apartment. Modern kitchen and bathroom. Call EV 7-3430. 50*6 SUMMER SUBLET -BEAUTIFUL A partment with balcony for good ten ants only. Ideal for 2 or 1 convenient location. Reasonably priced. 349 8*8*. . 5119 FURNISHED APARTMENT 3*th A Walnut. Summer sublet Fan option. Bedroom, living room, bath A kitchen EV 2-3503 or 349 4398. 5087 AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY: MODern efficiency. I and 2 bedroom apartment*. air conditioned and car peted. Call 722 2805 or EV 2 0755. SIM SUMMER SUBLET/ FALL OPTION. large efficiency apt.. 40th A Pine, rent negotiable, call Lea. EV 2 3324. after * P.M., Mon. Thurs. 5111 SUMMER SUBLET SPACIOUS 5 room furnished apt. for 3 or more. Campus area. Dirt cheap. Call EV 7 6753 after * P.M. 5089 TYPIST, IBM, PICA/ELITE. TOP quality dissertations. manuscripts and term papers In all fields. Foreign symbols. Excellent faculty references Doris GR 7 4861 4721 FEMALE ROOMMATE, 22 TO 2*. wanted for two bedroom Germantown apartment, SI3 50 mo. Utilities in eluded. Call CE 14*13. Ask for Bar bar* 5134 WANT YOUR TYPINO WORK DONE with electric typewriter. Call EV 6 7195 45*7 SUMMER SUBLET FURNISHED T bedroom, livinu. room, kitchen, bath. 40th and Spruce, rent negotiable EV 7 42*2. 5103 TYPIST-ELECTRIC EXECUTIVE, thoroughly experienced. Thesis, ra port, term paper A 1 work. Prompt, accurate, reliable. Call 'Rot' GR 73305 4*72 SUMMER SUBLET, C.C. TOWNhouse, air-conditioned, new kitchen, 2 living rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 floors w/ bathrooms, cheap, call evenings WA 5-1052. 5100 Vh baths, furniture, air cond. available. TRAVEL NEWLY DECORATED NICELY FUR nished 3 rooms and tile balh with shower bright large closets avail able now also August BA 3 6051 5094 ROLLING STONE MAGAZINE Openings for on campus reps, subscription sales, product sampling, promotional campaigns . Excellent commissions, free summer round-trip tickets to Europe for top salespeople. Write immediately: ROLLING STONE CAMPUS 78 E. 56th Street, New York, New York., 10022 PROFESSOR ON LEAVE RENTING hi* large air conditioned house near campus from mid-June 1972 August 31.1*73. Convenient faculty neighbor hood, 4604 Osage. Unique In town fen ced garden, yard. Fully furnished. Restricted to single families: No com munes. S350/ mo. GR * 7255 or 5*4 774*. S104 PALATIAL SUBLET WITH FALL Option- 2 bedrooms, sunporch, living room, dining room, kitchen -S140 Including utilities. Available May 5. Call SA 6 3032. 5059 APARTMENTS UNIOUE C.C. STUDIO APT -ENtire floor, quiet, lireplace, sundeck, overlooks 24th Street Park (furniture optional) Begin Sept. 1 EV 2 373*. GRADUATE STUOENTS PREFER red unfurnished apt. 2 bedrooms. 5 rooms available June 1 BIAS per mo 101* S. 45th St. EV 2 37*2. No pets 5091 5137 SUMMER SUBLET: JUNE-JULY. 45th A Osage. 1 room efficiency $65/ mo. BA 2 7*89 around 6 P.M 5136 SUMMER SUBLET MAY 31-AUO. 31st Modern efficiency apt. Furnished, A/ C. 41st & Spruce EV 7 3317. 5122 CLEAN AND CHEAP: HOUSE AVAILable al 40th A Ludlow, 5 bedrooms, kitchen, living room, bath, call EV 2 1357 after 5 PM Enormous place! 5112 JOBS ON SNIPS) MEN. WOMBN. Perfect summer job or career. No experience required Excellent pay Worldwide travel Send S2 00 for m formation. Seafax, Box 1239 PC. Seattle, Washington Mill, 510S SIM REWARD. FOR INFORMATION leading to renting 1 bedroom unfurn ished apartment beginning August 1st to 15th Must have large kitchen, easy access medical school, under 4700 Write details, Charles Hertz. 879 Broadway, Somerville. Mass 02144 or phone (617) 776 2008 5118 WANTED: FEMALE PING PONG players to settle dispute concerning coed ability to defeat an above aver age male player. Call EV 2 1*81. 5062 SUMMER SUBLET -EFFICIENCY with large separate kitchen. Good condition Good location. Good price. Call EV 7 3636 Keep trying 5123 4 SUMMER SUBLET 1914 SPRUCE Directly across from Co-op, 1-10 single bedrooms available, kitchen facilities, backyard, low rent! Inquire EV 7 427J. 512* SUMMER SUBLET/FALL OPTION. 45th A Pine. 1 bedroom, living room, kitchen (cooking A eating), bath, rant negotiable, call now 471-0545. 50*9 YOU Now apt.. leas* v* ALL HEARD ABOUT IT. you can live in II. 3 bedroom Chestnutl 3*th A or 12 mo EV2**5*. 5092 SEPT AVA LABLE lit -THREE room A bath 4130 Also: lour room A balh S170. 43rd Osage. 828 20*2 after SP.V 5110 . APTS FURNISHED OR UNFURNISH ed 3 rooms A bath; 6 rooms A bath Available now summer school or fall semester. Call Mr. Milner EV 6 2*50. 