Sally Pennsylvanian VOL. LXXXIII PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1968 NO. 107 Gross condemns tuition increase, tax-exempt status Increased speculation among top University officials that a tuition hike may be announced soon brought a quick condemnation of the proposal from State Rep. Bernard M. Gross yesterday. Contacted at his office, the Philadelphia Democrat declared: "The University is doing a fine job in increasing the number of millionaires on campus." Gross said the University should "concentrate more on books and not on bricks" to help combat rising costs. "They should use buildings year round, start classes earlier and keep students later at nigfrt to make better use of the buildings," he said. The state representative is against the construction of any new dormitories. "They should take more students from Philadelphia and house students in private homes at lower costs," he declared. Gross said that he will introduce legislation "in the future" to remove tax exemptions from University dormitories. "The people of Philadelphia subsidize the dorms and the public needs the money more than the University of Pennsylvania," Gross added. Gross said he feels he can get the bill to remove dorm tax exemptions passed before Nov. 8. It was at a press conference last November that President Harnwell first hinted that the University was considering raising tuition. It is "not at all unlikaly," he said, that the tuition might be raised. He said the $200 figure was the one being considered. But, he added in January, tuition has "gone about as high as it can," barring unforeseen inflation. Hill strikers claim 130 participants By MARK LIEBERMAN Black past is topic of new course s. MOSS CURIOS BEATNIK POET ALLEN GINSBERG, shown in pose expressive of his philosophy, speaks tonight at 8 in Irvine Auditorium in a Connaissance— sponsored lecture. (See story on page 7) Resisting the draft: VI Draft officials assail resisters By WILLIAM K. MANDEL Last of a series "If they want to go to Canada fine, but they'd better not try to come back." Gen. Henry Gross, state director of the selective service system, is disgusted by draft resisters, especially those who flee the country. Gross thinks keeping your appointment with the draft board is like paying income tax. "If a man doesn't pay his taxes, he's in a lot of trouble," says Gross. "It's the same thing with the draft." Gross says there are other ways to avoid military duty than leaving the country, turning in your draft card, or ignoring induction orders. "If a man holds the Supreme Being higher than his country, then he can apply for a 1-A (conscientious objector) classification," says Gross. "If he doesn't want to go through proper channels, I have no sympathy for these draft dodgers." Other officials and patriotic organizations react unfavorably toward draft resisters and protesters. A spokesman for American Legion County Headquarters says, "If I told you what I thought, you wouldn't be able to print it." Pressed to comment on war opponents and draft resisters, the spokesman adds, "They're such a low form of life that I couldn't waste my time thinking about them." Alexius Conroy, president of UPSG, said fleeing to Canada to escape the draft strikes him as foolish. "I don't see any sense in it (fleeing to Canada) myself," he declared. "There's a warrant The ad-hoc Food Committee and the standing Hill Hall Food Committee yesterday claimed 130 participants in the food strike which took place at the women's dormitory Tuesday evening. The joint committee disputed the claim of Dining Service Director John Scott that only 37 students left trays of food uneaten in the cafeteria. Lucille Chia, a sophomore in the College for Women and one of the members of the ad hoc committee refused to call the boycott a success on the basis of numbers but did say it was effective. "Because of the strike there will be a meeting," she commented, "and we will be able to discuss this entire situation." The coeds protested a change in the dining service which made it difficult for them to get second helpings of meat or desert.Coeds previously had taken "illegal" seconds and protested when the. The History department plans dining service changed proceto offer its first course in black dures. It was the service's plan, history next semester, tentatively titled "The Negro in according to Scott, to allow students second helpings on a cash America." Scheduled to teach the course basis. The system was attempted Monday evening but met with little is Theodore Hershberg, a visiting instructor in the department success. The organizers of the food who currently conducts a seminstrike released the tabulation ar on Controversial Topics in of questionnaires which had been Negro History," as part of The issued on Tuesday to coeds as Daily Pennsylvanian - sponsored Experimental Seminar prothey entered the dining room. gram. The questionnaire asked simply The idea of offering such a if the coed planned to participate course was first put forward by in the boycott and why. The forms were answered by three representatives of the Society of Afro-American Students, 357 women, 130 of whom indiwho suggested it to Dr. Alfred cated participation in the boycott. Rieber, chairman of the HisNot all of the students who responded entered the dining room, tory Department, last week. Hershberg, the prospective however. instructor of the course, is a According to the committee statement, more than half of the doctoral candidate at Stanford students indicating participation University, now working on his expressed dissatisfaction with dissertation here. Neither Rieber nor Hershberg the quality and quantity of food could be reached for comment served. Approximately onefourth objected to the policy yesterday. The coordinator of the change with regard to secondExperimental Seminar program, helpings, and the remainder opposed the compulsory food DP Executive Editor Stephen A. Pereleman, said he was "very service contract in general. Sandra Gustafsen, director of pleased" at the prospect of a Hill, said yesterday the actual seminar topic being used as a regular course. number of students who partici"A primary objective of the pated in the boycott is not as important as the reasons behind seminars," he said, "is to allow instructors to try out new the strike. material in the hope of establish"A key point is that all but ing new courses. We' re pleased to about 80 students who responded see this development." (Continued on page 10) out for your arrest if you come strators in the city. . back to the country. You lose "We just do our job day by your American citizenship." day," Fencl says. "When a disOn the other hand, Conroy turbance breaks out, we just take says he doesn't agree with draft care of it, that's all." director Louis B. Hershey*s reMeanwhile, draft resisters cent directive calling for reclas- plan more militant activity leadsification of all draft and war ing up to the major parties' protesters. nominating conventions in Au"The legal penalties of progust. test are enough," he comments. "I don't see any point in reclasCanada-bound war opponents sifying protesters." can take heart from Gross's laConroy said reclassifying ment: "Canada hasn't agreed to draft resisters only dilutes the extradite anyone who runs there content of membership in the to get out of the draft, dammit." armed forces. "It's really degrading for the men in the armed forces to have protesters put there as punishment," he said. "I think it defeats the whole purpose of the armed forces, and the pride the men should have in it." A spokesman for Veterans of Foreign Wars Capt. Slowe Post #3090 says that the VFW had no opinion on draft resisters. "We're American citizens, and whatever the United States does that's what we think it should do," he states. "We think the U,S. officials know more about it, and whatever they do, we agree with." "Personally," he intones, "I hate them." "These kids think they're so smart," he continues. "If they had the brains their parents had, they'd all enlist. How can they sit on their ass and watch theU»5. get pushed around?" "1 don't care what these kids do," Gross notes. "They'll all end up in jail anyway. I can't bother myself about them." Lt. George Fencl, head of the Philadelphia Police civil disobedience squad, says his group has no plans to move against demon- Wiggers are all fair Photo by DANIEL WOLF While all you flower children will be going to hear Allen Ginsburg do his thing, these industrious men of Pennsylvania will be zipping zippers, stuffing bras, donning makeup, and generally getting ready for tonight's opening of the Mask and Wig Club's 80th annual production All's Fair." Really Dead?" C. Lester FrankFreshmen or Sophomores urged INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN lin, playwright; John Bos, Manto attend. Thurs. Feb. 8,7:00PM, FELLOWSHIP: Winter Weekend aging director, Theatre of the Room 10, Houston Hall. Trip, Fri. thru Sunday, leaving Living Arts; Gloria Maddox, actINFORMAL DISCUSSION: tomorrow at 4:30 and 6:00 from ress; E. Schier, Bulletin Drama Bull session with Dr. Ghandi, Houston Hall. Critic. Franklin is author of open to undergraduate communLUTHERAN CAMPUS MIN"Scaffold of Marionettes," based ity, will be held Tuesday, Feb. ISTRY: Lutheran Campus Chapel 13, at 7:30, 3818 Chestnut St., Service Sun., 11 A.M., Christian Enter via alley off 36th St. near on Hattie Carrol murder—now at the ""heatre of the Living Arts. Apt. E-302. Sign up in the Student Association Building, 36th and Locust Walk. Government Office, or Houston Locust Walk. Everyone welcome. CATACOMBS: Meeting to- Tonight at 8 P.M., 200 College Hall. Hall Information Desk anytime night at 7:15 for all freshmen, S.D.S.: Meeting tonight canHISTORY CLUB:First meeting from Mon. thru Thurs. of this sophomores and juniors interceled. Postponed meeting will be week. For more information, call held at 8 Sunday night in Houston ested in writing and psrforming to organize plans, activities, etc. EV 2-1542. Hall. satirical material. Outstanding All history majors or interested members of this group will form the nucleus of next year's Underground company, but will also perform this year on their own. An equal opportunity employer. Enter via alley off 36th near Locust Walk. CIRCLE K: Meeting tonight Dietrich E-206, 7:30 P.M. Educational program. ENGLISH CONVERSATION PRACTICE PROGRAM: Any foreign student interested in improving his English in a dis7 P.M. TODAY - 4TH FLOOR BENNETT HALL cussion group led by returned Peace Corps volunteers should come and join the group this Sunday evening at 7:30 P.M. in the OPENINGS ON ALL STAFFS - ART, PHOTO, West Lounge of Houston Hall. EDITORIAL AND CREATIVE WRITING, BUSINESS GRADUATE ENGLISH CLUB: Panel discussion "Is the Theater Campus events CAMPUS AGENDA CAMPUS ORGANIZATIONS: All groups must pick up UPSG budget request forms in Room 117 Logan Hall, and sign up for interviews if desired. Deadline for return of forms Feb. 16. CAMPUS PERFORMANCE SOCIETY: C.P.S. will present the seventh of its free weekly coffee concerts at 4:30 today in Room 100. Hare Building. Program includes works by Bach, Dubois, Messager, and Beethoven performed by Louise Gaddis, soprano; Nate Schwartz, bassoon; Joel Robinson, recorder; Ranaan Stumacher, piano. All interested in free coffee welcome. CONNAISSANCE: Allen Ginsberg will do his thing tonight in Irvine at 8 P.M. The grand daddy of the beat generation will talk about pot, poetry, and peace. It's what's happening, baby. EVENING AT THE OPERA: Mondays, beginning Feb. 12 opera will be played at the Catacombs at 7:30. Discussion following will be led by Tim baker, who invites all campus opera buffs, and all those who want to learn why others are buffs to join him. FOLK DANCE CLUB: International dances will be taught tonight 7-10 P.M. at the Christian Association. GERMAN CLUB: The German Club will sponsor a bus trip to New York to see the ensemble of the Wiener Burgtheater present Arthur Schnitzler's "Professor Bernhardi"; Friedich Schiller's "Maria Stuart"; Hermann Bahr's"DasKonzert"and/ or Johann Nestroy's "Einen Jux will er sich mach". Fordetails, consult the bulletin board at the German department. The trip will be cancelled if an insufficient number are interested. I. S. A. CAMPUS AGENDA: Japanese Nationality Night, Feb. 17, 5:30 P.M., Christian Association. Dinner, music, film, and more. Tickets available at Houston Hall Ticket Service and Office of International Services; none sold at door. KITE AND KEY: Meeting Sunday night, Houston Hall. Members 7:00, Heelers 7:30. MEDICAL COMMITTEE OF HUMAN RIGHTS: Important film about civilian war casualties in Vietnam, "The Survivors", will be shown today at 12:30 P.M. in the Medical Alumni Hall of HUP and at 1 in Lecture Hall A of the Medical School. Dr. Herbert Needleman, professor of psychiatry at Temple U. and chairman of the Committee of Responsibility, will comment on the film and his recent visit to Vietnam. OPEN LAW SCHOOL WEEK: Feb. 12-16. Sign up for classes this week ONLY at B. Law Office, DH-W 233. PENN COMMENT: Short but imperative meeting tonight, 7 PM in Bennet Hall fourth floor offices. PH1LOMATHEAN ART GALLE RY: Exhibit of Roualt Graphics Feb. 5-25, Mon. thru Fri., 2-4, Fourth floor, Hare Building. PHILOMATHEAN SOCIETY: There will be a reception for prospective members today from 2 to 5 P.M. in the West Lounge, Houston Hall. All members of the University community invited. Find out what Philo is really all about. Refreshments will be served. Inquiries to Darrly L. Conner, 3903 Spruce St., BA 28295. Jjy) penn comment Spring Heeling Smoker *?