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Vol. 1.XXXVIII No. 49 Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Copyright 1972 The Daily Pennsylvanian Tuesday, April 2S. 1972 Nixon War Policy Assailed by Muskie as Penna. Race Ends On toe eve of the important Penn- sylvania and Massachusetts primaries, Senator Edmund S. Muskie told Philadelphia-area college students that America's involvement in Vietnam is back where it was in 1965 and no closer to an end. "We haven't won the war and we're no closer to an end to our involvement. We're more deeply involved than ever before," he said. The Maine Senator said Nixon was elected in 1968 on a promise to end the war and bring peace. "He had a secret plan," Muskie said. "Well of course, that plan is still secret "Now the four years since Nixon was elected seem to have been wiped away. They never happened. He has resumed the bombing on a more in- tensive scale than in the past nine years." Along with Muskie, McGovern and Humphrey spent Monday cam- paigning in Pennsylvania, choosing to forego appearances in Massachusetts, which is also holding a presidential primary today. The two states have 239 elected delegates at stake, or about one-sixth of the 1,509 delegate votes needed to win the Democratic presidential nomination at Miami Beach in July. Antiwar Activists Plan Protest at G.E. Facility By JOHN DAMSZKYVSKI Representatives of the Penn Strike Committee Monday made plans for a "major" demonstration against the General Electric Corporation as part of its continuing protests against U.S. involvement in Southeast Asia. The demonstration, slated for Wednesday between noon and 2 P.M., will begin with a rally at College Hall Green. Participants will then march to GE's production plant at 32nd k Chestnut Streets. There demonstrators plan to link up with another contingent of area protesters marching from GE's center city offices at Penn Plaza. The Penn Strike Committee, a coalition of antiwar students here, claims that trade unions and Philadelphia high school students will also participate in those marches. The announcement was made at a noon organizational meeting. About 100 persons attended the gathering in Irvine Auditorium. Also discussed at the hour-Ions meeting were plans for a nationwide student and worker protest If. May 4. That date is the second anniversary of the deaths of student' at Kent (Ohio) and Jackson (Mississippi) State Universities. Hal protest would be accompanied by a national moratorium directed at com- memorating the deaths and protesting the recent bombings in Indochina. Lauding Saturday's antiwar efforts as the "most significant since 1968," University student and antiwar ac- tivist David Kutzig said the peace movement would be escalated in the next several weeks. The committee, Kutzig said, is therefore conferring with ad- ministration officials on "options" to insure maximum "student par- ticipation without retribution." After the meeting Kutzig released five proposals that he has presented to University President Martin Meyerson, Vice Provost Humphrey Tonkin, and Dean of Students Alice Emerson. He said the requests would permit greater participation by University students in future peace demonstrations. The proposals were: "- that all classes for the rest of the semester become optional in that no punitive action be taken against those students who do not attend clasps; "--that, if possible, instructors prepare written summaries of all material not in texls that is covered in the next two weeki, or that instructors may simply cancel classes; "--that all finals may be rescheduled at a time agreed upon by the student and his or her instructor or department chairperson, either (Continued on page 3) McGovern, the acknowledged frontrunner in Massachusetts, followed an ambitious itinerary in Pennsylvania, Monday moving from the eastern suburbs to high- unemployment areas in the western part of the state. His crowds were large and friendy despite intermittent rainstorms. Speaking in West Chester, a Philadelphia suburb, McGovern predicted victory in Massachusetts, adding that the strength of his volunteer organization in Penn- sylvania may "very well" push him over the top here. Later in the day, BSTMM in Lancaster, McGovern declared be was a "good friend" of Pennsylvania Gov. Milton Shapp, and that be felt Shapp had "Just made a mistake" in choosing to support Muskie. Humphrey started off his final day of campaigning in Pennsylvania by greeting workers at a steel mill in Pittsburgh. The Minnesota Senator had predicted earlier that he would win in Pennsylvania, where he has the backing of many of the state's .Jiion leaders. Later in the day, Hur>-. k 4irey took a helicopter tour of mining com- munities in wesUrn Pennsylvania. Earlier M.joday evening, Mnstii told Philadelphia reporters that winning the delegate vote was more •:iiportant than the preferential race. "Pennsylvania is a big state and in many ways is a microcosm of the whole nation," the Maine Democrat said, speaking on Philadelphia's KYW-TV. Asked if he would be finished if he did badly in the preferential or delegate races, Muskie replied, smiling to the reporter, "I don't un- derstand why you should be so negative. We're going to win (Continued on page 5) aiDTV ¥Hj3t4 NEWIV El .cX TED UNDERGRADUATE representatives Easley. DavM Lloyd. Eric Fisher. Rath Asa Price. Edward t* (be fn'.ersity Council are (from « "> larry Fine, Ralph Everett, Anita Sima and Cart Faster Undergrad. Caucus Nominates Lloyd, Everett, Fisher to Council Steering Where To Vote Depending on which division of the twenty-seventh ward -which en- compasses most University students' residences-you live in. you can vote today at the following places from 7 A.M. to8 P.M.: First division, the Divinity School, between 42nd and 43rd Streets on Locust; second, and fifth, Helath Center, 555 S. 43rd Street: third, St. James Parish School, 38th and Sansom Streets; fourth, Comegys School, 51st and Greenway Ave.: sixth, Catto School, 42nd and Ludlow Streets; seventh, Wilson School, 46th and Woodland Ave.; eighth, 401 S. 42nd Street; ninth. University Dental School, 4001 Spruce Street; tenth, 4226 Spruce Street; eleventh, barber shop, 2 S. 43rd Street; twelfth, Comegy School, 51st and Greeenway Ave; thirteenth, 4260 Chestnut Street; fourteenth, 257 S. 45th Street; fifteenth, 4625 Woodland Ave.; sixteenth, 4712 Woodland Ave.; and seventeenth, barber shop, 4828 Woodland Ave. By ED 8ILVERMAN The eight newly elected University Council undergraduate represen- tatives caucused Monday night to choose three students who they will recommend as nominees for the Council Steering Committee. Meeting with two veteran Council members, the eight representatives also reviewed the nature of their duties and discussed possible strategies for achieving their goals in the Council. The names of the three recom- mended students, Edward Everett, Eric Fisher, and David Lloyd will be submitted to the present steering committee, which will make final nominations for the May 10 election. One of the eight undergraduate members of Council will be elected to the committee. The vote for these nominees followed lengthy discussion of the candidates' qualifications, dwelling largely on personal speaking ability and acquaintance with various ad- ministrators. No issues were discussed by the caucus, but the political nature of Council-particularly of the steering committee--and consequently the political attributes of the individuals were emphasized The first part of the meeting was devoted to explanations by present steering committee member Bill Tortu. and former member Dick Clarke,of the inner workings of the committee, and what kind of strategy is needed to achieve one's goals in steering. Clarke said that since there is only one student member on the steering committee, he must speak out on all the issues and have a better knowledge of the question than the combined "opposition " Clarke also claimed that what is said at Council (Continued on page 4) Rep. McQoskey, Baraka Speak Here Tonight Author Imamu Akiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones) and California congressman Paul N. McCloskey, Jr. will speak tonight at the University. Baraka, whose play, "Dutchman," won an off-Broadway award for the best American play in 1964, will sneak at 8 P.M. in the Fine Arts Auditorium. Another of Baraka's plays, "The Slave," won second prize in the In- ternational Arts Festival in Dakar in 1966. McCloskey will speak at 8 P.M. in Irvine Auditorium. A member of the House of Representatives since 1967, McCloskey had been a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination until his withdrawal following the New Hampshire primary in March. He had sought to present himself as a liberal alter- native to President Nixon, in much the same way Minnesota Sen. Eugene McCarthy challenged the candi- dacy of President Johnson in 1M A lifelong Republican. McCloskey was co-chairman of Young Lawyers for Nixon Lodge la 1960. In IM6. be was a speaker in George Christopher's campaign for governor of California, and strongly supported Robert Finch for lieutenant governor that year. McCloskey is member of the House Committee of Government Operations and the Subcommittee on Power and Natural Resources. Baraka, a graduate of Howard University, has taught at Columbia University and the New School for Social Research What the Budget Data Shows ... and What It Doesn't By CHAT BLAKEMAN The administration released last week the first part of its financial analysis of the University. As summarized in the chart below, the information shows the average faculty salaries within each school and the number of course units taught within each school or division There is also an estimate of each school's direct operating expenses, not including overhead of any kind. The l.„ures show the cost of teaching a course unit in certain divisions especially those which concentrate on graduate teaching or the physical, News Analysis biomedical, or engineering sciences-<to be higher generally than the cost in other areas. Also, the number of course units taught by faculty members in some divisions, such as veterinary medicine, is far less than the number taught by professors in the social science, management and humanities areas. While these comparisons can be made, they show little more than most people knew before the information was released. It is obvious, for example, that a professor who teaches a lecture course is going to have a greater course unit "productivity" than one who teaches a laboratory course. And while average faculty salaries are especially high in the Law School and the Medical School, this much was to be expected since professors in these disciplines can earn comparably more outside the University. So the information, while certainly providing a base for further studies, docs little in the way of answering the questions of priority which many students at the College Hall sit-in and elsewhere have asked. It is difficult to determine if there is more information of this type that the University has chosen not to disclose because of the heated discussion it would create in some areas or if means just do not exist for compiling data which do give a clearer sense of the University's priorities. Probably the answer is both For example, one method of determining actual priorities is to compare the deficits of each school as percentages of their total expenses. A school that is allowed to run a 35 per cent deficit is obviously being funded by the University more than one whose deficit is only 15 per cent, for example. Making a valid comparison by this method, however, involves determining not only the expense of each school, but its income as well. Such a study was made of the 1970-71 budget and it shows that the School of Social Work, the Annenberg School, the Graduate School of Education and the Veterinary School run deficits which, on a percentage basis, are considerably larger than those at the College and Wharton The study, however, is not valid because no suitable means of determining overhead costs could be devised. For purposes of the study, (he overhead coats, including maintenance and library costs, were based on faculty costs. If a school's faculty costs were, for example, 20 per cent of the total faculty costs at the University, then that school was assigned 20 per cent of the total overhead costs as well. Such an accounting system said in effect that it costs twice as much for a full professor to use the library as it does for an assistant professor. In addition, the library costs were lumped together and no separate analysis was made of schools, such as the Medical School, which have their own abr arses At any rate, until a valid method of determining overhead costs can be determined, the financial priorities the University currently has will not be clear. Budget director John llobstetter said last week that information of this kind will be part of "Phase Two," the second set of figures the University is planning to disclose. There are other data that the University did not disclose which also would contribute to a dearer understanding of priorities. For example, none of the figures last week could be applied to individual departments. Instead, aggregate (Continued on page 4) Annenberg School P 6 FACULTY Personnel Av. Salaries (Thousands) Ate. Alt. Lect. p. Asc. Ast. Lett. 3 10 » 15.6 EXPENDITURES TEACHING ANALYSIS Course Units Ml|*rt Salaries/ Wages Other Direct 0nd ar,a Um, 0rM 409.000 ' K '- ,9i2 75,000 510 4 IU5 tours* Umlv MS, 6* SBaaV Cewst Unit aot OSAS (Humanities) 16 16 U 3 19.* 15.3 11.65 - i44S.;*o 17047* 2.171 1.516 130 33* 72 330 Cellos* S CW (Humanities 1 SO 15 54 10 32 15.35 11* 91 3419.771 1*631 15.3(0 3.055 6*3 703 127 173 College 4 CW (Social Science*) 11 12 9 5 31.3 15.1 12.5 10» BaaUM 103.401 7.149 1.314 5*9 341 221 ST* College CW (Physical Sciences) 55 19 1* 3 34.4 16 135 ~ MMU9I 7.747407 (.0*7 44* 309 315 (4 - College a CW (Biomedical) 24 13 11 1 33 4 169 u 2 - 2.171.5*7 1447.945 tM» (05 S4S 134 175 (*• Gred Education 14 1U 13 6 30.5 151 HI 10.7 1.1744*0 4S..O00 1.313 7.151 147 531 aj - Orad. Fine Arts 14 13 10 1 33.3 25.3 13 4 - 1.224a** 7C7.O0O I-72S 7.(42 706 453 124 26* Law School 14 5 4 31 162 - - 1.2414*0 3O9.00U ••• - 625 - - Social Work 6 12 3 119 17.2 14.4 - *4*.0S* 450.000 - 3 176 t - Wharton (Social) 4f 72 41 9 f 343 163 13.0 13.4 242*4** •40.304 9.569 AMI 904 496 117 in Wharton (Management) 33 29 29 16 77. a 16.3 14 5 11.9 2.30*400 492400 6,039 (.557 939 **0 134 1,. Engineering Schools 37 31 17 1 n.% 70.0 13.3 - 3.5554** I.476.00U 3.1*7 7.977 461 560 5* 14*5 Medicine (Science!) 4S 31 40 31 36.0 227 16.9 163 5420400 4.0770.000 ~ - - - Medicine (Clinical) 74 77 95 72 33 1 III 733 19.6 9.511400 4.53*.47t " - " - Vat. Mod. 37 27 34 II 31.7 19.9 15 7 13.3 3,7*0,000 1.941.000 7.576 - 310 27 422 Dental Me*. M II 71 II 3*9 ISO 17.3 145*400 I.I 11.000 *" 5.064 7( 633 M - Health Professions 3 3 1 44 - - 13.1 10.0 53.700 •61.300 **» 664 1,19* 12* 7* - Note The information on salaries and wages does not include triage benefits The amewnt *f (acuity effort in sponsoring dissertations is not translated into course units.
Transcript

