The Daily

The
Daily
BEAT HARVARD
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1967
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA
VOL. LXXXIII
***
jr
Homecoming
Harvard roster
Pennsylvania roster
10 Lalich, qb
1 1 Tyson, s
12 Berg, qb
14 Cobb. cb
1 5 Kundrat, cb
16 Hornblower, hb
17 Stargel, hb
18 Ananis, cb
20 Goldberg, hb.
21 Smith, hb
23 Thomas, s
24
25
26
30
31
Donnelly, cb
Ballantyne, hb
Zimmerman, qb
Crim, fb
McKinney, k
55 Collins, c
56 Teske, c
57 Piotrowski, mg
60 Skowronski, g
61 Jones, g
62 Bersin, g
63 Czulewicz, g
64 Chiofaro, lb
66 Marine, lb
67 Jannino, g
69 Greenridge, mg
70
71
72
73
10 Creeden, qb
57 Fryreor, g
1 1 Barudin, qb
58 Walker, t
1 2 Zbrzeznj, qb
14 Wisniewski, se
59 Anderson, og
60 Pokorny, g
20 Brown, db
21 Brian Regan, wb
22 Monahan, tb
61 White, dt
62 Matesic, t
23 Tremba, db
24 Sudhaus, tb
64 Scovanner, dt
65 Mortensen, g
25 Lawlor, db
66 McGraw, og
67 DeSantis, lb
26 Dunn, wb
27 Small, db
Dowd, t
Berne, t
Burns, t
Brooks, t
63 Warner, lb
28 Zych, db
30 Santini, fb
68 Kelly, lb
70 Shaffer, dt
71 Keyser, t
31 Henderson, fb-k
72 Artinian, t
33 Strandemo, fb
35 Emery, lb
74 Wilson, t
75 Hughes, t
76 deBettencourt, t
33 Moretto, db
40 Friedl, db
74 Pfeilmeier, lb
75 Hamlin, ot
36 Georges, fb
40 Gatte, hb
41 Hurley, s
77 Kaplan, t
78 Panoff, t
80 Reed, e
41 Ostrowski, db
42 Burrell, wb
43 Knowlton, tb
76 Armao, g
77 Lambertson, ot
78 Dan Regan, ot
42 Ignacie, cb
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
44 Owens, se
79 Ketchey, de
45 Carey, lb
46 McFillin, fb •
80 Blake, te
81 Peterson, de
47 Eisenhour, db
82 Blumenthai, se
48 Gifford, lb
83 Chwastyk, de
50 Joseph, c "
84 Graham, te
85 Martinowich, de
86 Cameron, de
43
44
45
47
50
51
52
53
54
Sodaslci, s
Will iamson, s
Wynne, s
Saba, k
Weiss, c
Zawilla, lb
Zebal, t
MacLean, ing
Machin, lb
Timpson, e
Lord, e
Cook, e
Hoffman, e
Sounders., e
Strayhorn, e
Cramer, e
Hall, e
Ranere, e
51 Deal, lb
52 Hammond, g
91 Gloyd, e
53 Pottruck, lb
87 Linehan, de
54 Bobita, ot
55 Poleski, lb
88 Pinney, oe
89 Eichman, de
56 Koval, c
Harvard Results: Won 4, Lost 1 (2 -1 in Ivy League)
Pennsylvania Results Won 2, Lost 3 (1-2 in Ivy League)
Pennsylvania 35
Pennsylvania 28
Pennsylvania
0
Pennsylvania 27
Pennsylvania 14
Lehigh
Brown
Dartmouth
Buc knell
Princeton
23
7
23
28
28
Harvard
Harvard
Harvard
Harvard
Harvard
51
29
49
14
21
Lafayette
Boston University
Columbia
Cornell
Dartmouth
0
14
13
12
23
NO. 68
The
Daily
BEAT HARVARD
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1967
PHILADELPHIA. PENNSYLVANIA
VOL. LXXXIII
■i
Homecoming
Harvard roster
Pennsylvania roster
10 Lalich, qb
1 1 Tyson, s
1 2 Berg, qb
14 Cobb, cb
1 5 Kundrat, cb
16 Hornblower, hb
17 Stargel, hb
1 8 Ananis, cb
20 Goldberg, hb>
21 Smith, hb
23 Thomas, s
24 Donnelly, cb
25 Bal lantyne, hb
26 Zimmerman, qb
30 Crim. fb
31 McKinney, k
33 Strandemo, fb
35 Emery, lb
36 Georges, fb
40 Gatte, hb
41 Hurley, s
42 Ignacie, cb
43 Sodaski, s
44 Williamson, s
45 Wynne, s
47 Saba, k
50 Weiss, c
51 Zawilla, lb
52 Zebal, t
53 MacLean, mg
54 Machin. lb
55
56
57
60
61
62
63
64
66
67
69
Collins, c
Teske, c
Piotrowski, mg
Skowronski, g
Jones, g
Bersin, g
Czulewicz, g
Chiofaro, lb
Marine, lb
Jannino, g
Greenridge, mg
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
80
81
82
Dowd, t
Berne, t
Burns, t
Brooks, t
Wilson, t
Hughes, t
deBettencourt, t
Kaplan, t
Panoff, t
Reed, e
Timpson, e
Lord, e
1 0 Creeden, qb
1 1 Barudin, qb
1 2 Zbrzeznj, qb
1 4 Wjsniewski, se
20 Brown, db
21 Brian Regan, wb
22 Monahan, tb
23 Tremba, db
24 Sudhaus, tb
25 Lawlor, db
26 Dunn, wb
27 Small, db
28 Zych, db
30 Santini, fb
31 Henderson, fb-k
33 Moretto, db
40 Friedl, db
41 Ostrowski, db
42 Burred, wb
43 Knowlton, tb
44 Owens, se
45 Carey, lb
46 McFillin, fb •
47 Eisenhour, db
48 Gifford, lb
50 Joseph, c
51 Deal, lb
52 Hammond, g
53 Pottruck, lb
54 Bobita, ot
55 Poleski, lb
56 Koval, c
83 Cook, e
84
85
86
87
88
89
91
Hoffman, e
Sounders, e
Strayhorn, e
Cramer, e
Hall, e
Ranere, e
Gloyd, e
Harvard Results; Won 4, Lost 1 (2 -1 in Ivy League)
Pennsylvania Results Won 2, Lost 3 (1-2 in Ivy League)
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania
35
28
0
27
14
Lehigh
Brown
Dartmouth
Buc knell
Princeton
57 Fryreor, g
58 Walker, t
59 Anderson, og
60 Pokorny, g
61 White, dt
62 Matesic, t
63 Warner, lb
64 Scovanner, dt
65 Mortensen, g
66 McGraw, og
67 DeSantis, lb
68 Kelly, lb
70 Shaffer, dt
71 Keyser, t
72 Artinian, t
74 Pfeilmeier, lb
75 Hamlin, ot
76 Armoo, g
77 Lambertson, ot
78 Dan Regan, ot
79 Ketchey, de
80 Blake, te
81 Peterson, de
82 Blumenthal, se
83 Chwastyk, de
84 Graham, te
85 Martinowich, de
86 Cameron, de
87 Linehan, de
88 Pinney, oe
89 Eichman, de
23
7
23
28
28
Harvard
Harvard
Harvard
Harvard
Harvard
51
29
49
14
21
Lafayette
Boston University
Columbia
Cornell
Dartmouth
0
14
13
12
23
NO. 68
Penn 35, Lehigh 23
BILL CREEDEN lofts a pass over the outstretched arm of a Lehigh
defender in the opening game this season. Creeden completed 13 passes for 151 yards as Penn won the Franklin Field contest 35-23.
Penn 28, Brown 7
TAILBACK CABOT KNOWLTON tries to turn the corner against Brown
in Penn's second game. The Quakers smashed the Bruins 28-7 with
the only Brown touchdown coming on a punt return.
CREEDEN FAKES a hondoff to fullback Jerry Santini as he goes back to pass in early season action against Brown. The Quaker line does a strong job holding the Bruin defenders out.
Bucknell 28,Penn 27
CAMIH6
W
QUARTERBACK BILL CREEDEN puts on a display of running as
two Bucknell defenders chose him downfield. The senior signal caller
picked up 98 yards on the turf but Bucknell pulled the game out, 2827 in the closing seconds.
S7U0BNJS
Princeton 28,Penn 14
QUAKER WINGBACK George Burrell contemplates sweeping by the
outstretched arms of a Princeton defender in action last week. The
Quakers were down 28-0 before beginning a comeback which fell
short.
PAGE TWO
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1967
M DISCOUNT
PRICES
Zimmerman,Lord lead Harvard attack
By STEVE RUTTER
Despite a hair-raising loss to Dartmouth last weekend, the Harvard Crimson continue to sport one of the most versatile offenses of
the Ivy League, and also rank high in the number of individual defensive standouts.
Perhaps the biggest reason for Harvard's present 4-1 record is
senior quarterback Rick Zimmerman, who according to Crimson
head coach John Yovicsin, '* has made such a difference in our offense. We've never had the balance that we have with him in there."
Against Boston University and Columbia, Harvard's usually powerful land-locked offense actually gained more yards in the air than
on the ground.
To date, Zimmerman has completed 28 passes in 69 attempts for
498 yards and seven touchdowns. An important sidelight is the fact
that the Crimson's number one signal caller has also thrown only
one interception.
CARTER LORD FAVORITE TARGET
Zimmerman's primary target continues to be tight and Carter
Lord, a 205 pound senior from Lakeland, Florida. As a junior, Lord
hauled in 19 passes for 248 yards and two touchdowns, while so far
this season he has already gained the same yardage as last year, with
16 completions and three TD's.
Although the other Crimson end Joe Cook has only gained 47 yards
to date, Yovicsin calls this Harvard pair "the two best ends
we've ever had."
The running attack is led by
Vic Gatto, Ray Hornblower and
Will Stargel , who are all halfbacks and hold the three top positions as Crimson rushers.
As a sophomore last year,
Gacto turned in a tremendous
season's performance, ranking
third in the Ivy rushing statistics with 556 yeards, and a nine
game total of 700 yards. Coming
into Franklin Field this Saturday,
he has amassed 386 yards on the by SdleiTI KlTDdn
ground with 42 points to his cred-
NOW
FOR THE
FIRST TIME!
Runs Crimson offense
CARTER LORD
DON CMIOFARO
RIC ZIMMERMAN
Zimmerman's primary re ceiver
Linebacker bolsters defense
A Private Citizen's Report on World Conditions as he saw them first hand-VIETNAM, HONG
KONG, the MIDDLE EAST. See Photos newspapers are reluctant to print. Penetrate the cloud
of top brass propaganda. If you want to close the credibility gap in your own mind -THIS BOOK
IS FOR YOU! Honest, forthright, no punches pulled!
fflfe™
T»fl«l«
timi***m
StU***6**
MR. PRESIDENT
THE STORY OF ONE MAN'S SEARCH FOR PEACE
it.
Salem Kirban served in the U.S. Navy during World War II. Little did he realize that
Harvard's second leading some 23 years later his son would be engaged in another war.
rusher, Hornblower, also ranks
After six months training his son, Dennis, was sent to Vietnam as a member of the
as a standout with a 5.0 yard
U.S.
Army. Concerned about world conditions and our commitment to that country,
average for 35 carries and two
touchdowns, although he is only Kirban requested an interview with President Johnson. It was refused.
a sophomore.
Rather than be an arm chair critic, Kirban felt it was his responsibility as a Private
Stargel ranks third in CrimCitizen to make a 27-day Around the World reporting trip viewing world conditions first
son rushing statistics with a 120
hand.
yard total and one TD, and has
been alternating throughout the
In every area of war Kirban took sound motion pictures in full color, secured tape
season with Hornblower at the recorded interviews and also took over 500 still color photos.
halfback post vacated by Bobby
Shocking and revealing, you'll imd this book will give you a new insight into world
Leo.
Completing the list of fore- conditions.
most performers in the Harvard
backfield is senior fullback Gary HERE ARE THE EXCITING CHAPTERS THAT TELL ALL!
Strandemo, who aside from his
running duties, is Zimmerman's
FAINT AT ATTENTION
third best receiver with three GOODBYE MR. PRESIDENT
Are we making the best use of our
How one man's search for peace began.
completions for 105 yards.
troops? Shouldn't economy begin in
The Crimson defense is some
Vietnam?
A STUDY IN CONTRASTS
thing of an oddity compared to
The story of Oakland Processing Centhe other defensive contingents in ter. How a soldier is prepared for overseas
SAD GOODBYES
the Ivy League. Although Harvard duty.
The last words my son told me as I
boarded the plane...words every Amerhas outscored its opponents in
ican should know.
five games, 164 points to 64, JAPAN, A NEW INSIGHT INTO WAR
the Crimson defense has yielded
The unusual attitude the Japanese have
THE DESERT SHALL BLOSSOM
80 first downs, 20 more than the towards America and War.
AS A ROSE
Harvard offense has been able
The glory that is Israel. Mr. Salem KirHONG
KONG...ROYALTY
and
RIOT
to muster.
ban went to the Middle East to report on
The problems and the poverty...in the
What these statistics plainly
the
Arab side of the conflict (since his
reveal, is that inside the 20or 30 middle of wealth.
parents are of Arab heritage) but came
yard stripe and near their own CONFUSION, MISUNDERSTANDING
back with a surprising viewpoint after ingoal line, the Crimson defense and LIES
vestigating both sides.
becomes extremely stingy with
Personal gain, strategy or suicide. Are
IS THERE NO BALM IN GILEAD?
the ground it gives up. It also our soldiers expendable in the interest of
The sad plight of the refugees-pawns
indicates that the Harvard of- good press releases?
in a game called War.
fense can repeatedly gain large
THE
GLORY
IS
FOR
THE
LIVING
chunks of yardage on single plays.
HELLO MR. PRESIDENT
Casualties...a scene every American
In conjunction with these surConclusions and opinions. A Standing
should
be
made
to
witness.
prising statistical comparisons,
Offer to the President of the United
although the tenacious Crimson
States.