510* SUMMBR SUBLET: OREAT LOCAtion3»THiAWelnut/ large well furnish ed studio' modern kitchen' color TV light cool quiet/ Dick 34* 67*3/ 222 9045 510* APT. 1 for safe For 7284 AVAILABLE MAY 21 TO SEPT I or 2 people Located in large building at 41st A Spruce Sts more information call EV 2 5090 s 3 rooms & bath MO 4-4732 125 * ART MUSEUM AREA : LUXURY SUM mer sublet, Fall option. Top 2 floors of renovated cornerhousa, 3 bedrooms, large studio living room, air conditioning, washing machine, one block from Museum. S225 per month, small furniture Investment. Call CE 5 3917. 5105 SUMMER SUBLET - SPACIOUS 2 bedroom furnished apt. 46th and Spruce S125/ mo. SH 8 8275 Call » 12 P.M. 50*4 APARTMENTS ON CAMPUS Eastern States Realty Co. Apartments On Campus EV 6 0922 CENTER CITY APARTMENT TO sublet during June and July furnished and air conditioned. Call 7326*15. 5061 LARGE APARTMENT FOR RENT. Arl Museum area. 2 bedrooms, living room, kitchen, bath. Unrestricted parking. 8185/ mo. Furniture Invest, ment. Call CE 5 7048 any time after 4:00 P.M. 5071 SUMMER SUBLET FURNISHED. 4300 Spruce, three bedrooms, kitchen, living room, bath 4th floor Rent very negotiable. Marc EV 2 0144. Ruth 594 5437. 5069 COMMODIOUS 4 BDRM SUMMER sublet, large llv. rm,, kitch., 11/2 bath, quiet neighborhood, 349 8*58. 5068 EFFICIENCIES TO THREE BED rooms, furnished, available now or May, June, July. 39th to 42nd St. 480 00 to 4346.00 BA 2*447. MO 4 3213. 4797 TOWNHOUSE l*th A PINE, « BED rooms, living room, dining room. kitchen, 3 baths June or Sept. BA 2 4908 6354 or EV2 1300 SPACIOUS FURNISHED: 1 BED room, living room, kitchen, bath, ex cellent security. Near conveniences. Ideal for two, Si25 , 4404 Chestnut. EV 2 8*92. evenings. 4969 SPRUCE HILL COURT APTS. 39th A Spruce modern, spacious 2 A 3 bed room apts. Avail. June or Sept. S165 00 per month. Suitable lor 3 or 4 students BA 2 6254 or EV 2 1300 4909 1*50 PINE: IDEAL LAROE ONE 5074 APARTMENTS NOW AVAILABLE June 1 Sept. I. Pine Street Place. 4511 thru 4517 Pine Street. One and two bedroom apt*, modern kit. A bath, air conditioned. From 4135 00 Call Stolker A Company, Kl 5 6506. 5013 SUMMER SUBLET: AIR-CONDI tionad Townhouse 3 stories, 2 bedrooms. 5 minute walk to campus. Free lighted parking 5180/ mo. Call Robert or Jack 5*4 5433. 5049 SUNNY APT. FOR SUMMER SUBlet. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room, kitchen. Waterbedcall EV 7 0348. 5077 SUMMER SUBLET. FALL OPTION. 45th A Spruce. Spacious, convenient, luxuriously furnished apartment featuring: 2 bedrooms; living; dining; large, modern kitchen; backyard. Rent: 8175/ mo. Call: EV 2 8551. evenings. 50*5 SUMMER SUBLET. JUNE-AUGUST 43rd A Locust, 2 room "studio," air cond.. new furniture, parking, building has security, 8125/ mo. EV 2 9323. 5*3* SUMMER SUBLET: I PERSON NEED ed to share furnished 3 bedroom a partment near campus. Call Tom: EV 7 1878. 5054 SUBLET LARGE 3 BEDROOM Apartment June to December or long er. 4219 Pine SI. EV 7 4105. 5053 SUMMER SUBLET: 48th A WALNUT closest to Clyde's. Jusl Ice Cream. Palatial 3 bedroom apartment. Sale. rent negotiable. Call EV 2 8572. 5084 bedroom apt. New bathroom. Lease lor one year only. Extremely reason able. Grad. students only. EV 2 5844 ANNUAL ACTIVITIES SCHEDULING MEETING: Wed.. 3 PM.. Houston Hall. Franklin Room. A representative from each organization is urged to attend. ARMENIAN CLUB: Meeting. Tues.. 11 A.M. sharp. Room 7, Houston Hall. Picnic. CONNAISSANCE: Meeting for old and new members. Thurs.. 7 P.M. in McClelland Hall (Quad) to discuss next year's speakers. Important. HISTORY 574: Today we are showing East European Cinema (Polanski, cartoons, etc.) In F.A. B l at 4 P.M. OUTING CLUB MEETING: 7 P.M.. tonight. Houston Hall. Important meeting for election of officers. All please attend. Also nosslble trips to Cornell weekend and climbing at Seneca. PUNCHBOWL: There will be an Im portant meeting tonight to make plans for the fall issue. 8 P.M.. Irvine offices. SPHINX AND KEY: All new and old members please attend a dessert party. Sun.. April 30. 8 P.M.. 10th fl lounge ., High Rise South. Old members bring dues and cookies, cakes, etc. STAGE BAND: 7 P.M.. Tues. at Houston Hall, Ivy Room. SPRING IS HERE I Women's lacrosse arrived with it. All are welcome. Mon Thurs., 4 6 P.M., Hill Hall field. 6 & 7 rooms, hall. 2 baths l200 SUMMER SUBLET -4 BEDROOMS.3 bath rooms, kitchen 8. living room. completely furnished. Cheap. EV 2 4985 6938 RE AVAILABLE: DUPLEX APT., furnished or unfurnished. 2 large bedrooms, living room, kitchen, back yard. 8135/ mo. Optional parachute lor far out decor. EV 7 3015 5073 ACTIVITIES 5121 SUMMER SUBLET: 40th A SPRUCE. furnished, carpeted, paneled walls. 2 bedrooms, living room, bath, kitchen ette. Call Keith 382 9*60 or Dean 3(2 09*2/594 6581. 