10/7/68 pennsylkiman* - penn libraries a menber of the finance committee, will present a minority...

6
,-K 10/7/68 THEDAILY Local DP breaks with UPSG The Daily Pennsylvanian, in a front-page editorial in today's edition, declared itself financially independent from UPSG. The senior board of the paper voted unanimously Sunday to refuse the annual student govern- ment allocation after it was learned the the UPSG finance committee voted Thursday to recommend a $12,000 decrease in the paper's allocation. The original figure of $22,000. past last spring, has been under scrutiny by the finance committee since May. (The finance committee's action touched off a heated meeting of the UPSG rules committee Sunday night. The outcome was a withdrawal of the cutback by the leaders of the finance committee, then an effort to reinstate the cutback. SEE FOLLOWING NEV6BRIEF.) Finance committee members said the budget slash was based upon a 1967- 68 profit by the paper of close to $17,000. A spokesman for the DP said the move to break with student government was made in part to hurry the pap- er's total independence from the University and in part as a reaction a- gainst consistant statements by finance committee officials and members in public and private that the allocation would be left in tact. RULES COMMITTEE STOPS DP BUDGET CUT Daniel Corbet, chairman of the UPSG finance committee, withdrew then resubmitted then finally withdrew under pressure his committee's request that the budget of The Daily Pennsylvanian be cut by more than 50 percent at a lively session of the UPSG rules committee Sunday night. When Corbet resubmitted the bill, Arnold Brown, rules committee chairman, said, "This sure doeesn't sound like procedure to me." The rules committee subse- quently voted that there was no procedural justification to put the measure back in the omnibus finance bill. Corbet and Jerry Levene, vice chairman of the finance committee, decided at that time to resubmit the DP allocation as a completely new bill. Rules committee members balked at the attempt to circumvent the regular procedure. Brown explained to Corbet that to resubmit the bill at this time "as a matter of self-defense and to give a black eye to the entire student government is assinine." Corbet reportedly will attempt to bring the bill to the floor of the Assembly in Tuesday's meeting. Brown and Stephen Marmon, a rules committee member, are preparing a motion of censure against Corbet, Levene, and David Silvers, also vice chairman of the finance committee. The motion accuses the trio of overstepping their authority as stated in the UPSG bylaws. The motion also calls for the forced resignation of the three. It states that the com- mittee has misrepresented their actions and intentions to the Assembly and to student activities and has unduly interferred in the internal affairs of student activities. FINANCE COMMITTEE ASKS $2,100 FOR SAAS The L'PSG Assembly will consider a bill Tuesday night recommending that the Society of Afro- and Afro-American Students 'SAAS) receive tr. allocation of *2,100 from the $205,000 UPSG budget The rules com- mittee Sunday night decided to send the bill to the floor with a note point- ing out that a constitutional issue may be involved. SAAS does not allow whites to join or attend meetings of its organization. Tke UPSG finance committee decided at its regularly scheduled Thursday meeting to recommend funding SAAS even though it is a closed organization. The committee mem- bers had met earlier in the day at a joint session with University Chaplain Stanley Johnson and Mrs. Alice Emerson, assistant vice provost for stu- dent affairs. The two administrators reportedly advised that UPSG give SAAS money in recognition of the fact that SAAS is a special type of or- ganization founded to give blacks an identity among themselves. Robert Stokes, a menber of the finance committee, will present a minority re- commendation at the Assembly meeting which will ask that SAAS be given money only to support its newsletter which will be available to all members of the University community, TOWN MEETING ON MUNDHEIM REPORT TONIGHT A I,'PSG-sponsored symposium to discuss the merits and drawbacks of the final report of the Mundheim Commission on Open F.xpression and Demonstra- tion on Campus will be held tonight in Irvine Auditorium at 7:30 P.M. The first hour of the symposium will be devoted to a structured debate moderated by Jefferson Fordham, dean of the law school. The remaining time will be open to free discussion. Also on the platform will be Dr. Charles Price, chairman of the steering committee of the University Council and Robert L. Threscher, chairman of the trustees committee on undergraduate affairs. A faculty-student committee, including Dr. J.K.S. Ghandi, a member of the Mundheim Commission who objected to Article V of the report. Dr. William J. Williams, secretary of the Mundheim Commission, Jules Benjamin, temporary co-chairman of SDS, Howard Topel, member of the junior sports board of The Daily Pennsylvanian, and Ezra Rosenberg, editor of the UPSG newsletter, will evaluate the results of the town meeting and possibly draft a resolution for pre- sentation in the UPSG Assembly. SDS REJECTS TRUSTEE PROPOSAL The University chapter of Students For A Democratic Society (SDS) turned down a proposal by William Owen, sceretary of the corporation, that SDS attend a special meeting of the student affairs committee of the trustees Oct. 16. SDS had previously requested an open meeting of the board to dis- cuss the University City Science Center and the policies of university ad- ministration when the trustees meet this Friday. Plans for such a meeting were rejected by trustees led by Chairman William Day. The next full trustees' meeting will be in January. COMMITTEE NAMED TO SELECT NEW COLLEGE DEAN Uinguistics department Chairman Henry M. Hoeningswald is the chairman of the committee which will nominate the next dean of the College. Dr. Otto Springer resigned last spring, and Acting Dean Dr. William E. Stephens, physics department chairman, is only a temporary appointee. College juniors Sanford Kolb and Richard Katz, both General Honors students, were named to the committee by the Rev. Jack Russell, vice provost\for student affairs. Other faculty committee members are Dr. Richard Dunn, Dr. Henry Fall, Dr. Paul Lloyd, Dr. Wilfred Malenbaum, Howard Riasmussen, Dr. G. Robert Schrieffer, Dr. Anthony Wallace and Dr. David White. National By United Press International TIMES SAYS NIXON LEADS IN 34 STATES The New York Times released a Presidential election survey Sunday which showed Richard M. Nixon leading in 34 States with 380 electoral votes, 110 more than he needs to win. According to the findings, Vice President Humphrey now has 28 electoral votes, a decrease of 14 in the past three weeks, and George C. Wallace has 66 votes, 11 less than three weeks ago. Democratic candidate Humphrey, who was endorsed Sunday by the Times, spent the day at the World Series baseball game in Detroit but took time out to charge that Republican opponent Nixon "has no public record of accomplishment" and again lashed out at what he termed Nixon's refusal to debate him. Nixon, in the third of a series of radio addresses, said "an increasingly impersonal" federal beaeaucracy saps individual initiative and that federal programs "aimed at establishing domestic tranquility in securing the general welfare have had almost opposite effect." In Montgomery, Ala., Wallace, a third party candidate, claimed that he would win the election one month away. PENNSYLKiMAN* Vol. LXXXIV No. 51 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Copyright 1968 The Daily Pennsylvanian Monday, October 7, 1968 Cox body defends Columbia rebels By United Press International A blue-ribbon commission investi- gating last spring's disturbances at Columbia University in New York City said Saturday student protesters had many legitimate complaints and urged students be given a greater voice in policy-making. The commission included Anthony G. Amsterdam, professor at the Uni- versity Law School. At the same time, the commission criticized a small group of "hard- core" student revoluntionaries for seeking to provoke violence, charged the faculty with "aloofness" from campus life and attacked the police for using excessive force. The five-member commission, headed by Archibald Cox, law pro- fessor and former U.S. Solicitor General, said Columbia's admini- stration "too often