*r- I *•*»**• N. ^ Probably the greatest growth act since Jack & the beanstalk: Tidelity-Qrowth Certificates The Fidelity Bank Broad A Walnut Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. 19109 □ Enclosed is a check for$ ($25 or multiples thereof) or AS LITTLE AS $25 5% INTEREST COMPOUNDED DAILY JACK? ^ Charge my Fidelity Checking Account #. Please mail certificate(s) to: I Name Address City" Social Security No. ~w Stale Select Maturity Date (3 to 24 months) 70 ACTIVITY NOTICES ALPHA KAPPA PSI MEMBERS: There will be a rushing smoker this evening at 7;45 in the Smith -Penniman Room of Houston Hall. CATACOMBS: Poetry reading by Victor Bockris at 10 tonight. PAGE TWO THE DAILY PENNSYU THE FIDELITY BANK i*. JT THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1968 40TH 4 CHESTNUT STS. Member Federal Deposit Insurance Cornoration UPSG drug probe to begin next week The UPSG external affairs committee is conducting a survey on use of drugs by University undergraduates. Committee chairman Cathy Walker said that a questionnaire is scheduled to be mailed to a random sampling of 1,700 undergraduates sometime next week. The questionnaire will be "absolutely and completely" anonymous, Miss Walker said, adding: "I wouldn't want to be accused of being a narcotics agent on the sly." The result of a resolution passed at the Dec. 4 UPSG meeting, the survey is expected to secure financial approval at next Monday's meeting of the financial committee, Miss Walker said. The survey is designed to determine attitudes towards drugs as well as the extent of drug use in the University community. An examination of official attitudes is also planned. According to Miss Walker, the results of the survey will be published in a report later in the semester. She stressed the importance of returns from nondrug users in determining attitudes towards drug use. The resolution which created the survey noted that drugs were an "issue of national concern" and that drugs "may be harmful." The resolution called the student and University moral position on drug use "unclear." Mag writer to lecture College senior Joshua Markel will join two Temple University students in a discussion on student power on WFIL-TV (Channel 6) at 11 A.M. Saturday. Representing the "establishment" in the discussion on "Generations in Conflict" will be Dr. G. K. Lawrence, executive director of the Commission on Higher Education of the City of Philadelphia, and Dr. Donald Beineman, dean of students at Drexel Institute of Technology. Dr. Irwin D. Rutman, ex.cutive director of Horizon House, will be the moderator. Walter Goodman, contributing editor to Playboy and Redbook magazines, will speak here on "Privacy: Premises and Responsibilities of Communication Specialists" at 2 P.M., Monday in Room 126 of the Aimenberg School. Goodman, a Syracuse University graduate, received a master's degree from Reading University in England. He is author of The Clowns of Commerce, All Honorable Men and The Commitiee. He contributes regularly to Life, Commentary, New Republic, Nation and New York Times magazines. Bitch-in canceled UPSG Speaker James Rosenberg said that he was disappointed that there was "no turnout" at the bitch-in Tuesday for students dissatisfied with their nonUniversity housing. Attending the bitch-in to speak to students was Morton Packman, an area landlord. Rosenberg said that he talked to Packman about the possibility of setting up "some sort of a court situation with housing and landlords." Edwin Lodwell, director of residence and Alexius Conroy, UPSG president, were also at the bitch-in. Market joins WFIL panel CHARLES KRAUSE Night Editor MARVIN DASH Assistant The lecture, open to the public, is part of Aimenberg's communications colloquium. PERSONAL POSTERS 18" x 24" CREATE YOUR OWN VALENTINES Record rack Smiling blues singers and a musical surprise RICHARD HOGAN Paul Jones Sings "Privi and Others (Capitol) ege- Earth Music. The Youngbloods (RCA Victor) Paul Jones, formerly lead singer with the highly underrated Manfred Mann group in England, has gone solo and released his first album in the United States. He has already enjoyed considerable popularity in England; this album probably would not have been issued here if Jones had not starred in the film, Privilege. Though he still works with the same producer and some of the same writers, the style of his, music has changed since he left the group, being less blues and more pop. He has knocked most of the rough edges off his singing and now sounds more individual, less of a Negro imitator, though the rhythm-and-blues influence is still evident. In addition the instrumental background for the songs has been expanded to full orchestration. A couple of the numbers don't work, but on the whole the songs are carefully selected to make the best use of Jones' voice within its limitations. Jones has continued the songwriting he did for Manfred Mann with three original selections on this l.p. The best songs are "Privilege0 and "Free Me" from the film. The album is wellengineered and has, especially in the three film songs, some of the clearest stereo reporduction ever heard on a popular record. It is customary for electric blues bands to look serious, concerned, or downright mean on their album covers. The Youngbloods look happy. Their faces express a childlike innocence which seems to indicate none of them has ever experienced any of the hard times they sing about. Most of their performances still manage to be fairly convincing. Their new album, like their previous one, is a collection of about seven successful songs and three or four throwaways. They are best with original lyrical songs like "All My Dream Blue" and the country-flavored "Sugar Babe"; less impressive with humorous songs or hard blues.The unusual blend of Jesse Colin Young's haunting tenor and Jerry Corbitt*s gritty baritone gets under your skin in a way comparable only to the effect produced by certain bluegrass musicians like the Greenbriar Boys. The album ends on its high point, the best version yet of Tim Hardin's "Reason To Believe." Triangle. The Beau Brummels (Warner Brothers) The Beau Brummels used to be a large folk-rock group which tunned out some good songs but Penn gets $1.2 million The 1907 Foundation has donated $1,200,000 to the University's expanding program in urbanism and human resources. Part of the contribution has been designated for the endowment of a professorship in urbanism and human resources at the University. The first incumbent of the new chair is Dr. Howard E. Mitchell, professor of human resources and director of the Human Resources Program here. The new chair will be known as The 1907 Foundation Professorship in Urbanism and Human Resources. It is viewed as a major step toward implementing the University's commitment to improve teaching and research programs dealing with urban problems. Pennsylvania's Human Resources Program was established in 1964. During the program's first two years, three educational and vocational pilot projects designed to help students from low income and minority groups were completed. In 1966, the program became part of the University's Institute for Environmental Studies. Among the present projects are an interracial school study in a southwest community and consultative services to the University's student-ledCommunitylnvolvementCouncil. Mitchell earned his PhJD degree in 1950 at the University. In addition to his affiliation with the Graduate School of Fine Arts, he is a lecturer in the Graduate School of Education and the School of Medicine's department of psychiatry. Vincent's The DP's & ctfj POSTERS Posters Made From Any B. & W. or Color o o o o o PHOTOGRAPH NEGATIVE DRAWING COLLAGE LABEL ONLY $3.75 Psychedelic Photo Co. P.O. Box 3071 St. Louis, Mo. 63130 FRI. FEB. 9, 1968 &■■■■■■■■■■■■■ CONGRATULATIONS! TO THE EDINA HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL TEAM ON THEIR 66TH CONSECUTIVE ADDRESS CITY STATE SEND CASH, CHECK, OR M.O. ZIP VICTORY A NEW MINNESOTA RECORD 'iWRSDAYJ FEBRUARY oi'iSS'' The University ranks 21st among the universities of the U.S. in the total number of doctorate recipients from 1958-66, acording to a study recently published by the National Academy of Sciences. The University ranks first. of Illinois The Un iversity's highest ranks were in classics, English, economics, history and anthropology and archaeology. Statistics show a decline in the University's rank in the latter two as well as in several other fields since 1956. The 262-page study combines statistics concerning graduates who have received their doctoral degrees in 26 fields (not including the degrees of MD, DDS, and DVM). The study shows patterns of doctoral education throughout the country and transitions from academic to professional life. The report also rates New York as the state with the highest number of doctorates granted. Pennsylvania is fifth. It is also fifth in total expenditures on higher education, California ranking first. Very low rates with 5—year guarantee against cancellation. Phone MA 6-2297. PEABODY HALL BROAD AND NORRIS ADMISSION Penn is 21st in doctorates Automobile Insurance for Students AT TEMPLE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL. NAME I WOODY S TRUCK STOP CONCERT DANCE Plus .25 Handling Your Original Returned 2 Week Delivery All Posters B & W. ■ SAINT GABRIEL TAUGHT THE ANGELS HOW TO PLAY. had a hard time staying on key when singing in harmony. As some of the members have left the group at the urging of the Hershey Persuasion Squad, the Beau Brummels have been left with fewer instruments and only one singer.Their music no longer sounds like "Laugh, Laugh" or "Just a Little"; it has turned from folk-rock to pop-folk. The instrumental arrangements on "Triangle" are reminiscent of the Kingston Trio and Ian and Sylvia; Sal Valentine's quietly compelling voice echoes Bob Dylan. The Beau Brummels resemble these performers but do not imitate, and Triangle, an album of mostly original songs, is a musical surprise. "Painter of Women," "The Wolf of Velvet Fortune," and the poetic "Magic Hollow" are all outstanding; the group has an excellent though unusual guitar arrangement of Merle Travis' "Nine Pound Hammer"; and the rest of the songs are not far behind. Some of the tunes are partially orchestrated; the rest use the group's own guitar and electric bass with drums, banjo and harpsichord added. Since there is only one vocalist now, the earlier problem of singing in harmony has been eliminated, and the group's sound is considerably more professional than on earlier records. $1.25 HEAR YE! HEAR YE! JOHN BARLIYCOtM INVITES YOU TO A FOLK CONCERT AT HIS NEWIY OFENEJ9 ENGLISH TAVERN EVERY FRIDAY A SATURDAY NITE DRAUGHT REER, SANDWICHES. A SNACKS COME CASUALLY DRESSED, RELAX A ENJOY PRIVATE PARTY ROOMS 'AVAILABLE JoRnBarlekcorns 1330 HJmUMl\SU*U U 6U. PL.L4.lpt.,* THE DAILY PENNSYLVAN!AN PAGE 1 Teacher sign-up finished Continued from Friday Student registration for Free U. slated Student registrationwill begin Feb. 14 for the spring semester of the Free University. Registration for teachers ended yesterday. Free University officials will publish a list of courses within several days, according to a Free U. spokesman. Price calls for peace courses Dr. CharlesC. Price, University professor of chemistry and a prominent member of the United World Federalists (UWF) — world government movement— suggested the inclusion of "peace courses" in the academic curriculum of the University. "There are certain areas of the campus which encourage training for war," Price said. "I believe that organized courses on world law should balance the courses on spying." Speaking in Houston Hall's Franklin Room, Price explained the purpose of the United World Federalists: "Our goal is to transform the basis of international operations from the ancient system of military power to law and order." "The reason we have war is not because we have conflicts but because we have no civilized way of resolving them," Price said. "There is a 50 to 1 chance that we will blow ourselves off the face of the earth. We have to work on that percent chance." The UWF believes that its goal CHARLES PRICE Pulitzer winner talks One of the new courses offered this semester will be "Great Works of Children's Literature," featuring a non-Freudian analysis of Winnie the Pooh, Alice in Wonderland, Little Black Sambo, Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle and other books. Another course entitled "Journey to Vietnamese Culture," will investigate origins and traditions of the Vietnamese people and their wars. There will be several language courses offered. Free University teachers have signed for courses in Gaelic, Swahili, Cackehiquel (Mayan) and Brazilian Portugese. There will be another semester of the popular course "Reporting and News Writing". This course is "strongly suggested for Daily Pennsylvanian heelers,'' according to Berl Schwartz, heeling director. Registration times will be from 10 AJvl. to 4 P.M. Feb. 1416 and Feb. 19-20. There will be evening registration, from 6 to 8 P.M. on February 6-8. Students can register at Houston Hall or by calling 594-5757. 