Vol. 1.XXXVIII No. 49 Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Copyright 1972 The Daily Pennsylvanian Tuesday, April 2S. 1972

Nixon War Policy Assailed by Muskie as Penna. Race Ends

On toe eve of the important Penn- sylvania and Massachusetts primaries, Senator Edmund S. Muskie told Philadelphia-area college students that America's involvement in Vietnam is back where it was in 1965 and no closer to an end.

"We haven't won the war and we're no closer to an end to our involvement. We're more deeply involved than ever before," he said.

The Maine Senator said Nixon was elected in 1968 on a promise to end the war and bring peace.

"He had a secret plan," Muskie said. "Well of course, that plan is still secret

"Now the four years since Nixon was elected seem to have been wiped away. They never happened. He has resumed the bombing on a more in- tensive scale than in the past nine years."

Along with Muskie, McGovern and Humphrey spent Monday cam- paigning in Pennsylvania, choosing to forego appearances in Massachusetts, which is also holding a presidential primary today.

The two states have 239 elected delegates at stake, or about one-sixth of the 1,509 delegate votes needed to win the Democratic presidential nomination at Miami Beach in July.

Antiwar Activists Plan Protest at G.E. Facility

By JOHN DAMSZKYVSKI Representatives of the Penn Strike

Committee Monday made plans for a "major" demonstration against the General Electric Corporation as part of its continuing protests against U.S. involvement in Southeast Asia.

The demonstration, slated for Wednesday between noon and 2 P.M., will begin with a rally at College Hall Green. Participants will then march to GE's production plant at 32nd k Chestnut Streets.

There demonstrators plan to link up with another contingent of area protesters marching from GE's center city offices at Penn Plaza. The Penn Strike Committee, a coalition of antiwar students here, claims that trade unions and Philadelphia high school students will also participate in those marches.

The announcement was made at a noon organizational meeting. About 100 persons attended the gathering in Irvine Auditorium.

Also discussed at the hour-Ions meeting were plans for a nationwide student and worker protest If. May 4. That date is the second anniversary of the deaths of student' at Kent (Ohio) and Jackson (Mississippi) State Universities. Hal protest would be accompanied by a national moratorium directed at com- memorating the deaths and protesting the recent bombings in Indochina.

Lauding Saturday's antiwar efforts as the "most significant since 1968," University student and antiwar ac- tivist David Kutzig said the peace movement would be escalated in the next several weeks.

The committee, Kutzig said, is therefore conferring with ad-

ministration officials on "options" to insure maximum "student par- ticipation without retribution." After the meeting Kutzig released five proposals that he has presented to University President Martin Meyerson, Vice Provost Humphrey Tonkin, and Dean of Students Alice Emerson. He said the requests would permit greater participation by University students in future peace demonstrations.

The proposals were: "- that all classes for the rest of the

semester become optional in that no punitive action be taken against those students who do not attend clasps;

"--that, if possible, instructors prepare written summaries of all material not in texls that is covered in the next two weeki, or that instructors may simply cancel classes;

"--that all finals may be rescheduled at a time agreed upon by the student and his or her instructor or department chairperson, either

(Continued on page 3)

McGovern, the acknowledged frontrunner in Massachusetts, followed an ambitious itinerary in Pennsylvania, Monday moving from the eastern suburbs to high- unemployment areas in the western part of the state.

His crowds were large and friendy despite intermittent rainstorms.

Speaking in West Chester, a Philadelphia suburb, McGovern predicted victory in Massachusetts, adding that the strength of his volunteer organization in Penn- sylvania may "very well" push him over the top here.

Later in the day, ■BSTMM in Lancaster, McGovern declared be was a "good friend" of Pennsylvania Gov. Milton Shapp, and that be felt Shapp had "Just made a mistake" in choosing to support Muskie.

Humphrey started off his final day of campaigning in Pennsylvania by greeting workers at a steel mill in Pittsburgh.

The Minnesota Senator had predicted earlier that he would win in Pennsylvania, where he has the backing of many of the state's .Jiion leaders.

Later in the day, Hur>-.k4irey took a helicopter tour of mining com- munities in wesUrn Pennsylvania.

Earlier M.joday evening, Mnstii told Philadelphia reporters that winning the delegate vote was more •:iiportant than the preferential race.

"Pennsylvania is a big state and in many ways is a microcosm of the whole nation," the Maine Democrat said, speaking on Philadelphia's KYW-TV.

Asked if he would be finished if he did badly in the preferential or delegate races, Muskie replied, smiling to the reporter, "I don't un- derstand why you should be so negative. We're going to win

(Continued on page 5)

■ aiDTV ¥Hj3t4

NEWIV El .cX TED UNDERGRADUATE representatives Easley. DavM Lloyd. Eric Fisher. Rath Asa Price. Edward t* (be fn'.ersity Council are (from ■«■"> larry Fine, Ralph Everett, Anita Sima and Cart Faster

Undergrad. Caucus Nominates Lloyd, Everett, Fisher to Council Steering

Where To Vote Depending on which division of the twenty-seventh ward -which en- compasses most University students' residences-you live in. you can vote today at the following places from 7 A.M. to8 P.M.: First division, the Divinity School, between 42nd and 43rd Streets on

Locust; second, and fifth, Helath Center, 555 S. 43rd Street: third, St. James Parish School, 38th and Sansom Streets; fourth, Comegys School, 51st and Greenway Ave.: sixth, Catto School, 42nd and Ludlow Streets; seventh, Wilson School, 46th and Woodland Ave.; eighth, 401 S. 42nd Street; ninth. University Dental School, 4001 Spruce Street; tenth, 4226 Spruce Street; eleventh, barber shop, 2 S. 43rd Street; twelfth, Comegy School, 51st and Greeenway Ave; thirteenth, 4260 Chestnut Street; fourteenth, 257 S. 45th Street; fifteenth, 4625 Woodland Ave.; sixteenth, 4712 Woodland Ave.; and seventeenth, barber shop, 4828 Woodland Ave.

By ED 8ILVERMAN

The eight newly elected University Council undergraduate represen- tatives caucused Monday night to choose three students who they will recommend as nominees for the Council Steering Committee.

Meeting with two veteran Council members, the eight representatives also reviewed the nature of their duties and discussed possible strategies for achieving their goals in the Council.

The names of the three recom- mended students, Edward Everett, Eric Fisher, and David Lloyd will be submitted to the present steering committee, which will make final nominations for the May 10 election.

One of the eight undergraduate members of Council will be elected to the committee.

The vote for these nominees followed lengthy discussion of the candidates' qualifications, dwelling largely on personal speaking ability and acquaintance with various ad- ministrators.

No issues were discussed by the caucus, but the political nature of Council-particularly of the steering committee--and consequently the political attributes of the individuals were emphasized

The first part of the meeting was devoted to explanations by present steering committee member Bill Tortu. and former member Dick Clarke,of the inner workings of the committee, and what kind of strategy is needed to achieve one's goals in steering.

Clarke said that since there is only one student member on the steering committee, he must speak out on all the issues and have a better knowledge of the question than the combined "opposition " Clarke also claimed that what is said at Council

(Continued on page 4)

Rep. McQoskey, Baraka Speak Here Tonight Author Imamu Akiri Baraka (LeRoi

Jones) and California congressman Paul N. McCloskey, Jr. will speak tonight at the University.

Baraka, whose play, "Dutchman," won an off-Broadway award for the best American play in 1964, will sneak at 8 P.M. in the Fine Arts Auditorium. Another of Baraka's plays, "The Slave," won second prize in the In- ternational Arts Festival in Dakar in 1966.