conveyed an at- titude of authoritarianism and in- vited distrust." "We are convinced," the com- mission said, "that ways must be found, beginning now, by which stu- dents can meaningfully influence the education afforded them and other aspects of the university activities." The commission was appointed by the faculty to investigate the causes of the disturbances. More than ~0() students were arrested and hundreds injured when police raided the campus twice to remove students from buildings they had occupied. The report was based on 21 days of hearings that began last May, in which 79 witnesses testified and 3,790 paees of transcript were taken. The commission -said it flatly rejected the view that ascribes the \pril and May disturbances primarily to a conspiracy of student "revo- lutionaries" who were members of the Students for a Democratic So- ciety (SDS). Instead, the report said, by its final days the Columbia revolt "en- joyed both wide anil deep support among the students and junior faculty, and to lesser degree among the senior professors." But the panel said a hard-core group within SDS sought confron- tations with the university and police and bore "part of the responsibility" for the resulting violence. The report criticized Columbia faculty for its "aloofness" to campus problems prior to the revolt and for some of the tactics advocated by faculty members during the pro- test. Specifically, the report says that the ad hoc faculty group increased the likelihood of violence by pressur- ing the administration to delay call- ing the police. The report says the police "may have used excessive force" in the (Continued on page 4) Editorial i Photo by The Evening Bulletin RICHARD NOBLE, occused mur- derer and arsonist who allegedly started the fire at Delta Tau Delta fraternity last December that took three lives, goes on trial in City Hall today. Noble, a former College student, has reportedly been in Philadelphia for several weeks. Photo taken last December after he surrendured to police. Our financial independence It is with some reservation but great conviction that the editors and staff today declare the financial independence of The Daily Pennsylvanian from the student government of the University of Pennsylvania We understand the consequences of our action and regret the circumstances under which we sever our economic affiliation with the University; we believe that we can no longer safeguard our editorial freedom by remaining at the mercy of the finance committee, Assembly, and officers of the University of Pennsylvania Student Government. The financial history of The Daily Pennsylvanian has been a chaotic one. In the 1966-7 fiscal year, this newspaper lost $14,000 and its debt stood at $21,000. Because of strict management control and parsimony, The Daily Pennsylvanian was able to repay its debt of $21,000 in one year's time and retain $17,000 in its account. The UPSG subsidy for the 1967-8 fiscal year was S22.000. In April of this year, the Assembly voted$22,000 for The Daily Pennsyl- vanian for the 1968-9 fiscal year. That money was supposed to have been transferred to our account on July 1. It was not. Since that time, the finance committee and The Daily Pennsylvanian have been in constant contact; the finance committee's excuse for not authorizing transfer of funds being that since the paper was beginning negotiations with the University for the paper's independence, the committee should not allocate our money for the coming fiscal year. The finance committee knew that our independence could not come until late in the fiscal year but indicated that it had to decide what UPSG position would then be. Daniel Corbet/ chairman of the finance committee, has lied to both the Assembly and The Daily Pennsylvanian in regard to this money; he has told the paper that it would receive its full allocation and has told the Assembly that the holdup was a "technical" matter. We asked UPSG for the same subsidy this year as we received last year. We have installed a United Press International teletype machine at the" annual cost of $1,000, we have bought a ticket for our sports editor to Mexico City so that the University might be informed of the progress of its crew team there, we have created a new weekly magazine (which will appear Friday) to give the University community a complete entertainment guide to Philadelphia. We had hoped to buy some much-needed equipment in all of the paper's departments to make The Daily Pennsylvanian a better newspaper. The UPSG finance committee has repeatedly questioned the need for these expenditures. The UPSG finance committee has looked upon our profit which was the result of great sacrfice (in terms of coverage) to both the newspaper and the University as its profit "and has now recommended that our request be cut by more than half. There are those who will congratulate the finance committee for punishing The Daily Pennsylvanian. Do not congratulate them out of ignorance. Under- stand this: The advertising to copy ratio has been approximately 1:1 because of our determination to repay our deficit. The reason that so few activities and University events are covered is that there is so little space after advertisements and Campus Events are included in the paper. With the full allocation, The Daily Pennsylvanian had planned to increase the number of pages per issue to allow for full coverage of University events. Because of the finance committee's decision, our advertising to copy ratio must remain the same. The Campus Events section—heretofore provided free to the University may no longer be free to activities or to the Uni- versity. In short, the students have lost because the $15 semester activities fee has been poorly appropriated by a student government which is so petty as to react to our criticism of it by attempting to cripple this paper. We urge other activities and concerned students to consider alternatives to the present student government and its financial monopoly of student funds. Although UPSG has thus managed to thwart any attempts to reform itself into a more representative body, there is discontent seething below the surface. It must make itself known. The editors and staff of The Daily Pennsylvanian a re guilty of attempting to challenge and stimulate, particularly by suggesting changes and reform to our fellow students and hoping that they will act upon suggestions which they see as both right and relevant. We are guilty of mistakes—we are not perfect. We are guilty of desperately trying to be the catalysts for thought and action. We are guilty of representing students where they would not or could not represent themselves. We are guilty of representing them when their own student government was betraying their trust by playing political games and ingratiating itself for its own selfish ends with the University's administration. We are guilty of these charges and ironically we have been found guilty by a student government which neither represents the students nor leads the students nor understands the students. This group has done by not doing and by un-doing; it has attempted to check student activity and concern rather than foster it. But we will not be executed or castrated. Today is an unhappy day for us because we believe in this University and we believe in its students. We have long fought for and believed in student rights—often in a vacuum and often alone. We do not apologize. We do not capitulate. We are sincere and we want the very best for this University. And so we regret student government and will not compromise with this petty body. We will go on—hoping that we have the support of those we have attempted to serve. We are not omniscient or omnipotent under- stand that we are motivated because we want freedom and responsibility and, yes, justice for all students. We will continue to fight and continue to challenge and continue our quest to improve our paper and our University. We declare our financial independence; we will accept no more funds from UPSG. We will attempt to live on advertising revenues alone until we can devise other sources of income. Whether or not every student and faculty member agrees with the editorial policies of The Daily Pennsylvanian, we hope that this University will recognize the absolute necessity of an unfettered, unrestricted, provoca- tive student newspaper. We, the editors and staff of The Daily Pennsylvanian, hereby reaffirm and rededicate ourselves to those ends. I