585 freshmen pledge houses PHI SIGMA DELTA: Robert I. Benjamin, Stanley H. Berke, James L. Cutler, Stephen R. Ehrlich, Kenneth H. Ernskoff, Ronald J. Friedman, David J. Frish, Martin J. Genauer, Charles A. Gilman, Hartley A. Goldstone, Arthur D.Hoffman, Jeffrey M. Kahn, Phillip Kislak, Jeffrey S. Leviit, Steven P. Michelson, Ira J. Mitchell, WilliamH.Rackoff, Mike D. Schlesinger, Jonathon Shiekman, Robert Silverstein, Lee H. Wagman, John R. Welson, Richard M. Wetler, and Steven B. Zweig. PHI SIGMA KAPPA: Scott R. Bracken, Craig G. Carlson, Leroy N. Chellis, Anthony S. Chigounis, Kenneth A. DeVeau, Emmet MacDonald Erwin, Richard C. Fredette, Michael J. Gratch, Jeffrey F.Kellar, Walter Kuenstler, Robert A. Kosian, Francis W. Kuborsak, Gene C. Maffey, W. Macy Marvel, Craig V. McConnell, John M. McLaurnon, Lawrence C.O'Connor, David F. Pleuthner and Karl L. Reisner. PI KAPPA ALPHA: Robert Buchsbaum, EdwardDanielweitz, Dan Darkes,BruceDichter, Steve Dreskin, George Fleigelman, Mike Gall, Steve Golovato, Bob Bruce Sherman, Charles A. William s, Thomas R. W inston, Theodore H. Hellmuth and Mark Duane Rost. SIGMA ALPHA MU: Howard Babas, Mathew Bellas, Steve Bilsky, Robert E.delstein, William Elliot, Marc Eisenman, William Ferer, Dave Fisher, Sheldon Flamm, Lawrence Gaines, Orian Gunshor, William Hait, Robert Holub, Robert Levin, Geoffrey Littlehale, Jay Luck, DanielMetzger, KennethOssnoss,Theodore Rosen, Douglas Stahl, Monroe Szporn, Louis Pellessier, Tom Sturgess, and Ken B. Dietz. SIGMA CHI: Tracy B.Braun, Christopher C. Cicoski, Allen J. Daniel, StephenM.Epstein, Jonathon M. Fee, James B. Hatch, Richard P. Klish, Richard Koontz, David \V. Laver, Mark D. Lipsey, Robert R. Markay, Ronald Manco, Kevin C. Munroe, Steven L. Paris, Keith D. Peirosky, Frank C. Polidora, Michael S. Quinn, Michael D. Rosko, Kenneth Skarka, Merle Stein and Richard C. Waldbaver. SIGMA NU: HarlanF.Batrus, James J. Doody, William Gough, Daniel A. Gray, Joseph M. Hankins^ Mathew T. Hawkins, Daniel (Continued on page 5) How.to interview# 130 companies in half an hour. of shedding the "war system" will be achieved through a stronger United Nations. "The U.N. has to be fundamentally changed from an adjunct to the war to a political authority," Price said. "The United States has given lip-service to the promotion of world peace," Price claimed. He said that the U.S. must agree to the acceptance of China into the United Nations as one step toward world peace. Although the UWF condemns the Vietnam war because it represents another aspect of the "war system," the UWF is "reluctant to actively oppose the war," according to Price. "It sounds funny because UWF has such a revolutionary idea, but it is too conservative to do so." TMi Talk to the man from General Electric. He represents 130 separate GE "companies" that deal in everything from space research to electric toothbrushes. We call them product departments. Each one is autonomous with its own management and business objectives. That's why a job at Gen. Electric offers the kind of immediate responsibility you might expect to find only in a small business. Right from the start you get a chance to demonstrate your initiative and individual capabilities. And the more you show us, the faster you will move ahead. As you do, you'll find that you V^TMnsijteiiidn. PACE FOUR Herrod, Jay Juruska, Mark Perwa, Wayne Pitts, Gary Stolbach, Paul Tietz, and Peter Vogt. PI LAMBDA PHI: MarkAronchick, EmilioBassini,BruceBiltekoff, Richard Bronstein, Benjamin Bilus, Carl Burwick, Robert Chipinski, KennethCoplon, Robert Day, Paul Frankel, Steven Fried, Jeffrey Gilman, Mel Glenn, Joseph Goodman, Richard Horwitz, Edward Hutchinson, Marc Linnowitz, Daniel Prodanovich, Elon Schwartz, Neil Shifrin, Larry Spector, Steven Steinberg, John Sutter, Samuel Troy, Alan Weeks, Mike Wold, Brian Yeckley, JohnYoffe, Larry Zellin and Rody J. Munko. PSI UPSILON: Richard M. Chandler, Ashley G. Dormevil, John W. Hutchinson, Douglas K. Hyland, Ernesto J. Mejer, John S. Reed, Peter M. Thompson, Nicholas P. Trott, Robert E. Vanderlinde, James B. Wilcox Jr., G. D. Gammon and Jeffrey L. Eisberg. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON: William Burg, Don O. Burley, Maynard K. Davis, Talmage L. Dryman, Nathan A. Estes, Robert J. Forbes, Warren H. Graham, Thomas D. Herman, Wiley P. Parker, Kenneth T. Seeger, THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 8. 1968 don t iv rily have to spend a lifetime working on the same job in the same place. We have operations all over the world. Chances are you'll get to try your hand at more than one of them. Our interviewer will be on campus soon. If you're wondering whether it's possible to find challenging work in big business, please arrange to see him. He speaks for 130 "companies." GENERAL® ELECTRIC An equal opportunity employer House lists ven Freedman, Mark Friend, Je(Continued from page 4) rome Gabry, Arnon Garonzik, R. Hondula, Dennis E. Howard, Henry Herman, Arnold Holland, David L. Keene, Gary R. KichRobert Holtz, Kenneth Kaplan, line, Mark W. Legnini, Robert Richard Levy, MonteLieberfarb, J. Lynch, Kevin M. Maddock, Gary R. Miller, James Miller, Robert C. Martin, Robert G. Jerome R. Miller, Lawrence Meadow, Gregory E. Riley, and Ochs, Arnold Papowitz, Robert Dennis D. Smith. Shou, Paul Silverstein, PeterTaSIGMA PHI EPSILON: Peter ney, Jay Randolph Viders, LawBeale, Bernardo Beyer, Robert rence J. Wooley, and Robert Chase, Robert Dean, Raymond Yohai. Flowers, Stephen Gibson, John THETA RHO: Joel Brown, Hunt, Shelby Josephs, Jeffrey John Charnay, David Cohn, PerKoester, Gerald Martin, Robert ry Esterson, Joel Frankel, Alan Mayer, David Michelman, Gregg Gerber, John Hoffman, Bruce Monsees, John O'Shaughnessy, Katcher, Paul Lipkin, Theodore Gary Owens, Robert Salthouse, Naron, Louis Pappas,Donald Paand Leonard Viejo. py, Mark Paster, Gary Rikdon TAU DELTA PHI: Gary L. and Stephan Toe knell. Berman, Robert H.Biggs, Joseph THETA XI: M. Stephen AltM. Checchio, Edward B. Chez, mayer, Leo P. Chow, Richard Ken R. Drossman, Michael S. A. Davis Jr., Husband E. KimFalkowitz, William A. Ferer, mel, Robert A.B. Lee, Martin Gilbert E, Geldon, Michael J. D. Mayer-Wolf, Martin D. O*Gitlin, Michael N. Gordon, RoMalley, William L. Patterson, bert J. Hallock, Kenneth A. Kaufman, Robert J.Lapidus, Steven A. Lipman, William J.Luftig,Bruce A. Lynn, Ralph S, Mechur, Michael L. Pontarelli, Robert S. Reader, Andrew L. Rosenberg, Neal Shaffer, assistant to the Barry S, Sandals,SethM,Schneidirector of financial aid, said der, Henry N. Scovern, David A. Tuesday that the new National Shenker, RobertC.Stein,Richard Merit scholarship policy will not B. Stoller, John L. Susman and affect students now in school. Bart J. Vinik. He said the new policy of TAU EPSILON PHI: David awarding Merit Scholars a single Arluck, Jonathan Aunet, Stephen grant of $1000 will only go into Baron, Marc Blumenthal, Alan effect beginning with the Class of Braverman, Donald Brody, '72 and that those students now Robert Chasnon, Kenneth Cooper, in school will not be affected by Howard Dimond,JackFever,Ste- the change. ational Merit to continue aid Media Symphony to play here f?ni I "nducts the Media Community Symphony in a practice session before their concert at 8:30 P.M. in Annenburg Auditorium. The 45-member orchestra is composed entirely of amateurs with the exception of Smith. Tickets are on sale at the door. The Philomathean Society is sponsorinq the event. Place for experimentation Underground has big plans By LUCY CONGER The Catacombs is entering its sixth year as the only oncampus coffee house. This semester its program promises to be as varied as ever. Jon Takiff, program director, has scheduled-a rash of movies, interspersed with bridge, opera and international nights, student plays and poetry readings. The Underground and folksingers are featured every Friday night. "The Catacombs is open to any campus talent," Takiff said. "It's a place for experimentation, and not enough students take advantage of this," he added. Takiff encourages students with jazz bands, plays, "almost anything" to seek a booking at the coffee house. Most of the Catacombs' movies will be free this semester. "We're showing documentaries primarily, because the campus is overloaded with films," Takiff said. The "series" of documentary films will begin on Tuesday with the showing of "The City" and "The River" at 10 p.m. A contrast of life in the typical overcrowded, noisy city wi*to life in a planned community is presented in "The City," which is narrated by Lewis Mumford. "The River" studies the waste of natural resources around the Mississippi. "N.Y., N.Y." and "Liquid Jazz" will be presented later in the semester. Both these films are in color, and present ex- perimental photographic effects. "Will Rogers" and "Paris 1900" are films that combine news reels, early silents and other memorab lia to present historical chronicles. "High Noon*" the classic Western with Gary Cooper, will show at 7:30 and 9:30 P.M. on Feb. 20. For its Happy Sixth Birthday party, the Catacombs will present the original version of "Alice in Wonderland." The film stars W. C. Fields and Gary Cooper, and will be presented on March 5. Because "what this campus really needs is an outdoor Ma andPa Kettle film festival," Takiff has arranged just that for late April. The event s provisionally set to be held on the Gaza strip between Hillel arri the Christian Association, and will include "Ma and Pa Kettle," and "Ma and Pa Kettle Back on the Farm." A new feature of the Catacombs' schedule this semester will be "Evenings at the Opera." Tim Baker, director of social services and camps, will lead discussions after playing a complete opera every Monday at 7:30 P.M. "Kadimah!" a play about the Israeli war will be presented (Continued on page 8) SALE LAST CALL Pre-period tablet helps relieve that 2 to 7 pound monthly "water weight" gain that can cause pain, nervousness, irritability. Discover Pamprin8, the medical formula that helps relieve your normal periodic weight gain. You see. in those 4 to 7 days before your period, your body begins to retain extra water weight. You look puffy, feel stuffy. The extra weight puts pressure on delicate tissue causing simple headaches, irritability, nervousness. Pamprin gently relieves your body of the extra water... puffy look ... stuffy feeling. Works before and during your period. v. Get Pamprin now and be ready to break your date with monthly water build-up! DRESSES 510." 