McCloskey will speak at 8 P.M. in Irvine Auditorium. A member of the House of Representatives since 1967, McCloskey had been a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination until his withdrawal following the New Hampshire primary in March. He had sought to present himself as a liberal alter-

native to President Nixon, in much the same way Minnesota Sen. Eugene McCarthy challenged the candi- dacy of President Johnson in 1M

A lifelong Republican. McCloskey was co-chairman of Young Lawyers for Nixon Lodge la 1960. In IM6. be was a speaker in George Christopher's campaign for governor of California, and strongly supported Robert Finch for lieutenant governor that year.

McCloskey is • member of the House Committee of Government Operations and the Subcommittee on Power and Natural Resources.

Baraka, a graduate of Howard University, has taught at Columbia University and the New School for Social Research

What the Budget Data Shows ... and What It Doesn't By CHAT BLAKEMAN

The administration released last week the first part of its financial analysis of the University.

As summarized in the chart below, the information shows the average faculty salaries within each school and the number of course units taught within each school or division There is also an estimate of each school's direct operating expenses, not including overhead of any kind.

The l.„ures show the cost of teaching a course unit in certain divisions especially those which concentrate on graduate teaching or the physical,

News Analysis

biomedical, or engineering sciences-<to be higher generally than the cost in other areas. Also, the number of course units taught by faculty members in some divisions, such as veterinary medicine, is far less than the number taught by professors in the social science, management and humanities areas.

While these comparisons can be made, they show little more than most people knew before the information was released. It is obvious, for example, that a professor who teaches a lecture course is going to have a greater course unit

"productivity" than one who teaches a laboratory course. And while average faculty salaries are especially high in the Law School and

the Medical School, this much was to be expected since professors in these disciplines can earn comparably more outside the University.

So the information, while certainly providing a base for further studies, docs little in the way of answering the questions of priority which many students at the College Hall sit-in and elsewhere have asked.

It is difficult to determine if there is more information of this type that the University has chosen not to disclose because of the heated discussion it would create in some areas or if means just do not exist for compiling data which do give a clearer sense of the University's priorities. Probably the answer is both

For example, one method of determining actual priorities is to compare the deficits of each school as percentages of their total expenses. A school that is allowed to run a 35 per cent deficit is obviously being funded by the University more than one whose deficit is only 15 per cent, for example.

Making a valid comparison by this method, however, involves determining not only the expense of each school, but its income as well. Such a study was made of the 1970-71 budget and it shows that the School of Social Work, the Annenberg School, the Graduate School of Education and the Veterinary School run deficits which, on a percentage basis, are considerably larger than those at the College

and Wharton The study, however, is not valid because no suitable means of determining

overhead costs could be devised. For purposes of the study, (he overhead coats, including maintenance and library costs, were based on faculty costs. If a school's faculty costs were, for example, 20 per cent of the total faculty costs at the University, then that school was assigned 20 per cent of the total overhead costs as well.

Such an accounting system said in effect that it costs twice as much for a full professor to use the library as it does for an assistant professor. In addition, the library costs were lumped together and no separate analysis was made of schools, such as the Medical School, which have their own abr arses

At any rate, until a valid method of determining overhead costs can be determined, the financial priorities the University currently has will not be clear. Budget director John llobstetter said last week that information of this kind will be part of "Phase Two," the second set of figures the University is planning to disclose.

There are other data that the University did not disclose which also would contribute to a dearer understanding of priorities. For example, none of the figures last week could be applied to individual departments. Instead, aggregate

(Continued on page 4)

Annenberg School

P

6

FACULTY Personnel Av. Salaries (Thousands)

Ate. Alt. Lect. p. Asc. Ast. Lett.

3 10 » 15.6

EXPENDITURES TEACHING ANALYSIS Course Units Ml|*rt

Salaries/ Wages Other Direct 0nd ar,a Um, 0rM

409.000 'K'-,9i2 75,000 „ 510 4 IU5

tours* Umlv MS,

6*

SBaaV

Cewst Unit

aot

OSAS (Humanities) 16 16 U 3 19.* 15.3 11.65 - i44S.;*o 17047* 2.171 1.516 130 33* 72 330

Cellos* S CW (Humanities 1 SO 15 54 10 32 15.35 11* 91 3419.771 1*631 15.3(0 3.055 6*3 703 127 173

College 4 CW (Social Science*) 11 12 9 5 31.3 15.1 12.5 10» BaaUM 103.401 7.149 1.314 5*9 341 221 ST*

College • CW (Physical Sciences) 55 19 1* 3 34.4 16 135 ~ MMU9I 7.747407 (.0*7 44* 309 315 (4 - College a CW (Biomedical) 24 13 11 1 33 4 169 u 2 - 2.171.5*7 1447.945 tM» (05 S4S 134 175 (*• Gred Education 14 1U 13 6 30.5 151 HI 10.7 1.1744*0 4S..O00 1.313 7.151 147 531 aj - Orad. Fine Arts 14 13 10 1 33.3 25.3 13 4 - 1.224a** 7C7.O0O I-72S 7.(42 706 453 124 26*

Law School 14 5 4 31 162 - - 1.2414*0 3O9.00U ••• - — 625 - - Social Work • 6 12 3 119 17.2 14.4 - *4*.0S* 450.000 - 3 176

t - Wharton (Social) 4f 72 41 9

f 343 163 13.0 13.4 242*4** •40.304 9.569 AMI 904 496 117 in

Wharton (Management) 33 29 29 16 77. a 16.3 14 5 11.9 2.30*400 492400 6,039 (.557 939 **0 134 1,.

Engineering Schools 37 31 17 1 n.% 70.0 13.3 - 3.5554** I.476.00U 3.1*7 7.977 461 560 5* 14*5

Medicine (Science!) 4S 31 40 31 36.0 227 16.9 163 5420400 4.0770.000 ~ - - - Medicine (Clinical) 74 77 95 72 33 1 III 733 19.6 9.511400 4.53*.47t " - " - Vat. Mod. 37 27 34 II 31.7 19.9 15 7 13.3 3,7*0,000 1.941.000 7.576 - 310 27 422

Dental Me*. M II 71 II 3*9 ISO 17.3 145*400 I.I 11.000 *" 5.064 7( 633 M -

Health Professions 3 3 1 44 - - 13.1 10.0 ♦53.700 •61.300 **» 664 1,19* 12* 7* -

Note The information on salaries and wages does not include triage benefits The amewnt *f (acuity effort in sponsoring dissertations is not translated into course units.

Page 2

tEtje ;6atlt) |I.mn*gltoant'att< 1885 • 1972

The Newspaper of the University of Pennsylvania

CHAT BLAKEMAN. Editor-in-Chief THOMAS PAPSON, Managing Editor THOMAS EWING,Business Manager

SCOTT GIBSON. Editorial Chairman: KATHE ARCHDEACON. Newt Editor. STEVEN WINN. J«h Street Editor; PHILIP N. SHIMKIN, Sport. Editor.- EDWARD Rt)TH. Photojraphy Editor; RALPH POLUMBO, Financial Manager. MERRY HENIG. Advertising Manager; KAREN MIDDLETON, Mth Street Business Manager. ALICE E.GOETZ. Production Manager; MICHAEL STEPHEN GROSS, Credit Manager. MARK J HOSENBALL. Mth Street Associate Editor; ROBERT WEMISCHNER. Mth Street Associate Editor: BILL WITTE. Associate Sports Editor. DANIEL A KASLE, Associate Photography Editor; ANTHONY KOVATCH, Assistant Sports Editor. BENJAMIN L GIN SBERG. Contributing Editor. MARK McINTYRE. Contributing Editor

The Daily Psnnsylvanian is published Monday through Friday al Philadelphia. Pa.. during the tall and spring semesters, except during vacation periods. One issue published in August Subscriptions may be ordered at Sergeant Hall. 34th and Chestnut Sts . at the rate ol *I2 00 per annum Second class postage paid at Philadelphia, Penn sylvania 19104. Phones: (21 i) 5»4*S»I Display and Classified Advertising may be placed at the same address

The Daily Pennsylvania!) Tuesday, April 25, 1*72

Vietnam Overview: Who Is Invading Whom?

Student Input By James Parton

Once again, for the third time in the last four years, the College for Women faculty (allegedly the most liberal faculty group in the University) has rejected a student proposal to abolish the language requirement. The CW faculty rejected a change in the structure of our education that was overwhelmingly approved by the student body with only 30 out of the 80 faculty members voting.

While a student survey went 450 against the language requirement, 160 in favor and 68 undecided, the faculty - - which claims to have the best in- terests of students at heart - voted 12 against the requirement. 18 in favor and 50 didn't care enough to vote.

For years, students have been told by the faculty, "Oh yes, we'd love to have student 'input' into our decisions," but, "No you can't have a vote in the decisions; we know best for you." So SCUE gave them student input: a survey that was randomly distributed by volunteers and printed in the DP. We can now see how they treat student "input." First, we heard a charge that, since the people who had put forward the proposal had run the survey, the survey's data was suspect and, therefore, inadmissible. Ignoring the slander, we pointed out that on the same survey was another proposal we had supported, an end to the distributional requirements, and this bad been overwhelmingly rejected by the students.

. Various faculty members then tried to discredit the survey on the grounds of inadequate returns. They were disappointing. We see the volume of returns as a reflection of the faculty's attitude toward student "input." Many students see that "input" for the bullshit that it is and have un- fortunately turned to trying to avoid the system individually rather than beating their collective heads against

the wall It is typical, also, that the CW

faculty could have the audacity to throw such a charge at the student body when they could not even muster one half of their members for a regularly scheduled meeting (one must wonder what they define as a quorum).

As a final attack on the survey and the student body, some of the mem- bers of the faculty claimed that the survey should not be considered, since the CW faculty should not make decisions on the basis of popularity contests. One member claimed that, since 112 out of the 259 College students who were against the rquirement had not fulfilled the requirement, the people who were against the requirement were ob- viously self-seeking individuals.

It is sad to say, but it was easy to see, that, aside from the amazing closed-mindedness of many of the faculty who did attend to the reasons put forward for ending the requirement, many of the faculty do not want student "input" of any weight. They do not want to allow students any meaningful say in how their education is run. Wherever academic decisions are really made, it is the faculty that makes them, and they don't want any help. The only reason many of them even talk student "input" is to keep the natives from getting too restless.

To these faculty members (a majority, it seems), education is still a coercive one-way street where students' like it or not, are taught down to by the faculty. Unfortunately, until the students see themselves as the second-class citizens theyy really are, the faculty will continue to pat us on the head and laugh up their sleeves.

James Parton is a sophomore in the College.