ESCORT SERVICE
secondary has intercepted 14
War's most tragic task and how it is
serials to date, it has yielded accomplished.
more passing yardage (770) than
USE ORDER BLANK BELOW
the Harvard offense has gained VIETNAM AT LAST
(624).
Leading the Crimson defense
is the Yard's 94th captain Don
Chiofaro. The 230 pound senior
linebacker recovered three fumbles last year and blocked two
kicks, while as a standout at
Belmont High School in Massachusetts, he earned All-American recognition.
Other standouts at linebacker
include John Emery, who leads
his squad in tackles and has one
interception to his credit. Emery
played an especially fine game
last week against Dartmouth.
The principal contributor to
the Crimson total of 14 aerial
pickoffs is safety Tom Wynne
with four, although team mate
safety Tom Williamson and cornerback Bill Cobb, are not far
behind with three and two interceptions respectively.
Reunion with my son.
THE CHAPLAIN...SPIRITUAL
COUNSELLOR and MOTHER
The G.l.'s problems. The constant battle between the U.S.O. and the Chaplains.
A sad commentary on America!
u
FILLED WITH REVEALING PHOTOS
personally taken by the Author
in COLOR and BLACK and WHITE!
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Salem Kirban is a graduate of Girard College
and received his Bachelor of Science at Temple
University in Philadelphia.
He and his wife Mary became more vitally
concerned over world conditions when their son,
Dennis, enlisted in the Army. The below Ad first
appeared in The WASHINGTON POST prior to
Salem Kirban's Round the World reporting trip.
$1.50 per copy
SALEM KIRBAN, Publishers
Kent Road
Huntingdon Valley, Pa. 19006
An Open Letter to President Johnson
GOODBYE MR. PRESIDENT...
On March 25th I wrote you requesting a personal interview My son was sent to Viet Nam and as
a concerned father I wanted more information on
our commitment to that country.
I was aware of your phrase. "Come now, let us
reason together"* and wanted to do just that. However, your office wrote that your schedule would
not permit a personal interview. So I decided to do
the next best thing-fly to Viet Nam, Israel, Egypt,
Jordan and Russia and prepare a Citizen's Report
on the Search for Peace.
I believe every American Citizen has first a duty
to his country, and because of this privileged citizenship, also a responsibility to the world.
Now, as a citizen, under your leadership, I embark on my own Private Citizen Fact Finding mission around the world. I am sponsored by no one.
I can report the facts accurately as I see them...
and without bias.
I will be leaving from Philadelphia's International Airport this Sunday, July 16th at 6:15 P.M.
on United Air Lines. I would consider it a real honor
to have you send me off.
SALEM KIRBAN
PS. If you can't make it this Sunday, will you grant me the
privilege of personally presenting you with my Private
Citizen Report on World Conditions . upon my return
in Mid-August?
P.P.S. 'This phrase is a part of a favorite Bible verse of
mine, but you've only been quoting the first half of
it. The second half offers the world's only hope for
enduring peace. It's found in Isaiah 1:18.
ORDER FORM tor GOODBYE MR. PRESIDENT
EARN EXTRA MONEY!
We have openings for a limited
number of U. of P. students to
act as our exclusive agents on
campus...in
distributing
our
book GOODBYE MR. PRESIDENT
Excellent commission income.
Write: Salem Kirban, Kent Road,
Huntingdon
Valley,
Penna.
19006.
Single Copy Price: $1.50 5 copies or more: $1 each
SEND ME
copies of GOODBYE MR. PRESIDENT.
Enclosed is my check for $
NAME
ADDRESS
state
Zlp
CITY
SALEM KIRBAN Publishers, Kenf Road, Huntingdon Valley, Penna. 19006
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1967
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIA
PAGE THREE
TEAM STATISTICS
Penn hosts
Harvard
Harvard
Points
First Downs
Rushing Yardage
Passing Yardage
Total Offense
Passes
Pass Intercepted by
Punts
Fumbles, Lost
Yards Penalized
(Continued from page 8)
in an effort to force the C rimson
to go to the middle from the
flanker-T.
"This game is going to be
hard fought/' Odell said. "We
want to win and Harvard wants
to come back after a tough loss
to Dartmouth last week."
Points
CABOT KNOWLTON crosses goal line for Quakers at Franklin
against Bucknell.
Knowlton scored three TDs, but Penn lost 28-27.
"WELCOME FELLOW ALUMNI ! i
>:•
!
M
*
First Downs
Rushing Yardage
Passing Yardage
Total Offense
Passes
Pass Intercepted by
Punts
Fumbles, Lost
Yards Penalized
Field
Opponents
164
65
912
624
1536
35-84
14
29-38.8
19-9
305
62
80
512
770
1288
67-146
1
32-33.6
18-10
209
Penn
Opponents
104
93
895
733
1628
57-142
10
34-36.5
20-12
336
109
75
928
648
1626
46-106
5
38.5
13-5
313
AFTER THE GAME
Enjoy Cocktails And Dinner
With All Your Friends
A SATURDAY NIGHT MUST!!!!
HEAD COACH BOB ODELL
Communicates with spotters
OLD TIME
1
PRIME RIBS
(BET YOU DON'T FINISH!)
BAKED POTATO, VEG, SALAD. HOT ROLL & BUTTER
DINNER
COMPLETE*/
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39TH & CHESTNUT
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Captains 1967 Quakers
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A DELIGHTFUL C
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THEATRE 1812 '\\f,T
PAGE FOUR
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1967
.fcu
f—i?—i
i
§
Zimmerman,Lord lead Harvard attack
By STEVE RUTTER
Despite a hair-raising loss to Dartmouth last weekend, the Harvard Crimson continue to sport one of the most versatile offenses of
the Ivy League, and also rank high in the number of individual defensive standouts.
Perhaps the biggest reason for Harvard's present 4-1 record is
senior quarterback Rick Zimmerman, who according to Crimson
head coach John Yovicsin, " has made such a difference in our offense. We've never had the balance that we have with him in there."
Against Boston University and Columbia, Harvard's usually powerful land-locked offense actually gained more yards in the air than
on the ground.
To date, Zimmerman has completed 28 passes in 69 attempts for
498 yards and seven touchdowns. An important sidelight is the fact
that the Crimson's number one signal caller has also thrown only
one interception.
CARTER LORD FAVORITE TARGET
Zimmerman's primary target continues to be tight and Carter
Lord, a 205 pound senior from Lakeland, Florida. As a junior, Lord
hauled in 19 passes for 248 yards and two touchdowns, while so far
this season he has already gained the same yardage as last year, with
16 completions and three TD's.
CARTER LORD
DON CHIOFARO
RIC ZIMMERMAN
Although the other Crimson end Joe Cook has only gained 47 yards
Linebacker bolsters defense
Zimmerman's primary re ceiver
Runs Crimson offense
to date, Yovicsin calls this Harvard pair "the two best ends
A Private Citizen's Report on World Conditions as he saw them first hand-VIETNAM, HONG
we've ever had."
KONG, the MIDDLE EAST. See Photos newspapers are reluctant to print. Penetrate the cloud
The running attack is led by
of top brass propaganda. If you want to close the credibility gap in your own mind-THIS BOOK
Vic Gatto, Ray Hornblower and
IS FOR YOU! Honest, forthright, no punches pulled!
Will Stargel , who are all halfbacks and hold the three top positions as Crimson rushers.
As a sophomore last year,
Gacto turned in a tremendous
season's performance, ranking
third in the Ivy rushing statistics with 556 yeards, and a nine
game total of 700 yards. Coming
into Franklin Field this Saturday,
he has amassed 386 yards on the
ground with 42 points to his credit.
Salem Kirban served in the U.S. Navy during World War II. Little did he realize that
u
Harvard's second leading some 23 years later his son would be engaged in another war.
rusher, Hornblower, also ranks
as a standout with a 5.0 yard
After six months training his son, Dennis, was sent to Vietnam as a member of the
U.S.
Army. Concerned about world conditions and our commitment to that country,
average for 35 carries and two
touchdowns, although he is only Kirban requested an interview with President Johnson. It was refused.
a sophomore.
Rather thar be an arm chair critic, Kirban felt it was his responsibility as a Private
Stargel ranks third in CrimFILLED WITH REVEALING PHOTOS
Citizen
to make a 27-day Around the World reporting trip viewing world conditions first
son rushing statistics with a 120
personally taken by the Author
hand.
yard total and one TD, and has
in COLOR and BLACK and WHITE!
been alternating throughout the
In every area of war Kirban took sound motion pictures in full color, secured tape
season with Hornblower at the recorded interviews and also took over 500 still color photos.
halfback post vacated by Bobby
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Shocking and revealing, you'll find this book will give you a new insight into world
Leo.
Salem Kirban is a graduate of Girard College
Completing the list of fore- conditions.
and received his Bachelor of Science at Temple
University in Philadelphia.
most performers in the Harvard
He and his wife Mary became more vitally
backfield is senior fullback Gary HERE ARE THE EXCITING CHAPTERS THAT TELL ALL!
concerned
over world conditions when their son,
Strandemo, who aside from .his
Dennis,
enlisted
in the Army. The below Ad first
running duties, is Zimmerman's
appeared
in
The
WASHINGTON POST prior to
FAINT AT ATTENTION
third best receiver with three GOODBYE MR. PRESIDENT
Salem
Kirban's
Round
the World reporting trip.
Are we making the best use of our
How one man's search for peace began.
completions for 105 yards.
troops? Shouldn't economy begin in
The Crimson defense is some
Vietnam?
thing of an oddity compared to A STUDY IN CONTRASTS
An Open Letter to President Johnson
The story of Oakland Processing Centhe other defensive contingents in ter. How a soldier is prepared for overseas
SAD GOODBYES
GOODBYE MR. PRESIDENT...
the Ivy League. Although Harvard duty.
The last words my son told me as I
has outscored its opponents in
boarded the plane...words every AmerOn March 25th I wrote you requesting a perfive games, 164 points to 64, JAPAN, A NEW INSIGHT INTO WAR
ican should know.
sonal interview. My son was sent to Viet Nam and as
a concerned father I wanted more information on
the Crimson defense has yielded
The unusual attitude the Japanese have
our commitment to that country.
THE
DESERT
SHALL
BLOSSOM
80 first downs, 20 more than the towards America and War.
AS
A
ROSE
I was aware of your phrase. "Come now, let us
Harvard offense has been able
The
glory
that
is
Israel.
Mr.
Salem
Kirreason together"* and wanted to do just that. HowHONG
KONG...ROYALTY
and
RIOT
to muster.
ever, your office wrote that your schedule would
ban went to the Middle East to report on
The problems and the poverty...in the
What these statistics plainly
not permit a personal interview. So I decided to do
the Arab side of the conflict (since his
reveal, is that inside the 20or 30 middle of wealth.
the next best thing-fly to Viet Nam, Israel, Egypt,
parents are of Arab heritage) but came
Jordan and Russia and prepare a Citizen's Report
yard stripe and near their own
back with a surprising viewpoint after inCONFUSION, MISUNDERSTANDING
on the Search for Peace.
goal line, the Crimson defense and LIES
vestigating both sides.
I believe every American Citizen has first a duty
becomes extremely stingy with
Personal gain, strategy or suicide. Are
to
his
country, and because of this privileged citithe ground it gives up. It also our soldiers expendable in the interest of
IS THERE NO BALM IN GILEAD?
zenship, also a responsibility to the world.
indicates that the Harvard of- good press releases?
The sad plight of the refugees-pawns
Now, as a citizen, under your leadership, I emin a game called War.
fense can repeatedly gain large
bark on my own Private Citizen Fact Finding mischunks of yardage on single plays. THE GLORY IS FOR THE LIVING
sion around the world. I am sponsored by no one.
HELLO MR. PRESIDENT
Casualties...a scene every American
In conjunction with these surI can report the facts accurately as I see them...
Conclusions and opinions. A Standing
and without bias.
prising statistical comparisons, should be made to witness.
Offer to the President of the United
I will be leaving from Philadelphia's Internaalthough the tenacious Crimson
ESCORT SERVICE
States.
tional Airport this Sunday, July 16th at 6:15 P.M.
secondary has intercepted 14
War's most tragic task and how it is
on United Air Lines. I would consider it a real honor
serials to date, it has yielded accomplished.
to have you send me off.
more passing yardage (770) than
SALEM KIRBAN
the Harvard offense has gained VIETNAM AT LAST
USE ORDER BLANK BELOW
NOW
FOR THE
FIRST TIME!
MR. PRESIDENT
THE STORY OF ONE MAN'S SEARCH FOR PEACE
by Salem Kirban
(624).
Leading the Crimson defense
is the Yard's 94th captain Don
Chiofaro. The 230 pound senior
linebacker recovered three fumbles last year and blocked two
kicks, while as a standout at
Belmont High School in Massachusetts, he earned All-American recognition.
Other standouts at linebacker
include John Emery, who leads
his squad in tackles and has one
interception to his credit. Emery
played an especially fine game
last week against Dartmouth.
The principal contributor to
the Crimson total of 14 aerial
pickoffs is safety Tom Wynne
with four, although team mate
safety Tom Williamson and cornerback Bill Cobb, are not far
behind with three and two interceptions respectively.
Reunion with my son.
THE CHAPLAIN...SPIRITUAL
COUNSELLOR and MOTHER
The G.l.'s problems. The constant battle between the U.S.O. and the Chaplains.
A sad commentary on America!
EARN EXTRA MONEY!
We have openings for a limited
number of U. of P. students to
act as our exclusive agents on
campus...in
distributing
our
book GOODBYE MR. PRESIDENT
Excellent commission income.
Write: Salem Kirban, Kent Road,
Huntingdon
19006.
Valley,
Penna.
$1.50 per copy
SALEM KIRBAN, Publishers
Kent Road
Huntingdon Valley, Pa. 19006
P.S. If you can't make it this Sunday, will you grant me the
privilege of personally presenting you with my Private
Citizen Report on World Conditions upon my return
in Mid-August?
P.P.S. 'This phrase is a part of a favorite Bible verse of
mine, but you've only been quoting the first half of
it. The second half offers the world's only hope for
enduring peace. It's found in Isaiah 1:18.