5 SKIRTS 7." SWEATERS 5799 $ 99 BLOUSES 3> WERE ro WERE TO $30.oo M6.00 WERE TO $19oo WERE TO $6>50 WE«ETO $16.00 '■"-•" SLACKS <"* acting PAmpRfn $ 7." M HER CLOTHES TREE 3427 WALNUT ST. Pamprin THURS - FRI. Now at the drug section of your store THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1968 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE FIVE 1885 Th« Daily 1968 MAN, M2£ 10U SURE -TMl-7 WIU. '-nNlt \>E> It) fljuTlCAU, SociOLOfclC^L AM) ecusiorvc HN*.MONY ? DONALD M. MORRISON Editor—in—Chief DENNIS H. WILEN Managing Editor ROBERT I. TUTEUR RICHARD B. SHAPIRO Business Manager Editorial Chairman An historical perspective Events tend to repeat themselves at the University. Deans come and go, tuition keeps rising, and people keep making the same mistakes. This time it looks like the Committee on Residence Operations (CRO) is going to disregard the past. During late November and early December of 1966, CRO, through its delays and postponements, managed to create an atmosphere of unrest and alienation among the residents of Men's Dormitories; an atmosphere that eventually lead to a Rowbottom. And while extended parietal hours were eventually approved, many students were left with a feeling that the administration couldn't care less about what they wanted. This time it looks likely that the administration will once again disregard student wishes. But the problem is that the administration now cares too much for the "welfare" of the students. Administration officia Is have given no support to the UPSG - MRB proposal to establish weekday parietals in the dorms. Even though 90 percent of those answering a MRB poll on visiting hours called for the weekday parietals, the administration is once again saying that IT knows what is best for the students. "Extended parietals are not good for you," it says, in effect. << We have to preserve privacy and provide a place to study. And anyway, we think that most freshmen really don't want to have their rooms open all week. What they really want is a good place to take their dates. "We've also heard several complaints from the girls who say that if we establish weekday parietals it will create a large increase in the social pressure around here. What we really need is a completely revised and improved program for the vitally important freshman year." The administration is right in one area. The freshmen year does need a drastic revision. But just because major changes are needed doesn't mean that minor improvements shouldn't be made now. And one of those minor improvements would be to approve the weekday parietal hours proposal. If the University truly believes its students are adults and not children then there is no valid reason that those students cannot learn to manage their lives in a new situation. Or is "in loco parentis" still really the policy here? Student government leaders, when UPSG passed the parietals bill last December, resolved that they would use all their influence to put the new hours into effect. UPSG should now start doing whatever it can to prevent the University from repeating last year's mistakes. Visiting the home of our Vietnam policy ^- Letters to the editor Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian: Although we, too, applaud the University's support of graduate students in fine arts we found your editorial to contain a very popular specious argument. You make the mistake of equating science with "machinery and lethal weapons." The raison d'etre of science has never been the mere creation of war material just as that of the epic poem has never been the creation of more war heroes. Science and literature have in common the elevation of ,the soul, the clarification of what is "real," and the power to produce tranquility. How either comes to expression and application depends upon society and those vho have cultural and political control. If we may ask you not to espouse the ignorant sentiment of all ages by using "Astrophysics" and "nuclear studies" as modern symbols of obscurity or excuses for your own unwillingness to understand science, then perhaps we canview science in a different light. Since by the nature of their training and work scientists may be lesscommunic?'tve, less perceptive of human needs, and less able to carve common culture, society could probably receive more influence from those with creative powers in the humanities. But are these powers exercised? Is it the scientist's fault that one of »_»» the t-AKw unanticipated uiiuuu'-ipuvvu technological (vv,iuiuiUgiLax m& fruits of his researches, television, is used to display such crap, or the fault of the commercial establishment? Wouldyou blame a particular scientist for the creation and use of lethal weapons or the military-industrial complex? Could Galileo have any more known about that malady you designate as astrophysics than Shakespeare (born the same year, 1564) could have known about future abortions of his English language? Your intentions are good. We assume you merely wanted to state again that technology is not the answer to the human condition, with which we heartily agree. Society has come to exalt the scientist for "good" technology. You escoriate him for "bad" technology. Neither expresses the hopes and joys of what is really science, as commercial television does not express the hopes and joys of what is really visual art. So encourage art. Even discourage science a little if you must. But concentrate on training the industrialists and politicians who seem to give society its values. The values of science were established many centuries ago and almost indistinguishable from those of the humanist. Stanley Guralnick Dept. of History and Philosophy of Science Alexander Ziss Department of Political Science (Both chemistry* majors. College '65) ■ • ■ ; mmmmm mzm Rusk is a friendly man and he uses big words DENNIS WILEN WASHINGTON - Ray '.ough- clench, and determination dozes hibits a calm few Americans ton is "100 per cent American." from jowls as he reveals the talking about the Vietnam war It's not hard to find out that plans of the Communist interna- could achieve. But occasionally, whenever he he is: He'll tell you himself. tional conspiracy. "WhenU Thant asks for peace is asked a tough question, the He'll also tell you that he negotiations, he's talking out of Achilles tendon of his right leg reads the Bible, that history is a the Soviet side of his mouth," he twitches. battle between truth and falseQUESTION: If the Vietcong hood, that truth will prevail, that intones. "The Vietcong's orders are led and trained in the North, America is meant to be a "torch- come from Hanoi, Hanoi's orders light" for the world, and that come from Peking. They're all how do you explain persistent U Thant sometimes speaks out of the same, there's no difference." reports out of Saigon in the last A reporter asks, "Is Yugo- few days that many of these so"the Soviet side of his mouth." Ray Lought on works for the slavia the same as Albania?" called terrorists have beenshel"Well, 1 don't know about that, tered, fed and clothed by the State Department. His job is to shepherd members of the press but I know that Communist ex- Saigon population? Twitch. past the security guards, through pansionism is the greatest threat QUESTION: The Vietcong are the lobbies, through outside, in the world today. If we don't outer, inner and innermost re- stop them in Vietnam, we'll have basically South Vietnamese, and to stop them in Laos, if we don't if this war is brought to a concluception rooms. He also is charged with help- stop in Laos, we'll have to stop sion, what is their role going to ing spread theState Department's them inCambodia, if we don't stop be? Twitch. gospel across America and them in Cambodia, we'll have to QUESTION: President Johnstop them in Thailand. There's throughout the world. son has said that if the war came When Ray Loughton talks no telling where it may end," he to a political solution that Amerabout America's being "a leader concludes. ican troops would be leaving withDean Rusk is 100 per cent for the nations," he trembles. in six months. Could the present His eyes gleam when he talks about American, too. He won't tell you the future of the world, which he about it. You sort of have to South Vietnamese government stand on its own feet if America expects to reach greatness under figure it out yourself. As Rusk leans back on the walked out? American "guidance." Twitch. But he exhibits the most emo- green leather chair in his He is a tall man, and although tion when he describes the evils spacious office, lighting Lark fat has softened his face, he still of Communism. after Lark with his blue State His voice drops, his fists Department matchbook, he ex- retains the grace and strength PAGE SIX THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1968 that made him a Rhodes scholar about 30 years ago. He speaks precisely, and through his Georgia accent, obscure words and phrases flow from his furrowed face making him sound occasionally like an unabridged dictionary. "We're not going to be chivied out of this situation* by a nibbling process," he says. When Rusk begins an interview, he insists that he sit next to the phone. "Is that the red phone?" areporter asks* "No," he replies. "The red phone is over there behind the curtain. I hope it never rings." And when Rusk ends an interview, he walks with you back to the middle reception room, where receptionist Vera Gordon is reading Time magazine. A firm shake of the hand, a smile curling the corners of his mouth, he whisks back to the inner reception room, this time to meet an ambassador. Mrs. Gordon has a Georgia accent, too. It is evident as she hands you your coat and as she retrieves your forbidden tape recorder from under her desk. "Isn't the Secretary a wonderful man," she asks. He certainly is. Why, he's 100 per cent American. The Daily Pennsylvania is published Monday through Friday at Phila— K idelphia. Pa. during the fall and spring semesters, except during vacation-; periods, and the last seven class days of each term. On-? issue published; in August. Subscriptions may be ordered at Sergeant Hall, 34th and Chest— nut 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 594-7535 (If busy call 594-7535). " ■ ■ ■:■:■; -. Ham Radio Club offers free radiogram service The Amateur Radio Club W3ABT, located in Room 214 of the Moore School announced last week a free radiogram service. The service will make it possible for a member of the University community to send a brief message to any part of the United States or Canada. The club is also providing a course for those interested in obtaining amateur radio licenses.Covering Morse code and basic theory are required for the license examination. The course will offer station facilities to practice for the examination. The Amateur Radio Club participates annually in several contests including international competition. The Men's Residence Board will sponsor next weekend a trip to Chadds Peak with girls from Beaver College. The trip begins Saturday at 9 A.M. Interview mmmmmmmmmm Pochoda assails fraternities, Viet war, and LBJ power JUDSON BROWN Editor's note: Phillip Pochoda, who has a B.A. from Amherst and B.S. from M.I.T. is currently working on his doctorate in sociology at the University and is a lecturer in the Sociology Department. MRB sponsors ski excursion with Beaver The price is $15 and includes a day of skiing and swimming, a buffet dinner and a dance. The Board promises to supply anything else that might be needed to make the occasion perfect. Only a limited number will be able to participate, a spokesman said. Tickets are on sale in Houston Hall and McClelland Hall Wednesday, from 3 to 5 P.M. D.P. Classifieds brings quick results HEEL THE O.P. PHILIP POCHODA "LBJ-irresponsible" Call 594-7535 ACTION LINE QUESTION: Our stall shower drain is stopped up. It floods the bathroom. We called the desk at Hill Saturday and so far no one has been here. As long as we're going to have a plumber up, our bathtub shower needs fixing, too. -- Barrie Herbold. ACTION: Action Line spoke to Russell Fulton of the Residence Office. He told us that he will call Buildings and Grounds to have it repaired. A call to the director of residence at the Men's Dorms should be sufficient for problems of this nature. Keep plugging, girls! Women's choral group celebrating ten years QUESTION: I received a traffic ticket on Dec. 26 and sent the check on Jan.8. My bank honored the check on Jan. 10. Saturday I received a summons. Please straighten this out. — Curt Douglas. ACTION: Action Line called the traffic court at City Hall. They told us that if your summons number is written on the back of your cancelled check, you can destroy the summons notice. Start ripping! Next time you may not