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Page 1: 10/7/68 PENNSYLKiMAN* - Penn Libraries a menber of the finance committee, will present a minority re- commendation at the Assembly meeting which will ask that SAAS be given money only

,-K

10/7/68 THEDAILY

Local

DP breaks with UPSG The Daily Pennsylvanian, in a front-page editorial in today's edition,

declared itself financially independent from UPSG. The senior board of the paper voted unanimously Sunday to refuse the annual student govern- ment allocation after it was learned the the UPSG finance committee voted Thursday to recommend a $12,000 decrease in the paper's allocation. The original figure of $22,000. past last spring, has been under scrutiny by the finance committee since May. (The finance committee's action touched off a heated meeting of the UPSG rules committee Sunday night. The outcome was a withdrawal of the cutback by the leaders of the finance committee, then an effort to reinstate the cutback. SEE FOLLOWING NEV6BRIEF.) Finance committee members said the budget slash was based upon a 1967- 68 profit by the paper of close to $17,000. A spokesman for the DP said the move to break with student government was made in part to hurry the pap- er's total independence from the University and in part as a reaction a- gainst consistant statements by finance committee officials and members in public and private that the allocation would be left in tact.

RULES COMMITTEE STOPS DP BUDGET CUT Daniel Corbet, chairman of the UPSG finance committee, withdrew then

resubmitted then finally withdrew under pressure his committee's request that the budget of The Daily Pennsylvanian be cut by more than 50 percent at a lively session of the UPSG rules committee Sunday night. When Corbet resubmitted the bill, Arnold Brown, rules committee chairman, said, "This sure doeesn't sound like procedure to me." The rules committee subse- quently voted that there was no procedural justification to put the measure back in the omnibus finance bill. Corbet and Jerry Levene, vice chairman of the finance committee, decided at that time to resubmit the DP allocation as a completely new bill. Rules committee members balked at the attempt to circumvent the regular procedure. Brown explained to Corbet that to resubmit the bill at this time "as a matter of self-defense and to give a black eye to the entire student government is assinine." Corbet reportedly will attempt to bring the bill to the floor of the Assembly in Tuesday's meeting. Brown and Stephen Marmon, a rules committee member, are preparing a motion of censure against Corbet, Levene, and David Silvers, also vice chairman of the finance committee. The motion accuses the trio of overstepping their authority as stated in the UPSG bylaws. The motion also calls for the forced resignation of the three. It states that the com- mittee has misrepresented their actions and intentions to the Assembly and to student activities and has unduly interferred in the internal affairs of student activities.

FINANCE COMMITTEE ASKS $2,100 FOR SAAS The L'PSG Assembly will consider a bill Tuesday night recommending

that the Society of Afro- and Afro-American Students 'SAAS) receive tr. allocation of *2,100 from the $205,000 UPSG budget The rules com- mittee Sunday night decided to send the bill to the floor with a note point- ing out that a constitutional issue may be involved. SAAS does not allow whites to join or attend meetings of its organization. Tke UPSG finance committee decided at its regularly scheduled Thursday meeting to recommend funding SAAS even though it is a closed organization. The committee mem- bers had met earlier in the day at a joint session with University Chaplain Stanley Johnson and Mrs. Alice Emerson, assistant vice provost for stu- dent affairs. The two administrators reportedly advised that UPSG give SAAS money in recognition of the fact that SAAS is a special type of or- ganization founded to give blacks an identity among themselves. Robert Stokes, a menber of the finance committee, will present a minority re- commendation at the Assembly meeting which will ask that SAAS be given money only to support its newsletter which will be available to all members of the University community,

TOWN MEETING ON MUNDHEIM REPORT TONIGHT A I,'PSG-sponsored symposium to discuss the merits and drawbacks of the

final report of the Mundheim Commission on Open F.xpression and Demonstra- tion on Campus will be held tonight in Irvine Auditorium at 7:30 P.M. The first hour of the symposium will be devoted to a structured debate moderated by Jefferson Fordham, dean of the law school. The remaining time will be open to free discussion. Also on the platform will be Dr. Charles Price, chairman of the steering committee of the University Council and Robert L. Threscher, chairman of the trustees committee on undergraduate affairs. A faculty-student committee, including Dr. J.K.S. Ghandi, a member of the Mundheim Commission who objected to Article V of the report. Dr. William J. Williams, secretary of the Mundheim Commission, Jules Benjamin, temporary co-chairman of SDS, Howard Topel, member of the junior sports board of The Daily Pennsylvanian, and Ezra Rosenberg, editor of the UPSG newsletter, will evaluate the results of the town meeting and possibly draft a resolution for pre- sentation in the UPSG Assembly.

SDS REJECTS TRUSTEE PROPOSAL The University chapter of Students For A Democratic Society (SDS) turned

down a proposal by William Owen, sceretary of the corporation, that SDS attend a special meeting of the student affairs committee of the trustees Oct. 16. SDS had previously requested an open meeting of the board to dis- cuss the University City Science Center and the policies of university ad- ministration when the trustees meet this Friday. Plans for such a meeting were rejected by trustees led by Chairman William Day. The next full trustees' meeting will be in January.

COMMITTEE NAMED TO SELECT NEW COLLEGE DEAN Uinguistics department Chairman Henry M. Hoeningswald is the chairman

of the committee which will nominate the next dean of the College. Dr. Otto Springer resigned last spring, and Acting Dean Dr. William E. Stephens, physics department chairman, is only a temporary appointee. College juniors Sanford Kolb and Richard Katz, both General Honors students, were named to the committee by the Rev. Jack Russell, vice provost\for student affairs. Other faculty committee members are Dr. Richard Dunn, Dr. Henry Fall, Dr. Paul Lloyd, Dr. Wilfred Malenbaum, Howard Riasmussen, Dr. G. Robert Schrieffer, Dr. Anthony Wallace and Dr. David White.

National By United Press International

TIMES SAYS NIXON LEADS IN 34 STATES The New York Times released a Presidential election survey Sunday which

showed Richard M. Nixon leading in 34 States with 380 electoral votes, 110 more than he needs to win. According to the findings, Vice President Humphrey now has 28 electoral votes, a decrease of 14 in the past three weeks, and George C. Wallace has 66 votes, 11 less than three weeks ago. Democratic candidate Humphrey, who was endorsed Sunday by the Times, spent the day at the World Series baseball game in Detroit but took time out to charge that Republican opponent Nixon "has no public record of accomplishment" and again lashed out at what he termed Nixon's refusal to debate him. Nixon, in the third of a series of radio addresses, said "an increasingly impersonal" federal beaeaucracy saps individual initiative and that federal programs "aimed at establishing domestic tranquility in securing the general welfare

have had almost opposite effect." In Montgomery, Ala., Wallace, a third party candidate, claimed that he would win the election one month away.

PENNSYLKiMAN* Vol. LXXXIV No. 51 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Copyright 1968 The Daily Pennsylvanian Monday, October 7, 1968

Cox body defends Columbia rebels

By United Press International

A blue-ribbon commission investi- gating last spring's disturbances at Columbia University in New York City said Saturday student protesters had many legitimate complaints and urged students be given a greater voice in policy-making.

The commission included Anthony G. Amsterdam, professor at the Uni- versity Law School.

At the same time, the commission criticized a small group of "hard- core" student revoluntionaries for seeking to provoke violence, charged the faculty with "aloofness" from campus life and attacked the police for using excessive force.

The five-member commission, headed by Archibald Cox, law pro- fessor and former U.S. Solicitor General, said Columbia's admini- stration "too often conveyed an at- titude of authoritarianism and in- vited distrust."

"We are convinced," the com- mission said, "that ways must be found, beginning now, by which stu- dents can meaningfully influence the education afforded them and other aspects of the university activities."

The commission was appointed by the faculty to investigate the causes of the disturbances. More than ~0() students were arrested and hundreds injured when police raided the campus twice to remove students from buildings they had occupied.

The report was based on 21 days of hearings that began last May, in which 79 witnesses testified and 3,790 paees of transcript were taken.

The commission -said it flatly rejected the view that ascribes the \pril and May disturbances primarily to a conspiracy of student "revo- lutionaries" who were members of the Students for a Democratic So- ciety (SDS).

Instead, the report said, by its final days the Columbia revolt "en- joyed both wide anil deep support among the students and junior faculty, and to lesser degree among the senior professors."

But the panel said a hard-core group within SDS sought confron- tations with the university and police and bore "part of the responsibility" for the resulting violence.

The report criticized Columbia faculty for its "aloofness" to campus problems prior to the revolt and for some of the tactics advocated by faculty members during the pro- test.

Specifically, the report says that the ad hoc faculty group increased the likelihood of violence by pressur- ing the administration to delay call- ing the police.