5070 BEAUTIFUL LAROE FURNISHED modern 3 bedroom home with recrea tlon room, garage. Available June 1*72. Rent S190/ month Mr. August, TR « 7*43 5060 GSAC MEETINGS: All grad students and club representatives are invited to attend every Tues., at 11 A.M. in the Franklin Room. 2nd fl., Houston Hall. HIGH SCHOOL RECRUITING: Meeting lor all those Interested in doing high school recruiting over the summer vacation, today, 7:30 P.M., DRL A 1. THE JEWISH FREE UNIV.: Presents a lecture by Rabbi Yochanan Muffs of the Jewish Theological Seminary, entitled "The Biblical Covenant. Compact of Man and God " Wed , 2nd fl., Houston Hall. 4 P.M. PENN PLAYERS: "The Glass Menagerie" by Tennessee Williams will be presented April 26 30 at 8 P.M. in Houston Hall Aud., free. PHILOMATHEAN ART GALLERY: Exhibit ol graphics by grad students in fine arts at Penn. Mon. Fri.. 126 P.M. College Hall. 4th fl. Exhibit runs until May 15. SALLAH: An Israeli comedy. In ternational House, Hopkln'pn Rm. Today, 7 and »:30 P.M STUDENT CONSUMERS BOARD: Open 24 hours. Call EV 7 2394. WOMEN'S LIBERATION OFFICE: Now open in C A , Room 13 PROBLEM PREGNANCY: Call Jim or Barbara, EV 6 0774 at the C.A. TALKING POINT: Sun Thurs , 8 11 P.M. at Van Pelt. Houston, McClelland or call 839 3437 day or night. SUMMER SUBLET 44th A OSAGE Ave Efficiency, very modern, tile balh lurnished. Available May IS. Rent 885 00 mo Call EV 2 9278 5010 SUMMER SUBLET, 41st A SPRUCE, kitchenette, separate bathroom, fur nished. tan, perfect for one person, 890. Call EV 2 9041, keep trying. 5018 SUMMER SUBLET Jfth A BALTImore Furnished 5 bedrooms, kitch en. dining A living room. S300 Call soon EV 7 5309 5027 REMODELED. LOVELY ONE BED room apis., living rm., kitchen, tile bath, new wall to wall carpeting, in dividual thermostat controls BA 2 3068 or GR 4 7396 5037 SPACIOUS, NEWLY PAINTED, tly furnished apartment In PennDrexel Area. Three bedrooms, en, Iwo living rooms (one with ing fireplace), bathroom, front Call EV 6 3278. PAR kitchwork porch. 5052 BEAUTIFULLY FURNISHED 4room Center-City rowhous*. Available for SUB let May 1 Aug. 15. Safe neighborhood. convenient, tennis courts A swimming pool within two blocks, air conditioner. 8155/ month. Call 985 9577. 5051 FURNISHED SUMMER SUBLET 4lst Spruce, 2 or 3 peoples bed rooms, living room, kitchen, bath, safe, quiet-rent negotiable. Call EV 7 3437 4843 CAMPUS APARTMENTS 4043 Walnut Street BA-2-6254 EV 2 1300 JUNE or SEPTEMBER RENTALS FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED Open Sunday from 10:00 to 2:00 We Have The Largest Selection Ot Apartments & Townhouses To Choose From located in the area of 39th Sprue* 39th Pine & 39th Baltimore. Houses range from 5 bedrooms to 12 bedrooms. 1000 APARTMENTS TO CHOOSE FROM located in the area of 39th & Pine. 40th & Spruce. Apartments range from 1 room efficiency to 5 badrooms. 2 baths. [\ews In Brief Communists Break S. Viet Lines By United Press International positions ciose to the perimeter. Two U.S. advisers and 28 government troops were wounded and one Saigon soldier killed in the shelling, field reports said. down off the North Vietnamese port of Dong Hoi, 37 miles north of the demilitarized zone (DMZ) separating the two countries, and that the two crewmen were rescued by helicopters after they bailed out over the South China Sea. North Vietnam claimed two U.S. jets shot down Sunday. The most serious ground fighting was reported in the central highlands were supply roads to the adjoining bases of Tan Canh and Dak To, 280 miles north of Saigon, were cut. Tan Canh was hit with both longrange 122 MM rockets and short-range 57 MM recoilles rifle fire and officers in the area said it appeared the Communists were digging siege SAIGON-- North Vietnamese tanks and Infantrymen breeched South Vietnam's lorthernmost defense lines along the Cua Viet River Sunday and closed In on two key central highlands bases where military officers were bracing for a possible Communist siege. In the air war, U.S. B52s and smaller tactical jet-bombers blasted Communist positions in the highlands and around the embattled provincial capital of An Loc, 60 miles North of Saigon, where fierce fighting continued into its 17th day. The U.S. Command said one U.S. Air Force F4 phantom jet was shot Apollo J6 Astronauts Blast Off For Karth SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON -• Apollo 16 astronauts John W. Young and Charles M. Duke Jr. blasted off from the moon Sunday night, ending a record-breaking stay that may force scientists to rewrite their theories about the origins of the lunar highlands. While a camera mounted on their trusty lunar rover televised the event to Earth, the landing craft Orion, its ascent engine generating 3,500 pounds of thrust, hurled Young and Duke into lunar orbit after nearly three days among the Descartes Mountains. Scheduled about two hours later was rendezvous and docking with the command ship Casper, piloted by Thomas K. "Ken" Mattingly II, who had been taking photographs and mapping the surface from a little more than 60 miles altitude. Before they finished, the two explorers had peered into the deepest lunar crater ever seen, found the strongest magnetic field ever measured on the moon and sampled soli shielded from the sun's rays since antiquity. 