be so luckyl QUESTION: Is there any reason why certain journals came in so late to the library? For example, 1 requested the August Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders yesterday and they said they have not received any since May. -- AnnBodine Long overshadowed by the Glee Club and, according to director, Dennis Rittenhouse, ignored by the Daily Pennsylvanian, Pennsyngers, the woman's choral organization is celebrating its tenth anniversary. The 68 member chorus will become the first non-cheeHeading females to perform at a basketball halftime. Saturday night, March 2 at the Cornell game, the girls will do a whistling, singing, dancing version of "Sweet Georgia Brown," a Swingle Singer piece, "Bouree for Bach," and end with the "Red and Blue." The Penn State Glee Club and the Pennsyngers will meet twice in concert, once at the Forum in Harrisburg on March 28, and again at AnnenbergAuditorium on March 30. Pennsyngers performed for the Annual Alumni Dinner on January 25, but on April 25 they will sing for their supper before a different sort of alumni: the Twenty-Five Year Club, an organization of Penn employees which meets once a year for a banquet in the University Museum. Two offshoots have developed from Pennsyngers: the Broad Outlook, a pundit society of 8 girls who perform light, humorous music; and the Pendings, 4 girls and 4 boys from the Glee Club who perform folk music accompanied by a guitar and a bass. Janet Taylor Nursing '69, was elected president of next year's Pennsyngers at elections Monday night. Other officers are: vicepresident ; Joyce Wolpert CW' 70, business manager; Paul Cook CW 170, treasurer; Mary Ann Allen CW '69, publicity; Janet Hochberg CW '69, social alumnae; Phyliss Edwards CW '69, librarian; Sarah Tuckerman CW '71, secretary/rehearsal manager; Jean Moss CW '69, properties; Florence Lai CW '70. \CTION: Director of Libraries Warren Haas told Action Line that the Medical Library on Hamilton Walk has two subscriptions to the Journal. Service has been interrupted at Van Pelt because of an error on the publisher's part. Van Pelt is doing all it can to straighten out the matter. (Continued on page 8) Utilize Action Line Ginsberg talk tonight The chanting of mantras and the ringing of symbols will fill Irvine Auditorium today at 8 P.M. as Allen Ginsberg, the leading exponent of pot and the sexual freedom movement, will hold forth on "Pot, Peace and Poetry." The 42-year-old poet and his "wife" of 15 years, Peter Orle^sky, spend eight months of the year traveling across country in Reporter: What is your feeling about fraternities? Pochoda: My response to fraternities is part of my more general feeling about institutions and activities on campus.That is, virtually all functions, all behaviors in a university community should be justified or evaluated in terms of their congruence or compatability with essential university functions and ideals. And it appears to me historically, and almost in principle, that fraternities are irreconsilable with the kinds of programs and policies which I think universities should maintain. Reporter: How do you react to student power, to the idea of student involvement in the administration and in the determining of curriculum? Pochoda: It is very difficult to deal with the question abstractly. I think student power is generally legitimate, at least to the extent that it contributes to higher academic standards and a richer intellectual life. The students are the ones immediately affected by course offerings. We're not here solely to teach ourselves. We're trying to maximize cultural and intellectual transmisson within the university, which is probably most effective if the students are concerned with the educational opportunities which are available. To the extent that students are becoming increasingly involved, active, and in some cases imaginative in terms of proposing programs for their own education and forcing awareness of their needs and aspirations, it seems to me all to the good. By the way, it's a very small and select portion of the student we are talking about. Most students, I find, simply aren't interested in getting an education. The kinds of programs which they favor are those which permit as little effort as possible, and the quickest, cushiest path to accreditation and a remunerative career. Reporter: What are your feelings specifically on Vietnam? Pochoda: It seems to me that our position in Vietnam is thoroughly illegitimate. It reflects action on the part of our government which emerges from an analysis of all events in the world in terms of the power position of the United States, in the interest of which we are prepared to commit murder and atrocities, to lie to ourselves and others, to rewrite history, and to maintain an international tyranny. We collapse the complexity of demands and relationships, of cultural developments and diverse political orientations, to a one dimensional formula, in terms of which we're prepared to wreck the societies and the peoples of any other country in the world, unleash our military abroad, and to jail and condemn voices of conscience at home. Reporter: Am I forcing parallels, or is this concept of one dimensional formulas applicable to an analysis of the national government, in that increasing authority is increasingly centralized? Pochoda: I have mixed sympathies in this, in that I have a very strong anarchistic strain. I generally oppose any kind of government intervention in my life. On the other hand, I have collectivist sympathies because, in the past, it has seemed to be necessary to oppose personalized domination or locally barbarous behavior. And often the influence of the larger unit is necessary simply to coordinate and plan. The kind of coordination that seems necessary in a technological age simply cannot be carried out entirely on a local level. But it is difficult; the risks are very high. And centralization has proved compatible with totalitarianism, with the conduct of unjust racial wars, as in Vietnam. There seems to be no alternative any longer to this kind of centralization.The more important problem is what sort of planning is envisioned, in what interests, and to what ends. Reporter: What about the significance of one man, LBJ? Pochoda: LBJ seems to be exercising an irresponsible authority and administrative tyranny to an extent unprecedented in American history. I think we are now witnessing an historical discontinuity, visible in his radical disregard for public opinion and key congressional sentiments, in his disregard for the basic forms and substance of democratic procedures and of honesty in political life. Reporter: As one sort of answer to our problems, poetic or otherwise, what about the flower people? Do you take them seriously? Pochoda: Sure I take them seriously. I take both their overt claims seriously, that love is better than hate, and I take the kirti of critique they offer to our society seriously, because to a large extent I share in it. This is not to say that I consider their solutions viable or the modes of personal response they have effected appealing. On the other hand, there is so much mone in the American social scene which passes for normal or commendable critique of the hippies frequently malicious and unnecessary. A real problem arises accounting for the extreme and objectively unwarranted aggressiveness, hatred, and fear they have produced in so many observers. Reporter: Do you think they are effective? In other words, are they a force in motion, or simply an escaped, immobile segnent of society? Pochoda: I don't think they're terribly effective. But I'm rfet sure if that is a proper rebuke. I don't know if any of us hatfe been effective. I'm increasingly depressed about the futility of protest and the importance of humane demands. There are millions of people in this country who are doing nothing and other millions whose protest is ignored, and it is much too easy to project antagonism to the hippies who simply don't offend us. It's not the hippies who are limiting potential for life, for fulfillment, or for equality. They bring joy into people's lives, perhaps. their Volkswagon bus, lecturing at colleges. Ginsberg, who often leads anti-war demonstrations, is also a favorite target of police for his advocacy of pot, LSD, mescaline and any other hallucinegenic drugs. "Howl'',Ginsberg'sfirst book survived a 1954 pornography trial, establishing a precedent for his next books: "Kaddish" and "Reality Sandwiches." THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1968 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE SEVEN Catacombs (Continued from page 5) Feb. 21 and 22 at 9:45 P.M. The play is an original work by Jack Solomon, and was commissioned by the Hillel Foundation. The cast will be composed of students. Frank Miller, a flamenco guitarist in Philadelphia, will be featured at 10 P.M. Wednesday. Victor Bockris will present a poetry reading tonight at 10 P.M. Classifieds TYPIST, ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER, FOReign and chemistry symbols. Experience in PhD dissertations, master theses, legal scientific. Fast, accurate, reasonable. Dons, MI 9-6684. 2138 FOR SALE - BRAND NEW HOFNERLLTE, Guitar and Bass Guitar - Private, reasonable - Call 1-609-235-6502. 1788 XEROX COPIES AS LOW AS 3tf EACH The Copy Center, 3647 Walnut Street Corner of 37th & Walnut. EV-7-4746 9 A.M.-9 P.M. 1784 1955 ENGLISH FORD - 2 NEW SNOW tires, 4 other good tires, sound engine. Best offer. SH 7-8637 (6 to 11 p.m.) 1791 BEAUTIFULLY FURNISHED APARTMENT near Art Museum available for three in May. Call 232-6494. Money talks - Nobody walks. 1785 ACTION LINE (Continued from page 7) QUESTION: I work in the Houston Hall Dining Service. There are cockroaches all over the place and in the food. The service won't do anything about it. Can Action Line help? —Anonymous ACTION: Action Line spoke to the office of the sanitation supervisor of the health department of the city of Philadelphia. They promised an inspection of Houston Hall Cafeteria as soon as possible. QUESTION: I have a problem over a security deposit left for an apartment in St. Louis. A lawyer would be more expensive than the deposit. Does the University provide a legal service for its students? —W.E. ACTION: Action Line talked to Russell Fulton of the Residence Office. He told us that the idea was discussed recently and that Philadelphia fire regulations prevent the installation of the machine in the hall, the only plausible place known. With the renovation of the dorms the students will find new lounges and probable vending machines. QUESTION: In the College Office, College Hall, there's a huge delay on transcripts. They claim their zerox machine is broken. Why can't they put on more people so kids won't lose scholarships, etc? -Richard Levitt ACTION: Action Line spoke to Mrs. Peberdy of the College Office. She said that they are meeting the usual 48-hour-process deadline, and they certainly are doing all they can. The Xerox machine is never out of action for more than 24 hours. ACTION: Dr. Jefferson Fordham.deanof the Law School, told Action Line that he could refer you to someone in St. Louis. The University does not offer free legal counsel because of the superior facilities here in this city of Brotherly Love. The Lawyer Reference Service of the Philadelphia Bar Assn. and the Legal Aid Society of Philadelphia serve this purpose. QUESTION: There's no handle on one of the front doors to Hill and when there is a big crowd of people, and you're trying to kiss your date good-night, you can really get banged around. What's up? —Richard Levitt QUESTION: I live in the dorms, and it is a pain to run down to McClelland to get a Coke. Couldn't Coke machines be put in the dorms? It wouldn't cost the University anything. ACTION: Director of Hill Hall, Sandy Gustafson, told us that there was no reason why the handle was removed. It has been reported to Buildings and Grounds, and will be fixed as soon as possible. All's fair in love and war. PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER SPECIALIZING in masters, Doctoral Dissertations, Tern' papers. Sample of work in libraries of all area colleges. Flora Carlin. 7922 Rugby St. LI 8-4124. 2090 LUXURIOUS 2 1/2 ROOM APT FURNISHED 40th & Pine St. Telephone & utilities already installed. Ideal for one or two people. Call Terry Zintl - KI-6-0485. 1789 HUNGRY-EAT IN COMFORT AT YOUR home. Dial-A-Meal. Free Delivery. 1 roasted chicken, roast beef sandwiches, or lo" pi//a. Chicken-N-Beef. GR 6-0550. 