The report says the police "may have used excessive force" in the

(Continued on page 4)

Editorial i

Photo by The Evening Bulletin RICHARD NOBLE, occused mur-

derer and arsonist who allegedly started the fire at Delta Tau Delta fraternity last December that took three lives, goes on trial in City Hall today. Noble, a former College student, has reportedly been in Philadelphia for several weeks. Photo taken last December after he surrendured to police.

Our financial independence It is with some reservation but great conviction that the editors and

staff today declare the financial independence of The Daily Pennsylvanian from the student government of the University of Pennsylvania We understand the consequences of our action and regret the circumstances under which we sever our economic affiliation with the University; we believe that we can no longer safeguard our editorial freedom by remaining at the mercy of the finance committee, Assembly, and officers of the University of Pennsylvania Student Government.

The financial history of The Daily Pennsylvanian has been a chaotic one. In the 1966-7 fiscal year, this newspaper lost $14,000 and its debt stood at $21,000. Because of strict management control and parsimony, The Daily Pennsylvanian was able to repay its debt of $21,000 in one year's time and retain $17,000 in its account. The UPSG subsidy for the 1967-8 fiscal year was S22.000.

In April of this year, the Assembly voted$22,000 for The Daily Pennsyl- vanian for the 1968-9 fiscal year. That money was supposed to have been transferred to our account on July 1. It was not.

Since that time, the finance committee and The Daily Pennsylvanian have been in constant contact; the finance committee's excuse for not authorizing transfer of funds being that since the paper was beginning negotiations with the University for the paper's independence, the committee should not allocate our money for the coming fiscal year.

The finance committee knew that our independence could not come until late in the fiscal year but indicated that it had to decide what UPSG position would then be.

Daniel Corbet/ chairman of the finance committee, has lied to both the Assembly and The Daily Pennsylvanian in regard to this money; he has told the paper that it would receive its full allocation and has told the Assembly that the holdup was a "technical" matter.

We asked UPSG for the same subsidy this year as we received last year. We have installed a United Press International teletype machine at the"

annual cost of $1,000, we have bought a ticket for our sports editor to Mexico City so that the University might be informed of the progress of its crew team there, we have created a new weekly magazine (which will appear Friday) to give the University community a complete entertainment guide to Philadelphia. We had hoped to buy some much-needed equipment in all of the paper's departments to make The Daily Pennsylvanian a better newspaper.

The UPSG finance committee has repeatedly questioned the need for these expenditures. The UPSG finance committee has looked upon our profit which was the result of great sacrfice (in terms of coverage) to both the newspaper and the University as its profit "and has now recommended that our request be cut by more than half.

There are those who will congratulate the finance committee for punishing The Daily Pennsylvanian. Do not congratulate them out of ignorance. Under- stand this: The advertising to copy ratio has been approximately 1:1 because of

our determination to repay our deficit. The reason that so few activities and University events are covered

is that there is so little space after advertisements and Campus Events are included in the paper.

With the full allocation, The Daily Pennsylvanian had planned to increase the number of pages per issue to allow for full coverage of University events.

Because of the finance committee's decision, our advertising to copy ratio must remain the same.

The Campus Events section—heretofore provided free to the University may no longer be free to activities or to the Uni- versity.

In short, the students have lost because the $15 semester activities fee has been poorly appropriated by a student government which is so petty as to react to our criticism of it by attempting to cripple this paper.

We urge other activities and concerned students to consider alternatives to the present student government and its financial monopoly of student funds. Although UPSG has thus managed to thwart any attempts to reform itself into a more representative body, there is discontent seething below the surface. It must make itself known.

The editors and staff of The Daily Pennsylvanian a re guilty of attempting to challenge and stimulate, particularly by suggesting changes and reform to our fellow students and hoping that they will act upon suggestions which they see as both right and relevant.

We are guilty of mistakes—we are not perfect. We are guilty of desperately trying to be the catalysts for thought and

action. We are guilty of representing students where they would not or could not represent themselves. We are guilty of representing them when their own student government was betraying their trust by playing political games and ingratiating itself for its own selfish ends with the University's administration.

We are guilty of these charges and ironically we have been found guilty by a student government which neither represents the students nor leads the students nor understands the students. This group has done by not doing and by un-doing; it has attempted to check student activity and concern rather than foster it.

But we will not be executed or castrated. Today is an unhappy day for us because we believe in this University

and we believe in its students. We have long fought for and believed in student rights—often in a vacuum and often alone.

We do not apologize. We do not capitulate. We are sincere and we want the very best for this University.

And so we regret student government and will not compromise with this petty body. We will go on—hoping that we have the support of those we have attempted to serve. We are not omniscient or omnipotent under- stand that we are motivated because we want freedom and responsibility and, yes, justice for all students.

We will continue to fight and continue to challenge and continue our quest to improve our paper and our University.

We declare our financial independence; we will accept no more funds from UPSG. We will attempt to live on advertising revenues alone until we can devise other sources of income.

Whether or not every student and faculty member agrees with the editorial policies of The Daily Pennsylvanian, we hope that this University will recognize the absolute necessity of an unfettered, unrestricted, provoca- tive student newspaper.

We, the editors and staff of The Daily Pennsylvanian, hereby reaffirm and rededicate ourselves to those ends.

I

Page 2: 10/7/68 PENNSYLKiMAN* - Penn Libraries a menber of the finance committee, will present a minority re- commendation at the Assembly meeting which will ask that SAAS be given money only

HHIIMUHHHHMMIINIiniinHmm^

Letters: the fraternity issue IMMWIIUMimilllllllHIIIIIIIIII»»MIIIIHIIMIHHIIIIHIIIIIHIimM HIIIIIIIIHIIIIH

DISCRIMINATION EVERYWHERE

Sir: I wonder whether your other readers are as tired as I of reading your anti-fraternity campaign. It seems that the only plank in your platform is that you do not believe the fraternities should have the right to select pledges on an irrational and secret basis. You have chosen to call it discrimination. Your nom- enclature is not altogether unreason- able as the fraternities are noting differences between persons and act- ing upon these observations. Is that "morally wrong"? ("Daily Pennsyl- vanian", "AbolishFraternities",9/- 30/68). If it is immoral for fratern- ities to have selective policies in choosing members, are all the social and country clubs in the United States immoral institutions?

If the "Daily Pennsylvanian" is going to crusade against the im- morality of fraternities maybe it should do something about every single student on campus who is dis- criminating when he (or she)chooses friends. If one does not discriminate on the basis of race or religion one must certainly be discriminating on some other criterion, maybe that is morally wrong too.

If your editorial board thinks my comments are naive I think it is rather naive of the editor to think that the fraternities discriminate only on the basis of race and religion, or possibly it is just that the editor feels those are the only immoral grounds for discrimination. Is it moral to discriminate on the basis of hair colour but immoral to dis- criminate on the basis of skin col- our?

1 do not agree that it is morally wrong for fraternities to selectively choose members, and so I simply cannot concur with the editorial pol- icy.

John M. Reynolds Wharton, '72

TO STAND ALONE

Sir: There are those who have a pass- ing preoccupation of criticizing that which they know nothing about.These people can take a simple subject and evolve a complex answer in- corporating pseudojargon to such an extent that the reader is unable to comprehend the actual subject. But unfortunately, this high sounding ans- wer has nothing to do*-withthe subject belhg"dfscussed. decent articles and leners *> the editor in this paper is a prime example; for each student should make his own personal choice of whether or not to join a fraternity, not the DP or a sociology pro- fesseum (sic). Being a happy, con- tented independent, though far from a protesting radical, I feel it is a- bout time that someone clearly pre- sented the issues surrounding the abolition of fraternity life.