27Wi Ward Reform Democrats •ndorwd by ADA. ft Ntw Dtmocntic Coalition PRIMARY ELECTION, POLLS OPEN TUESDAY, APRIL 25,1972 7 *•*•"* **] tff K WHSWOIW ii oia wiun ■ » HMTMUUIt UMHK BUM — 3^5; % f II1.1m TIN -it ■■HMtl am ■in » I»I Democratic Democratic Column A wit i D ■Ml t nttawu IMMII n tHMilNcMVBM L Delegates to Democratic Column B 16IOIW s President of the United States i. McGOVERN Ik* '•—•" CNMUH1 MUM (llllWllH K tMNtiHttenM L National Convention IMMH I tHMilMcMnM (Vol. tot T»f..l Alternate Delegates to Democratic National Convention 15 IIKHVKmiK NT* WMl K SUHClMcWnM L IRVIM Member of the Democratic 27 State Committee irci afea «v«i BELFAST, NORTHERN IRELAND - Heavily-armed Irish Republican Army (IRA) members, anticipating a major drive by British troops, turned Roman Catholic areas of Londonderry into an armed camp Sunday, throwing up concrete barricades, sandbag observation posts and guarded checkpoints. "The decision has been taken (to try to oust the IRA from its sanctuary). Only the pretext Is awaited. It will come very soon," an IRA spokesman said. William Whitelaw, Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, denied it. "There has been too much loose talk about commiting troops and solving problems militarily," he said. D lilt! M FIIIHU Cmailii KT7I WNWHtrtOTW [X] 16 IRA Blocks Off Londonderry ,1 mm i uuntiw DGKTM DUTtPCT D l ibmm* 1 Democratic Column A Ward Exocativo Committee rVot.to.T-o' ■»■!■■"■ I l« C^olA »*««<• atft1>»*o" &^|il"""" JHt«rC t ta.o»«o» Moll OD.ll ai*D«*~« HK«XJ la«t uavt QUWmm TOWNHOUSE at 39th & Dolancey finest accomodations in West Philly. Central air, dishwasher, washer & dryer, private parking, etc. Fully furnished . Four bedrooms. $300. per month plus utilities. Security required. EV 2-8688, M..,*"* 0« STOUFFER TRIANGLE HIGHLIGHTS OF THIS WEEK'S MENU EFFECTIVE AS OF APRIL 2l, 1972 Monday Dinner 90* Braised Short Ribs (8 oz.) Baked Meat Loaf Baked Perch Tuesday 65* Lunch Hot Meat Loaf Sandwich Southern Fr i ed Ch i cken Baked Lasagna 60* 95* 65* Dinner Roast Turkey w/ Dress ing Sweet & Sour Pork over Rice Cubed Beef Si eak in Swiss Sauce Wednesday payment of income taxes by such large corporations as United States and Bethlehem Steel. Muskie has more emphasis on Vietnam than any of the other candidates. Tuesday night he not only branded the bombing of Hanoi and Haiphong "an outrage," but also reversed his three month refusal to comment on military aid to Saigon following American withdrawal, declaring he would have it "cut off if Saigon is not making substantial progress toward peace." Despite this new-found anger, the New York Times Sunday reported that Muskie appears "stoical" and "resigned to whatever fate might have in store for him." Thus, despite claims by Muskie's Pennsylvania press secretary Tony May that "we couldn't be broken even if Humphrey wins...we've already sustained two greater losses," aides said Sunday that Muskie had cancelled a last minute trip to Massachusetts because he had decided to peg all of his eleventh hour hopes on Pennsylvania. Black Students League Plans Solidarity Week Imamu Amiri Baraks (LeRoi Jones) will speak at the University this week aa part of a program sponsored by the Black Student League. The week-long program, "Transition Toward Solidarity '72" is designed to Increase both cultural awareness and a sense of unity among black students here. The Black Student League is Inviting students at area high schools, colleges and universities to participate In the week's activities. The following programs are planned: ■ -Monday, April 24: Poetry by Larry Neal; "The Vanguard Poets" "Lea Danseurs Nolrs," University Museum Auditorium,33rd and Spruce; - • Tuesday, April 25: "The Courts and Prisons vs. Blacks," a discussion featuring Franklin Alexander, National Committee to Free Angela Davis; Father Paul Washington, Church of the Advocate; Irvine Auditorium, 11 A.M. At 8 P.M., Imamu Amiri Baraka will speak In the Fine Arts Auditorium. Admission la SOt; - - Wednesday, April 26: The Spirit House Movers Theater Company, Fine Arts Auditorium, 8 P.M., admission $1.00 --Thursday, April 27: Talent Show, 7:30 P.M., University Museum Auditorium, Admission - 25*. "To Be Young, Gifted and Black," show and dinner, 3914 Locust Walk, Lounge, admission 25*; • •Saturday,April29: -Dancewith music by the Parkway North, 1920 Commons, tickets • $2.00; • •The Penn Relay* will also be held Friday and Saturday at Franklin Field. In addition, three receptions will be held at the House of the Family on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday between 5 P.M. and 7 P.M. Rich in courtly tin and irreiiitible rbyibmi, the dance muiic of England'i Renaissance period is among tbi moil appealing lagaa.