B\ Kriwanl S. Herman

The Nixon administration and its supporters describe the North Viet- namese military operations in South Vietnam as an outright and blatant "invasion," and a renewal of "agression," both terms suggesting an immoral and illegal crossing of national borders. Many people, in- cluding some who are "against the war," have been taken in by this linguistic perversion. Since this particular issue has not been analyzed seriously in The Daily Pennsylvanian, while the Nixon argument has been used there, with simplicity in one case (Tabas, April 20), with singular disingenuousness in another (Rosengarten, April 13), I would like to discuss its central flaws.

1. First, most important, and well known to students of the history of the war, is the fact that only the U.S. presence, and the continuous illegal intervention by the United States for almost two decades, has caused Vietnam to be divided into separate political entities. The Geneva Accord of 1954 states that the 17th parallel was only a "provisional military demarcation line" that "should not in any way be interpreted as constituting a political or territorial boundary" (Articles 1 and8; Article 6 of the Final Declaration). (The statement by Rosengarten about a "de jure division" of North and South Vietnam at Geneva is therefore grossly misleading.)

Unification was to take place by "free general elections" in July 1956. They were not held because Diem, with U.S. backing, refused even to discuss the conditions under which such elections might be held. Apologists for U.S. policy have always argued that the elections were not held because North Vietnam would not tolerate free elections, being a police state. This is hypocritical nonsense. It disregards the fact that our satellite was itself a police state, under which "no independent political activity was permitted" (to quote U. Alexis Johnson, formerly U.S. Deputy Ambassador to South Vietnam). It ignores the fact that North Vietnam tried through the end of the fifties to get Diem to discuss election con- ditions, without success.

The DRV also indicated a willingness to go quite far in per- mitting free campaigning and outside supervision. No doubt they did this because they were pretty sure that they would win. Since Diem was a mandarin, member of a small urban elite in a largely peasant society, and given Ho Chi Minn's wide countryside support in the South as well as North, there was never any doubt about who would win a free election - and why it was never held.

The United States was closely implicated in this refusal to abide by the political settlement machinery outlined at Geneva. We had not signed

Letters to the Editor The folio wing is the text of a letter sent to President Nixon by a University etas* in Chinese studies. Those who signed the letter are: Daniel Altieri, Karen Alwrez, Derk Bodde (professor of Chinese studies), Dorothy Borei, Chung-yu Chang, Priscilla Ching, John Keenan, Charles LeBlanc, Alan Wagner, Linda Walton.

Sir: On this beautiful day, dedicated at our University (the University of Pennsylvania), as at countless other

universities throughout the country, to protesting the latest re-escalation of the war in Indochina, we write to you as members of a seminar on the history of Chinese thought. This is one of many courses, aggregating years of our time, which we are taking in order to acquire an understanding of a great and ancient civilization. Among the many reasons why we make this ef- fort is the thought that by so doing, we may contribute in some small measure to better world un- derstanding and thereby to the cause of world peace.

It is with particular heaviness of

"Let Me Know When There's A Winding-Down"

Xfifi

the Geneva accords, but we had pledged that "In the case of nations now divided against their will, we shall continue to seek to achieve unity through free elections supervised by the United Nations to insure that they are conducted fairly." As the suc- cessor power to the French, also, we had a legal and moral obligation to see that the Accords were implemented.

Our support of Dien.'s refusal to permit peaceful unification of Viet- nam irretrievably destroyed our legal and moral position there. If we and our imported "leader" completely refused reunification by lawful procedures, could we then talk of "invasion" if the Vietminh moved south in their own country?

Once the unifying elections of 1956 were barred, the Vietminh had every

<n <♦»•*. ■e=*«j«*i-l«?t

All signed letters and columns appearing on this page represent the views of their authors, and in no way reflect upon the editorial position of The Daily Penn- sylvanian. All items submitted for publication must be signed and typed 66 characters to the line.

The U.S. was intervening massively to sustain a government whose popular base in 1965 "does not now exist" according to a pacification chief there. The Pentagon Papers make clear that the Johnson escalation of 1965 was to prevent the collapse of the failed puppet regime.

At this point - February 1965 - we have the first and only really clear and definitive "invasion" and "aggression." The bombardment of the North and the occupation of the South to prop up a government without indigenous support can clearly be designated aggression plus invasion. These actions, of course, brought North Vietnam into the war more decisively, and extended the theatre of war over the whole of Vietnam.

"Ai this point--February 1965—we hare the first

ami tail} really clear and definite "invasion anil

'afifiressitm. The bombardment of the \orih ami

the occupation of the Smith to prop up a government

without indigenous support..."

right under international law to fight for unification by any means. By the same token, is it not a form of external aggression for a foreign power to establish and artificially prop up a minority government, knowing that it has a very small internal con- stituency, and knowing that this violates the letter and spirit of the relevant international agreements (Geneva 1954)?

2. After 1956 the situation rapidly deteriorated in South Vietnam from the standpoint of Diem's ability to maintain control - and this was for reasons that were almost wholly connected with the character of the Diem regime. North Vietnam began to aid the southern insurgency in 1959 and 1960, but from 1959 to the end of 1964 U.S. aid to the Diem and suc- cessor regimes - money, material, and manpower - always exceeded DRV aid to the NLF by a huge margin. (Official figures, for example, reveal that in February 1965 there were about 400 North Viet

' namese troops in the South, maybe; at the same time there were about 23,000 armed Americans in the South.)

North Vietnam could not retaliate against the United States itself for (he murderous air assault that was carried out against it starting in February 1965, but it could increase its activity in the South and peripheral fighting areas. Were the troops sent into the South by the DRV after February 1965 "invading" an in- dependent South Vietnam? Viewed in historic context this is utter nonsense. North Vietnam was responding in the only ways open to it to blatant aggression; and South Vietnam, the southern half of a country separated solely by foreign (U.S.) intervention, had become an occupied country.

3. For seven years now the United States has been attempting to pound the Vietnamese into submission. (Rosengarten's statement that the North Vietnamese refuse to let the peasants of South Vietnam "do their own thing" - after 15 years of "strategic hamlets;" the destruction of literally thousands of peasant hamlets (euphemism: "enemy base camps") oy"zippo squads," artillery and aircraft; the defoliation of peasant crops to "deny the VC food," mass strategic bombing of the

countryside; and the deliberate creation of millions of refugees - is a marvel of hypocrisy and crocodile tears.)

The core Nixon strategy is still precisely that of Johnson - to assure by essentially military means that a client state survives south of the 17th parallel in Vietnam. Having brought North Vietnam into the war on a large scale, and generalized the war over the entire Indochinese peninsula, the strategy is to get North Vietnam to withdraw quietly north of the 17th parallel and permit us finally to subjugate her friends, fellow coun- trymen, and political allies in the South without interference.

Our bombing of South Vietnam, North Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos; our occupation of the South; our massive building up of mercenary armies in Indochina - none of these are "aggressions" or "Invasions" - only when the North Vietnamese move troops South into a "piece of real estate" (Rusk) over which we apparently have more rights than Ho Chi Minn do such invidious terms apply.

Having illictly created a "friendly" (puppet) state in South Vietnam in 1954, we totally destroyed its tenuous legitimacy and "sovereignty" in 1965. Having invaded, occupied, and committed aggression against South Vietnam, we wish to have this oc- cupation and the sovereignty of ourselves and our proxy forces recognized as legitimate. But, as Dean Rusk told us so many t nes, it would be very wrong for aggressors to be permitted to reap the fruits of their conquest. Furthermore, the victims do not seem sufficiently submissive as yet to permit this.

Edward S. Herman is a professor of finance in the Wharton School.

PHOTOS FOR" APPLICATIONS

PASSPORTS RESUMES

on campus at

SHAPIR STUDIOS 3907 WALNUT ST.

BA2-7888

heart, therefore, that we see all ef- forts of this sourt currently nullified by what our government continues to do in Indochina. We are horrified by a government which, purporting to represent us, sees no contradiction between welcoming ping pong players and pandas to its shores in the name of peace and simultaneously using all its enormous technological resources toward the destruction of peoples and countries on the opposite side of the earth. We are deeply distressed by the corresponding destruction of moral integrity which these actions abroad have brought to our own people.

In the third century B.C., Mencius, the follower of Confucius, said: "Men who are great, by correcting them- selves, thereby cause others to become correct."

With all the power we have, we say to you: Stop this beastliness and stop it now.

MISSPELLING

Sir: Perhaps a bit of foreign language training for the writer of the editorial "End Requirements" would have helped him to use the English language better.

I cannot follow the logic of the statement that arguments for a language requirement are weak, when a knowledge of some elemen- tary Greek would have prevented the use of the word criteria as a singular when actually it is the plural of criterion.

PERRY RKDIKKR Catalog Kdilor

Van Pelt Library

THE 1972 RECORD IS HERE

PICK UP YOUR COPY

AT THE RECORD OFFICE

TUES-FRI n AM-5 PM

APR. 25 - 28

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Tuesday, April 25, 1972

ISews In Brief The Daily Pennsylvania!! Page 3

N. Viets Overrun Five Bases Antiwar Group Plans Protest at G.E.

By United Press International

SAIGON - North Vietnamese forces spearheaded by tanks captured five more South Vietnamese military outposts in the Central Highlands, field reports said Monday. Four Americans were killed in the fighting.

A senior U.S. adviser said the Communists were preparing to seize control of the country's midsection.

In the air war, U.S. B52 bombers struck targets deep inside North Vietnam, hitting the port of Thanh Hoa, 82 miles south of Hanoi, and a nearby road complex. They also struck within one-half mile of the besieged provincial capital of An Loc, 60 miles north of Saigon.

One of the eight-engined B52 Stratofortresses raiding Thanh Hoa limped back to Da Nang airfield Monday after it was hit by sharpnel from an exploding surface-to-air (SAM) missile. It was the first time in the war one of the high-flying, heavy bombers had been hit. There were no casualties.

The U.S. command also reported two U.S. warships hit by rounds from costal batteries. There were no casualties.

On highway 13, North Vietnamese troops attacked at close range and pinned down two government bat- talions of abut 1,300 men south of the town of Chon Thanh, 38 miles north of

Saigon on the road to An Loc. South Vietnamese sources said a

full North Vietnamese division of 13,000 men led by 20 tanks was in- volved in the Central Highlands at- tacks in Kontum Province. They said it was the start of the long-awaited Communist offensive in the area.

G.O.P. Expected to O.K. Miami Convention Site

WASHINGTON - Indicating an almost certain switch, Republican National Chairman Bob Dole Monday summoned the GOP National Com- mittee to a meeting next week to consider his recommendation that the party move its national convention from San Diego to Miami Beach.