5603 PHOTOGRAPHY CLASS - BEGINNERS AND Advanced. Starting Feb. B/W 35 mm to 8 x 10 incl. developing, printing, etc. Dark room facilities included. BA.2-1797. 2084 STUDENT ECONOMY EUROPEAN TOUR 21 days. $499. Complete. Visiting London, Paris, Zurich. Amsterdam, Frankford. Write for brochure C/O Box 202, Wayne. Pa. 19087. 2139 ATOZ EXPERT THESIS TYPIST. WORK guaranteed. Footnotes, bibliography, proofreading. 20 minutes from campus. Tel: 609TI 5-2792. 2648 LOST: DIME-SIZED OMEGA WATCH WITH gold band. Reward. EV-2-8207. 1337 At John Hancock, there's more to Life Insurance than selling Life Insurance. We'll be here on February 15 to prove it to you. ROOMMATE WANTED TO FILL VACANCY in new three-man apartment. Call BA-27980. 1338 Selling life insurance is big business. So big that John Hancock is selling nationwide. So we need a lot of talented salesmen like Frederick Brown—who can choose their own locations. But that's just the beginning, we also need a lot of talented nonsalesmen like Alan Smith and Charles Grier for positions as: AFRO-AMERICAN STUDENTS NEEDED TO help evaluate materials for socialpsychological experiment. $2.00 for single 1 hour session. Please call MA 7-6729, evenings. 2146 FOR SALE 1960 RAMBLER AMERICAN, Romney's Brainstorm $100, call TylerBA2-9" 1342 BLOOD RESEARCH PROJECT NEEDS Volunteers, $40 for entire study. Requires one full morning plus brief visits to lab for following 8-10 days. Males - 21 or over. Contact Dr. Scott Murphy - EV-2-4200 501. 1793 FACULTY MEMBER WISHES TO SELL custom made 8 ft. sofa. Call GR-4-6913after 6 PJvt. 1797 a Alan Smith works in our Salary Administration Division in Boston. Alan earned his B A. from Harvard in 1965. IS FROM JUNE ANDSEPTEMber, renovated, furnished, immediate.Campus area. See large ad this issue or Call EV-2-2986. 1798 FABULOUS OPPORTUNITY FOR GIRL who likes to cook. Two law students tired of cooking need relief for evening meals. Offer free meals in exchange for cooking service. 17% SUMMER IN WASHINGTON DJZ. - MALE student wants another to split apartment expenses from mid-May through August Call EV-2-2950. 1341 computer programmers And mathematicians. And accountants. And researchers. And management trainees. And people to manage these people. And people to manage the whole business. (Presidents are made, not born.) You'll find that no matter what your degree will be, John Hancock probably has a career for you. The John Hancock recruiter will be here to see you. TAPE RECORDFR; Roberts 330 and 2 E.V. mikes & speaker. Worth $500. Selling now for $300. Call John GR-4-5704. 1800 FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED FOR large 3 bedroom apartment. Modern & furnished. 42nd & Chester - Call BA-27148. 4302 Frederick Brown, Jr. graduated from the Pennsylvania Military College in 1964. Rick is a Sales Representative at the Mordecai Gerson Agency, Philadelphia. Check your college placement office for details. WHO KNOWS AUTHOR OF SHORT STORY The Tiger and the Lady? Two dollar reward when verified. EV-2-6606 12-1 AJvl. 2250 LOST: GREEN BOOK BAG CONTAINING book, manuscripts near Univ. on Monday. Call 594-7337 or 7311. 4303 OLYMPIC POSTERS - MEXICO CFTY 1968 Olympics, in colour 5.00 limited number, all different. J. Stitely D-3, 3425 Powelton Ave. 19104. 4304 Charles Grier is a management trainee in the Policy Contract Service Department in Boston. Chuck graduated in 1966 from Tuskegee Institute. An Equal Opportunity Employer BABYSnTER WANTED FOR POWELTON friends meeting. 10:45 to 12:15 Sunday mornings. Interested coeds call Joan Wattles, BA-2-5685. 1799 PAGE EIGHT THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN LIFE INSURANCE THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 8, 1968 Best tennis at Spectrum (Continued from page 12) (Thursday, Saturday and Sunday), Pancho Gonzales, the world's best amateur and professional tennis player in his time, will be instructing in a two-hour clinic to be held Saturday morning at 10 A.M. Since moving from Cheltenham to the Spectrum this year, the Philadelphia indoor tourney increased its spectator capacity to 15,000 — more than the capacity at Wimbledon or Forest Hills. One of the methods employed by the tournament committee--of which Perai Athletic Director, Fred Shabel, is Chairman of College and University Sales — to attract tennis patrons is the student rate. For the incredibly small price of one dollar, a college student (upon presentation The Happenings At Area College of college identification) can see some of the best tennis in the world, as well as get a good introduction to the new Spectrum. "The Happenings" will be Aside from the battle for the featured at this year's annual tournament title, what should Spring Weekend Concert, at Delaprove most interesting in the ware Valley College, in March. tourney will be the struggle The event is sponsored by the between America's top amateurs Class of 1970 which extends its --and its implications for a ra- welcome for everyone to attend pidly changing U£. tennis pic- this musical treat. ture. 4 What does IBM offer a Ph.D? I'd say diversity. But judge for yourself when they're here February 14th through 16th!' "I think IBM's worth listening to because the advantages that attracted me are even stronger today. (This is Garv Kozak, Ph.D. in Analytical-Physical Chemistry, an IBIvf Development Chemist and Project Manager.) "At IBM you're constantly working with people doing advanced work in many different fields. That's a great asset to any scientist because today's problems are often interdisciplinary. You can't solve them with one kind of background. You need inputs from three or four different kinds of people. "A good example is the solid logic technology used in building the IBM System/360. The EE tells vou how many conductors you'll have, where they go, and what should be at the terminals. An ME designs fixturing and automatic processes. A Polymer Chemist formulates insulators and says how they should be used. The Metallurgist specifies alloy compositions. The Physicist decides how to optimize a process for producing transistors and diodes And all these people have to talk with each other and help each other. " It's a stimulating environment, and it keeps vou technologically sharp. Of course, to do all this interfacing with other disciplines, you need a free and informal atmosphere and IBM has it. It's a good place for a scientist to work " There's more to the IBM story than Garv has mentioned. You can get all the facts when we interview Ph.D.'s on campus. Make an appointment at your placement office, even if you're headed for military service. Or if you can't make a campus interview, send an outline of your interests and educational background to Mr. L.H. Covert, IBM, Armonk, , N.Y. 10504. We're an equal ] ? ]D opportunity employer. -I IJ a' THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 8. 1968 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE NINE Sig Ep wins again in IF brain match Sigma Phi Epsilon narrowly edged out Tau Epsilon Phi Tuesday night to win thelnterfraternity Council Scholastic Bowl for the third year in a row. "Well, we did it again," William Bence, Sig Ep president said. The final tally was 190 for the winners, 175 for TEP, 150 for Tau Delta Phi, and 110 for Theta Rho. For about twothirds of the match, TEP looked like a sure winner, as they grabbed an early lead and widened it until they had 90 points and Sig Ep had 45. But the two-time winners came up from behind, and in the last minutes of the match, the score seesawed between the two top contenders. Besides Bence, members of the winning team were Philip Scranton, Neal Howard, and Leonard Huber. "They're good, what can you say? I've played against them before and they're good," Joseph Shapiro, Captain of the TEP team said afterwards. The finalists were chosen by elimination. All 33 fraternities ,had sent representatives to take written tests, which were administered by David Handler, IF scholarship chairman. The four teams chosen to compete in the bowl were the scholastic stalwarts," according to Handler. Shortly before the event, one of the contestants confided, "There's no reason for my being on that stage. I was on my way to a Circle K works with cripples Circle K Club members are involved in a program to brighten the lives of young cerebral palsy victims in the Home of the Merciful Saviour for Crippled Children at 4400 Baltimore Avenue. Currently Circle K members visit the 41 stricken boys and girls once a week, reading stories, talking to them, playing ball and " roughhousing" with the boys. In the spring the club plans to host the children a; a picnic or party. The program was initiated last November when club members realized the need they fulfill by just visiting the crippled children and giving the boys male companionship which they lack. Any interested Penn student is invited to participate in this and other Circle K activities. For information call Larry Keefauver at EV r Bernie Schenkler at EV 2-3189, or attend the next Circle K meeting. Student-faculty2 in ZBT cocktail party when three guys jumped me and said, 'You're on my team.' " The contestants all came black-tie. Handler emceed the match. At one point, the audience grew so boisterous that he said, "Please keep it down; I'm having a tough enough time doing this without you." "Please don't call out the answers in the audience," he later warned. "Most of them are wrong." Food strike (Continued from page 1) to Tuesday's questionnaire had unfavorable opinions about the dining service," she said. She added that her office has begun to arrange a meeting between the student committee, Alice Emerson, dean of women, Karen Romer, assistant dean of women, Dr. A. Leo Levin, vice provost for student affairs, Harry Evering, director of the University Dining Service, and Harold Manley business and financial vice president of the University. Mrs. Romer termed the boycott a "qualifiedfailure" adding that most of the girls knew some action was being taken, and therefore did not participate. Priscilla Ord, director of Sergeant Hall, said yesterday the boycott served one purpose -bringing the issues out in the open. "The leaders must organize now so they can make an effective presentation to Dr. Levin and Mrs. Emerson," she commented. "Now they have opinions to work with." seminars begin win awards next Tuesday for Studies UPSG will begin a series of informal seminars next week aimed at improving student faculty relations , a government spokesman said Monday. Senior representative Sue Goldman said the Council "wants to improve communication between students and faculty . . . especially freshman and sophomores". "The seminars will be informal discussions, bull sessions between students and teachers," she added. The first seminar will take place Tuesday evening at Miss Goldman's apartment at 3818 Chestnut St. Associate professor of finance, Dr. Jamshed Ghandi, will join a group of students there, "Any students interested in coming should sign up in Houston Hall or at the UPSG office in Irvine", Miss Golden said. She added that Ghandi "wants the topic of discussion to come from the students themselves." Students interested in the seminars can suggest a topic. Most of the seminars will take place at apartments, house keeping dorms, Dr.Leo Levin's house or Chaplain Johnson's, according to Miss Golden. "We hope suites at Hill Hall will eventually begin asking professors to visit," she said. Miss Golden said her concern is that students rarely talk to faculty members outside of class. Tuesday's seminar will begin at 7:30 p.m. Students should sign for it by tomorrow. 1 All have new modern kitchens with garbage disposals Many apartments have paneling, carpeting, terrances, * * * * * * m W PHIIA.S LARGEST FOLK CLUB 0pen7:a0Thur.Fri Sat.&6Sun 874 Lancaster Ave Bryn Mawr Phone (215) LA 5-3375 PAGE TEN THE DAM Y PENN How about ope free with every acre? I'll call it Bog Harbor. 4. Have you checked for tsetse flies? You sure look on the dark side. 37 completely renovated apartments Available for rental from June 1 and September 1 Located between 39th and Walnut and 45th and Pine All apartments have modern ceramic tile bathrooms decks FEB. 8-11 STEVE GILL I I I I •"v ANDY ROBINSON 3. WhatTl you do with the alligators? 