-i of lb* eta. Recently, with the television and motion picture exploration! of the tiiei of Henry VIII and Elizabeth I, American audiencei have come to ibaee England's enthunaim for thii music. In fact, listeners may be interested to note that The Early Muiic Contort of London made in U.S. televiiion debut with ibe showing of the highly acclaimed BBC production, 'The Six Wivei of Henry VIII'.' Festive dance music by Susato and Morley PLEASURES OF THE COURT The Early Music Consort of London & The Morley Consort directed by David Munrow THE BECKER CPA REVIEW COURSE Dinner PHILADELPHIA PITTSBURGH 85* 85* 65* Roast Beef au jus Baked Pork Chops Surf Cakes (Continued from page I) McGovern is leading Muskie there by more than 2-1. Humphrey, however, is not without his own problems: many see his loser's image reflected not only in his 1968 defeat but also by the fact that he has never won a presidential primary. All in all, both the race for delegates and popularity poll have emerged as classic battles between Muskie's "machine" support from Gov. Shapp, Philadelphia City Chairman Peter Camiel, and county leaders, and Humphrey's extensive union backers, among them leaders from the AFLCIO and the United Steel Worker's unions, former Philadelphia mayor James Tate and former Pennsylvania Gov. George Leader. For Muskie it has gotten to the point where Gov. Shapp, who just three weeks ago was viewed as having an ancillary role, has taken over all Muskie's fund-raising responsibilities and has made crucial decisions on scheduling, advertising, and promotion. Though the strength of the state organization, especially in Pittsburgh and non-urban areas, is questionablemany county chairman reportedly think Shapp's endorsement will hurt Muskie-the Maine senator is counting on Camiel's 66 ward leaders and 3,500 committeemen to send him out of Philadelphia with a great enough margin to win. Though Camiel insists he is working hard for a Muskie victory, activity this week at the Walnut Street and Broad Street headquarters seemed slight. Humphrey, on the other hand, is relying on labor loyalties which "go all the way back to 1948, not just 1968," as one Muskie man acknowledged. Another great boost for Humphrey could be the use of "sample ballots" which, due to the district by district delegate election format, have rendered television practically useless outside of the popularity poll. Labor groups backing the Minnesota Senator have printed up 2.6 million of the ballots to help voters in each of the SO districts identify which delegates on the complex ballot are pledged to the candidate. Due to money problems the Muskie organization will be able to distribute only 500 thousand such ballots. In general however, voter apathy has characterized the campaign. Both in Philadelphia and throughout the state less than a 45 per cent turnout is expected. In particular, blacks and students have not supported Humphrey and McGovern to the degree expected by many. The black-oriented Philadelphia Tribune reported Saturday that though the black vote is being conceded to Humphrey, "there is a noticeable lack of enthusiasm." And although McGovern's Philadelphia headquarters has bustled all week with enthusiastic young stamp-lickers, one of their coordinators admitted "the response from students has been less than we expected." The candidates' large overlap on many of the major issues could be one reason for the apathy. For instance, many observers see the campaign's rhetoric as distinctly populist in character, as all the candidates seek to capitalize on the sense of frustration which McGovern and Wallace originally brought to the fore. Tax reform has been especially promoted by Muskie, Humphrey and McGovern. They point to non- Letuirwlpyov: PLAN AHEAD To Become a CPA 50* 55* 65* Hamburger Barbeque on Bun Western Omelet Chicken Croquet tes Pennsylvania Primary to Be Held Tuesday ACCOUNTING AND FINANCE MAJORS 85* 75* 70* Lunch , Page 5 The Dally Pennsylvania!! Monday, April 24, 1972 21&73&3520 4124714333 1/5 OF USA Thursday Lunch Beef Hash Pat t ie Italian Spaghetti w/ Meat Sauce Deep Sea Dandy on Hot Dog Bun 60* 65* 50* Dinner Chicken Tet razz in i Veal Parmegian Gr 11 iert Sal i sbury Steak