ORDER FORM tor GOODBYE MR. PRESIDENT
Single Copy Price: $1.50 5 copies or more: $1 each
SEND ME
copies of GOODBYE MR. PRESIDENT.
Enclosed is my check for $
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY
State
Zip
SALEM KIRBAN Publishers, Kent Road, Huntingdon Valley, Penna. 19006
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1967
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIA
PAGE THREE
onema ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE
Roundup
"Grand Music Hall" is grand
"Ruach" is the Hebrew word
for spirit, vigor, song, dance,
emotion, happiness, and pride.
And that's just the word to describe the performance of the
Grand Music-Hall of Israel. The
program, a collection of many of
the greats of modern Israeli
music, opened Tuesday night at
the Shubert. The Music Hall's
three-week stand in Philadelphia
is the company's first performance in America.
Director Jonathan Karmon
and musical director ItchakGraziani have put together a program
to lift anyone out of everyday
life and problems. The music
is all new. The arrangements
are modern and youthful interpretations of old songs.
The vitality and boldness of
the music, the bright colored
costumes, the colorful lighting
effects, and the youth and spirit
of the performers make a carefree and dynamic show. Through
special talents, Israeli music has
come into its own as an art and
is no more the singing of unsophisticated melodies by khakiclothed
dancers. The THE KARMON-HISTADRUTH balarrangements are much like jazz, let are features in The Grand
but they are not melancholy and Music Hall of Israel, the official
have none of the "blues."
ensemble of the State of Israel
Optimism, militant pride, and now performing at the Shubert.
strong personality shine on the sical instrument he himself
face of each performer. The love invented. With this instrument,
dances are light and flirtatious. new tonal and textural qualities
The ethnic dances combine both are explored.
For those who have a backthe Oriental and European eleground
in Hebrew music, the old
ments of Jewish culture. The
program is a happy, beautiful, favorites, such as "Tsena" and
and purely musical experience. "Havenu Shalom" are played,
The dances are easy to under- but with fresh arrangements.The
stand and feel. They accurately Israeli singers also sing some
express human emotions and American folksongs, and at times
they are better singers than the
thoughts.
The audience was so capti- Americans.
The political importance of
vated by the vigor of the music
that everyone was clapping to the concert exceeds even the
the beat during a few of the dance artistic contributions, for the
character of the music and the
numbers.
The performers are com- humanity of the performers propletely natural. The girls have motes understanding of the true
long hair. The men are virile.
Israeli spirit. It should be noted
The acrobatics are refreshing.
An example of the complete
originality of the show is Boaz
Shareali's presentation of a mu-
that the cast touring the United
States is not the first string cast.
Yet, the performance is first
rate.
ELVIS PRESLEY stars in "Clambake," his 25th motion picture,
coming to the Palace Theatre
November 8th.
«?
Arts
■ ■:■■'■:• ■ :..;■-■ ;..-;-;. ; ;Xv x ■.■ ;:-.y::.x--:;::;:>.x-:-x: :■:■: ■.:: ;■
By LINDA SELTZER
**** - Excellent **
- Fair
*** - Good
*
- Poor
ARCADIA"To Sir With
Love." Fine drama of a high
school teacher in an English
slum features Academy Award
caliber performance from Sidney
Poitier.****
BAND BOX- "Marat/Sade."
One of the very best translations of a play from stage to
screen.****
BOYD- "The Happiest Millionaire." First of the many
anticipated posthumous Walt Disney productions is a total dud.*
ERIC- "I, A Woman." The
world's first arty sexploitation
film.*
FOX- "Point Blank." Pointless.**
'Bonnie and
GOLDMANClyde." Brilliantly cinematic
gangster film.****
LANE- "Enter Laughing."
Carl Reiner's autobiographical
play has been made into an extraordinarily funny movie.***
MIDTOWN-' "Far from the
Maddening Crowd." Maddeningly
disappointing.**
RANDOLPH"Gone With
the Wind." The Great Wind has
been blown up to 70mm. and looks
better than ever. ****
REGENCY- "Reflections in
a Golden Eye." A bad reflection
on Marlon Brando, John Huston,
and everyone else involved.**
STANLEY-"Thoroughly Modern Millie." Thoroughly primitive humor.**
Living
Happiest Millionaire"
e
IS
sad
SHUBERT - "The Grand
Music Hall of Israel." Sixty Israeli entertainers present modern Israeli music with vigor and
originality. See review.
SOCIETY HILL PLAYHOUSE"Marat/Sade." Last day of the
Peter Weiss drama at the Playhouse.
FORREST- "Spofford (or,
The Flesh Pots of Egypt)." Melvyn Douglas, Pert Kelton, and
Barbara Britton star in the comedy based on Peter DeVries'
"Reuben. Reuben."
THEATRE OF THE LIVING
ARTS- 'TheEntertainer." Harris Yulin plays the title role in
John Osbome's play.
ACADEMY- "The Philadelphia Orchestra." Leopold Stokowski conducts, with soloists
Veronica Tyler and Maria Lucia
Godoy.
MAIN POINT- "Andy Robinson". The young composer
performs his own and others'
compositions.
Chris Smither,
guitarist, specializes in traditional and contemporary blues
and 'ballads. Both peformers
sang at the Philadelphia Folk
Festival.
TOWN HALL"Judy Collins." The popular folksinger
performs at a special benefit
concert Saturday at 8:30.
2nd FRET"Kweskin Jug
Band."
ARTIST HUT-"Synchronized
Light Show." This new attraction is a machine that synchronizes lights and music.
By RICHARD RANDOLPH
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Symphony. Middle East Fc
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LH E
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□ No,
In this age of changing moral
and artistic values, only one
man's filmic contributions have
remained so consistently the
same. That man is Walt Disney.
Therefore, it is not surprising to note that the "master showman's" last film, "The Happiest
Millionaire," fits the pattern that
has been a hallmark of his studio
for over thirty years.
Disney makes "family pictures," which for the most part
means they have little or no
social significance, very little
artistic or cinematic experimentation, and plots and characters
easily understood by the dullest
of five-year olds. In other words,
his films contain the essence of
"pure" entertainment, which
makes little demand on the realities of life.
There is no sex, real violence,
or poverty in a Walt Disney film,
only intelligent dogs, infantile
professors, an anti-gravity substance called flubber, and warm
boy-and-his-dog stories.
"The Happiest Millionaire,"
being representative, features a
cast that is either being introduced or exhumed. All actors
must show a lot of tooth, be en-
WALT DISNEY makes a visit to the set of "The Happiest Millionaire,"
now at the Boyd, and is greeted by Fred MacMurray, Greer Garson,
and Tommy Steele.
Drexel Biddle, played by a favorite Disney hero, Fred MacMurray. The color film depicts some
"Point Blank" combines a
of Biddle's unusual hobbies like
television-type gangster plot with
instructing Marines in bayonet
a few funny scenes and is basicand jujitsu, taking care of twelve
ally a pointless film. But the
pet alligators, singing with the
blank is filled in by Lee Marvin,
Manhatten Opera Company, and
who plays a combination thief,
collecting down and out boxers
superhuman, mastermind, and
and drunks for his Bible classes.
girl
chaser.
John Davidson, as Angier Buchanan Duke, and Lesley Ann
In trying to get both revenge
Warren, as Cordy Biddle, are
on the "Organization" and
the beautiful people that provide
$93,000, Mar/in makes stops at
the love interest. Considering
plush apartments, meeting places
that this is their first screen
and Alcatraz, and exercises a
appearance, they can be at least
wide variety of talents.
partly excused for their obvious
discomfort and blank-stare actMost of the humor is slaping, especially during closeups.
stick. In the funniest scene, MarGreer Garson, as Mrs. Corvin throws a naked "Organizadelia Biddle, gives as quiet and
tion' ' leader off a balcony, and the
restrained a performance as is
nude body lands under a stopping
allowable in one of these films
car.
and is a welcome relief.
GERALDINE PAGE, distinguishAngie Dickenson and the other
Geraldine Page, one of the
ed actress and three-time Academy
supporting characters do nothing
Award nominee, makes her first world's most versatile actressextraordinary.
They only act as
appearance in a screen musical es, comes closest to actually
straight men for Marvin.
creating a real-life character as
in "The Happiest Millionaire."
Mrs.
Duke.
ergetic or spry, and ham up every
Because the scenes change
Tommy Steele over-performs
moment on screen. There is no
constantly, the movie moves
place for subtlety in a Walt well as Biddle's butler, John
quickly. The few gory or sad
Disney film. Everyone behaves Lawless.
moments are forgotten quickly,
The music and dance numas if he were Mickey or Minnie
because they have no significance
bers,
and
the
direction
of
Norman
Mouse.
and
are usually followed by some"The Happiest Millionaire" Tokar are overdone which acthing funny. You might enjoy
is the turn-of-the-century story counts for the fact that "The
"Point Blank", but not unless you
Happiest
Millionaire"
is
very
of Philadelphia's very own eccenare
a Lee Marvin fan.
tric millionaire, Anthony J. sad.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1967 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIA PAGE FIVE
"Point Blank"
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THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIA!^
The most respected symbol
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1967
B3B
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Coach Scott expects his team
at a high mental peak for Harvard. "It's not a question of revenge," he said, "but purely amatter of knowing that Harvard
is a strong team and knowing that
we have to beat them to stay in
the race."
Brown
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The most severe loss for the
Crimson was the graduation of
second team All-America Andy
Kydes at center halfback, a loss
that coach Scott claims, "Harvard is sure to feel." Kydes'
place in the starting lineup has
been taken by sophomore Dick
Hardy, who will be flanked by
Captain Joe jould and senior
Nwachukwu Azikiwe.
Sophomore Bob Gray replaces
All-Ivy fullback Tony Marks,
while Jay Breese will be making
his second start in the Crimson
net. Breese made his first start
against Dartmouth last week, and
was brilliant as Harvard rallied
for a 3-1 victory. The other starting fullback is senior Dave
Wright.
Perm, who remains unbeaten
with a 5-0-3 record following
Wednesday's disappointing 2-2
tie with Drexel, is at full strength
for this key game. The return of
Tom Hutchison, who missed the
Drexel game due to illness, will
bolster a Quaker attack that has
put severe pressure on the opposition goal throughout the season.
CO
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By HOWARD TOPEL
While the eyes of Ivy League
football buffs will be focused on
the Yale-Dartmouth clash this
weekend, the league's hottest
soccer action will take place at
Penn's Stewart Field at 10:30
Saturday morning.
At that time. Penn and Harvard, boasting identical 2-0-1
marks in league play, will square
off, each determined to drive the
other out of the four-way knot at
the top of the league standings.
The Quakers display the
stingiest defense in the league,
having allowed only one goal in
their three loop contests. Against
Harvard, the men of coach Charlie Scott will be facing the
league" s most potent offense. The
Cantabs have tallied eight times
in downing Columbia and Dartmouth and tying Cornell.
Leading the Crimson attack
are the three leading scorers of
last year's squad that routed the
Quakers 6-2 and rolled to a second place finish in the league.
At left inside will be Jaime
Vargas, a first team All-Ivy selection a year ago. Vargas has
tallied eight goals in leading Harvard to its current 6-1-1 record,
including a trio in the Crimson's
6-2 rout of Wesleyan.
Scott Robertson, who plays
along side Vargas as left outside,
shared Harvard's goal scoring
lead with Lutz Hoeppner a year
ago. The second team All-Ivy
junior has two goals and three
assists thus far this year.
Hoeppner, an inside right who
made honorable mention All-Ivy
in 1966, has scored five times this
year. His most important tally
came with 48 seconds remaining
in the second overtime period
against Cornell and knotted the
score at two apiece.
As if this high rcoring trio
isn't enough, coach Bruce Munro
inserted junior letterman Ahmed
Yehla into the starting lineup at
center forward at the start of
the season, and the native of
Rolle, Switzerland has responded
with eight goals, including a hat
trick in Harvard's 8-0 swamping
of Boston University. G e r a r d o
Montero rounds out Harvard's
five man atacking unit.
Although the Crimson forward line returns virtually intact, coach Munro has been hard
pressed to sew up a defensive
corps that was depleted by the
graduation of two All-Ivies and
goalie Richie Hammond.
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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4. 1967
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
PAGE SEVEN
The
Daily
Don 't make any nof M
today - the E or has a
hangover.
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA
VOL. LXXXIII
New Miss U. reigns
MISS UNIVERSITY, Sue Hamilton, hold her bouquet as Rick Losee,
head of Campus Chest, and President Harnwell look on.
GPH first speaker
in 'Think-in' tonight
By RONA ZEVIN
President Harnwell will be
the first speaker in a student,
faculty and admini st rat ion-sponsored "Think-In on the Nature oi
the University*' at 8 P.M. today
in Irvine Auditorium.
The "think-in" is an outgrowth of last Wednesday's demonstration against recruitment
by Dow Chemical Co. and the
Central Intelligence Agency.
Robert Brand, GFA, brought up
the idea of having a Universitywide discussion on the issues
brought up at the protest at a
Vietnam Week Committee meeting.
President Harnwell and Provost David R.Goddard have given
the "think-in" their full support.
UPSG unanimously approved the
idea and is financing the rental
of Irvine Auditorium and publicity.
The International Affairs Association has changed the date of
their showing of "The Knack** so
that the "think-in** could use
the auditorium.
The "think-in" will begin
with a 20-minute panel discussion on "What are the objectives
of the University?" followed by
40 minutes of questions, discussion and debate with the audience.
Members of the panel include
President Harnwell, Dr. JJC.
Gandhi, Finance, Michael McCrudden, vice-president of MBA,
and Michael Neiditch, chief justice of the student judiciary.
The second hour will begin
with another 20-minute panel
discussion on "What is the relationship and responsibility of
the University in society?"
Members of this panel are Dr.
William Gomberg, professor of
industry, Phillip Pochoda, sociology lecturer, Richard Shapiro, editorial chairman of the
Daily Permsylvanian, and Douglas Cox, president of the Interfraternity Council.