Unlike others I believe that a pre- requisite for an intelligent discussion of an issue should be exact definitions and not alluded to fantasies. Let us be gin-

Conformity is "the adapting of oneself to prevailing standards and customs." In relationship to devi- ation, conformity acts as a mitigating influence on some forms of self- expression, not all by any means.

Student conformity at Pennsyl- vania, until recently, was primarily manifested in fraternity life. Here we see a social organization which exhibits cultural and social changes. The fraternity is a place to vent e- motions and escape the drudgery of a long and tiring academic life. In a large university, such as Penn- sylvania, the student loses any semb- leance (sic) of identity unless he has some subgroup with which to assoc- iate and the accompanying norms, beliefs, and values of this subgroup. I take it for granted that any 18 year-old student at Penn has enough basic maturity to decide for himself whether the benefits of fraternity life

outweighs the disadvantages—which there most certainly are.

The prospective fraternity man sees the fraternity as a beneficial way of life. He sees the fraternity as an exchange of culture. It is where men of various backgrounds can ex- change opinions freely. He sees the fraternity as a maturing process as he has a place to share everyday experiences with people who are en- countering the same dilemmas. It is a place where the business-minded person can learn to run a house- hold, where a politically-minded per- son can run a house meeting, or where a liberal-minded person can easily form opinions by hearing op- posing sides or arguments such as civil rights, germ warfare, power politics, or even op versus pop art. Fraternity life is a symbiotic re- lationship whereby the individual looks to the group for assistance and the group looks to the individual for sustenance of high ideals.

Yet every member in this group has experienced a "pledged period". Looking back we can conclude that this period has helped to conform the group into a mold from which escape is difficult or even desirable. Escape can be achieved by merely leaving the group. It is my content- ion that the consideration of whether or not to join a fraternity is a de- cision reserved for individuals--not organized interest groups pro or con.

Seeing that there are few trees, no lawns, and no real campus to speak of, tradition is definitely an important factor in this university. But there are those who seek the abolition of anything stable in the name of progress. What do they have to offer in return—except for a- narchy and a rule by an elite?

We look for more than a pure academic experience in college. For what is college but the gaining of experiences and the tasting of life? If one desires to taste life, sitting at a desk seven days a week and thinking closed, innocuous thoughts, he might be missing something. The same holds true for the independent man or college coed who feels that all fraternity men are either in- telliqually (sic) inferior or imma- ture. One must judge a person as a person standing alone, not as part of a group.

Dorryl J. Kramer College '69

HOUSE SYSTEM

Sir: Oh! are you blind! You laud the house sytem as it appears in Memorial House in the dorms, but you neglect the fact that this really isn't the model house at all. The fact that the dorm counselor has a vote, instead of only the one vote all the other members have, is hypo- critical and totally detrimental to the system in the future. The men should have the responsibility to face up to their decisions and the ensuing consequences. The dorm counselor may become a scapegoat for the members' failings and the purpose of the house system has to be joint responsibility and joint decision-making. If college students cannot be trusted to act responsibly, then the house system will never succeed; the administrative fears and instillation of a "veto*' will ruin many fine attempts at student power.

Secondly, you state that the men now term their project a "non- fraternity in the dorms". The pur- pose of the house system should be to get away from the gung-ho group pressures that fraternity men face. The members of the house must insure that each individual's free- dom to participate or not to par- ticipate is total. The presence of any social pressure, as was evi- denced in the Morris project last spring, is ruinous.

Thirdly, fifty men is entirely too many for a meaningful system. One will find that cliques develop

1885 1968

Page 2 10/7/68

CHARLES A. KRAUSE Editor-in-Chief

BERL N. SCHWARTZ Managing Editor

MARK LIEBERMAN, Editorial Chairman, ERIC T. TURKINCTOM, Editorial Chairman: WILLIAM R. BURCHILL, JR., iSews Editor; WILLIAM K. MANDEL, Associate Editor: BARRY JORDAN, Sports Editor; STEPHEN D. RUTTER, Executive Editor, KENNETH H. KAPLAN Photography Editor; PHILIP S. ARKOW, Associate Features Editor; NORMAN H. ROOS, Associate Sports Editor.

STANLEY H. BERKE ti us mess Manager

ELLEN M. COIN, Financial Manager;

KEN R. DROSSMAN, Advertising Manager;

JILL P. MESIROV, Production Manager

too easily and restrictively. Fur- thermore, men who are strangers in the beginning of the year to a- nother man, in most cases, remain relative strangers, except for iden- tity, perhaps, for the remainder of the year.

Finally, why must the house sys- tem be merely an experiment? It could be inaugurated throughout the dorms. All the dorms need is not carpeting and studio beds, but the responsibility for the living groups to make and abide by their own decisions. A diverse social program would make all occupants aware of each individual's contribution to the house. And, the house system would not make the need for fraternity life so acute, as freshmen would get a chance to develop their knowledge about themselves and would not be lured by the "advantages" of a re- strictive fraternity. Furthermore, a freshman would have friends of diff- erent religions and interest groups and would, one can hope, recognize the need for diversity in a total education. And, the house system, if it worked in even a limited capacity, would make freshman year more meaningful than it is now.

Joan Drucker CW '70

FACE GUILT

Sir: As an alumnus who was a fraternity man in the 1940*s, I have been stirred and stimulated by the articles written by you on fraternities. I would be equally interested in the rebuttals, but they have been all too few.

The benefits of this controversy are wo-fold. First of all, the fresh- man can now make decisions more on facts than conjecture. Secondly, all of us must face our own guilt in the practicing of discrimination against our fellow man.

Leonard Price

RIGHT TO EXCLUDE

Sin Fraternities and sororities should not be abolished. They do have their faults, but no more than any other selective institution. Why should people be precluded from as- sociating with others of their own ilk? If a majority of the member- ship does not want a certain person to be in their organization, I be- lieve that they have a right to exclude him.

Medieval guilds and country clubs have been selective on the basis of skill, religion or color for ages. 1 do not condone religious or racial discrimination. Buy, how often does a person of obvious different back- ground and belief really want to be part of an organization that is com- pletely opposite to him in this respect?

Integration of fraternities and sororities religiously and racially would benefit them because a novel ingredient would broaden the outlook and experience in the organization. However, if the majority does not feel that this is desirable, (I believe it is), they should, nevertheless, be allowed to remain the clique they are. They are only hurting themselves. The excluded person would not have been happy in a club where many people were against his acceptance, anyway.

The criteria for membership may be discriminatory, but harmony with- in the club allows participation in many worthy community projects and the contribution of much to university life. Coercion to blanket acceptance of all unwanted applicants would jeopardize this beneficial con- geniality, negate the purpose of the club, and make all members miser- able.

The benefits gained from fair and open - minded recruitment and a diverse, but still congenial member- ship are obvious to all fraternities and dororities. They are wise to follow such a course. However, I believe that the members of such an organization have a right to choose and exclude whomever they wish.

Susan Potfs CW 1969

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Letters to the editors are wel- come on any subject. Letters must be typed - - 66 characters to a line, double spaced. Letters must be signed, but names will be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the ria,ht to edit letters due to space limitations.

*******

Siqncd columns appearing on this paae represent the view of the author only and do not necessarily reflect the editor- ial opinion of The Daily Petm- sylvanian. Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the majority of the editorial board. Any member of the editorial board dissenting from the maj- ority opinion has the na,ht to have his opinion appear in a column entitled "Another

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AN EXHIBIT OF GOYA ETCHINGS

MON. FRI. 2 -6 WED. EVENING 7 - 9

Philomathean Art Gallery

4th Fl. Logan Hall (Hare Bldge.)