Both Dole, a GOP Senator from Kansas, and R.L. Herman, vice chairman of the committee for con- vention arrangements, will urge the committee to approve the switch to Flordia.

Dole said the problems of keeping the convention in San Diego were "almost insurmountable."

The major difficulties in San Diego were delays in starting construction work at the city's sports arena, failure of the city to come up with all of its pledge in cash and services, and a shortage of promised hotel rooms.

Woodcock:INixon Uses POWs as Hostages

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. - United Auto Workers President Leonard Woodcock accused the Nixon Ad- ministration Monday of using U.S. prisoners of war in Vietnam as hostages.

In his first presidential address to the union's 23rd constitutional con- vention. Woodcock said the POW's are "really hostages for this ad ministration's war policies, and if Hanoi would return the prisoners "in exchange for a U.S. pledge not to use them agin in Vietnam, it would strip away all this administration's pretentious."

(Continued from page I)

before or after the originally scheduled time;

"-that in all courses being taken pass fail or in which a total of at least two hours of tests and-or quizzes have been given or in cases in which per- mission of the instructor or the department chairperson is given, the final may be waived and grades assigned on the basis of previous work, at the option of the individual student."

Tonkin, contacted at his home Monday night, said he "still hadn't taken the matter (of the proposals) up with the President or the Provost."

Monday's meeting was punctuated by two angered outbursts directed against the University students who are coordinating protest efforts.

One unidentified student rose to a microphone and accused the student of lacking "credibility" since, he said,

they had repeatedly used tne term "strike" to describe the protest ef- forts at the University while a "clear majority" of students had not boycotted classes to protest the war.

Kutzig defended the committee's use of the term, saying strike meant "commitment to act as intensively as we can against the war."

Soon after, another campus activist, Geoff Gilmore, charged that mem- bers of the strike committee were "pigs." Gilmore said he was "sick of people setting their bodies in front of my body" as certain committee members allegedly did in Saturday's march for peace in New York.

Gilmore claimed that Saturday, when he and other members of the radical Attica Brigade attempted to move away from the main body of the march to stage their own protest, "peace pigs" or marshalls. locked arms to prevent them from leaving.

In other Monday protest activities

across the country. about three dozen protesters were arrested as they tried to block the main gate at Westover Air Force Base in CWcopee. Maine.

Students at Columbia University continued picketing at campus buildings to prevent students from attending classes there. Some students and professors reportedly climbed through windows to get to their classes.

Later in the day, three of the Columbia demonstrators were arrested when they tried to resist a patrolman escorting a student through their picket lines

Seven sailors on the USS Nitro jumped ship Monday and tried to *wim to a group of 16 canoes still trying to block the munitions vessel from leaving for Vietnam The seven seamen were fished out of the water and face possible disciplinary measures

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Budget Information (Continued; from page I)

figures «Mch tend to obscure real differences were released.

In the area of (acuity salaries, the University has yet to release the range of

faculty coats, as well as the average Information showing the difference between

salaries for female araftssori and male professors, which some groups have

charged is great, would also be meaningful.

A system has yet to be devised which can differentiate exactly between the

costs of under graduate education and the costs of graduate education within each

school The information released last week does include the number of course

units in each area, but there is no valid method of determining what amount of

expense or faculty time goes into teaching each.

In addition, the time a faculty member spends sponsoring dissertation work

cannot be translated into cater at units.

A viable system, given the number of undergraduates taking graduate courses,

would have to lake into account a considerable number of variables.

Nobody in College Hall is saying when "Phase Two" will become a reality, but

certainly there are many unanswered questions which more information could

help ans«

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The Daily Pennsylvanian

Council Caucus

Tuesday, April 25, \m

(Continued from page 1)

meetings is as important as the

legislation which actually passes, because merely hearing certain

points discussed affects the ad-

ministration. In addition, since a member of

University Council is one of eight elected student officials on campus,

Clarke said that he can. and should,

accomplish a great deal behind the

scenes. The theme of unity and working

together was mentioned several times

during the caucus, and was one of the

reasons given for presenting a united

front behind three candidates instead

of leaving the choice of nominees

entirely to the steering committee. Several students also felt that they

should not initiate a precedent of

allowing the faculty to make most

decisions, even though the three

student names submitted by the

caucus are merely suggestions, and

the final decision of which names

appear on the ballot will be made by

the steering committee.

VOTE TODA Y

MICHAEL SILVER Night Editor

SCOTT SHELDON Copy Editor

KEITH MERRILL Sports Copy Editor

ANNE SIUKOLA Advertising Copy Editor

One more week.

SECOND CHANCE: REAVAILABLE 1 bedroom apt., air conditioned, gar- bage disposal, wall to wall carpeting. June lease. More modest furniture In- vestment. Rent 5182/ mo. 4512 Pine. SH 8 1908 5142

LOVELY C.C. TOWNHOUSE. 4 BED rooms, 2 baths, disposal, garden courtyard. Furniture investment: 51000 or best offer (We've come down) Avall.Junel. 7tt-«717 5142

SUMMER SUBLET, FURNISHED EF- flclency apartment, two blocks from campus, 5200/ whole summer, 5100/ summer school session. EV 7 06*8

5141

SUMMER SUBLET W/FALL OPTION: 1 bedroom apt. available June-Sept. 1 at reasonable rent. Call EV 7-0442.

5144

1*2 S. 42nd ST. 1st FLOOR S ROOMS and bath A yard. Available Aug. !■ S17S A elec. Call 7578318 after 4 P.M. 5144

44th A SPRUCE

try, ir<b8d*roo —Sept —NSM0 A

alter 6 P.M.

VIC. 1st FLR. LIV- dming room, kitchen/ pen

and bam. Available 18

5.145

ART MUSEUM AREA EFFICIENCY for bachelor. Recently renovated: *x- paaed brick, beamed celling, new klt- crten and bath, Boston book shelves, shutters, dark wood throughout. A/ C, 5125/ month. Robert Wallner, 645- 1630, 9 5 weekdays. 5149

SUMMER SUBLET: MODERN 2 BO rm. apt., 43rd A Osage. Rent negoti able. Air-conditioning available. Call Jerry at EV 2 7477 A leave message.

5139

APARTMENTS ON CAMPUS

Eastern States Realty Co. Apartments On Campus

EV 6-0922

SUBLET A OPTION 1 BEDROOM 41st near Spruce. Separata kitchen. Trees by window. Furnished or unfur- nished. Nice landlord. 57 5 mon (negotiable) including utilities. EV 7- 3570 early/ late. 5141

SUMMER SUBLET/S BEDROOM townhouse. Quiet neighborhood, 3 blocks from campus. 5340. per month. Fall option available. Call EV 7 0714.

5140

SUMMER SUBLET -BEAUTIFUL 1 bedroom apt. furnished, 3*th A Pine- available June l EV 2 8639 rent neg- otiable. 5159

WE'RE DESPERATE TO SUBLET SO the rent is ridiculously cheap! Great apt. 2 bdrm., comfortably furnished, private parking, good security, very cheap Call Bob EV 2 6159 515*

SUMMER HOLIDAY-SPENDING your summer in Phllly? 30th A Pine, sunny 2 bedroom apartment for sub lei. Furnished with utilities under 5150 (negotiable) call EV 2 7532. 5157

WANTED: TWO FEMALES TO SHARE 4 bedroom Center City with 2 Whar ton grads. 570 each. Furniture invest men! Paul, EV 2 5333. 5156

FEMALE SUMMER ROOMMATE needed. Own bedroom in great clean, spacious, iwo floor apartment. 563/ mo. Convenient, safe location. Call EV 2 4643. S1S5

TWO STUDENTS SEEK TO RENT ONE or two bedroom apartment starting June or September until December. Kim EV 2 1236. Betsy TR 7 7003.

5151

THREE BROOM APT. STARTING June 15. Fully furnished A carpeted 5450 investment EV 2 2278 5154

SUMMER SUBLET MAY 17 SEPT 1 First floor apt. with backyard and Sleinway Grand Piano. Furnished. Safe block, proximate lo supermark at, transportation. University. Three large rms. inc. kitchen. 565/ mo. Call EV 2 *770 any eve after 11 P.M. 5165

LAROE MODERN 1 BEDROOM C.C. apt Two stories, central A/ c, large kit w/ garbage disposal, working lire place, 1/ 7 block Irom bus, use ol swimming pool, ideal for couple. 5190/ mo., 12 mo. lease or summer sublet. Call evenings 9*5 9594. 5164

VERY NICE APT. 4 BEDROOMS, EN- ormous placet Backyard, worthwhile furniture Investment. Only 5200/ mo. 4114 Chestnut St. Call EV 7 3659. 5161

SUMMER SUBLET. 2 ROOM APART ment A private bath. Furnlthed. Inex- pensive. 510 S. 46th St. If Interested, call EV 2 1878 or 149 8690. 5140

ATTRACTIVE AFARTMENT-JUNI sublet. September opt ion-spa clous kitchen with adjoining shady area, liv- ing room, bedroom, bath-quiet, safe building with students A young coup- let-S minute trolley ride or 20 minute walk to campus good landlord no hassles 4629 Baltimore .5122/ month NEGOTIABLE SA 6 1105.

5115

BEAUTIFUL EFFICIENCY APART- ment summer sublet with fall option. 45th A Osage Ave. Rent negotiable. Call SH 8 8678 anytime. 5125

SUMMER SUBLET 41tt A SPRUCE. Furnished efficiency with kitchenette, bath, double bed in sale building. June 1.August 21. 585/ month. EV 7-4470.

5121

SUMMER SUBLET/ FALL OPTION, large efficiency apt.. 40th A Pine, rent negotiable, call Lee, EV 21324, after 6 P.M., Mon. Thurs. 5111

SUPER CHEAP SUMMER SUBLET 7 rooms (4 bedrooms) 44th A Walnut. 5190/ month. EV 7 1938 alter 6.

5126

SUMMER SUBLET MAY list -AUG. 31st. Modern efficiency apt. Furnish- ed, A/ C. 41st A Spruce EV 7-3317.