The final panel discussion,
at the beginning of the third hour,
will deal with "How are University decisions made?" The panel
will Include Dr. Claude Welsh,
associate dean of theCollegeand
professor of religious thought,
Dr. Jules Wishner former chairman of the Faculty steeringcommittee and president of the University Senate, AlConroy, president of UPSG, and Josh Markel
of the Vietnam WeekCommittee.
Dr. Jefferson Fordham, dean of
the Law School will be the moderator of the "Think-In."
After the first three hours,
during which discussion will be
limited to the three main questions, the "think-in will take the
form of general audience debate
on any questions concerning the
University.
The "think-in" was planned
by graduates, undergraduates,
faculty and students, so that it
would have the broadest possible
basis. Each panel is arranged so
that the speakers would present
varied views on the questions
and would provoke heated debate
among the audience.
The planners of the "thinkin" were Robert Brand, Al Conroy, John Doerr, col *70, Mrs.
Alice Emerson, dean of women,
Danniel Finnerty, GSAS, Buddy
Hirsch, chairman of the UPSG
finance committee, The Rev.
Stanley Johnson, chaplain of the
University, Roger Lotz,Col.*69,
Michael McCrudden, H. Michael
Neiditch, The Rev. John Russell
of the CA. Alan Weinstein of the
Law School, and Dr. Claude
Welch.
At a meeting Friday afternoon, the planners of the"think(Continued on page 5)
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1967
Weinstein's hearing set
after capture in NYC
Campus tobacconist Stephen
Zachary Weinstein,
accused
strangler of College freshman
John W. Green III, is in a Phila.
detention center awaiting a Nov.
15 hearing after being captured
Saturday in New York City.
Weinstein was arraigned early Sunday morning after being
personally returned to Phila. by
District Attorney Arlen Specter.
In the brief arraignment at
police headquarters, 8th and
Race Sts., Weinstein asked for
court-appointed counsel. He is
being held without bail.
Weinstein's capture ended a
50-state manhunt for the short,
heavy set 29-year-old pipe shop
owner who is accused of drugging
and strangling to death 18-yearold Green.
Weinstein's capture Saturday
afternoon in Times Square was
called a "one-in-a-millioncoincidence" by New York police.
Weinstein was spotted in a
ticket agency called Mackeys
on 44th St. between 8th Ave.
and Broadway by Philadelphian
Edward Sherman.
Sherman, 27, an operator of
a local ticket agency at which
Weinstein had tried to purchase
tickets on Oct. 27, left the New
York ticket agency quickly and
told Patrolman Neil T. Ridge,
standing nearby, that he had
just seen the accused murderer.
Weinstein, who had smilsd
at Sherman, left the ticket agency
immediately and crossed the
street. Ridge yelled at him to
stop and pursued him for 50 ft.
before catching him. There was
no violence, Ridge said.
Philadelphia police had been
concentrating their search for
Weinstein in New York for the
last few days.
Frank Hahn, an investigator
in the district attorney's office,
said he and two other detectives
had spent Friday and Satuiday
looking for Weinstein in Greenwich Village and the nearby East
Village. The search had turned
up nothing, he said.
A University student told
police Friday night that Weinstein had a weekend apartment
in New York City, but the clue
was too broad, Hahn said.
(Photo by DANIEL WOLF)
STEPHEN WEINSTEIN, accused murderer of College freshman John
W. Green III, is escorted to Phila. police car by First Assistant
D.A. Richard Sprague (left) and Chief Inspector Joseph Brophy (right)
for ride from New York to Philadelphia Saturday night.
A hard day's night
for Steve Weinstein
By DENNIS WILEN
New York police said Stephen
Weinstein had been riding back
and forth on the Long Island
Railroad for several days, ever
since he fled Philadelphia last
week.
Evidently, the train rides became boring, and he decided to
take in a show. He had always
claimed to have been in show
business, and buying a ticket
at an agency in Times Square
was not uncommon for him. So
at 1:25 P.M. Saturday he stopped
at an agency at 44th St. and
8th Ave. He smiled a sickly
smile when he saw Philadelphia
ticket agent Eddy Sherman inside.
Eddy Sherman reacted differently. He called the cops.
Traffic Aide Neil T. Ridge
was directing traffice outside,
on the corner. After Weinstein
left the agency, Sherman walked
up to Ridge, a rookie with only
18 months on the force.
"He first indentified himself
to me,*' Ridge said Saturday
night, "and pointed out Mr. Wein-
No doorway-blocking expected
Anti-Dow sit-in set for Wed.
By BERL SCHWARTZ
Anti-war students plan to
greet the Dow Chemical Co. recruiter when he returns Wednesday with a continuation of last
week's Logan Hall protest. This
time, however, no doorwayblocking is expected.
The protesters decided at a
meeting Friday to sit-in but not
to disrupt the recruiter's interviews, as they did for more than
an hour last Wednesday.
A spokesman for the protesters labeled the new policy a
"tactical decision" influenced by
the campus's general disapproval of obstructing the interviews.
The protesters also agreed to
hold a rally at 11 A.M. tomorrow in Houston Hall Plaza to
explain their opposition to Dow's
campus recruitment. Faculty
members are expected to speak.
NO. 69
The plans for tomorrow and
Wednesday were arranged by
more than 50 students who were
called together in the Christian
Association by the Vietnam Week
Committee.
JULES BENJAMIN
Sit - in Leader
The meeting was marked by
an absence of debate over the
Dow Corporation's representative's right to be on campus,
an issue which plagued the protesters at their four meetings
last week. No one opposed the
decision to band doorway-blocking at the sit-in.
The number of persons expected to sit-in Wednesday was
put at over 100 by Richard Lesnik, treasurer of the organization. Lesnik said there may be
some problems of overflow at the
sit-in because of the narrow size
of the third-floor corridor which
leads to the interview room the
Dow recruiter is expected to use.
The Dow recruiter is scheduled to be from the company's
chemistry division. Last week's
representative was a business
and marketing supervisor.
(Continued on page 5)
stein. I chased him about 50
feet down the street, stopped
him and gave him a preliminary
frisk. I asked if he knew he was
wanted in Philadelphia, and he
said 'no.' I brought him into a
Ripley*s clothing store on the
corner, frisked him again, and
called for a patrol car. The car
took both of us to the 16th Precinct."
Weinstein was hauled in on
a Federal warrant, N.Y. police
flashed the word to Philadelphia,
and District Attorney Arlen
Specter and First AssistantD.A.
Richard Sprague hopped in a car
and drove up to New York.
After they arrived they questioned Weinstein for an hour
and 20 minutes.
In the meant ne N.Y. authorities allowed Weinstein a
traditional one phone call. Specter later said Weinstein used it
to call his psychiatrist.
At about 7:30, Weinstein emerged from Police Headquarters at 240 Centre St. He
left from a below-street-level
exit, from a part of the building
known as "the dungeon." He
walked up the eight steps slowly, his raincoat draped over his
hands, which were clasped out in
front of him.
He was put into a N.Y. police
car, with a Philadelphia escort
car close behind. They drove
over to Night Court, 100 Centre
St., where Saturday night proceedings were in progress.
The scene at Night Court was
classic. Arraignment after arraignment, with the clerk calling
out the cases so quickly he
could barely be understood. Vagrancy, possession of stolen
goods, narcotic addict ion...The
spectators were talking, police
were running in and out, a baby
was wailing in the back rows.
At about 8:15, the seemingly
interminable procession of suspects ended, and the judge
stepped off the bench.
The judge was Walter Gladwin, ex-cop, ex-city prosecutor,
ex-state legislator, ten years on
the bench. He wasn't scheduled
to preside Saturday night, but was
substituting for a sick friend.
(Continued on page 2)
Meridian plans
are
examined
By STEPHEN MARMON
(The following is a continuation of the analysis of the Meridian Engineering student housing
program.)
Meridian presented the University with 26 possible housing
layouts for use in the proposed
buildings. Most of these designs
were for apartment style suites,
although a few were for dormitory-style rooms.
Meridian then presented the
University with proposals of the
various features to be included
in each of the living units and
for lounges, dining halls and
other common facilities.
Technical specifics for each
of the suites were divided into
three areas: Study-bedroom,
common living-room area, and
bathroom.
Meridian proposed that each
bedroom should be furnished with
a single bed, wardrobe or closet
space, desk, desk chair, and at
least 12 ft. of book shelving,
individual control of the central
heating and air-conditioning facilities, provision for installation
of telephones and possible use of
carpeting, vinyl wall surfacing
or accoustical tile ceilings for
accoustical purposes.
For each of the bathrooms in
the suites, Meridian proposed
installing a shower-tub combination, two sinks, a toilet, ceramic tile flooring, waterproof paint,
heating and ventilation, and electrical outlets.
Additional facilities for the
living room area included such
items as easy chairs, end tables,
a sofa, dining table, table lamps,
book racks, and other general
facilities included in the design
for the bedrooms.
Also included in the furnishings were window finish items
such as draperies or blinds.
Meridian then estimated the cost
of all these furnishings and found
their cost would be $1.00 per
square foot.
Meridian did recommend that
the dining facilities in each building be cafeteria-style but did not
go much farther in defining what
would be in those facilities,
except to say they should be dividable into smaller units. In the
lounge Meridian said special attention should be given use of
accoustical control materials
such as carpeting and ceiling
tiles to keep the noise levels
down. They also recommended
that provision be made for such
items as table tennis, billiards
and card games, with the equipment supplied by the University.
In each of the layouts presented. Meridian allocated a certain percentage of space for
corridors, stairs, elevators, etc.
The only special requirement
Meridian placed in this area
was that one elevator be provided
for every 150 occupants.
Other common facilities presented in the report by Meridian
include small typing offices,
music rooms, and a house off iceinformation center.
Outside of the buildings themselves. Meridian recommended
the plan for the "superblock"
include tennis courts, basketball
courts, at least one softball diamond, a field for touch football
or soccer, outdoor amphitheatre
for student gatherings, reflecting
pools, benches, lighting, light fixtures and other street furniture,
shrubbery and trees, and variation of the ground level by use
of ramps, steps, embankments.,
etc.
self-service laundry, dry cleaning, barber and/or beauty shops,
haberdasher or other specialty
clothing shop, a small food market, restaurants, general book
shops, shoe repair, and jewelry
and other specialty shops.
Further analysis of the Meridian report will appear in the
near future.
Russell speaks
on Phila. slums
"There are slums of hope and
slums of despair," said Jack
Russell, executive director of
the Christian Association Tuesday night at the CA during a discussion of "The Community
Around Us: Their Hopes and
Expectations."
West Philadelphia, he indicated, is not a
slum of despair.
It's net the buildings that
make a slum, it's the people.
"If they are bad people, you have
a bad neighborhood; if they are
good people, you have a good
neighborhood,"
said Charles
Campbell, president of the Walnut Hill Community Association
and president of the W. Phila.
High School Home and School
Association.
The other panelists at the
meeting were Dr. James Nixon,
president of the Spruce Hill Community Association; Peter Renner, chairman of the Powelton
Neighbors; and Larnick O.
Stapleton, Esq., president of the
Garden City Association.
During the course of the meeting, Nixon categorized the Community involvement Council as
"a bunch of bleeding hearts."
He criticized their propensity
to "find the dirtiest, filthiest
hole and sweep it out." They
try to "cure cancer instead of
tonsillitis." This tends, he said,
to leave the lower middle class
"out in the cold."
Hans Binnendijk, executive
vice-president of the IF Council
asked Dr. Nixon what the IF
could do to "improve their image
of the fraternities in the community." Nixon said that the
fraternities are disliked because
"they have parties, drink, and
make noise" and that there is
"nothing" they could do, since
" some people are constant grumblers."
M. Frances Hurley then said
that "I lived for 30 years with
fraternities on the right of me,
fraternities on the left of me,
fraternities around the corner.
I loved it. Miss Hurley especially complimented Delta Kappa Epsilonwhom. she said, were "fine
honorable,
admirable young
boys." Miss Hurley has been
forced out of two apartments
as the University has expanded.
"I wish I was back there," she
lamented.
A hard day
(Continued from page 1)
He said Weinstein's case was
number 41 that night.
Back in the courtroom, the
contingent of reporters from
Philadelphia edged up to the
judge's bench, awaiting the beginning of the proceedings. The
first luminary in the side door
was Specter.
"I missed a couple of
parties," to come to New York
(Continued on page 4)
Campus Events
JOHN MARSHALL SOCIETY:
Open Law School Week. Today,
undergraduates are invited to attend classes in Civil Procedure
(9:00 A.M.) Torts (10:10 A.M.),
Contracts (11:20) and Criminal
Law (12:30 P.M.) at the Law
School, Room 214. Sign up for
classes at the Business Law office, DH W-233.
PRE -LAW SOCIETY-MRF:
"Penn Student and the Law"—A
representative of the Phila. Police Dept. McClelland Hall. Tomorrow at 7:30 P.M.
PSYCHOLOGICAL SOCIETY:
Stephen Maier will speak on
"Escape of Traumatic Shock:
Learned
Helplessness?"
on
Tuesday. Nov. 7, at 7:30 P.M.
in the Smith-Penniman Room,
Houston Hall. All welcome. Refreshments.
STUDENT TUTOR SOCIETY:
Free tutoring available in most
subjects. Tutors assigned daily.
Mon-Fri., 1-2 P.M. Room 206,
College Hall.
OFFICIAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
PRE-LAW: Professor Ferguson of New York University
Law School will interview prelaw students tomorrow. Pre-law
students — especially seniors —
are invited to see Dr. Sooper,
DE-46, to make an appointment
for an interview with Professor
Ferguson.
PRE-LAW: Professor Valente of Vallanova School of Law
will interview pre-law students
Thursday.
Pre-law students —
especially seniors—are invited
to see Dr. Cooper, DE-46, to
make an appointment for an interview with Professor Valente.
CAMPUS AGENDA
BALALAIKA ORCHESTRA:
Rehearsal for all members,
Tuesday, November 7, 11 A.M.,
Rehearsal Room, Houston Hall.
CAMPUS
PERFORMANCE
SOCIETY: First of weekly, free
coffee-concerts on Thursday at
4:30. Room 100, Hare Building.
INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
ASSOCIATION: All I.A.A. members and all others interested
in attending a dinner on Nov. 7
with Dr. Bershady of the sociology dept. Please contact Allen
Monroe at EV 2-3174 or Marcia
Kipnees at 594-5468.
I.A.A. MODEL UN GENERAL
ASSEMBLY: Delegates and the
university community are invited
to participate in faculty-student
on the timely issues which will
be debated in the Model General
Assembly. Wednesday, 7:30
P.M., Houston Hall.
I.A.A. MOVIE: "The Knack
and How to Get It", tonight, 8:00
P.M., Irvine Auditorium, Sponsored by the International Affairs
Association.
I.A.A. MODEL UN GENERAL
ASSEMBLY:
Resolution from
country delegation due in the
I.A.A. office, Christian Association building, by today at the
latest.
ACTIVITY NOTICES
ALPHA PHI OMEGA: Meeting tonight at 8:00 in Houston Hall.
Pledges will induct at this meeting. Anyone who has not comLJ * 11111 • (> 11111M111 f 1111111111111111111 f 11111111) 11111! I»«1111
I
j
pleted his application, please call
Don Spooner at EV 2-6978 before
the meeting.
ALPHA PHI OMEGA: Picture
tomorrow at 3 in Upper Quad of
Men's Dorms. Jacket and tie.
CIRCLE K: Yearbook pictures today. 2:55, Hamilton Walk
near Medical Buildings.
EXPERIMENT
INTERNAtional living; yearbook picture will be taken today at 4:00
at Biology Pond. Wear costume of
your country.
HILLEL: Freshmen committee will meetTues., 11:00 A.M.
OUTING CLUB: Meeting at
7:30 P.M. today, at second floor
lounge. Christian Assoc. Christmas ski trip and Florida kevs.
All invited.
ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN
FELLOWSHIP: Meeting at 7:30
P.M. today in Christian Association, first floor lounge. Come
and meet our new director, Fr.
Goidich.
RECORD: Meeting tomorrow
at 4:00 in the Record office.
Mandatory for heelers of all
staffs and all business staff
members.
SCUE: Open meeting, 9:15
(Continued on page 7)
1 • 111111 f f 11111111111111111111111111 f 111111! I f 11111111 f 1111111111111 * '^
GALA - ALL TIME
REUNION AND MIXER
|
j
Election Day,
Tuesday-November 7th-9:00 P.M.
FEATURING
1 2-R0CKAND ROLL BANDS-2
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FREE BEER FOR EVERYONE! §
I Inn of the Font foils
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West Conshocken, Pe. |
Gents - Coat and Tie
/■■■iiiiitifltiititiifiiiiiif fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiif iiiiiiiiiifliiiittiiitif iiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiitiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiT
Vuit 'lite,
WIN A ROSE BOWL
WEEKEND FOR TWO!
£<xJtuUtd>
Alike C«Aic\
Win one of 25 all-expense-paid trips for three nights and three
days in the Los Angeles area highlighted by the Festival of
Roses, the Rose Bowl Classic, and a trip to Disneyland.
Sponsored by INA—Insurance Company of North America
—who brings you NCAA football every Saturday on television.
Just pick the winning team in this Saturday's game. For tie
breakers guess the final score and how many first downs the
winner will make. Enter your predictions on the entry blank
below and send to the address given.
(34th Street below Spruce)
"UCLA vs. U.S.C. (Sat., Nov. 18)
Additional prizes: 750 handsome travel bags.
What's our motive? We're interested in telling you about
opportunities with INA. We're offering these prizes in return
for the chance to mail you information. Simple as that.
Maybe this isn't the usual way to go about college recruiting.
But then we aren't a usual company.
AND TRY THE
Qa»ia44,d, ^ba^tUlt
y
SmoASielno-d"
And PatUtf,
OFFICIAL RULES
1. Complete entry blank or facsimile by
indicating winner or tie. Also predict
final score and number of first downs
of winning team.
2. Entries must be postmarked by
Friday before game, received by Friday
after game.
3. Five winners per school will be
determined each week in random
drawings from among all correctly
answered entries. In the event that
there are no correct entries, winners
will be determined by random drawings from among all entries received.
4. All winners will be included in final
sweepstakes in which 25 winners of
AT THE
T^f>fir;
Open Daily 10-4:30
Tuesday
Sunday
10-9
1-5
Mail to:
INA Football Sweepstakes
P. O. Box 1901
Philadelphia, Pa. 19105
trips for two persons will be determined by random drawings. (All
judging is being done by an independent judging organization.)
5. "Contest is open to all full-time
undergraduate and graduate students
of the college or university where this
newspaper is distributed except
employees of INA and members of
their families.
6. Winners will be notified by mail.
For complete list of winners, send
stamped, self-addressed envelope
with your enify.
7. Contest void where prohibited by
law. All federal, state and local regulations apply.
'"!
<m>
INSURANCE COMPANY
OF NORTH AMERICA
_will come out on top.
I say_
(write in the team you think will win)
The final score will be.
In , the realm of commercial
facilities in the ''superblock**
complex, Meridian listed the following as possibilities for inclusion: pharmacy, delicatessen,
The winning team will make.
Name
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
.Class of.
College or university.
My address
L
PAGE TWO
.first downs.
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1967
.-1
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Campus black power triumphs
Although they didn't know it,
the forces of black power and
black moderation met head-on
at the Christian Association Wednesday night, and black power won
by a knockout.
Downstairs in the lounge,
black Charles Campbell and three
white community leaders spoke
to an all-white audience of 15
people about how their organizations had fought for a clean,
prosperous, integrated West Philadelphia.
Upstairs in the auditorium
Muhammed Ali spoke to an allblack audience of 100 about where
it's at for them.
Charles
Campbell is a
smooth, well-dressed, cigarsmoking, middle-aged man and
president of the West Philadelphia Home and School Association and the Walnut Hill
Community Association.
Muhammed Ali is the-heavyweight champion of the world.
* * *
Downstairs, Campbell explained
how
a community
depends on people. "There are
good people, and bad people, and
a whole range in between," he
ERIC TURKINGT0N
said. And they come in both
colors, he added.
Upstairs
Muhammed Ali
swept into the auditorium, surrounded by an all-black crowd
of admirers.
One of the white community
leaders told of efforts to get
married graduate students from
Perm and Drexel to move into
new, subsidized, lower-income
housing being constructed near
the schools.
Not one couple
could be found, and the housing
project is today a segregated
one.
Upstairs a white reporter
from the Inquirer was told in
blunt terms he couldn't get into
the auditorium.
Campbell talked about poverty.
"Fifty-one per cent of
Negro families earn under $5000
a year,"
he explained. "Of
course, there's 16 or 17 per
cent of the white population in
the same boat." That's a lot
of white people too, he noted
accurately.
Upstairs a DP photographer
had to sneak into the auditorium
balcony to take a picture.
After a few minutes listening,
Hans Biimendijk of the Interfraternity Council rose to explain
all the good works the fraternities
do to further community relations
and to explain how the IF Council
has carefully checked all fraternity charters to insure that none
of them discriminate against
"Jewst> Christians, or Negroes."
Ups'tairs the crowd cheered
something Ali said. The community leaders talked about how
urban renewal in the past had
been "Negro removal" but they
were all sure that new urban
renewal would be different.
"There's a new attitude in Washington now," someone said.
"They could see the old bulldozer
■nethods hadn't worked out."
Upstairs sent down a burst of
applause.
Campbell said when he was at
Perm he couldn't get into a fraternity, and Hans replied that he
was sure things were different
now, and besides he didn't think
discrimination on a social or
economic basis was wrong. "A
fraternity exists to perpetuate
its own kind," he said.
Upstairs the crowd, few of
whom belong to fraternities.
thundered applause.
Biimendijk urged all the community leaders to speak to the IF
junior chairman to hear about
all the fine community projects
the IF was doing. Then the subject turned back to the community, and Hans Biimendijk left.
Three white students were
denied entrance to the auditorium. "We just wanted to see
Cassius Clay in person," one
with a southern accent said, and
they waited at the bottom of the
stairs, hoping to catch a glimpse
of him on his way out.
Diane Rosenberg of the Community Involvement Council told
of all the good works the CIC
does for the underpriviledged,
disadvantaged of the community,
especially in Mantua, and Powel-
A prominent University professor was recently named as one
of America's ten best teachers.
Dr. Moshe Greenberg, professor of Hebrew and Semitic
DR. CHARLES BASSETT
speaking on
"Some Trends in Modern American Fiction"
MONDAY - NOVEMBER 6
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At ten o'clock the discussion
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remaining spectators drifted
(Continued on page 7)
langues and literatures, was
recipient of the 1968 E. HarrisHarbison Award for Distinguished Teaching.
Greenberg
received
the
award at a dinner in Washington
last week at which the winners
met with President Johnson.
The award, presented by a
St. Louis foundation, "honors
men who excel as teachers without neglecting scholarly projects
of their own."
Greenberg said in an interview Tuesday that" it is not clear
why the distinction would have
been made." He said there are
better known and better qualified
men within the department.
The award offers the winner
a period cash grant or a one
semester period of freedom from
usual academic responsibilities.
Greenberg will use the grant to
take a leave of abscence from
the University.
Ureenberg, born in Philadelphia has taught at the University
since 1954. He teaches graduate
and mixed undergraduate-graduate courses in Oriental studies.
He will teach an undergraduate
course in the General Honors
program next semester.
There are about 85 students
in Greenberg's department.
"Our purpose is to train
scholars",
Greenberg
said.
"Most of the students in the
department are serious and quite
good."
Greenberg received a BA in
1949 and a doctorate in 1954,
both from the University. He was
later ordained a rabbi after
studying at the Jewish Theological Seminary of America in New
York.
Greenbere has served as a
visiting lecturer at the Hebrew
University in Jerusalem,
Swarthmore College, and the
Jewish Theological Seminary. He
is the editor of the Journal of
Biblical Literature monograph
series and author of "Introduction to Hebrew"
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Greenberg named as
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herself, she said, is part of a
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Upstairs the floor shook.
Diane Rosenberg got very irritated when one of the community leaders termed the CIC
"a bunch of bleeding hearts.'
He said he couldn't even find their
office and she swiftly informed
jim that it had a very large
office in Irvine's basement.
Upstairs everybody laughed.
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THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIA
PAGE THREE
I
mmmmm
The
Daily
1885
Pennsylvania]!
1967
DONALD M. MORRISON
Editor- in- Chief
Letters to the editor
:
mm. mmmmm
DENNIS H. WILEN
Managing Editor
ROBERT I. TUTEUR
Business Manager
LAWRENCE D. KROHN
Sports Editor
JAMES J. RESTIVO JR.
Features Editor
BETTY OSTROV
Financial Manager
A. STEVEN PERELMAN
Executive Editor
KENNETH MESKIN
Advertising Manager
MICHAEL KANAS
Business Coordinator
PAUL BLUMENTHAL
Photography Editor
STEPHEN MARMON
Night Editor
mm*
RICHARD B. SHAPIRO
Editorial Chairman
• vm mm
Capitol Hotel blues
TRAN VAN DINH
Collegiate Press Service
Tran Van Dinh is Washington correspondent for the Saigon Post,
THE SAIGON POST of October 21
printed a letter written by a Vietnamese
citizen to UjS. Ambassador Ellsworth
Bunker.
The letter reads:
"Dear Ambassador Bunker,
"On several occasions I have written
Your Excellency on my case about the
accrued rentals of the Capitol Hotel located at 107-A Dong Khanh Boulevard,
Cholon. And on each case, your aides
merely give me the assurances that the
appropriate office will be contacted for
action. However, these promises, up to
this writing, have remained mere words
to the disadvantage and hardship of my
family.
"USMACV (United States Military Assistance Command Vietnam) has been using my hotel for several years but has
withheld the payment of my rentals notwithstanding the Vietnamese Supreme
Court ruling No. 992/PLS dated May 25,
1966, proclaiming that the undersigned is
the owner, manager and has the right to
collect all rentals due on the building. Fon
an unknown reason, however, USMACV
has refused to pay the secured rentals
including those for the ground and first
floors (Lease No. USARV, E-933-66).
"Such an attitude on the part of USMACV amounts to Unlawful confiscation
of property from a Vietnamese citizen,
while the Americans and other allied
countries are here to help the Vietnamese
people. If I might say so, USMACV has
been using military force to deprive the
undersigned of the right to use his property, namely the Capitol Hotel.
If USMACV cannot pay me the rental
why can it not return the building to me?
\ am not interested in ren-'ng my building any longer but still USMACV is forcing me to rent it without any compensation at all.
"I should be grateful, Mr. Ambassador, if you could please take this case into
consideration once and for all. I also
hope that President elect Nguyen Van
Ihieu and Vice President elect Nguyen
Cao Ky will take notice to protect the
rights of a Vietnamese citizen who is being
unjustly treated by Americans in uniform.
"My nine children and I were asked by
USMACV to move out of the building's
ground floor on the promise of fair and
prompt payment of rentals. Once we were
out of the building, USMACV did not keep
its promise. Notwithstanding the valid
lease for the ground and first floors,
USMACV has ignored the provisions of
the said contract and has continued to
withhold payment of accrued rentals for
the whole building knowing that I cannot
do anything to get back my building in
spite of non-payment of the rent.
"Understandably, the payment was
withheld during the ownership litigation,
but after the Supreme Court made its
decision, USMACV still refuses to pay.
"I'm now in the hospital and very
sick and in need of medical attention.
I need money to pay my hospital bills.
Where will I get the money to pay my
hospital bills. Where will I get the money
if USMACV does not pay the rentals of the
Capitol on which depends the livelihood of
my entire family.
"Would you please, Mr. Ambassador
look into this case and make an impartial
decision which I will gladly accept. 1
believe that you and all the readers of this
open letter will help me in my right to
retain what I own from the oppressions of
military officers of which you and the
Commander in Chief of USMACV might
have been unaware.