Page 3: 10/7/68 PENNSYLKiMAN* - Penn Libraries a menber of the finance committee, will present a minority re- commendation at the Assembly meeting which will ask that SAAS be given money only

iMonday, October 7, 1968 The Pa'ly Pennsylvania!! Page 3

Page 4: 10/7/68 PENNSYLKiMAN* - Penn Libraries a menber of the finance committee, will present a minority re- commendation at the Assembly meeting which will ask that SAAS be given money only

Page 4

lllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllll

Campus events mini minim mini iiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiii inmiimii iniiniii iiiiiimi mi'

CAMPUS AGENDA WHARTON WOMEN: Organization

ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION: Co-ed volleyball every Wed. night, 7 P.M. Weightman Hall Gym. All welcome.

OPEN DISCUSSION: Vice Provost Jack Russell will lead an open dis- cussion on the crucial problems facing the University this year. OPEN TO ALL UNIVERSITY STUDENTS,Tues.. Oct. 8, 8 P.M., Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity, 3615 Locust Walk.

PHILOMATHS AN ART EXHIBIT: An exhibit of Goya etchings will be presented this week. Hours: Mon. thru Fri 2-6 P.M.; Wed. 7-9 P.M. I'hilomathean Art Gallery, 4th fl.. Logan Hall. (Hare Bldg.)

ACTIVITIES NOTICES

A.S.M.E.: Meeting Tues., 11 A.M., Towne Bldg., 266, speaker and re- freshments. All welcome.

BALALAIKA ORCHESTRA: Meet- ing 11 A.M. tomorrow, 126 Potter Hall. Please attend.

CHORAL SOCIETY: Rehearsal tonight, 7 c.M. promply. Christian Association, 56th and Locust Walk. Bring Verdi.

CIRCLE K: Board meeting tonight, Houston Hall. All welcome.

DAM Y PI NNSVLVANIAN: Full Business Staff meeting tonight, 7:30

P.M. GENERAL HONORS PROGRAM:

Brief but urgent meeting Tues., 11 A.M., of General Honors students (past and present) in General Honors Lounge, Van Pelt Library. Please attend.

I.A.A.: Model U.N. General Assembly-Be a delegate for a day. Applications at booth outside College Hall and at I.A.A. office. Due Oct.11.

LA.A.: Model U.N. committee meeting tomorrow, 4 P.M., LA.A. office, basement of C.A.

OUTING CLUB: Wilson Square Dance, climbing, hiking to be dis- cussed. Meeting in Room 33, C.A. at 7 P.M. tonight. All welcome.

PENNSYLVANIA LITERARY SOCIETY: Organizational meeting for all members and all those interested in joining, 11 A.M. Tues., Room 3, Houston Hall.

SKI CLUB: Meeting for all those interested in joining, Thurs., 8 P.M., Houston Hall Room 200. Films will be shown.

SOCIETY FOR THE ADVANCE- MENT OF MANAGEMENT: Open meeting today 4 P.M., Dietrich Hall. W-124. All undergraduates welcome.

SOPHOMORE ENGINEERS: Check mailbox for Sigma Tau award invita- tion*

UP.S.C: Interviews for a sopho- more fraternity man and a senior commuter man interested in joining U.P.S.G., 2:30-4:30 P.M., U.P.S.G. office, with Tom Brown.

meeting tomorrow, 11 A.M., Room E-109 Dietrich Hall. Open to all co-eds in Wharton School.

RUSSIAN CLUB: Meeting at 2 P.M. today in Room 126 Potter Hall for members and interested others to discuss plans for the year.

The Daily

World Series (Continued from page 6)

crowd of 53,634 fans at Tiger Stad- ium--including Vice President Hu- bert H. Humphrey--by allowing just three hits over the final seven inn- ings to boost his world series mark to 7-1. He also homered in the fourth and walked with the bases loaded in the eighth.

Brock, who hit .414 in last year's Series, went 3-for-5 to boost his

Cox defends Columbia (Continued from page 1)

first raid April 30. Of the second raid, on May 22, the report asserts that while there was some student provocation:

"...The police engaged in acts of individual and group brutality for which a layman can see no justifi- cation unless it be that the way to restore order in a riot is to ter- rorize civilians."

The commission said two of the causes of the protest were the wide- spread "tensions and frustrations of United States policy in Vietnam" felt by students and the desire for racial justice.

It dismissed as relatively in- significant the avowed objectives of the April demonstrations--the end of Columbia's affiliation with the Institute for Defense Analyses (IDA), which does defense research; the termination of university construct- ion of a gym in Morningside Park in Harlem: and the removal of dis- ciplinary penalties against six stu- dents for violating a ban on indoor demonstrations.

Asserting that these three issues were simply "symbolic" and were "inadequate causes for an uprising," the report lists three underlying "purely internal causes of unrest."

These were the administration's "authoritarianism," and lack of in- terest in student opinion; the in- ferior" quality of student life on campus in "living conditions and personal associations" and the uni- versity's failure to deal with the problems of black students.

The black students, organized in- to the Students Afro-American So- ciety, helped spark the revolt when they occupied Hamilton Hall to pro- test construction of the gym.

The 222-page report was issued in the form of a paperback book which goes on sale Monday. It was published by Vintage Books, a di- vision of Random House.

It contains no specific chapter on recommendations although rec- ommendations were implied through- out the report.

It said the "vital decision in rejecting these "disruptive demon- strations" Asted with "the^ liberal and reform minded students."

"They can save or destroy the institution," the report said.

Other members of the commis- sion were Hylan G. Lewis, profess- or of Sociology at Brooklyn College; Simon H. Rifkind. former U.S. dis- trict court judge, and DanaL.Farns- worth, director of Health Services at Columbia University.

Pennsylvanian

average to .500 with eight hits in 16 at bats. He clouted McClain's second pitch of the game into the ridit centerfield bleachers, tripled in the fourth inning and hit a bases- loaded double over centerfielder Jim Northrup's head in the eighth.

Gibson lost his bid to become the fifth man in history to pitch two shutouts in a series when North- rup homered in the fourth. But Gibson was in charge the rest of the way. He also became the only pitcher ever to hit two Series home runs.

With the Tiger fans chanting "rain, rain" and the Tigers stalling by going back to the dugout to get different bats in the hope that the rain might resume before five inn- ings were completed, the Cards countered by twice deliberately getting thrown out while trying to

steal. In the middle of the fifth, the

umpires warned both managers that the strange play wasn't helping base- ball's image and after the game was official, there were no more in- cidents.

After Brock's homer, McClain made the first of four Tiger errors when he bobbled first baseman Norm Cash's throw at first on a grounder by Roger Maris--who scored when Tim McCarver singled him to third and Mike Shannon hit an infield

single. Curt Flood's single, McCarver*s

triple and Shannon's double produced two more runs off McClain in the third. After McClain walked Julian Javier, the game was delayed by

rain. Joe Sparma pitched after the stop-

page and finished the third but was bombed for Gibson's homer—his first since he homered in the seventh game against Boston last year—and the triple by Brock, who scored on Marts' grounder.

John Hiller was combed for four eighth-inning runs when the Cards loaded the bases on Matthews' error, a double by Javier and Dal Max- vill's walk. Gibson walked to force in a run and Brock then doubled in

three.

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The Committee, Houston Hall Board's perennially popular answer to the rising tide of mediocrity in campus entertainment, is offering an exciting new program this year which will bring to campus top-flight performers on the college coffee house circuit.