5122

SUMMER SUBLET-EFFICIENCY with large separate kitchen. Good condition. Good location. Good price. Call EV 7 3636. Keep trying 5123

WANTED: TWO ROOMMATES FOR coed apartment. 6 bedrooms. 3 baths, kitchen. SS5 per month. Furnished, utilities included. EV 2 0363 or EV 2 0124. 5128

CO-ED HOUSE, 42rd A PINE, NEEDS roommates for September, maybe June. Community lood, own room. 565 amonth. EV 2 8148. 5127

SUMMER SUBLET 1*24 SPRUCE directly across Irom Coop 1 10 single bedrooms available, kitchen facilities, backyard. Low rentl IN. quire EV 7 4271. 5129

SUMMER SUBLET: 4007 BALTI- more Ave. One block Irom Ronnie's! I single bedrooms, dishwasher, wash er. dryer, air conditioned! Low rent. Call EV 7 3639. S13I

CHEAPESTI SUMMER SUBLET PER sq. It. Cleen, furnished 3 bedroom apt. with large living room and kitchen. 42nd St.. ideal public trans. You can't afford to miss this Call EV 2 1051

5124

Campus Events OFFICIAL

BOOK SALE: All University Press books 70 80 per cent off. April 24 28 from 9 A,M 5 P.M. in Logan Hall, room 12. CAREER ALTERNATIVES ADVISING:

What do you want to do alter Penn? Talk it over at the Advising Center, 117 Logan Hell, 59485*4.

PLACEMENT OFFICE: A copy of in dustrial and academic openings for chemical engineers compiled by AlChE Is available for reference from Mrs. Dovberg. Dales Published three limes on closest Tues , Wed , and Thurs. PROFESSIONAL COUNSELINO: For

full time Univ. students without fee. 3812 Walnul It., * A.M. 5 P.M.. 594 7021.

CAMPUS EVENTS

BLACK M.B.A.'S PRESENT: "The Courts and Prisons vs. Blacks." Speakers. Franklin Alexander. Father Paul Washington 11 A.M. today. Irvine Aud., free. BLACK STUDENT LEAGUE

PRESENTS: Imamu Amiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones). Fine Arts Aud. Tonight at S P.M DOCUMENTARY FILM SERIES: First

Public screening of current films made by students of the Documentary Film Laboratory. Annenberg School of Com munications. Wed., 4 and 8 P.M., Studio Theatre, free. THE PLOUGH AND THE STARS By Sean

O'Casey, directed by Thomas Gruenewald. Playing now through April 29, 7:30 P.M., Zellerbach Theatre, 3680 Walnut St., tree with U. of P. I.O. card, information: 594 6791 THE COST OF WAR AND CIVIL

STRIFE: Part of an Inquiry series presented in connection with the Annenberg Center production ol "The Plough and the Stars." Film: Gillo Pontecorvo's award winning "The Battle of Algiers." Today, 4 P.M.. Studio Theatre, tree. ELEUTHERIAN SOCIETY: Dr. Allred

Rieber, Chairman of Penn History Dept.; and Dr Richard Pipes, Director of Russian Research Center, Harvard will discuss: Soviet American Detente: Opportunities and Dangers. Today, 7:15 P.M., Rooftop Lounge, High Rise South. GIVE BLOOD TODAY at Houston Hall, 10

5:30. DORM CONCERT: Sun.. April 30, S P.M.,

Woodwind Quintet. High Rise South, Rooftop Lounge, Iree. MORGAN STATE EXHIBIT OF paintings

by Paul Collins. Houston Hall, Bowl Room. WORKS BY DAVID ITCHKAWICZ In

reading room of High Rise South.

WORKS BY CARNES in seminar room of High Rise South. SYMPOSIUM ON ISLAM: 4:15 P.M.

seminar on symbolism In Islamic art; seminar on Islam as an ecological system. Schedule your voting so as to be there! 7 P.M.. seminar on the world's religions; how Ihey approach the world's problems and how they view each other. Participate in the dialogue! Both in Houston Hall. Today BIRTHDAY OF THE PROPHET

MUHAMMAD: Wed., April 26. Milad or celebration at 7 P.M., Houston Hall. EXHIBIT ON ISLAM: Now through May

1. West Lounge, Houston Hall. Books and crafts will be sold April 24 28. JEWISH FREE UNIVERSITY

PRESENTS: A lecture by Rabbi Yochanan Muffs of the Jewish Theological Seminary entitled "The Biblical Covenant: Compact of Man and God." It will be held Wed., 4 P.M., 2nd II., Houston Hall. LIMITS TO GROWTH and its challenge to

the concept of optimization. Roof, High Rise South, Thurs., 12 noon 3 P.M. PENN PLAYERS PRESENT: Glass

Menagerie by Tennessee Williams. April 26 30 at 8 P.M. in Houston Hall Aud., free. PIANISTS INTERESTED IN PER

FORMING lor New Student Week, per forming arts night show, please contact Carol Abrams, 594 5335. by April 26. Auditions held April 26. 7 P.M. PHILOMATHEAN ART GALLERY:

Exhibit of graphics by grad student in line arts at Penn. Mon.Fri., 12 6 P.M.. College Hall, 4th II. Exhibit runs until May IS.

1972 RECORD HAS ARRIVED. Pick up your copy at the Record office. 36th A Hamilton Walk, today through Fri., 11 A.M.-5 P.M. You can still buy a copy on Locust Walk or at the Record office. Only 57. STUDENT CONSUMERS BOARD: Open

24 hours. Call EV 7 2394. WOMEN'S LIBERATION OFFICE: Now

open in C.A., room 13 PROBLEM PREGNANCY: Call Jim or

Barbara, EV 6 0724 at the C. A. TALKING POINT: Sun. Thurs,8 11 P.M.

at Van Pelt, Houston, McClelland or call 839 3437 day or night.

ACTIVITIES

ANNUAL ACTIVITIES SCHEDULING MEETING: Wed.. April 26,3 P.M., Houston Hall, Franklin Room. A representative from each organization is urged to attend. ARMENIAN CLUB: Meeting, today, 11

A.M., sharp Room 7, Houston Hall. Picnic CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORG. MEETING:

Today, 11 A.M., Room 7, 3rd II., Houston Hall, everyone welcome. CONNAISSANCE: Meeting lor old and

new members. Thurs.. 7 P.M. In Mc- Clelland Hall (Quad) to discuss next year's speakers. Important.

HISTORY 574; Today's movies are "Some Like it Hot" (Wilder, 1959, Curtis. Lemmon, Monroe) and Monroe Strip Film, "The Most" (Hef(ner). in FAB 1 at 4 P.M. RUGBY PRACTICE: Every Tues., 6:30

P.M. on Franklin Field. All new and old players welcome. SPHINX AND KEY: All new and old

members please attend a dessert party. Sun., April 30, 8 P.M., 10th II. lounge. High Rise South. Old members bring dues and cookies, cakes, etc. STAGE BAND: 7 P.M., tonight at Houston

Hall, Ivy room. WOMEN'S LACROSSE: Mon. Thurs., 44

P.M., Hill Hall Held. All welcome.

ANGELA DAVIS

Two men active in the defense of

Angela Davis will speak today la Irvine Auditorium at 11 A.M. They

are Franklin Alexander, national

co-chairman of the UailefJ

Committee to Free Angela Davis, and Father Paul Washington.

Alexander it the co-author of Mist Davis' book. "If They Come In the

Morning." and is a legal in-

vestigator in her case. '.Tie event is free and open to the public.

OOPS! Due lo a typographical error in

yesterday's Daily Pennsylvanian,

the complete list of recipients of

the Lindback awards for out-

standing teaching was not published.

The four teachers are:

Dr. Roger M.A. Allen, assistant professor of Arabic

Dr. Ingrid L. Waldron. assistant

professor of Biology

Dr. Michael Zuckerman.

associate professor of History

Dr. William F. Hamilton,

assistant professor of Community

Medicine

SUMMER SUBLET -BEAUTIFUL A- partment with balcony for good tenants only. Ideal for 2 or 3 convenient loca- tion. Reasonably priced. 349-888*. 511*

4*1* PINE: YARD A PRIVATE porch; two rooms, furnlthed effici- ency. Available May 10 August 11. Rent negotiable EV 7 3654. 5120

S1(( REWARD. FOR INFORMATION leading to renting 1 bedroom unfurn Ithed apartment beginning Augutt 1st to 15th. Mutt have large kitchen, easy access medical school, under 5200. Write details: Charles Hertz, 879 Broadway, Somervllle, Mass. 02144 or phone (417) 774 2008. SIN

FEMALE ROOMMATE, 32 TO IS. wanted for two bedroom Germantown apartment, $12.50/ mo. Utilities In- cluded. Call GE 8-4*13 ask for Bar- bara S134

UNIOUE C.C. STUDIO APT-ENTIRE floor, quiet, fireplace, tundeck, over- looks 24th Street Park (furniture op- tional) Begin Sept. 1. EV 2-3738. 5117

LAROE SUMMER SUBLET: AIR conditioned, 3 bedrooms, 1 bathrooms study, 2 living rooms. May 20 Aug. 21; 44th A Pine St., tel. • GR 48698

CLEAN A CHEAP: HOUSE AVAIL- able at 40th A Ludlow; 5 bedrooms, kitchen, living room, both, call EV 2- 1357 after 5 P.M. Enormous place!

5112

SUMMER RENTAL4517 OSAGE MID May through August. 1 bedroom, fur- nished 590/ mo. utilities included. Call: 471 4304 after 10 P.A*. 4*57

SUMMER SUBLET -SPACIOUS 5 room furnished apt. for 3 or more. Campus area. Dirt Cheap. Call EV 2 6753 after 6 P.M. 5089

AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY: MOD ern efficiency, 1 and 2 bedroom a- partments, air conditioned and car- peted. Call 722 2805 or EV 2-0755.

5116

APTS: FURNISHED OR UNFURNISH- ed 3 rooms A bath; 6 rooms A bath. Available now-summer school or fall semester Call Mr. Mllner EV 6 2950 5109

WHERE ARE YOU GOING TO LIVE

NEXT YEAR? Come see ut - University City

Housing Co. We have the finest

housing in the campus area.