Friday 75* 70* 65* Lunch Beef Stew m Casserole Hot Turkey Sandwich w/ Cranberry Sauce Baker! Macaron i & Cheese TIRED OF THE SAME OLD FACES? Unlimited Veal Purchase Price* Breakfast I 1.25 l.unrh $1.75 Dinner $ 2.SO 75* 65c 50* NEW ONES TO CAMPUS. Dinner Flank Steak Stuffed Green Peppers Fr ien Filet of Sole HELP BRING SOME 95* 60* 60* STOUFFER TRIANGLE DINING HOURS: Monday - Friday Contract and Unlimited Purchase Dining Room ■ Formal Dining Room (Second Floor) Breakfast Lunch Dinner 7:10 am to 10:00 am 11:30 am to 1:10 pm 5:00 pm to 7-00 pm 4 la carte Dining Room ■ Rustic Dining Room 'First Floor) Breakfast Lunch Dinner Monday ■ hrida\ 7:10 am to 10:00 am 11:10 am tn 1:10 pm 5:00 pm In 7-OII pm HIGH SCHOOL RECRUITING MEETING TONIGHT 7:30 P.M. DRL A - 1 Oarsmen Reign Over Weekend's Opposition ■» *W1" SwTWWll The old cliche reads totowissaagkyetosaasaVation is like kissing your sister The Penn H+wtwsigto; mm Sent tos» *4> innsrtenced the unwelcome sensation when the Ceiaaakat tffs ware esawsswAed after an apparent victory Saturday on the 'ibnjw.nl TsanaMs) ihtwj — toe only ■near on the Quaker ledger as they otherwiae dasaty avast aS (ear races and Ike Dodge Cup from Ivy rivals Columbia aad Yale "We're treating toMtortateakwalrsawwion paper only." lightweight mentor Fred 1lamiliwl—j "Wl If we rowed like this against anyone else, we The Baby Bh la have earned a three-quarter length victory befare race Sack made the disqualification. "They rowed oat ef tosv Mansion Bridge and interf ered with the Yale dad,'' "The Yale cox yelled over to Columbia to row is ana from the coaches' launch." Before the race, «■ shown the course. Because of the slight turn on the i; the cox must pass directly under the lane markers continued rowing out of lane after an official "If I had been the rename, f disqualified them," Leonard stated. TheYakceadk.JkaJey.aaato s launch, however, and from his point of view, the referee ■*•*• "It's hard to say haw sauto tow* by catting the turn," sophomore oarsman Del Brown oeanaaaton "Inwafewwy* have beaten us even if they didn't cut. They rawed a hnanrnwfMawenM." Ts worst performance. The oarnmen agrani tel tttowM, be far, toe Behind from the Mart, ton at MO meters; the stroke jumped to a 17 34. Because the abnormally high stroke, the Quakers teat the margin "We looked lousy, "It's the sort of race you would like to forget" "We should have been up by "We had no eight to 10 seconds We The Perm JV tanned Yaie. The Perm A and B crew beat Columbia in the frank tears The freshman race preekfai asset castor rawer. In war maps. Columbia's shell beached and ripped s IStostksfcMate hsl. fear oarsmen were rescued by the officials' boat; otherwtoe. toe ausSsasto; knee kttoed the old mattresses and beer cans on the hurt— «f toe ffcir. Although the entire aregrnm was Istoj i< by more than two hours while the Baby Blue outfitted anetoar assf, Sto tewed la deter Pete Mallory's frosh from earning a nne Isngfr vtotery.eawtegan stosrawi fall afternoon. __^^«ns«j«w. DP PHOTO STAFF FRED LEONARD 'H'sawta en nance ealy' By Bv GLENN UNTERBERGER With so many plans for camping out in Central Park or by the Schuylkill gone awry because of those April showers, more than a few groups had to chalk up this past weekend as a lost one. But there was one contingent for whom losing was out of the question, that being Ted Nash's varsity heavyweight crew, which found the wind stiffer than the competition in rowing to an easy set of triumphs over Princeton and Columbia eights at the Tigers' Lake Carnegie Saturday. The 2.7 second margin of victory for the Quaker first-boat oarsmen over the runner-up Bengals gave the Red and Blue possession of the Childs Cup for the eighth consecutive year and allowed Nash to walk away from his first 1972 race smiling. "Naturally we're pleased with the victory," the third-year mentor offered. "The Childs Cup is rowing's oldest trophy (having been up for grabs over each of the past ISO or so years), really heavy and ornate. You ought to come down to Weightman Hall and see it." As impressive as the cup may appear to visiting alumni, Nash assuredly was more satisfied with the victory than with the spoils. The Tigers (2-2) are a crew known for their fast starts, but after only 30 strokes the Quakers were ahead by a half-length while the winless Lion eight was in good position to get back to the starting line in case of a false start. The Red and Blue oarsmen hiked their advantage to a full length by 1000 meters and by 1300 meters had some open water between themselves and their challengers. Making their move with 500 meters to go, Princeton closed to within three quarters of a length, but the Red and Blue (under