Truong Binh and his family
55 Nghia Thuc Street, Cholon."
I sympathize with Mr. Truong Binh
and his family but I am shocked by his
naivety. Asa Vietnamese he should know
now that his country is occupied by
500,000 U.S. troops without any treaty,
only at the asking of people like General
Thieu and General Ky, who cannot represent the Vietnamese people.
If Mr. Binh reads the recent pronouncements by President Johnson and
Secretary of State Dean Rusk, he should
realize that Vietnam is simply a battlefield for the U.S. to contain the Chinese,
and that the U£. is not there in Saigon,
Cholon and all over his land, to help the
Vietnamese people.
Mr. Bihn must remember that in
November 1966, the mayor of Saigon,
Colonel Van Van Cua, was arrested and
handcuffed by the U.S. Military Police, in
Saigon. Mr. Binn's insistence on the return of his property is legitimate but
against the background of a situation in
which his own Compatriots are destroyed
daily both North and South by the U.S.
military power, his demand seems to me
totally irrelevant if not comic.
I advise Mr. Binh to befriend a UJS.
corporal to plea for the restoration of his
hotel rather than to call on General Thieu
and General Ky, the President and Vice
President elect of South Vietnam.
A hard day's night
(Continued from page 2)
Specter said.
The reporters continued asking questions, a New York cop
asked a girl from KYW to shut
off her tape recorder, and, as
the arraignment was about to
begin, the newsmen were asked
to sit down.
Weinstein was hustled in the
side door. He was dressed in a
brown tweed jacket, white shirt,
and wrinkled, baggy brown pants.
His usually heavy beard was
clean shaven. He was wearing the
new, wire-rimmed glasses he
had bought over the summer.
The usually jolly tobacconist was
wearing a bewildered frown.
He looked different with that
frown. Only once did the old
"kooky" Steve reappear during
the proceedings. He turned around to look at the press, and
(Continued on page 6)
The Daily Pennsylvanian is published Monday through Friday at Philadelphia, Pa. during
the fall and spring semesters, except during vacation periods, and the last seven class days
of each term. One issue published in August. Subscriptions may be ordered at Sergeant Hall.
34th and Chestnut Sts. at the rate of $10.00 per annum. Second class postage paid at Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. News and editorial Phones: (215) 594-7535. Business and advertising:
594-7534 (If busy call 594-7535).
PAGE FOUR
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1967
.:;.::.':.::;
DEPRESSED
Editor, The Daily Pennsyl vanian:
Its one of those dark fall days in
Penn's rainy town and today the miniskirts don't look quite so much fun and
the great graffiti wall protests somewhat
mutely under a mantel of wet autumn
leaves.
I could not help finding myself a little
depressed as I read your feature on the
tragedy of freshman Green. Though your
coverage left little for the pages of The
Philadelphia Daily News you are forgiven
because you still have time to learn what
is news and that good taste in a newspaper is more remarkable than sordid
trivia. What was more optimistic however
was that this unfortunate death might serve
to remind us that our campus is not free
from the reality of the world that we can
not shut out what is unpleasant. One can
not protest against the reality of death
and though it is indeed depressing on such
a day as this, it will not hurt us to pause
for a moment and absorb some of the
reality that is so often missing from our
environment.
Ben
PLEA
Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian:
I'm writing in regard to Mr. Gilman's
article on the upcoming Joan Baez Concert. I have a great admiration for Miss
Baez's voice, and a respect for her right
to express her views on current political
problems.
I believeMr.Gilman's article is hardly
objective journalism to say the least.
Instead it falls quite easily into the catagory of "bush league" editorializing. Anyone writing in such a manner for a respectable newspaper would be out of a
job in ten minutes.
This letter is a plea for some objective journalism. So far such a word doesn't
seem to be in your vocabulary.
Cecil H. Bliss
Wharton '69
HYPOCRISY
Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian:
Being a commuter, I was not on campus at the time of the demonstration at
Logan Hall on Nov. 1. Having no first-hand
knowledge, I must base what I believe on
reports from news media and TV film.
Though I myself do not believe in the
protestors' opinion, I do believe that a
peaceful demonstration to voice their
views is proper and serves as a sueful
instrument for dissent. But the infringement upon another's right cannot be tolerated; by not allowing freedom of passage
and speech for others with dissenting
views from their own, they immediately,
as a direct consequence of such action,
must also give up their own rights. Such
a stand is definitely against the principles
upon which this country has stood for so
many years and also against the Constitution, which guarantees freedom of
speech and assembly.
Such action must not be allowed in any
part of the UJ5., especially on a college
campus, where there is supposed to be
academic and intellectual freedom. The
demonstrators have protested that Dow
Chemical (of which napalm is an almost
insignificant part of its billion dollar
budget) and CIA should not be allowed on
campus, or even access to speak with
others. While they have accused the President of the U.S. for carrying on a policy
against the will of the people and without
authority, they have willfully and purposefully carried out a policy of their own
which directly violates the freedoms that
our descendants in previous generations
have fought and died toprotect.Thisisthe
worst form of hyporcrisy. Perhaps they
should have read Robespierre: I many
not agree with what you say, but I will
defend to the death your right to say it.
Such hypocrisy makes me very much
ashamed that I am a part of a student body
which has such a vocal minority bringing
a bad name to the university of which I
am a member.
Brett K. Kunin
College '70
BAD MANNERS?
Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian:
The behavior of the students who sat-in
at the CIA and Dow recruitment stations
'■■.'■."...'...'.'.■■':
.
was a flagrant breach of good manners
and showed a lack of courtesy towards
fellow students investigating career opportunities. It recalls the illegal sit-ins
of the so-called "civil rights" advocates.
Why, then, did I sit in yesterday, as I
have done in civil rights protests in the
past?
Because the moral outrage of
slaughtered Vietnamese and stifled Negroes cannot be accepted passively.
I cannot prove that Negores should not
be kept in slavery, or that they have a
right to dignity and development; I cannot
prove that the Vietnamese human beings
have any right to life, liberty and the
pursuit of happiness even when my government feels its interests threatened by their
continued existence. But I will not live in a
society which denies these basic tenets.
I support the right of anyone invited to
the university to speak publicity, from
Governor Wallace and LBJ to representatives of the CIA and Dow. But the execution
(as opposed to advocacy) of crimes against
humanity must not be permitted, on campus or elsewhere.
Recruitment is not a right, but a privilege extended selectively by the university as a service to its students. Would
a company which admits to hiringwhitesonly have an inalienable right to recruit
on campus? Would the university give
space to the Playboy Club to recuit bunnies? Or the Nazi Party? The question
really boils down to whether we care
enough about the Vietnamese people to
withhold the privilege of recruitment from
these agencies and corporations which
actively pursue their destruction.
Too many people are looking for some
consistent procedural formulation of appropriate behavior, to cover all possible
situations, by which to judge student actions. They wish to avoid the responsibility, even in the critical issues of our
generation, of making moral decisions,
and not just logical deductions from a set
of rules.
The majority ef the German people
behaved quite politely among themselves
during the Nazi period. Let's hope that if
we err it be in our etiquette, and not in
our humanity.
Hillel Bradin
Graduate Student
Moore School
NO ONE CARES
Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian:
Thursday night the Perm football players arrived at Hill Hall for the rally that
was to build up their spirit and psyche
them for Saturday's game. As they sat and
waited for the action to begin, one girl
asked them when they were going to start
singing as she thought they were the Glee
Club. Another Hill resident requested that
the boys leave as she had to study and she
didn't want any noise—a really warm welcome for the team.
After the team had been waiting for a
half an hour, the band arrived with six
members of the Spirit Committee, the
cheerleaders, and five or six loyal supporters. As the band began to play, maybe
150 girls leaned over their suite lounge
balconies or wandered into the lobby to
"see what was going on." About half of
those present yelled a few cheers and then
the band struck up the traditional Perm
songs, which the Penn students either
didn't know or just didn't bother singing.
The girls of the Spirit Committee did a
routine designed to create spirit; they got
a few whistles. As the football team filed
out, the true fans filed in—the bright young
men ready for a mixer.
Every week, these same "spirited"
supporters plus about half of the rest of
the Penn student body go to the game, get
smashed, and have a great old time for
themselves. Then, they blame the cheerleaders—who have put out a big effort of
late to psyche up the Penn student body—
for the apathy on the Penn campus. They
then scream about players who lose—the
same players who beat their brains out day
after day in practice, who sacrifice fifteen
or twenty hours a week, who spend two
weeks at football camp before school even
opens—all for the glory of dear old Penn.
Their reward is the drunken cries and
beer cans that fly from the upper deck
each week.
Who cares if Penn wins or loses—
certainly not the Penn students.
Gracia Goade
College for Women '70
Avoid controversy
Art of Sister Mary Cowida
Penn Democrats host
Tri-state convention
MARK COHEN
The Penn Young Democrats called a tri-state convention last week,
and received delegations for 14 schools, a speech by 1966 Pennsylvania Democratic gubernatorial candidate Milton Shapp, and telegrams from Senator Joseph Clark and Vice-President Hubert
Humphrey.
Humphrey, who had previously written that Penn had one of the
finest groups of Young Dems in the country," wished the convention
well and urged the delegates to support the Democratic ticket in 1968.
Clark hoped that the conventionwouldleadto some sort of permanent
organization.
In his speech, Shapp announced that he had coined a new word
"G-O-P, S-O-P." He acknowledged that the word could have two
meanings, but the one he preferred was "gopsop," which means that
the Republicans are Great on Promises but Short on Performance. He
urged the Young Dems to do their best to put his word into more
general usage.
Works plead for reforms
nun, but thenSister Mary Corita's
serigraphs are forceful comments on the passing scene.
"Doesn't the Bible call truth
Now on display in the Bowl
bread? Our smile has lost out, Room of Houston Hall through
we crawl around on a thin mar- November 17, Sister Corita's
gin-a life, maybe, but what for? works are battles among words
superimposed on one another,
and who wants it anywayV*
These are rather strong, upside-down and backwards, in
words for a Catholic-educated flashy florescent colors on stark
By JEAN MOSS
WORLD FAMOUS SERIGRAPHIST
FREE EDUCATION
Shapp, now chairman of the Pennsylvania Democratic Study
Group (DSG), noted that his campaign suggestion to guarantee
free education for all Permsylvanians who wanted it by floating
long-term low interest bonds which would be paid back in taxes
from the extra earnings of college graduates, has been adopted
in modified forms by the state government of Illinois and a Presidential Advisory Commission.
Shapp said that Vietnam was an important issue, but
he urged the Young Democrats not to make it their dominant issue, expressing the fear that so doing would split
and possibly destroy, their club.
After the Shapp speech, which had been preceded by a Houston
Hall luncheon, the delegates
broke up into various committees to discuss resolutions dealing with Urban Problems, the
196S elections, the structure of
the new organization, Political
Action, and one or two others.
The committees prepared resolutions. RESOLVED, that antidiscrimination legislation be
enforced, that aid to private
schools be opposed, that a mock
nominating convention be held in
April, that students and clubs
should actively participate in
primaries.
Coordinators and assistant
coordinators had just beenelect3d, the organization was only a
few minutes old, and the delegates decided—over the objections of Penn, Chestnut Hill,
and St. Peters of New Jersey,
to table the controversial resolutions.
Penn President Marc Kalmanash, elected coordinator for
Pennsylvania, hopes to mobilize
his new group and support Clark
in the 1968 April primary, organize Young Democratic Clubs
in schools that don't have them,
and do other things to spread the
influence of the Democratic
party.
Arraignment
(Continued from page 6)
After his arraignment Hildreth reportedly fled the courthouse while bail arrangements
were being made. He finally
turned himself into police at
Beach Haven, N.J., and was returned to Allentown early Monday
morning.
Think-in
(Continued from page I)
in" expressed the hope that it
would lead to a meaningful evaluation of the University and its
community. They said they hope
that the broad basis for support
will attract people with different
views who are willing to discuss
their beliefs and who feel they
can learn from others.
Although the main emphasis
of the "think-in** will be on the
University itself, the planners
all agreed that the issue of the
war in Vietnam will be brought
up. However, debate and discussion will be limited to the University and the war, and not the
was as a specific issue.
The main purp< >e of the
**think-in" is "to gt people in
the University con: .iunity to
think,*' several organizers said.
white backgrounds.
Culled from popular advertising slogans and the works of
well-known poets, the lines of
letters combine in a "scream
of consciousness" effect."Come
Live," "A Man You Can Lean
On," and "Give the Gang Our
Best Now," are but three examples of trade phrases used,
but are converted into pleas for
man to relieve the ills of hunger,
poverty, racial discrimination,
and the like. Also present are
myriad references to God, love,
the Church, and the necessity of
involvement.
STUDENTS EXAMINE A Sister Mary Corrida serigraph in the Houston
Hall Bowl Room. The collection will be displayed until November 13.
Soviets continue to oppress
minority sects-Strausz-Hupe
By CLAUDE GRAHAM
Listing recent examples of
Dr. Robert Strausz-Hupe, Soviet anti-Semitism, he noted
Professor of Political Science that a quota system has been reand director of the Foreign Poli- introduced to limit the number
cy Research Institute at the of Jewish students in Russian
University, dismissed current universities. He also referred
suggestions that the treatment of to the 1964 trials of the so-called
the Jews in Soviet Russia has 'black marketeers*, stating that
"there can be no doubt that the
improved in recent years.
Speaking on "Minorities and Soviet press with great relish
Minority Rights m the Soviet used these trials to focus the
bloc** at Hillel last Tuesday, guilt upon the Jew for the bad
Strausz-Hupe charged the Soviet economic conditions caused by
leaders with a 'credibility gap'— the policies of Mr. Krushchev."
the difference between what the His third example was the recent
leaders say is happening to the anti-Israel campaign launched by
he Soviet government, which, he
Jewish minority in the Soviet
Union and "what actually happens charged, "no one can distinguish
at the lower levels in Soviet from an anti-Semitic campaign."
The influential foreign policy
society."
expert explained that the antiSemitic policies of the Soviet
government imply that "the Soviet Union has accepted the
heritage of Czarist Russia with
regard to national minorities."