Efficiency - 4 bedroom apt. Baltimore Walnut. 39th to 46th

11a.m.-7 p.m.-EV 2 2986

AVAILABLE SEPT. lst-THREE room A bath 5130. Also four room A bath $170. 43rd Osage. 828 2062 alter 8 P.M. 5110

SUMMER SUBLET FURNISHED 2 bedroom, living room, kitchen, bath. 40th and Spruce, rent negotiable. EV 7 4292. 5103

NEWLY DECORATED NICELY FUR- nished 3 rooms and tile bath with shower bright-large closets-a vail able now also August BA 2 6051

5094

PROFESSOR ON LEAVE RENTING his large air conditioned house near campus from mid June 1972 Augus! 31, 1973. Convenient faculty neighbor hood. 4604 Osage. Unique in town fenced garden, yard. Fully furnished. Restricted to single families: No communes. 5350/ mo. GR 4-7255 or 5947749. 5104

SUMMER SUBLET, C.C. TOWN house, air conditioned, new kitchen. 2 living rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 floors w/ bathrooms, cheap, call evenings WA 5 1057 5100

SUMMER SUBLET/ FALL OPTION 45th A Pine, I bedroom, living room, kitchen (cooking A eating), bath, rent negotiable, call now 471 0545. 5099

SUMMER SUBLET/FALL OPTION- 2 B.R. lurnished apl. on 42nd St. Liv Ing room large kitchen. Summer price 5135/ mo. Call EV 7 2470 even

Ings. iW*

FURNISHED APARTMENT 19th A Walnut. Summer sublet Fall option, bedroom, living room, bath A kitchen. EV 2-1503 or 349 7391. 5087

PRICE VERY NEGOTIABLE! SUM mer sublet with Fall option. Spacious quiet, furnished double apartment. Modern kitchen and bathroom. Call EV 7-3430. 5086

GRADUATE STUDENTS PREFERR- ed-.unfurnished apt. 2 bedrooms, 5 rooms available June I $165 per mo. 1016 S. 45th St. EV 2 3762. No pets.

5091

YOU 'VE ALL HEARD ABOUT IT. Now you can live In It. 3 bedroom apt. 39th A Chestnut. 9 or 12 mo. lease EV2 9956 5092

SUMMER SUBLET: OREAT LOCA- tion 38th Walnut/large well furnish ed studio/ modern kitchen/ color TV/ light cool quiet/ Dick 349 6764/ 222 9045. 5104

SUMMER SUBLET 44th A BALTI- more across from Clark Park. Ef- ficiency, quiet, sunny, cheerful, fur. nished. Rent negotiable call late eve- nings EV 7 2210. 5098

APARTMENT FOR NEXT YEAR spacious 2 or 3. .JVJL . PatJSJnj back yard. Near campus" 4l»l -Spruce. CaTl soon EV 2 9236. •ae_- —4MH4

TOWNHOUSE 19th A PINE, 4 BED room, living room, dining room, kit Chen. 3 baths June or Sept. BA 2 4254 or EV 2-1300. 4908

EFFICIENCIES TO THREE BED rooms, lurnished, available now or May, June, July. 39th to 42nd St. $80. 00 to $246.00 BA2 6447, MO 4 3213

4797

SPACIOUS-FURNISHED: 1 BED room, living room, kitchen, bath. Ex- cellent security. Near conveniences. Ideal for two, $125, 4404 Chestnut, EV 2-8992, evenings 4969

SUMMER SUBLET, 41st A SPRUCE, kitchenette, separate bathroom, fur- nished, fan, perfect for one person, 590. Call EV 2 9041, keep trying. 5018

SUMMER SUBLET 44th A OSAOE Ave. Efficiency, very modern, III* bath furnished. Available May 15. Rent 585.00 mo. call EV 29278. 5010

2,1,4 ROOMS, FURNISHED APART ments with kitchen and tile baths. Near campus, also summer sublets available. GR 3 8754. 5004

SPRUCE HILL COURT APTS. 3*th A Spruce. Modern, spacious 2 A 3 bed- room apts. Avail. June or Sept. $165 per month. Suitable lor 3 or 4 stud ents. BA 2-6254 or EV 2 1300. 4909

APARTMENTS NOW AVAILABLE June 1 Sept. 1. Pine Street Place. 4511 thru 4517 Pine Street. One and two bedroom apts. modern kit. A bath, air conditioned. From 5125.00, call Stoik er A Company KI 5 6506. 5013

REMODELED. LOVELY ONE BED room apts., living rm., kitchen, tile bath, new wall to wall carpeting; In- dividual thermostat controls. BA 2- 3068 or BR 4 7196. 5017

SUMMER SUBLET: JUNE-JULY, 45th A Osage, 2 room efficiency. $65/ mo. BA 2 7989 around 6 P.M. SIM

RE-AVAILABLE: DUPLEX APT., furnished or unfurnished. 2 large bed- rooms, living room, kitchen, backyard $115/ mo. Optional parachute for far- out decor. EV 7 1015. 5071

SUNNY APT. FOR SUMMER SUBLET 2 bedrooms. 2 baths, living room, din- ing room, kitchen. Waterbed. Call EV 7 0348. 5072

BEAUTIFUL LAROE FURNISHED modern 3 bedroom home with recree- lion room, garage. Available June 1972. Rent 5190/ month. Mr. August. TR 8 7943. 5060

CENTER CITY APARTMENT TO sublet during June and July. Furnished

'—and •«—conditioned caN 732 4615. -»a—. ^ 5061

LAROE APARTMENT FOR ENT ART Museum area. 2 bedrooms. Hying room, kitchen, bath. Unretlricted parking. $185/ mo. furniture invest- ment. Call CE 57048 any time after 4:00 P.M. 5071

SUMMER SUBLET FURNISHED, 4300 Spruce. Three bedrooms, kitch- en, living room, bath 4th floor. Rent very negotiable. Marc EV 20144, Ruth 594 5437. 5069

COMMODIOUS 4 BDRM. SUMMER sublet large liv. rm., kltch., 11/2 bath, quiet neighborhood 349-8958.

5068

SUMMER SUBLET SPACIOUS 2 bedroom furnished apt. 46th A Spruce 5125/ mo. SH 8 8275. Call 6 12PM

5064

SUMMER SUBLET. JUNE AUGUST, 43rd A Locust. 2 room "studio" air- cond.. new lurniture. parking, building has security, 5125/ mo. EV 29323.

4919

SUMMER SUBLET: I PERSON NEED ed to share furnished 3 bedroom a partment near campus. Call Tom: EV 7 1878. 5054

CAMPUS APARTMENTS

4043 Walnut Street BA-26254 EV-2-1300

JUNE or SEPTEMBER RENTALS

FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED

Open Sunday From 10:00 to 2:00

We Have The Largest Selection Of

Apartments & Townhouses To Choose

From located in the area of 39th Spruce 39th Pine & 39th Baltimore. Houses range from 5 bedrooms to 12 bed- rooms.

1000 APARTMENTS TO CHOOSE FROM located in the area of 39th & Pine, 40th & Spruce. Apartments range from 1 room efficiency to 5 bad- rooms. 2 baths.

BEAUTIFULLY FURNISHED 4- room Center-City rowhouse available for SUB-lel May 1-Aug. 15. Safe neigh borhood. convenient, tennis courts A swimming pool within two blocks, air conditioner. 5155/ month. Call 9BS- 9577. 5051

BlJOOD DONORS WANTED Fee P.Id

Write: BLOOD DONORS CLUB

antUtttrnkmrntOartiut PUb., Pa. ttlsl

Qtrt

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* Preparation for tests required for admiasion to graduate and profes- sional schools

* Six and twelve session courses * Small groups * Voluminous malarial for home study

prepared by experts in each field * Lesson schedule can be tailored to

meet individual needs.

Sjmmer Sessions

Special Compact Courses

tVsakeotlt - Intersessions

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EDUCATIONAL CENTER

mi.iMii. txefaxs■ v

PHILADELPHIA (215) CA 4-5145

OAVS I vINHXC. fsejf «fMM

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Tuwday, April 25, 1972 The Daily Pennsylvania!!

Candidates Vie in Pennsylvania Primary (Continued from page 1)

tomorrow in Pennsylvania and the nomination in July."

By most estimates, Minnesota Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey is ahead in the

.preference test among the Democratic presidential candidates, with a tight three-way tie - between Muskie, South Dakota Sen. George McGovern, and Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace - predicted for the runner- up position.

What percentage each candidate will win of the 137 delegates being chosen today is uncertain according to most observers.

Muskie, after speaking to 15 persons at a Philadelphia drug rehabilitation

center, also visited Pittsburgh, where he took a walk along Fifth Avenue, stopping to chat with United Steelworkers President I.W. Abel.

Muskie called off plans to campaign in Massachusetts Monday, after he was convinced by campaign strategists that an eleventh hour surge in support was developing in the Keystone state.

Meanwhile, Wallace campaigned at Boston's Fanevil Hall asking for a "good vote" to give "false liberals" the "shakes."

The Alabama Democrat has run poorly in preprimary polls in Massachusetts, where McGovern leads his closest opponent, Muskie, by more than a two-to-one margin ac-

cording to a poll released Sunday by the Boston Globe.

The Globe poll gave Wallace four per cent of the vote.

In other political action, McGovern picked up 17 delegates from his native South Dakota over the weekend to take the lead in delegate votes for the first time. He now has 118'.. com- mitted delegates, compared to 107Vi for Muskie, 75 for Wallace, and 20 for Humphrey.

Humphrey and Muskie will await the results of the Pennsylvania and Massachusetts primaries at cam- paign headquarters in Philadelphia. McGovern will spend the day in Massachusetts.

University of Pennsylvania's ANNENBERG CENTER for Communication Arts and Sciences

Tickets: $3 Free with U. of P. Identity Card Box Office Phone: 594-6791

THE PLOUGH AND THE STARS THE COST OF WAR AND CIVIL STRIFE An Inquiry into the Causes and Consequences

The Plough and the Sum raises issues as urgent today as when O'Catty produced his masterpiece. These touch upon the responsibility for armed struggle ... the illusions that make men fight and die'... the realization that there is no way to step aside. To examine such issues the Annenberg Center for Communication Arts and Sciences offers s scries of discussions, panels, and films. The public is invited and admission is free.

Films

The Battle of Algiers. A highly influential film, depicting the Algerian rebellion against the I ■tenth between I9S4 and I9S7. Won 11 international awards, including the Best Picture Award at the Venice I'ilm Festival. Pontecorvo staged totally convincing scenes of massive street demonstrations and riots. The staggering, newsrecl-like authenticity of these scenes and the vital spontaneity of the performances and camerawork gave The Battle of Algiers J unique dramatic impact.

Shame (Skammen) Ingmar Rci^man't confrontation with war non-political and without allegiance to one side or another. It is his look at the universe

violent and unknown-with survival a keystone of human behavior.

Open Oty. Rossellini's neo-realistic masterpiece revolutionized post-war European film style. Anna Magnani is memorable as a mother unsuccessfully attempting to hold her family together during a period of military occupation and civil violence.

Panel

Who ii Responsible? The discussion will extend the experience of the play into further consideration of the nature of personal responsibility in a social upheaval. Men and women "caught up" in w >r and civil strife beyond their control.. . what part do intent, conscience, and moral imagination play in plotting theit course?

Larry (iron. Assistant Professor of Communications, moderator

George (ierbner. Professor of Communications

LI Col. I aris R. Kirkland. Associate Professor of Military Science

Philip Pochoda. Assistant Professor of Sociology

CALENDAR

TODAY Tuesday, April 25

4:00 p.m. Studio Theatre. Annenberg Center. 3680 Walnut.