orders from Nash not to sprint unless behind) still finished with a 6:21.1 clocking ahead of their hosts' 6:23.8. In light of a relaxed finish and a strong head wind, Nash was not surprised that the times were not the greatest. But at least, he decided, "The race was educational because it showed us both t strengths and weaknesses." Apparently the coach is not ruling out possibilities for improvement, as he informed, "We plan to do a lot of shifting around early in the season to determine exactly what our strengths are. It's quite possible that three seats will change for the Blackwell Cup Regatta next Saturday." If so, Nash will have to break up a winning combination which performed even more impressively than the varsity. Penn's second varsity eight thrashed Princeton's by an overwhelming 15 second margin (Columbia's struggling second eight was relegated to third-string status, where Penn also won). It was a psychological victory for the JV'ers as well, since Navy, generally conceded to have the country's best second boat, defeated the Tigers by the same margin. The only real excitement of the day was provided by Jack Barclay's frosh heavies, who trailed Princeton for all but the first and final five strokes of their season's debut, winning by an estimated two feet (one-tenth of a second). Only a Bengal win in the freshman fours heat prevented the Quakers from making the day a total washout for their rivals. Trackmen Enjoy Big Time in Big Apple •Her through 18 lean years, it may yet join the above trio in divine ByRICKrUBLOMC Of the DP Sports U*f1 NEW YORK Relays have much luck as toe bird, and Sam toe Pharoahs on their although it has bad : the burdens this meet has lacks of money, fans, [ (always over-shadowed by big fa the South, Penn Relays), and chaotic administration. Last year, all the entry blanks were placed ■a an incinerator by a Janitor who was perhaps trying to tell us something. This year the bogey man was rain, it didn't put a damper on the of Jim Tupoeny's Quaker track team, which rolled up 65 1/1 pstots to destroy the opposition by 46 1/2 points. The Quakers had been hoping to •to toe meet as a tuneup for this week's Pern Relays, but the cold, plus • track submerged under several i ef water, prevented any out! tones. Nonetheless, the Quakers had • m trouble defending their title and, winning six gold established themselves as one of toe legitimate contenders for at least one of the championship erewns this weekend Three Red and Blue relays sloshed their way to titles. Peter Christ I4.U.1), Julio Piazza (4:13.7-the fastest mile split of the day), Karl Tkernton (4:1M), and Denis Fikes 4-17.2) pasted their way to a fiveI win over a suprisingly strong juuoruzz* Cornell team in toe four-mile event. Bruce Collins was among the wettest of the Quakers; he won the 44* intermediate hurdles (54.5) and came back later to anchor the shuttle burtfle relay (Joe Abitante, Don Clune, Larry Lewis) to a 10-yard win over St. John's. Bernie Gansle, BUI Wilson, Fred Samara, and Adoiph Dctteiane successfully defended the team's 44f crown (43.1). In addition to Collins, two other sophs won titles: Sherman Couser in the long Jump (22-8 1/2) and Mike Sperger in the high jump (6-8). Tuppeny showed no mercy toward his Eastern rivals as he put four other scoring relays on Randall's Island's "aD-weatber track" (although after Ibe way It "drained" the weekend's ram. It might be more accurately described as "fair weather"). The two mile, 880, and distance medley foursomes each came in from the cold with a set of silver medals, while the third-place mile relay was only 0.7 seconds behind Manhattan, winner after Adelphi withdrew. Rounding out the Quakers' point total were Javelin thrower Fred DePalma (third at 195-7), shot putter Ed MarkowsU (52-3 and fourth), fifth place high Jumper Ken Buddington (62), and Willie Clark and Len Stachitas (third and fourth, respectively in the long Jump). Laxmen Eat Lions; Solow Scores Four By TED METZGER The Quakers may be no match far Penn State in football but ace punt returner and defensive back Steve Solow showed his superiority over-the Nittany lions lacrosse team <l-4i Saturday when he scored bar goals in leading Penn (3-3) to a 1M victory at University Park. Rainy weather cut heavily into toe crowd but the spectators that braved the intermittent drizzle saw a contest that ranged from artistic to absurd. "It was a good win and it came at a crucial time," cited Penn mentor Jim Adams. "It wasn't what yon would call an artistic win, but toe sloppy ground threw things off." The wet turf sent the Red and Blue into a tailspin at the game's < when State scored the first three goals. The Lions were