2. But that's just swampland. APARTMENTSSummer and Fall ' ^Utilize ^Action JElint to heel the DP Dabbling in real estate. There's some choice acreage for sale. (Continued from page 5) Donald L. Raub Jr., Roger B. Read, James M. Schell, Bruce R. Schuyler, William M. Vitka, and David H. Woodside. ZETA BETA TAU: John F. Boneparth, Steven E. Brawer, Charles R. Brown, Robert D. Cohan, Robert B. Denby, Edward Fernberger Jr., Leonards.Katz, Brian M. Madden, Stephen M. Offen, Bruce Poushter, Jay David Rosenberg, James E. Sherman, Barry N. Vogelstein, Richard K. Wilner, and Joseph H. Sklar. ZETA PSb R. E. Biddle Jr., B.B. Considine, J. B. Goodwin Jr., J. E. Hochschwender, J. G. Leigh, TX.P. Mitchell and W^. Wheeler. The Christian Association will sponsor the first in a series of visits to local synagogues tomorrow. The series, open to the entire University community, has been organized by the CA in cooperation with Hillel for Christians who wish to lean? more about Judaism. The visit tomorrow will be to Temple Beth-El, a conservative synagogue at 58th and Walnut Sts. Rabbi Samuel Berkowitz,director of Hillel, will meet with those going on the visit at 7 tomorrow night at the CA. Information about other visits may be obtained by calling the CA at EV 6-6264. It's never to late 1. Planning a trip? lists ^6i4lMfr Two University Zeta Beta Tau members have won$250 scholarships each from the fraternity's national foundation. Marc Wolens. Wharton sophomore, has won this year's Joseph Winokur Memorial Scholarship. Laurence Kahn, College junior, was awarded the I. Emanuel Sauder Memorial Scholarship. The awards are based on the students' own applications as supported by the University ZBT Chapter, alumni trustees, and administration officials. The two $250 scholarships are part of 70 annual national ZBT foundation awards that total nearly $20,000. CA sponsors synagogue trip sun- <v All apartments (except 7) have inter-coms from apartment to vestibule Sizes range from efficiency to four bedroom, two bathroom townhouse Many apartments have three bedrooms, two bathrooms, living room, eat-in kitchen, terrace and attractive marble entranceway. Apartments furnished with appropriate modern matching furniture, unless otherwise desired Rentals for normal occupancy range from $55 to $75 (average $60) per person, monthly, depending on size and options such as dishwasher, air conditioning, etc. Private laundry facilities available We specialize in occupancy by students and married couples who desire modern, safe, clean, attractive, furnished and unfurnished apartments at mutually equitable rentals. And we offer the advantages of direct owner—management. Apartments shown at all convenient times, but only by appointment. For information or appointment call anytime from 9 A.M. to midnight (we have answering service if not in). Owner-Management of UNIVERSITY CITY HOUSING COMPANY EV 2-2986 MAN THl RSDAY, FEBRUARY 5.1 hatr to see you throw your dough away. Listen, I'm doing this so my wife and kids will have something to fall back on if something happens to me. 6. Then why don't you put some money into Living Insurance from Equitable. That way, you'll all be on solid ground. Living Insurance gives top protection while your kids are growing up. And when you retire, it can give you a lifetime income. I never could read road maps. For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable. For career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, or write: James L. Morice, Manager, College Employment. The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United States Home Office: 1285 Ave. of the Americas. N.Y.. N.Y. 10019 An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F EqnJtabla 1968 Frosh swordsmen beat Lehigh by 22-5 margin While the varsity swordsmen were having their troubles before defeating Lehigh Saturday, the Quaker frosh trounced the Engineer yearlings, 22-5. The freshmen turned in their best showing of the season in taking eight foil .bouts as well as seven victories each in the sabre and epee events. The meet was, however, closer than the final score indicates. The Lehigh fencers managed to stay in contention through the first round of nine bouts, winning four, but the Quakers took 17 of the last 18 matches, including all nine in the third round. "It wasn't really as bad as it shows," commented coach Maestro Lajos Csiszar about the Engineers' performance. "There were five 5-4 bouts which we won. It (the final score) could have been 17-10 instead of 22-5." Again it was Dan Sims who led the freshmen. Sims tacked three more foil victories onto his record and is now undefeated in 14 encounters. Gary Berman raised his season' s log to 9-3 with a three win day, while Ron Law, 2-1, now owns an 11-3 slate. Tom Kalman, 10-4 for the year, posted three wins for the epeemen in what the Maestro TOURS & JOBS IN EUROPE Now it is possible to have an exciting, fun-filled, low priced tour of Europe & a paying job anytime during the entire year. Your choice of job & country with wages up to $400 a month. For a booklet with all jobs, tours & application forms send $2 (handling & air mail) to: Dept. K, American Student Information Service, 22 Ave. de la Liberte, Grand Duchy of Luxembourg. *2.99 isn't much for on album. called "the best effort of the afternoon." Kalman beat his Engineer opponents 5-2, 5-2, 5-3. Steve Lerner was 2-1 Saturday. Steve Ajl won his lone bout and Paul Tietz split two matches. In sabre competition Joel Epstein won three times. Vince Corcoran and Bob Martin were each 2-1. This weekend the frosh host the swordsmen from GirardCollege. '71 raquetmen top Tigers, 6-3 Like their varsity counterparts, Princeton's freshman squash team invaded the Ringe courts in search of an upset over Perm only to find the Quaker racketmen too powerful for them to handle. The Pennsylvanians played strong games in all positions to hand the men from Old Nassau a convincing defeat by the score of 6-3. The victory by coach Bill Swift's frosh was secured with wins in all 5 of the first positions. Elliot Berry, the top player for the freshmen, played an exceptional game to down Sandy McAdoo, Princeton's number one player. Playing before an enthusiastic gallery that had just viewed the Varsity triumph, Berry surged to win the first set, 15-11, only to have McAdoo surge back in the second set to defeat him by the same score. The third set was won by the Pennsylvanian, 15-8, but McAdoo, again not to be denied, came back to win the fourth, 15-11. This see-saw tilt ended when Berry's brilliant returns and deft corner shots sewed up the victory, 15-10. In the other positions, Pennsylvania played equally well. Jeff Condon, playing number two for the Red and Blue, took his Tiger opponent in straight sets, 15-12, 15-12, 15-10. Mike Jennings at number three dropped the first set to his Princeton adversary Pete Bassett by the score of 11-15, but took the next three, 15-11, 15-9, 15-13. RickWheeler disposed of his Tiger opponent in straight sets 15-11, 15-13, 15-9. John Boneparth, Perm's number five player, overcame the questionable calls and vindictiveness of his Princeton counterpart to win 18-16, 15-12, 9-15, 17-15. The Quakers, however, were not nearly as fortunate in the re maining positions. Number six John Raphael lost to Princeton's Paul Vonkuster in straight sets, while Greg Djanikian bowed to Old Nassau's Mike Harris, and number nine man Park Willis likewise lost. Penn's Jim Coleman won in number eight, though, to insure the winning 6-3 margin and boost the team's seasonal log to six wins and no defeats. Catacombs presents tonight Is it? VICTOR B0CKRIS poetry reading It's happening at 10:00 FREE HECSH CARDS 106 S 0 U T H 36TH ST. PHILADELPHIA. A COMPLETE LINE OF VALENTINES Nichols, past graduate dean, gives talk on campus history Dr. Roy Nichols, the University's Pulitzer Prize- winning historian and former dean of Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, will speak here tonight on "Some Chapters in the History of the University of Pennsylvania." Nichols won the Pulitzer Prize in history in 1949 for his book "The Disruption of American Democracy." Now a University Professor of History emeritus, Nichols began his teaching career here in 1925 after two years at Columbia University. He earned his B.A. from Rutgers University in 1918 and his M.A. from there one year later. He received his PhJD. from Columbia in 1923. Nichols, besides winning a Pulitzer, also received a 1967 award for excellence of the Governor's Committee of 100,000 in the Commonwealth. Nichols has been a visiting professor of history at Columbia, Cambridge, and Stanford universities. He is chairman of the Philadelphia Historical Commission and senior vice president of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. His latest book, "The Invention of the American Political Parties," published last year, deals with the evolution of the twoparty system. Nichols will speak at 8:30 P.M. in the Friars Room of Houston Hall. He is sponsored by the Graduate History Society. The lecture is open to the University. The Graduate History Society will also hold a business meeting at 7:45 tonight in the Friars Room. Phi Kappa Sigma wins Interfraternity contest Continuing its tradition of remaining unbeaten in musical competition, Phi Kappa Sigma took first place in the Inter-Fraternity sing contest for the fourth consecutive year with the help of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, last night at the Christian Association. Second place awards went to Tau Delta Phi, while the judges were only able to render a tie decision between Beta Sigma Rho and Alpha Chi Rho fraternities for third place. The judges' panel included newly-elect I.F. President Steve Schatz, outgoing chief Doug Cox and Martin Duffy, Assistant Dean of Men for Fraternities. The Phi Kap repetorire was composed of three songs: "I'll get around to it when and if I can," by Chad and Jeremy, "20 Million Flower People Can't be Wrong," and "Thunderbird--Home of the Wine Country." The Phi Kaps appear to be making a near clean sweep of InterFraternity competition held this week. In the afternoon, that house dominated the Tep Relays held at Franklin Field. An official IJ7. source was also reported to have said that, "Phi Kappa Sigma is also in strong contention for the best-house-on-campus-award." Steve Hosmer, leader of the Phi Kap group at the IJ7. Sing remarked, "We have won the award since its inception and we intend to keep it that way." Hosmer also reserved his greatest praise for the sisters of Theta. "They did a great job as coholders of the award and sang wonderfully. I only hope we have such good people to work with next year." The competition began at 8:00 p.m. last night and was viewed before a packed audience of fraternity brothers and other curious onlookers. Penn keglers tie for 2nd Penn's keglers moved into a second place tie with PMC following a 1-1-1 meet against the military school Sunday, at the William Penn Bowling Center. The Quakers managed to improve upon an earlier match with PMC in which Penn lost 2-1. The two squads split the first two games with PMC winning the first, 954-839 and the Quakers squeaking to a 904-898 decision in the second. In the rubber game, Penn needed two fine performances to manage a tie at 927. Tom Hutchinson rolled a 214 in the third game to pace the Red and Blue. AlAideckman was right behind him with a 210. Aideckman bowled the high series for the afternoon with a 579 total. The Quakers are in the second half of their season which spans two semesters. In the first half of the campaign Penn finished in second place behind Villanova. The Quakers now trail Temple after two weeks of competition in the second half of the season. FREDDY'S Temple poll shows 'pot' emotions A January poll of students at Temple University on marijuana usage indicates that a majority of students would use marijuana if it were available, the student newspaper reports. The Temple News, which ran the poll, said 76 per cent of those asked claimed they knew someone who smoked marijuana. A third of these, the story said, would try it themselves if they had the opportunity. The paper polled 50 students in each class, including 102 females and 98 males. ROY NICHOLS Wants peace courses Einhorn talks on differences Ira Einhorn, hippie philosopher and former columnist for The Daily Pennsylvanian, will speak Monday night at the Philadelphia Ethical Society, 1906 South Rittenhouse Square. Einhorn will* talk on "The Generation Gap: Some Possible Solutions." The lecture is open to the public. Indian gives talk on logic Dr. Bimal Krishna Matilal, of the University of Toronto and formerly of the University of Calcutta, will speak at 4:30 P.M. today on "Some Problems of Indian Logic." Matilal's lecture, in the Franklin Room of Houston Hall, is sponsored by the Graduate Philosophy Club and the South Asian Regional Studies Club. The speech is open to the public. WXPN Sports Friday evening, February9, College Basketball, Penn vs Brown, live from the Palestra at 6:55 P.M. Play by play, Doug Selwyn; analysis, Bart Stichman, (88.9 fm and on campus 730 an). Saturday afternoon, February 10, College Ice Hockey, Penn vs Brown, live from the Arena at 1:55 PM Play by play, Bob Pinzler; analysis, Doug Selwyn. (88.9 FM and on campus 730 am). Saturday evening, February 10, College Basketball, Penn vs Yale, live from the Palestra at 6:55 PM. Play by play, Mark Rosen, analysis, Lonnie Schooler. (88.9 FM and on campus 730 am). Sunday evening, February 11, Sports in Focus, discussion, Why Indoor Track? (88.9 FM only) 8:00 P.M. I.R CENTER CITY RESTAURANT AND PIZZERIA BEFORE AND AFTER THE SHOWS SERVING FINE ITALIAN FOOD 21ST AND CHESTNUT L0 7-9595 OPEN EVERY DAY EXCEPT MON. UNTIL 12. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1968 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE ELEVEN : /:--■;■:■ h D aSy Pennsylvanian- sports PAGE TWELVE MSSSI MORE SPORTS ON PAGE 11 m:+ - From the press box Five-man Quaker entry in '68 squash Nationals The Flyers phenomenon Lorry They might have been the Montreal Canadiens. They hustled all over the ice, passed crisply with surprising precision, and the goalie made some miraculous saves. The offense scored four goals, all of them on plays that seemed well rehearsed, and Toronto was beaten 4-1. The crowd was a sellout, loving every minute of it. But the winners wore orange uniforms and the home ice was not in chilly Quebec but in Philadelphia. And whoever heard of big-time hockey in the drab town of Philadelphia? It does seem hard to believe that only months ago there was no major league hockey in the City of Brotherly Love. Nor was there much of a demand for it, which is why the phenomenon of the Flyers seems so incredible. Remember that this is an expansion club. The six team NHL decided, in what appeared an impulsive move, to double its membership. This put the Flyers in the category of such expansion miscarriages as the New York Mets, the Chicago Bulls, the New Orleans Saints. Now, however, the Philadelphia franchise not only heads the newly added Western loop, but makes a habit of defeating the original NHL powerhouses. Last weekend, the Flyers humiliated Chicago and Toronto on s*uccessive evenings with two brilliant displays of efficient, aggressive hockey. And nearly 30,000 local enthusiasts voiced their appreciation. The Flyers this season unaccountably have been outdrawing the '76ers, basketball champions of the world. One starts to wonder just what forces have converted Philly so rapidly into a full-fledged hockey town. Of course there used to be the notorious Ramblers, but they were a different breed altogether. The Ramblers, now the Jersey Devils, played in the Eastern League, a semi-pro loop which features a loose, unpolished brand of hockey. Their home games were played at the Arena out on scenic Market St. before the aged stadium was at least made presentable for University use. The Arena was not a classy joint. There was no way to escape the smell of stale beer or cigars, and no one remembers seeing the place very clean. The local populace certainly did not come out to watch great hockey. The main attraction was in the brawls, and the spectators enjoyed themselves by throwing sundry objects onto the ice or directing colorful epithets at the Ramblers, their opponents, the officials, and the parents thereof. Nice boys didn't take their dates to the Arena. None of this characterizes the Flyer phenomenon and the spanking new Spectrum. Every seat in the house offers a fine view of the action and the stadium is kept immaculate. The fans for the most part are well-mannered students of the game and come to see hockey, not to find an outlet for their aggressions. The team responds to all this interest by knocking off the established giants of hockey to the bewilderment of players and public alike. It's a happening in Philadelphia, a welcome addition to the local sports scene. But there is something missing down at Broad and Pattison. To understand it one must travel the 100 miles north to New York where the old Madison Square Garden suffers on its deathbed at Eighth Ave. and 49th St. The regulars have populated the infamous side balcony at the Garden for years and years. They are unique in their enthusiasm, their consistent support, their vocal exhortations. They shell out a dollar (or is it now $1.50) to see their heroes skate, despite the fact that from their balcony vantage point a full third of the ice is blocked from view. These dedicated fans stand for all sixty minutes of play and they come out in any weather to watch a team that has often occupied the NHL cellar. It is these regulars, not the $6 Park Avenue patrons, who give NHL hockey its real class. They develop, however, not overnight,but only after years of steady patronage. When the Philadelphia Flyers can claim these regulars, then the team will have truly come of age. By ROB LaTULIPE "It's a great experience--to see the great players in the world in action can help our entrants to develop their own play." With this idea in mind, Coach Al Molloy will bring, five members of Penn's once-defeated squash combine to Saturday's USSRA Tournament in Boston. The competition, sponsored by the UnitedStatesSquashRacquets Association, is the major annual testing ground for outstanding squash amateurs from the U£. and Canada. Penn, one of 1968's strongest collegiate teams, will be represented in one of four phases of this weekend's "Nationals". The Quakers are in a field of 38 five-man teams, representing colleges, clubs, cities and states. Intercollegiate powers Harvard, Navy, Princeton, Yale and Amherst join Penn in team play. Philadelphia, a squash racquets stronghold, has two squads on the list. The city will host the 1970 edition of the USSRA's -- to be played at Penn's own Ringe Courts. The multiphased competition also features veteran and senior players' individual tourneys, and a playoff among 32 top-seeded amateurs from several nations. Harvard's 1967 intercollegiate champion Anil Nayar is the only collegian to qual ify for this event in '68. Co-captains Dave Brown and Fred Levin, senior Gerard Harney and junior Chris Keidel have already secured spots on Penn's unit. The victor in a Wednesday match between juniors Spencer Burke and Richie Cohen will round out the Quaker entry. "I usually take my seniors along," said Molloy. Brown, Le- DAVE BROWN Unbeaten co—captain vin and Harney are the only senior regulars on this year's "young" squad. Levin has been a stalwart in Penn's fourth position. Harney, coming out of a short slump, has played at number three. Keidel and Cohen have been battling each other for the top two Quaker spots. B rown and Burke boast Penn's only unblemished records -- with 6-0 individual marks this season. The Red and Blue will tangle with Ontario in the first round. Last year, Penn downed the Ohio squad before being eliminated by Ontario in the second pairings. The match with the Canadians was a close 3-2 affair. "If Ontario has the same personnel this time, we might have a good chance," Molloy noted. 1968 city entrants from Toronto and Hamilton may weaken the provincial squad. Molloy values competition in the USSRA's regardless of his entry's chances. "We should put in a team even in those years when we may not be as strong," he said. "This year we're better than average." There are a number of advantages to being in the tourney. "It's simply good publicity for the University of Pennsylvania," the coach added. The prestige and the possibility of playing in the Nationals is attractive to high school prospects. And for Penn's 1968 contingent, the thrill and the "great experience" is only a few days away. World's best tennis players at Spectrum By NORMAN ROOS America's top three amateur tennis players, some of the best foreign players in the world, and Pancho Gonzales are in town. The occasion which has drawn all this tennis talent to The City of Brotherly Love is the Seventh Annual Philadelphia International Indoor Tennis Championships, which gets underway this evening at 7:45 P Jvl. at the Spectrum. Charlie Pasarell, Arthur Ashe, Cliff Richey (ranked one, two, and three respectively in the U.S.), Manuel Santana, JanLeachly and Bob Hewitt head the list of entrants in the benefit tourney, whose proceeds go to the Philadelphia Tennis Patrons Association and Philadelphia Tennis Center (organizations concerned with the development of tennis among area youth.) Although the most highly-reBy MARVIN DASH garded tennis player In the Phi Kappa Sigma ran away with the TEP relays yesterday aftertournament is Spain's Manuel noon at Franklin Field, posting a fast 3:35.0 mile relay time in the Santana, rated the third best amafinals. teur in the world, Charlie PasaArnie Papowitz made up 70 yards in zipping through the last rell, currently the top-ranked quarter mile in sub-50 second time to give the host Tau Epsilon Phi amateur in the USH Is top-seed. team runner-up honors. Kappa Sigma was third, while Sigma Alpha Epsilon took fourth place. In winning Phi Kap avenged its second place finish last year. Alpha Tau Omega won the '67 relays with Sigma Nu finishing third. Hap Davis opened up a big lead for Phi Kap on the first lap, running a :53.8 opening leg. Steve Race followed witha:53.2 440, and Dave Hammond chalked up a third leg time of :52.2. Anchorman John Accardi broke the tape 150 yards ahead of TEP*s Papowitz, turning in a time of :55.8 for the last quarter mile. Phi Kap wins relays Penn indoor track standouts in important meets this weekend Earl Andrews, co-captain of Penn's indoor track team, and Jerry Williams, standout in the 1000 yard run, will be traveling to New York City Friday for the first top-flight indoor meet of their careers, the Madison Square Garden Invitational. The most renowned track stars in the country will be pounding the boards of the lame duck Garden. Andrews specialty, the mile run, will be especially loaded with talent. Jim Ryun, the current record holder in both the mile and 1500meter run,DavePattrick,theman whe recently defeated Ryun in the 880, and Sam Bair, the new sensat ion of the indoor season, will all be trying to break the tape first in what promises to be "the indoor mile of the year." Andrews' and Williams' activity for the weekend does not end with the conclusion of the garden meet. The two Penn stars must journey to Baltimore on Saturday for the Eastern Indoor Championships. They will both be members of the Quaker two-mile relay team. Other Quaker entries in the Baltimore meet will be the mile relay team and the frosh mile and two mile relays. Penn has a fine opportunity to do quite well in the Eastern Championships. Each team is placed in a heat with teams of similar ability. Last year the yearling two-mile relay team copped a first place. Track Coach, Jim Tuppeny is quite pleased with the prospects .for a good showing this weekend. He remarked, "I am quite sure our relays will go all out and I am sure Earl and Jerry won't embarass Penn in New York." Managerial Freshmen or sophomores interested in heeling lacrosse managerial should call Paul Friedberg at EV 2-8364 or Barry Sussman at EV 2-3499 any evening. Freshmen will receive gym credit as heelers. Earlier Phi Kap posted the fastest time, 3:39.3 in the preliminary heats to qualify for the finals. Kappa Sigma, running in the same heat, had a 3:48.0 for the second best qualifying time. TEP took its heat in 3:50.0, beating the team from Phi Sigma Kappa by a comfortable margin. SAE ran a 3:54.2 to make the finals, finishing far ahead of Delta Tau Delta and Sigma Alpha Mu. In other heats ATO was timed in 3:59.5 for the first place finish. Delta Kappa Epsilon took its heat in 3:56.8, Phi Delta Thetawonits race in 4:01.4, and Beta Sigma Rho took the seventh qualifying heat with a time of 4:00.5. CHARLIE PASARELL Top—Seed Santana is seeded second. The tourney's defending champion, Lt. Arthur Ashe, is seeded third. Whereas Ashe took the Philadelphia title away from Pasarell last year (Pasarell wo» the Philadelphia tourney in 1965 and 1966) Pasarell relieved Ashe o'. the number one amateur ranking in the U£. last season. While the amateurs are competing in the three-day tourney (Continued on page 9)