Appearing in the West Lounge snack bar in Houston Hall which has become the traditional locale for The Pengelly a former member of the New Christy Minstrels, typifying the group's contemporary sound and youthful appeal.

Prior to joining the Christy's, Pengelly appeared as a solo per- former at the Village Inn in Mesena, New York and Morgans in Plattsburg, New York. He also appeared on the Ted Mack Amateur Hour.

He will later be followed by'' David

Booters (Continued from page 6)

toward the goal. Sturman dribbled in and then rifled a picture shot by Hager's outstretched arms. Hutchi- son got credit for an assist. Vogt and Rosenglick lit the score- board in the final quarter for Penn. each tallying his initial goal of the young season.

Vogt's score came after Hager blocked his attempt from 30 yards. The ball rebounded back to him, and the junior inside forward prompt-

594-7535

Monday, October 7, 1968

ly kicked it past the fallen Bruin goalie with 14:03 left in the game.

Eight minutes and 55 seconds later Rosenglick closed out the scor- ing by heading a loose ball into the Brown nets.

The Quakers used their speed to great advantage in the contest and appeared the stronger of the two teams at the finish.

"We outconditioned them," Sed- don noted. But he wasn't yet about to claim the Ivy title. "I've felt all along that Harvard is the team to beat this year," he warned. Penn shut out the Crimson, 3-0, last fall during Homecoming Weekend.

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QUESTION: Why does VVistar Institute have an emergency entrance? --J.T.

ACTION- Miss Knowles, secretary for public relations at the institute, explained the two reasons for the emergency entrance. Scientists at the institute conduct experiments which cannot be regulated by a 9 to 5 schedule, and after 5 P.M. the regular driveway is used for parking space. Therefore, first, the emergency entrance is needed to provide the scientists with access to the building at any hour. Second, the Institute orders shipments from all over the world and when these shipments arrive, they must be put away at once. This is done through the emergency entrance.

QUESTION: Why aren't you allowed to wear pants or shorts to language lab if you are allowed to wear them to class? --German 1, ("lass of '72

ACTION: Beth Manwaring, secretary at the language laboratory, told Action L.ine that there are no longer any dress regulations for students using the

lab.

QUESTION: Why aren't the squash courts open on Saturdays and Sundays? -- David Berman

ACTION: Al Moiloy, squash coach, told Action Line that the Ringe Courts are open from 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Monday through Friday, from 9 A.M. to 3 P.M. on Saturdays and Sundays from 2 to 5 P.M. Courts in Gimbel Gym are open irom 10 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. weekdays, 10 A.M. to 3 P.M. Saturdays and 2 to 5 P.M. Sundays. You must have had the wrong squash.

QUESTION: The students in Chemistry 1 are being unjustly treated. This past Monday I spent an entire three hour lab period dojng a forty-five minute experiment. Reason? There are only six balances in the entire chem lab. Can you imagine waiting in line for two hours to use a balance only to find that when your turn finally arrives your isopropyl alcohol has evaporated? --Linda Wellner '72

ACTION: Edward Verner, business administrator of the biochemistry depart- ment, told us that there is a requisition on file for more balances, but they arc- waiting for a release of funds. When that will occur, Mr. Verner said, is not known.

Ql I STION: DP board meetings can gel to be pretty noisy, but we wish that staff members wouldn't continue them on 34th Street after midnight. We can't sleep! -Sergeant Hall, facing 34th Street

VCTION: Associate editor Bill Mandel suggests youcomedownto the meetings and listen, then you'll be able to sleep.

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OPEN MEETING

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* *

DIETRICH HALL W-124

Page 5: 10/7/68 PENNSYLKiMAN* - Penn Libraries a menber of the finance committee, will present a minority re- commendation at the Assembly meeting which will ask that SAAS be given money only

Monday, October 7, 1968 The Daily Pennsylvania!! Page 5

*l^

The Treaty of Farmingdale ■

Here, on the majestic plains of Long Island, the distinguished representatives of three great nations met to promote greater international harmony.

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<

Page 6: 10/7/68 PENNSYLKiMAN* - Penn Libraries a menber of the finance committee, will present a minority re- commendation at the Assembly meeting which will ask that SAAS be given money only

Quaker gridders stymie stubborn Brown,l 7-13 By HOWARD TOPEL

Route 95 heading west out of Providence is a lonely road. Especially at dusk, when it's too dark to see anything, but light enough to know there's nothing to see anyway. There must be something to do to break this monotony.

What d'ya know! The tape of that Penn-Brown game is on the radio. Talk about exciting football...

The second half is just about to start, Penn leading 17-13. Missed all the scoring plays. It's a good thing Penn's defense stiffened up in that second half. The way the game started it looked like Brown was gonna walk right through them.

71 yards m nine plays after the opening kickoff. That big halfback Lemire made it look easy, especially on that 26-yard touchdown run. He gained 108 yards in the game. Only 26 in the second half.

Zbrzeznj got that first one back for us though. Took it in around right end from the eight. Good fake to Santini on the play. Set 'em up nice, too. Santini had carried five of the seven previous plays on the drive. That soccer- style cat Berry kicked the point after to tie it up 7-7 after the first quarter.

Penn looked better in the second quarter. Santini capped a 16-play, 80- yard drive by bulling over from the one. He carried 10 times on the drive, gained 53 yards. Had 141 on the afternoon. Passes to Blumenthal, Dunn and Graham kept Brown honest. Berry again—Penn 14 Brown 7.

Those Bruins really bounced back though. Quarterback Phillips zeroed in on that 6'4" end Kontos. Hit him four times in a row to put the ball on Penn's 13. After being thrown for a loss, Phillips hit Kontos again on a slant- in from the left for a 17 yard touchdown play. Bad snap from center killed the PAT. Wide to the left. Penn 14 Brown 13.

Monahan's kickoff return sure helped the Penn cause. Returned it 36 yards to Penn's 41 with less than two minutes left in the half. He made some key plays in that last drive, also, like carrying a pitchout 19 yards to put the ball on Brown's 30. Zbrzeznj looked cool moving us into field goal range. Time left for only one play. Berry into the game, kicking into a 14 MPH wind at a tough right-to-left angle. 28 yard boot perfect. Penn 17 Brown 13 at halftime.

The tape of the game's finally back on. They sure drag out that halftime

Photo by JEFF STERLING

QUAKER HALFBACK JERRY SANTINI (30) drives for yardage after taking handoff from quarterback Bemie Zbrzeznj v'2). Santini rushe^ for 141 yards on carries in Saturday's 17—13 win over Brown.

stuff. Two tackles in a row by Charley Ketchey. He was all over the field all afternoon.

Here comes the screen pass to Lemire. Pfeilmeier was just waiting for him. Really creamed him. Did the same thing in the first half. Brown never used the play again.

Brown has the ball again. Boy, those Quaker defensemen were really hitting. Chwastyck, Fuddy. Brown punts.

Burrell's waiting for the punt on Penn's 46.1 can just see the move now. Told me he was lucky after the game. 1 wonder if the five Brown guys he left eating dirt would believe him. It looked like he was gonna get killed; then he was gone. Would have gone all the way, too, if he hadn't slowed down to set that last defender up for a block. Caught from behind. Still, first and ten on the Brown sixteen isn't bad.

Here comes the fumble that killed our best scoring opportunity of the second half. Pitchout to Santini, ball rolling loose on Brown's 39. Recovered by Bruin's Dan Stewart. We fumbled three times on that pitchout play. Lost two of them. Poor execution coach Odell said after the game. Well defended, he added.