able to win the face-offs in the beginning of the stanza and they controlled the ball well. Jim Trenz, sophomore standout for Penn State, scored three times, being aided by the mud which made footing slippery for Penn defenders. The Quakers rallied, though, and scoring on shots by Jon Bock, Solow and Jamie Greene came within one of the Lions with a minute left in the period. Then the explosions occurred. Sophomore midfielder Johnny Sheffield tallied, followed 23 seconds later by Fred Eisenbrandt. Solow capped the quarter with his second goal with two seconds remaining on the clock. The Red and Blue never relinquished the lead though Penn State got within one at the beginning of the second quarter. Solow then notched his third goal and co-captain Joe Robinson got on the board to give the Quakers an 8-5 lead at the half. "Steve played a very good game for us overall," continued the victorious Quaker coach. "His attack was fantastic. He played alertly and was very good on ground balls. His play really perked up the team." The second half was no better for the Nittany Lions as Penn ran the score up to 11-5 before State scored again. Eisenbrandt, playing one of his best games, scored his second goal. The hungry Solow notched his fourth and Bock added his second. In the fourth period junior Steve Cohen completed the Penn scoring when he popped a shot past a befuddled Lion goalie. "We were very aggressive Saturday, " concluded Adams. "I think the team was a little mad at itself for last week's losses and wanted this one badly." Penn State may find some solace in the Fall where they are still terrors on the gridiron. Comedy of Errors,Big Inning Enable Nine to Crush Cadets By JOEL mun the fifth frame saw the two teams escfcange runs. Penn scored on Gary Ozga's drive to center field which rafted through the slot in the fence at Ae 410 foot sign and was ruled a ground rule double, but was enough to score Ken Mulvaney from second On a Friday when toe i was striking ag demonstrating on CeMej* IteS area* and having a Pray-to at far tirsry 3.1-1 in EIBL action) | in the festivities by i 12-6. In the top of the eighth inning the Cede* ■% put the pressure on by putting two more runs on the scoreboard. Wfto the score 6-3, Bob Seddon's only had two more chances at plate to take the lead, and even record in league play. The bottom of the eighth inning proved to be Army's Waterloo. The tap of the Red and Blue's batting order was up and triggered a nine run that could be heard by the back at West Point. With the loaded, Laurits (who had given up Ms pitching duties in the fifth and The scoring was eases the first seven inning* ef s gasat was riddled with 'itCt tallied eight mishaps botched three). Wen run in the second Quakers struck back managing two raw handed to them on fear error. In the fourth retaliated, adding ton toitofatoj on two Quaker errors sesahfeto right by West Pout Etheridge. M = win win win win WM win win win win win winw win now occupied center field) blasted a triple over the Cadet centerfielder's head to knot the score. Malvaney executed the suicide squeeze play, allowing Laurits to score, and was safe on first because of an Army error. When the smoke cleared, tore* hits and as many errors later, the Quakers had batted around to Laurits and were leading 12-6. The Cornell contests never materialized and for the third weekend in a row the Red and Blue batsmen had their double header rained out. If any of the teams in the rainouts are in contention for toe League crown, the contests will be made up following exams. Today, the Quakers travel to Otney to face a senior-dominated La&nOe squad. Junior Gary Shoe will be on the mound for Perm in toe 3:30 P.M. matchup. DWIGHT PAGANC LION TAMER - Middle Steve Solow (23) releases a shot on coal la action earlier this season. Solow scored four goals in leading Peasi to a 12-9 victory over Penn State at University Park Saturday. The win evened the Quakers' record at 3-3 and snapped a two game losing streak. 53BBSZ Congratulations To The Class Of 1972 Moke Your Parents' Reservations Early WIN! * * * * * A Portable Radio Just FIJI Out A Coupon At Tw Old* SwMt Shoppe Houffon Hall Basement win win win win MM WM MM WM I'ENNESEE WILLIAMS2 < I * * * * * * .ill: 1800 Market Street. 1 Mile From Campos, Free Parking, ColorT.V. Fine Cuisine • 3 Restaurants. For Reservations Call - 561-7500. GLASS MENAGERIE I presented by Penn Players WED. SUN. APRIL 26 - 30 Learn HYPNOSIS Houston Hall Auditorium 3 May '50 (Student Rate) 8:00 P.M Admission Free Pennsylvania Hypnosis Institute * win win win win win win win su«8io S2S2S2S SHZS S2SSSSB2S58 BSS55S
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