The Jew in the Soviet Union is
confronted today, he said, "with
the 'traditional drive for Russification" — the drive to impose
on all minority nationalities the
language and culture of the dominant Great Russian nationality.
Noting two other Soviet
government campaigns — the
drives
to convert national
minorities to Communism and
atheism, Strausz-Hupe asserted
that the Jew in Russia has been
hardest hit of all the minority
nationalities by these drives because "he has, unlike the other
ROBERT STRAUSZ-HUPE'
nationalities, no regional land
"Russification reigns"
base in the Soviet Union."
Sit-in
(Continued from page 1)
Dow has been selected for
protest because it is the principle supplier of napalm to the UJ5.
Department of Defense. Napalm
is a chemical thickener used to
jell gasoline in incendiary bombs
and is used by the U.S. in Vietnam.
Last week's protest was also
aimed at a recruiter from the
Central Intelligence Agency.
Among organizers of Wednesday's sit-in areLesnik; Jules
Benjamin, the graduate-student
chairman of the Vietnam Week
Committee; Joel Aber, a graduate student; Joe Mikuliak, a
Wharton junior, and graduate
student Dan Finnerty.
He also cited statistics showing that less populous minorities
in the Soviet Union are allowed
to have many more language
schools and places of worship
than the Jews.
In a question period after the
lecture, Dr. Strausz-Hupe referred to the "latent anti-Semitism
of the Russian masses,** and
criticized many aspects of US
foreign policy. He was asked
whether American public opinion
could have any effect on the Soviets' treatment of the Jews. Repeating the beliefs he has
expressed in his books, StrauszHupe argued that only the sub
rosa threat of United States*
power could have any influence
on the Soviet leaders. Asked if
Bertrand
Russell's protests
about Soviet anti-Semitism could
have any effect, he replied that
"no one in the Soviet Union pays
the slightest attention to Bertrand
Russell."
Sister Mary Corita is head of
art at Immaculate Heart College
in Los Angeles, a Catholic Peace
Fellowship supporter, and has
had exhibitions all over the world,
most recently at the IBM Building and the Vatican Pavilion of
the New York World's Fair.
The serigraph is a silk screen
method for the printing of different colors to produce a
smooth even effect. The most
striking is a wall-encompassing
"POWER" printed over a rambling commentary on Christ and
the needy which appears along
the bottom margin of the work.
Its catchiest and perhaps most
cynical comment reads, "We
never know where we're going
in spite of tons of catechisms
and the ten editions of the Handbook for Instant Salvation and
that best of sellers, I Kept You
Know Who Out and Found God."
The world outside
It's a clean machine
PHIL ARKOW
There were these two hippies, you see, and they were hanging
over a pinball machine in the Drug and blowing their minds. It looked
like a normal night at the Drug. And it looked like a normal pinball
machine. But there was something wrong.. .
You see, tonight this was no ordinary pinball machine. Tonight
was Mischief Night, and the forces of evil were colliding with the
forces of good throughout the world. Consequently, tonight this
machine was a magic machine.
Both hippies had never ever had any luck with the art of controlling the steel ball. In fact, you might even have said they were
klutzes. They sure admitted it. "We're Klutzes," they said. "So how
come we keep winning?"
For lo and behold, they kept racking up free games. It was getting
a little ridiculous after a while. Not that they'd pull five or six
games, but one or two, evenly spaced out so as to keep a quarter
going for about eight turns.
The first hippy won his first game. "Beginner's luck," 'he other
snorted. But then the first one won a second, then a third. "What's
your secret, man?" asked the bemused, bearded one.
"Love, man, love. You gotta treat these machines with love, 'cause
that's what's gonna save the world, man," he replied, as the wooden
tumbler clicked again.
"Nah,you're fullovit, man,"the bearded one said, taking his flipper
position. "A machine's like a woman. She'll profess love to you, but
then ya gotta beat the sh— out of her to get it back. Get in there, you
1"
And he kicked it and punched it and whammed the plunger and
slammed the buttons and hit a free game.
Well, now the first hippy was all kinds of upset. "But you gotta
love the Machine, man, 'cause one day they're gonna take over the
world!" he said, "And if we don't love them now, they won't love us
then!"
And he rambled on babbling his Lennon McCartney.
They decided to put it to a test. The first one would keep playing
for Love, and the second would play for Hate, and they'd see who won
more games.
A dollar and half later, they came out equal-both won many.
Bewildered, they left to partake of the cold October Country
air, or at least what could be gathered of it beneath the smog. They
returned to the machine only to find it was being-attackedl-by a
total stranged
They nonviolently, apathetically kicked him out of the Drug and
returned to their machine. The machine just sat there, staring at
them like a printed-circuit icon, mad. Mad they had left the machine
alone, to fall prey to.some unclean, unknown, unloving jock who just
happened to pass by.
The loving hippy played his nickel. He registered a world s record on the first ball: 002. Which is pretty hard, you gotta admit.
Two lousy, goddam—
The machine tilted.
M
He quickly put in another. "Machine," he wined, I love you,
sounding like the bartender in "Casablanca."
900 points later, he hit.
_.
(Continued on page 7)
MONDAY. NOVEMBER 6, 1967
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
;E
FIVE
I
Seeds of third world
A hard day
war are in N. Vietnam
English bishop says
The Rt. Rev. W. Ambrose
Reeves, who went to Hanoi early
this year, said last Wednesday
in Houston Hall that North Vietnamese leaders "don't overrate the peace movement here,"
and that "it won't affect their
calculations on the war."
Rev. Reeves, an Anglican
bishop from Surrey, England, was
a member of an interreligious
delegation which spent 10 days
in Hanoi in January.
Leaders in Hanoi, he said, do
not think the American peace
movement is big enough to affect
White House decisions on conduct
of the war in Vietnam.
Rev. Reeves asserted that,
"if there is a third world war,
it will be a racial war," and
said "the seeds of a third war
are already in North Vietnam."
The North Vietnamese, he
added, "think they are dying not
just for themselves, but for all
non-white
people, including
American Negroes, wherever
they are struggling to preserve
their basic human rights."
Rev. Reeves quoted the Prime
Minister of North Vietnam, Tham
Var Dong, saying that whether a
Democrat or Republican occupies
the White House is "a matter
of complete indifference" concerning prospects for ending the
war.
Rev. Reeves added that "there
is no confidence in Hanoi on
the truthfulness of the American
administration." He emphasized
this is not necessarily his own
view, but quoted Tham as saying,
"We ask deeds, not words, from
President Johnson."
"I found the morale in Hanoi
extremely high, which , I suspect, resulted from the bombing," Rev. Reeves said.
He asserted that "there is
not the slightest chance of the
Hanoi government being prepared to go to the conference table
until the bombing of their country ceases
unconditionally."
Tham reminded him. Rev. Reeves
added,
that plotting against
French colonial control began
many years ago in caves', and
told him, "If necessary, we shall
return to the caves."
Talks with a National Liberation Front leader convinced him.
Rev. Reeves continued, that there
is "no identity of interest between the NLF and Hanoi." Rev.
Reeves, who described the NLF
representative as "easily the
most intelligent and shrewd leader"
he met in Vietnam,
emphasized that NLF guerrilla
fighters obtain many arms from
Americans through both theft and
the black market.
The difference between North
and South Vietnamese citizens,
Rev. Reeves commented, is "less
than the difference between England and Scotland." He added
that former South Vietnamese
Premier Ky was born in Hanoi,
and that many North Vietnamese
leaders come from Saigon.
Rev. Reeves deplored the fact
that the peace movement concentrated on the evils of nuclear
weapons, ignoring the use of
conventional
weapons against
civilians, in the form of antipersonnel fragmentation bombs.
He noted that Russian aid
to North Vietnam, in the form of
planes, trucks, and heavy equipment, far outstrips in value Chinese rice
and small arms
supplies.
Rev. Reeves said correspondence to Hanoi convinces him that
one-third of the city may now have
been destroyed by bombs. He estimated the current population
of Hanoi between 300,000 and
400,000, and said most of the
city's children and elderly citizens have been evacuated to the
country because of the bombing.
No bombing occurred in the
city while he was visiting there,
he said.
Rev. Reeves, for 11 years .
Bishop of Johannesburg, South
Africa, was expelled from that
country by the government in
1960 , after he protested policies requiring segregation of
churches. He is now rector of a
church in Surrey, and assistant
to the Bishop of Chichester,England.
(Continued from page 4)
seeing a reporter from The Daily
Pennsylvanian, he smiled a smile
of recognition. It probably was
the same kind of smile Eddy
Sherman had seen in the ticket
agency.
After Weinstein waived extradition, he was turned over
to the Philadelphia authorities.
As the formal transfer was
made in the hall outside the
courtroom, the N.Y. police gave
him their farewell.
"OJC.t Stevie," a cop saidas
he clicked the handcuffs on to
Weinstein's wrists. "Busy court
you've got here," Specter commented to another New York detective.
The contingent moved down
the steps from the second-floor
courtroom, and Neil Ridge repeated his story of Weinstein's
capture again.
Now in the hands of *he District Attorney's office Weinstein
was placed in the same car with
Specter. His raincoat covered his
handcuffs.
With Assistant D.A. Sprague
driving, the four-car motorcade
sped out of New York, sirens
wailing.
It went through the Holland
Tunnel and then made a rest
stop at the Peter Stuyvesant
center, the first on the Jersey
turnpike.
While a few of the cars gassed
up, a detective was dispatched to
bring food to the lead car. Weinstein sat in the back seat, with
Detective James McGowan and
Inspector Jospeh Brophy on
either side.
After the pit stop, the convoy
sped down the turnpike, emergency flashers blinking, at
speeds up to 90 miles an hour.
The cars—minus one which
had a flat tire in the middle of
the journey— made it to the
Police Administration Building
"Roundhouse" at 8th & Race
Sts. in an hour and 30 minutes.
There, Weinstein was turned
over to the Homicide Division
for questioning.
THE RECORD YEARBOOK PICTURES OF
VARSITY CLUB WILL BE TAKEN NOV. 7,
11:00 MEN'S DORMITORIES, 37th & SPRUCE
Specter left for the Harvest
Ball at the Bellevue-Stratford
Hotel. He lamented the fact that
he had to go in a three-piece
brown suit to the black-tie affair. "My wife is waiting," he
explained.
Weinstein was in the Homicide office from 10:30 P.M. until about 12:50 Sunday morning.
At It 15 P.M., Weinstein's
parents were ushered into the
office, as movie cameras whirred and strobe lights flashed.
Mr. and Mrs. Myer Weinstein
were grim-faced as they went
behind the door marked "No
Admittance." None of the reporters asked them questions.
At 12:50, Weinstein came
down the elevator for his arraignment.
His pasty complexion looked
even paler as the clerk read
out the charge, "murder."
He didn t smile at anyone
this time.
Dr. William Hildreth, a
research associate in the University's graduate biophysics department, has been arraigned on
larceny and forgery charges in
Allentown, Pa.
According to Allentown
police, Hildreth allegedly stole a
number of faculty pay checks
from faculty mailboxes at Lehigh University, and attempted
to cash them at a number of
Allentown banks.
He was apprehended last
Tuesday outside the Alletntown
First National Bank after allegedly trying to cash a check
there, and several more stolen
checks were found in his car.
(Continued on page 4)
UPSG changes one bylaw
allocates $135 of its funds
UPSG passed two bills Monday night, one amending a UPSG
by-law and the other allocating
$135 of UPSG funds.
The by-law amendment clarified the classification of student
organization as honorary. The
by-law now classifies an organization as honorary which "holds
as its stated chief purpose the
recognition, by admission to the
organization, of undergraduate
students who have distinquished
themselves by exhibiting out-
fl greeting cord...
standing achievement and/or
qualities of leadership in extra
curricular activities and/or academics."
Other developments at the
meeting: Carolyn Heff has been
selected to fill the 1968 Assembly Woman's seat left vacant recently, and Neil Pinsky has been
appointed chairman of the UPSG
Rules Committee, filling the vacancy left by the resignation of
Hemphil.
oid o check...
oil rolled iito one. Seed o
GIFT-CHECK
V®
GIRARD TRUST BANK
AT
36th and WALNUT
V
4
O
WEAR LETTER SWEATERS.
and now...
Biophysics
professor
arraigned
o
n
WHAT IS ITS SIGNIFICANCE?
£
JADH1EAST
CORAL
A NEW AFTER SHAVE & COLOGNE
Beverly Basick,
Dept. of Anthropology
Archetypical.
The ritual of the Midnight Pudding Snack is
well established in primitive societies. Since
Shake-A Pudd'n does not require refrigeration,
it lends itself to use in dormitories (surely one
of the most primitive societies), thereby
fulfilling this basic, instinctual human drive
at the precise moment it arises.
@£9, Francine Factor,
Dept. of History
Of tremendous historical significance.
Had Shake-A Pudd'n been discovered in the
18th Century, the French Revolution would
probably never have taken place when it did.
Marie Antoinette's famous remark, "Let 'em eat
cake," would no doubt have been transformed
to "Let 'em eat pudd'n," thereby appeasing
the masses for at least another century.
Harry Holesome,
Dept. of Health Education
The American Dream come true.
Shake-A Pudd'n combines healthful nutrition,
bracing exercise and, above all, Good Clean Fun.
An essential part of the Physical Fitness Program.
Sylvia Cimbill,
Dept. of Psychology
Truly Freudian.
Powder and water are mixed in a cup, an
obviously mammalian formation, seen on a
deeper level as Mother. One shakes the cup, in a
desperate but futile attempt to shake off the
inhibiting Superego and free the primitive Id.
Michael Media,
Dept. of Sociology
A true product of the Electric Age.
Shake-A Pudd'n has transformed a fragmented,
time-consuming, mechanical task into
an almost instantaneous, totally involving
experience. Definitely "cool." Although
equally good at room temperature.
PAGF
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1967
Shake-A Pudd'n'
the new instant
dessert mix from Royal.
Just put water and powder in the cup, snap
the lid, shake for 30 seconds and let it set.
In Chocolate, Vanilla, Butterscotch or Banana
Each package complete with four puddings,
spoons, lids, and throwaway shakers.