Penn's defense really made that four point lead stand up. Listen to them crack helmets together. Ketchey, Pfeilmeier, Fuddy, Chwastyck. Key stop by Pottruck.

The coverage in the secondary was good, too. Steinberg, Brown, Burrell, and Eisenhower kept Kontos and other receivers from opening up. Quarter- backs Phillips and Marini forced to eat the ball. Brown didn't get a first down the whole third quarter.

Fourth quarter now. Zbrzeznj has Penn offense moving again. Ball con- trol game sounds great. Santini and McFillen march the ball downfield. Santini gains his l,0OOth career yard. Ninth Penn player to do it. Third and ten—quick kick.

Brown storms back. Moves to mid-field. Marini pass deflected in the line, intercepted by Pfeilmeier. 1:51 left in the game. Looked like Penn had it wrapped up.

Brown's defense doesn't quit. Holds Zbrzeznj for no gain on fourth down quarterback sneak from Brown 35. Bruins' ball with 17 seconds left.

Fifteen yard penalty against Penn. Brown moves to Penn 37. Time for one play. Pass complete to Flanders, pounced on by John Brown at 20 yardline. Gun sounds. Penn, now 2-0 with Cornell coming up, wins 17-13 for the second time of the afternoon.

Booters trample Bruins, 4-0

* :

RETTSTURMAN Scored on perfect play

Weekend sports

Football

Penn 17 Brown 13 Lightweight football

Penn 0 Army 32 Soccer

Penn 4 Brown 0 Cross country

Penn 47 Harvard 16 Penn 15 Columbia 50

Frosh cross country Penn 15 Harvard 48 Penn 15 Columbia 50

Freshman soccer Penn 0 Lehigh 1

By MARVIN DASH

PROVIDENCE—A fired up Penn soc- cer squad grabbed an early lead and turned Saturday's showdown with Brown into a 4-0 rout.

Tom Hutchison put the Quakers ahead early in the second quarter with a goal from 25 yards out. Cap- tain Rett Srurman tallied in the third period, while Bruno Vogt and Jeff Rosenglick each scored an insurance goal in the final stanza to sew up the victory.

The crowd of about 4,200 parti- san Bruin fans sat stunned as the last seconds ticked away on the score- board clock, signaling the end of Brown's 26-game streak without a loss, a streak marred only by last year's 1-1 tie with the Red and Blue.

Down on the field, however, it was quite a different story.

A jubilant band of Quakers hoisted coach Bob Seddon onto their should- ers after the gun had sounded and carried him from the field, shouting, "We're number onel We're number onel" Their performance against the Bruins, Ivy League titleholders the past five seasons, did nothing to dis- prove their belief.

"It was a little bit of a great win," Seddon happily admitted. "It was a great effort for the whole de- fense."

The triumph upped the Red and Blue log to 3-0 this fall, all shutouts. In fact, counting last season's finale against Cornell, Saturday's victory

was Penn's fourth in a row by the shutout route, its sixth in its last seven, and eleventh in its last fif- teen contests.

The Bruins actually outshot the Quakers, 38-25, but sophomore goal- ie Alex Spector remained unscored upon, saving 10 Brown shots, several on high, leaping catches.

The Brown eleven used the strong wind which blew over A ldrich-Dexter Field in Providence to its advan- tage in the first period, almost com- pletely dominating play and outshoot- ing the Red and Blue, 13-2.

The Bruins had two big oppor-

Cadets gain revenge

tunities to score in the quarter, both stemming from corner kicks. Half- back Larry Morin failed to convert Rich Biehl's placement midway through the period, and the Quakers' Art Swanson broke up Ssebazza Her- man's breakaway in front of the goal after the ball had been headed around following the second kick.

Brown goalie Bill Mager stopped the Quakers twice in the opening quarter, and nine times all told, but Hutchison opened the scoring, only 56 seconds into the second frame.

The goal surprised Hutchison as

much as it did everyone else in at- tendance, including Hager. The ball rolled right by the Bruin netminder as he fell down and watched it cross the goal line.

The Quakers' Bruno Vogt missed an easy shot for the right corner of a wide open net midway through the third quarter, kicking the ball wide to the left. But a few seconds later, with 11:09 remaining in the period, Hutchison stole the ball at midfield and led Sturman perfectly as the Quaker center-forward broke

(Continued on page 4)

JEFF ROSENGLICK Tallied insurance goal

Army trounces Quaker lightweights

SPORTS 10/7/68!

Photo by JEKF STERLING

LIGHTWEIGHT QUARTERBACK JACK WELSH plows through the Army line in Saturday's game. The Cadets avenged their defeat last year by beating Quakers, 32-0-

From their first quarter touch- down drive to their fourth quarter field goal, the Cadets of Army man- handled Penn's lightweights Saturday in Franklin Field.

Army led at half 19-0 and didn't let up, handing Penn a 32-0 loss in the opening game for both clubs, thereby revenging last year's 13-0 Quaker victory.

Army took the opening kickoff back to their own forty yard line and marched the remaining sixty in a finely machined drive both on the ground and in the air. The Cadets took eighteen plays before sending halfback Jim Lovelace twelve yards around end to score. Marty O'Mally converted to put Army ahead 7-0.

The Cadets next drive was less grueling. Tackle Ron Hunt blocked a Quaker punt on the Pennsylvania eighteen and Skip Clark fell on i. jn the end zone. O'Mally missed and Army led 13-0.

St. Louis defeats Tigers, 10-1, takes 3-1 lead in World Series

Two O'Mally field goals gave Army their 19-0 halftime lead.

Penn nearly put together a scor- ing drive late in the third quarter when they moved the ball to a first and goal at the Army seven yard line. Two line plunges left it at the four. Quarterback Jack Welsh missed on a pass to the end-zone, and a power sweep left Penn's drive on the one, where Army took over.

Army quarterback Bevis led their offense on a forty-five yard scoring drive late in the third quarter, with Lovelace scoring and O'Mally con- verting.

Penn made a final assault on the goal midway in the fourth quarter after an intercepted pass by Barry Vogelstein on the Army forty-five. Welsh took the team to the three yard line, where an Army lines- man picked off a sweep lateral, and the Cadets took over once again.

O'Mally kicked two more field goals to give Army their 32-0 final margin.

By United Press International

DETROIT—Plucky Bob Gibson fired a five-hitter in the gloom of a misty drizzle for a record seventh straight World Series victory and speedster Lou Brock blasted a homer, triple and double Sunday as the St. Louis Cardinals routed the Detriot Tigers, 10-1, and grabbed a commanding 3-1

edge in this series. The Series fourth game, scheduled

to start at 1 PJvI., EDT., didn't get under way until 1:37 PJvl. because

of the rain and then was delayed for an hour and 14 minutes at 2:15 PJvl. with two out in the top of the third inning. When the downpour halted the match the Cards already held a 4-0 lead against 31-game winner Denny McClain.

McClain, suffering his second straight loss to Gibson as the Tigers were pushed to the brink of elimin-

ation in the best-of-seven Series, didn't come back when the game re- sumed in the mist at 3:19 PJvl.

But Gibson strode back to the

mound in the damp, 50-degree weath- er and won the respect of the capacity

(Continued on page 4)

Notices IF football games will be played

Monday at 5:00 P.M. on the Hill Hall Field.

*** There will be a meeting tomor-

row of all freshmen interested in playing intercollegiate squash at the Ringe Squash Courts at 4:30 PJvl. No experience necessary.

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