HEEL THE D.P.
Can The WaldorfAstoria, a solidly
entrenched
member
f
9
of the establishment
initiate a meaningful
dialogue with the
youth of America?
We can try.
By telling i> to you like it is: if you want to enjoy Thanksgiving in
New York City, first check out The Waldorf's —
MINI-RATE SCHEDULE FOR STUDENTS
$ 9.00 per person, 2 in a room
$12.00 per person, 1 in a room
$23.00 for 3 persons in a room
At The Waldorf, you'll be right around the corner from the swinging
East Side scene of "nowness." Maxwell's Plum, Friday's, Mr. Lalls,
and all those other friendly spots between 48th and 65th Streets are
just a short walk from our location on Park Avenue between 49th
and 50th. That means you can stay at New York's finest hotel at bargain rates and save a bundle on taxi fare. When it comes to eating,
well. The Waldorf's famed Oscar is a bargain, too. And wouldn't
you just know...it's a Hilton. How's that for a college try?
Just call or write
Clean machine
"The Knack ff
"The Knack and How to Get
It" will be shown in Irvine Auditorium tonight at 8:00 P.M. This
prize winning film won the
Cannes Film Festival award for
the Best Picture in 1965 and the
Grant Prize of 1965 by the Belgian Film Critics. The film deals
with the fine art of la seduction
as the French put it. or the knack
as the British prefer it. The hilarious plot involves Ray Brooks
(who has the knack) trying to
teach it to his friend Michael
Crawford (who hasn't) using
naive, suspicious Rita Tushingham as the girl upon whom to
demonstrate his knack.
Judith Christ of the N.Y.
Herald Tribune calls this picture
"off-beat and totally irresistable
. . .bursting at the seams with
a vitality, the vigor and the free
form conventionality that are the
hallmarks of youth. . .one of the
season's delicious delights. . ."
"Continued from page 5)
The bearded'hateful hippy stared and tried.''Machine/* he whined.
"I love you." He registered a 001.
He slammed the next ball back to the Gottlieb factory. On the third
ball, he hit "matchies."
OFF INTO THE SUNSET...
When last seen, the two hippies were on the Expressway, hitching
to Las Vegas to try their new "system." But of course they'd never
succeed. After all, the Desert Inn does not have what the Drug has in
the way of, shall we say, atmosphere? And with all the marriages and
divorces, it's awfully hard to distinguish love from hate. And of
course, Mischief Night does come only once a year.
(Continued from page 3)
P.M., tomorrow, Room 30, Irvine Auditorium.
VARSITY CLUB: Picture for
Record, Tues., Nov. 7, at 11:00
in main arch, Men's Dorms, 37th
and Spruce. Wear letter sweater.
YOUNG DEMOCRATS: Meeting Tuesday, 11 A.M., Friars'
Room, Houston Hall. Election
will be held for Freshman Representative.
DP Classifieds
bring
fast results :>oc
UK.
2»C
Black power
Campus
Events
3i
3»*C
2tK
DID YOU KNOW??
We. ale *tau* ^enU^a
LUNCHEON
Monday thru Friday, from 11:30 A.M.
(Special prices on Cocktails!)
Hymes speaks
THE CRACKER BARREL ROOM
(IN THE HAMILTON MOTOR INN.)
301 Pork Av«nu«. N«w Yofk, N.Y. 10022 T«l.(212) 355-3000.
CHESTNUT AT 39th 3JJC
3<}C
*K
3HC
EV 6-5200
XK
3ffC
Dr. Dell Hymes, professor
of anthropology, will speak at a
colloquia at 2:00 this afternoon
in Room 126, the Armenberg
I school. on "The structural Ananlysis of Myths.
X
"Happy Thanksgiving
Do you buy
a shirt
or a label?
If you want a good shirt,
look for a good label. One
that means the shirt is styled
to last. With rolls, tapers and
pleats in the right places.
Like this Arrow "Cum
Laude" Oxford. It's a woven
blend of Dacron® polyester
(Continued from page 3)
around for a while and then went
home.
A little laterMuhammedAll's
speech ended. He too had talked
about the community around us,
their hopes and expectations.
From the looks on the faces of
his audience as they left, he
had said a lot.
None of the departing black
students so much as glanced into the room where the community leaders had held their
talk. The leaders had presented
sound, practical, realistic plans
for gradual improvement of the
area. This wasn't anything hostile
to the crowd of black students
leaving the CA, nor anything alien
or distasteful. It was just not
relevant to them. And Muhammed
Ali, and what he said, about
black power, was.
if
checks, plaids, solids and
and cotton with skinny
stripes. All the things you
boxed stripes of green and
look for in a shirt-for
blue. Button-down collar,
tapered waist, long sleeves. •$7.00.
And in a good shirt you'l
Perma-lron so it won't
find a good label.
wrinkle.
The best labels come in
And "Sanforized-Plus." In
our shirts. Arrow.
5:
fads & Gifts
AVAILABLE AT
Zavelle's
3407 WALNUT
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1967 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN
PAGE SEVEN
Undefeated hooters rip Harvard, 3-0
By HOWARD TOPEL
"Penn has a fine soccer
team." was Harvard coach Bruce
Munro's comment following Saturday's Stewart Field action, and
the Quakers were indeed a finely
meshed unit as they rolled to a
3-0 victory over the Cantabs.
Penn's steady ball control
and pinpoint passing were the
dominant factors in the game,
as the Quakers rapidly adjusted
to a wet, slippery field and
raced to an early lead.
With only 3:13 gone in the
first quarter, Roger Lorberbaum
blasted an eighteen yard shot
from center field at the Harvard goal. Goalie Jay Breese
appeared to have made the save,
but at the last second the ball
trickled off his fingers and rolled
into the net for the first tally
of the game.
Penn added another goal at
the 14:00 mark of the period.
Lorberbaum brought the ball
down the left side of the field
and fed Bruno Vogt with a perfect pass in front of the goal.
on the left wing. The high scoring senior, who leads the Quakers in assists with ten, lofted
a perfect pass in front of the
goal that Rett Sturman headed
into the upper left corner of
the net for his fifth goal of
the campaign.
Vogt found Ken Rigden open a
little to the right of the net
and set him up with a pinpoint pass that the sophomore
forward exploded past the helpless Breese for a 2-0 Quaker
lead.
HARVARD FAILS TO SCORE
Harvard had its best scoring
opportunity of the game in the
second quarter. Nine minutes
*nto the period, Quaker goalie
Ted Isaacson blocked a Cantab
shot and the ball rolled loose
in front of the Penn goal. Three
Harvard players had shots at
cutting the Red and Blue lead,
but were unable to control the
ball. Quaker defensive stalwart
Larry Miller finally got his foot
on the sphere and drove it out
of scoring range.
Penn took to the offense again in the third quarter. At
17:00 Lorberbaum broke away
down the left side of the field
but was stopped by the defense.
At 21:00, Vogt's hard shot from
DEFENSE STOPS CRIMSON
(Photo by DANIEL WOLF)
SOPHOMORE KEN RIGDEN dribbles past Harvard's Dick Hardy in
Saturday's 3—0 win over the Cantabs. Rigden scored a key first period
goal that helped the Quakers topple the Crimson from a first place tie
in the Ivy League.
in front of the Crimson goal
sailed over the net by inches.
Not to be denied, the Quakers continued hammering away
at Breese, and sharp passing
resulted in the third score of
the game with one second left
in the third quarter. Vogt brought
the ball up the center of the
field and passed to Lorberbaum
vanian sports
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1967
PAGE EIGHT
Harvard gridders trounce Penn, 45-7,
as Zimmerman, Lord excel for victors
By BARRY JORDAN
Harvard quarterback. Ric
Zimmerman, had the best day
of his career while his teammates enjoyed the best performance of the season, rolling over
outmanned Penn, 45-7 before a
Homecoming crowd of nearly
16,000.
There was little the Quakers
could do to stop the senior southpaw who completed 14 of 17
passes for 237 yards. On the
receiving end of nine of those
aerials was senior end. Carter
Lord, who made them good for
199 yards.
The Quakers started off
quickly and there was a feeling
of upset in the air as Mark
Warner pounced on a Zimmerman fumble at the 35-yard line.
On the first play, tailback,
Cabot Knowlton, found a gaping hole off right tackle, made
one of his patented moves, and
picked up 11 yards. Penn's senior workhorse carried five more
times, bringing the ball to the
six, where Bill Creeden carried it over on a rollout after
a good fake. Carl Henderson's
conversion made it 7-0.
The Crimson took the ensuing kickoff and started to
march. Zimmerman, mixing the
running of Vic Gatto and Ray
Hornblower and passes to Lord
gained a first and goal on the
Quaker five yard line.
Here the young Red and Blue
defense braced for one of its
GREG ZYCH (28) tackles Vic Gatto as Mike Eisenhour (47) and Dave
Pottruck (53) move in. Gatto picked up 81 yds rushing against the
Quakers.
three successful goal line stands
of the afternoon. Gatto got two
yards on two carries, a Zimmerman pass was blocked, and on
fourth and three Gatto was
stopped on the one.
When the Quakers couldn't
get out of the hole, Bob Odell
called for a third down punt and
John Brown booted out to the
Penn 43-yard line.
Again Harvard moved toward
the Penn end zone, with Gatto,
Hornblower and Guthery Crim
gaining chunks of yardage on the
ground. With fourth and two on
the ten Crim tried the left side
of the Quaker line. Warner hit
TOM WYNNE kicks 38 yard field goal in fourth quarter action. The
three pointer gave Harvard a 38-7 lead.
him hard and he fumbled to the
four where Brown covered the
loose pigskin.
Caught again deep in its own
territory Penn punted on third
and eight and the Crimson threatened from the Penn 32, as the
first quarter ended.
This time Harvard was not
to be denied. Zimmerman hit
Lord with a 22 yard pass and
the Crimson had goal to go
from the four. On third down
Gatto just pushed his way into
paydirt to score the first of
four second quarter touchdowns
for the visitors. Tom Wynne
added the extra point.
Two minutes later Harvard
was on the scoreboard again
as Zimmerman hit Lord with a
38-yard scoring strike on a
double reverse pass.
Taking the kickoff. the Quakers finally began to generate
some offense with Knowlton and
Jerry Santini shouldering most
of the burden. One of the big
plays in the drive was a 14-yard
pass from wing back Pete Wisniewski to Rick Owens. With
fourth and five on the Harvard
10, the Quakers tried the wingback pass again but Don Chiofaro, Harvard's captain, intercepted at the Crimson 6.
Harvard promptly marched
the 94 yards in 12 plays to
score on a 14-yard pass to Fred
Reed. The kick was wide and it
seemed the Crimson would take
a 20-7 lead into the lockerroom.
With only three minutes left.
Creeden tried to move the Quakers through the air but Chiofaro
picked off his second interception and returned it to the Penn
30. It took only three plays for
Harvard to score on a sweep by
Hornblower.
The second half started out
much the same as the first,
Creeden fumbled the ball away on the Penn 19 but the defense again held on fourth and
goal at the one.
When the Quakers were unable to move, Harvard scored
again after a 33-yard completion from Zimmerman to Lord.
Odell then made a move that
had to prove to be one of the
few bright spots in a long
Quaker afternoon.
The Penn coach inserted
Bernie Zbrzeznj in the quarterback spot. The soph signal caller, described by Odell as "a
real cool customer", proceeded to amass 141 yards in the
air in a little over a quarter
of playing time. Hitting Owens, Pete Blumenthal, and
Dave Graham, his favorite target as a freshman, Zbrzeznj
led the Quakers to 12 first downs
but could not score against a
Harvard defense that was sitting
back waiting for him to pass.
Despite this Zbrzeznj left a lasting impression on a day that
was all Harvard.
Penn's ball control completely dominated the fourth
period of play. Although Harvard desperately tried to get
back into the contest, the Quaker
defense was so effective that the
Cantabs were unable to launch
even one shot at Isaacson in the
entire quarter.
"It was a sweet win," said
Quaker coach Charlie Scott,
whose teams had not beaten Harvard since 1963. The victory
knocked the Crimson out of the
ranks of the unbeaten in Ivy
League play, and avenged last
year's 6-2 trouncing at the Cantab's hands.
Quaker soccer fortunes almost suffered a crippling blow
near the end of the first "half.
With a minute to play in the
second quarter, Harvard's two
leading scorers, Jaime Vargas
and Ahmed Yehia, combined on
a play that left Yehia zooming
in on Isaacson uncontested.
Penn's All-Ivy goalie made a
tremendous save but was shaken
up on the play. After a delay of
several minutes, however, the
senior net minder, who has not
missed a minute of action in
two years, was able to continue
what resulted in his sixth shutout of the season.
TED ISAACSON
Fashions sixth shutout
Bowlers lose
Penn's bowling team dropped
a 3-0 decision to Villanova last
weekend as the first-place Wildcats mounted substantial winning
margins in all three games of the
match, capped by a 953-889 victory in the high-scoring final
game. The high scorer of the
day for Penn was Steve Gootzeit with a 548 total. The Quakers are still in third place in the
Delaware Valley Division of the
EIBL and will meet Temple's
pinmen next week.
Varsity grid stats
Passing
Atts.
Zbrzeznj 24
Creeden
13
Wisniewski 2
Totals
39
Comp.
11
6
1
Yds.
141
47
14
18
202
Receiving
Caught Yds.
107
9
Owens
2
36
Dunn
2
26
Blumenthal
12
Knowlton
11
Wi sniewsk i
1
8
Graham
7
Burred
-5
Creeden
First downs
Rushing yardage
Passing yardage
Return yardage
Passes
Passes intercepted
Punts
Fumbles lost
Yards penalized
att. 15,967
Rushing
Atts.
18
Knowlton
9
Creeden
8
Santini
3
Zbrzeznj
3
Burrell
Wisniews ki 1
1
Monahan
Yds
64
15
32
-15
13
4
0
43
113
Totals
Totals
18
202
Penn Harvard
21
23
113
264
202
283
154
79
18-39
17-24
2
3
6-30.2
0
1
2
4-20
4-41