FILM: The Battle of Algiers

Thursday, April 27

4:00 p.m. Studio Theatre, Annenberg Center. 3680 Walnut.

FILM: Shame (Skammen)

Friday. April 28

4:00 p.m. Studio Theatre, Annenberg Center, 3680 Walnut

FILM: Open City 10:00 p.m. (following the performance of The Plough and the Stars) Zcllerbach Theatre, Annenberg Center, 3680 Walnut.

PANEL: Who is Responsible?

The Annenberg Center production of The Plough end the Stan will be performed in the Zetlerbach Theatre, Monday through Saturday evenings, April 18 through AprH 29, at 7:30 p.m.

Admission to play $3 FREE WITH U. of P. IDENTITY CARD

Box Office Phone: 594-6791 Admission to lecture, panels, and films is free to public

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SOCIAL EXPERIMENTATION. IN DEVELOPING

COUNTRIES: THE CASE OF ISRAEL

1P.M. - 5:15 P.M. Sunday, April 30, 1972

Stiteler Hall (Audit. B6),37th St. * PANEL I l P.M. • SAMUEL KLAUSNER (Professor of Sociology *

Univ. of Penna.) Chairman *

SUZANNE KELLER -Professor of Sociology, Princeton Univ. THE KIBBUTZ AS AN ALTERNATIVE FAMILY FORM

RAPHAEL PATAI- Professor of Anthropology, Fairleigh Dickinson

ABSORPTION OF ORIENTAL IMMIGRANTS NISSIM ELIAD -Member of the Israel Knesset

ABSORPTION OF RUSSIAN IMMIGRANTS * Discussant: SIDNEY MORGENBESSER.Professor of Philosophy, *

Columbia Univ.

PANELXt-3:15 P.M. -HARRY BAILEY (Professor and Chairman Political Science, Temple Univ.j-Chairmon *

LOUIS GUTTMAN Professor of Sociology M.I.7.and Hebrew Univ.;*

SOCIAL RESEARCH IN ISRAEL

HOWARD PACK-Professor of Sociology, Swarthmore College

SOCIAL FACTORS CONDITIONING ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT JOSEPH LOEWENBERG- Professor of Economics, Temple Univ

THE HISTADRUT: MYTH AND REALITY Discussant. SAADIA TOUVAL- Professor of Political Science

Princeton & (el Aviv Univ. For information call -

American Professors For Peace In The Middle East

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594-7391

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Hurdler Collins Suspended After Feud With Tuppeny in New York

By RICK FURLONG An imbroglio that could have ex-

treme consequences for the future of the Penn track program surfaced Saturday as star performer Bruce Colhas, at least for the moment, was suspended from the team.

The sophomore hudler's departure was the culmination of a misun- derstanding with coach Jim Tuppeny that occured at the Queens-Iona relays in New York this past weekend But the seeds of this dispute, ac- cording to Collins, lie with the strained relations between coach and athlete that have existed for the past year.

In preparation for the Penn Relays Collins a potential Olympian, was entered in the 440 intermediate hurdles, shuttle hurdle relay and sprint medlay at New York. As ex- pected, he had no problem winning the open race but, in the process, suffered some muscle cramps. After doing his stint on the hurdle relay, he decided that the atrocious weather conditions could result in aggravating the cramps and headed for the team bus.

Before doing so though, be infomred team captain and sprint medley anchorman, Karl Thornton, that he

JIM TUPPENY One Opinion...

wold not be running. But after drying out for a while Collins changed his mind and decided that he would be able to run the leadoff 440 relay leg.

Meanwhile Tuppeney was on the track and. observing that Collins was no where to be found, claimed that he sent several team members to the

BRUCE COLLINS ..And Another

bus, all of whom returned bearing Collins' refusal to run. Collins, however, claims no one came to talk with him except Tuppeny.

"When he walked on the bus I thought he was coming to tell me to warm-up for the race. But he brought me outside and, while I stood in a

puddle of water without my shoes on, started to lecture me and tell me how disappointed he was with my attitude. I didn't say anything but turned around and went back in the bus and it was then that he asked me to turn in my equipment."

That Collins did yesterday morning and according to Tuppeny last night, "As of now he is suspended from the team and there hasn't been any more dialogue on the subject." Although both are the epitome of stubborness the air should eventually be cleared, perhaps by Friday. But Collins (who holds an assortment of indoor and outdoor records in ad- dition to his national freshman 440 hurdle mark) bitterly claimed yesterday, 'When I was recruited here, Tuppeny convinced me that he would help me improve and that I'd play a big role in building bis program. Well, he does know quite a bit about track but despite what he tells everyone I don't think be really cares that much about the individual. For example, I can't see any reason for roiling up the score in this meet and having everyone run two or three races in the cold with the Penn Relays only a week away. Right now I'm completely fed up."

Penn Relays LureSpeedmen To Return Engagement Fri,

By RICK FURLONG Track meet directors are notorious

for rhapsodic descriptions of their "babies" and Penn Relays guru Jim

Tuppeny is no exception. "I predict that every one of the major relay championships will be broken," he proclaimed yesterday in a aon-

Penn Coeds Feted AtW.A.A. Banquet

By SUSIE ADAMS The Women's Athletic Association

Annual Spring Banquet, held last Wendesday April 19, was, like malt liquor, a completely unique ex- perience. It must be the only sports banquet held amidst the mummies in the Egyptian Room of the University Museum. It also must be one of those rare times when Penn's women athletes are recognized and ap- plauded and honored for their achievements.

W.A.A president Susie Adams welcomed the group of 112 with words citing the expansion and im- provement of the women's athletic program at Penn and thanking members of the Departments of Recreation and Intercollegiate Athletics for their assistance.

"Over the past year 175 different women have participated in in- tercollegiates alone; and this does not include W.A.A. activities on the in- tramural and club levels. The W.A.A. has initiated programs in intramural Iannis and intercollegiate squash, while continuing weekly intramural events in the evenings. We have been getting more recognition and promotion for women's sports through the W.A.A. Newsletter and the DP.," the C.W. senior explained.

Mrs. Doris Griffith, a graduate of Temple and a United States Field Hockey Team member in 1960 and '61, was the banquet's guest speaker. Mrs.

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Griffith, beginning with a quip about the unusual surroundings of "the mummy room", reminisced about her experiences in athletics.

The diminuitive speaker told the assembly: "You will probably never again be involved in something so fun or so healthy as athletics. When I look back on my athletic competitions, I don't remember how much I won or lost, but I do remember the friends I made .... And while I congratulate the young ladies who will be honored here with awards tonight, I think that you all will remember the fun times you shared and the friendships in athletics more than the awards you won."

Coaches of the eight intercollegiate sports and the two club activities then presented the "Most Valuable Team Member" cups, designed to recognize the girl who had contributed most to her team with regard to "sport- smanship, leadership, inspiration, and cooperation". Kudos went to Lynn Yarborough for basketball; Susie Adams, badminton and field hockey; Rose Bigelow, lacrosse; Kathy Hartman, softball. Christy Moore,

quash; Mary Ellen Olcese, swim- ming; Molly Love and Kathy Wilson, tennis; Peggy Coleman. Penquin- nettes; and Sharon Frant, dance. Misses Yarborough and Frant also received special annual awards from the basketball and dance groups.

The mummies were the only ones who went home empty handed. Ill ——

characteristic burst of optimism. Barring weather difficulties this

weekend Tuppeny could be right. At the very least he has assembled enough talent to make the world's oldest (78 years) and largest (7000 athletes) relay carnival among the best ever.

After four years of Villanova dominance (they've won 18 titles during that span) a magnificent new contender has arrived to challenge for their corwn. The school is North Carolina Central and their essence is speed: with probably the finest corp of collegiate sprinters ever assembled in the East they'll be out to match the Wildcats record five gold watches.

The Carolinians racked up that total almost effortlessly in the Florida Relays three weeks ago. Their blazing 880 (1:22.9), mile (3:06), and sprint medley (3:16.9) wins in Gainsville all were quicker than Penn's records

Penn Relays Report while the 440 (40.1) tied Texas-El Paso's Franklin Field best and the shuttle hurdle relay (57.6) was only a tenth off the mark.

The Durham squad is headed by this country's top 220 sprinter last year, Larry Black (who rocketed a 44.1 mile relay leg in Flrodia), Kenyan Olympians Robert Ouko and Julius Sang, and hurdler Melvin Bassett.

But two major roadblocks stand in there way. From Long Island, Adelphi returns with its championship 880 and mile teams intact. El-Paso is back with brilliant 440 (39:5) and 880 (1:23.5) foursomes and even if they don't win, their ebullient coach, Wayne ("The Pain") Vandenburg, is a sure bet to break is own record for vocal outrage.

Alas, that gout-ridden old warhorse, Marty Liquori, has hobbled off into the sunset and Villanova s dominance of the distance races may be at a end. No less than ten teams have the op-

portunity to end the Wildcat's six year distance medley reign on Friday. Their anchor miler Brian McElroy will have to bold off challenges form the 'ikes of Duke's Bob Wheeler (3:59), North Carolina's Reggie McAfee (4:00), Penn State's Greg Fredericks (4:04) and Penn's Karl

.Thornton (4:00.8). In addition to their distance medley,

the Quakers four mile relay provides the host school with its most serious championship threat since the last one In 1959. Milers Julio Piazza, Bob Childs, Denis Pikes, and Karl Thorn- ton form a squad that must be rated the co-favorite here along with defending champion Villnanova.

It being an Olympic year Tuppeny has garnered a host of post-college talent aspiring to Munich. Probably the most interesting race is the 440 intermediate hurdles where Britain's Dave Hemery, who destroyed the cream of the world hurdling talent in Mexico City four years ago, is mat- ched against former Villanovan Larry James (well known to Relay fans for his amazing 43.9 mile relay anchor in 1968).

Other outstanding performers in- clude two time Olympians Ed Roberta and Mel Pender in the 100 yard dash; the world's third fastest three miler in 1971, Steve Stageberg; Philadelphia's 7-2 high jumper. Gene White; and mile relays from the Philadelphia Pioneers, Sports International, and BOHAA (All of whom could easily go as fast as their college counterparts.).

Finally there is the annual "high school madness", this year the preps being highlighted by Vince Cartier (who's 4:08 indoor mile broke a Jim Ryun record), Boy's High's 1:50 junior half miler, Bill Dabney, and St. Joseph"» (Buffalo) distance medley (who are out to break the national record)

It's no wonder Jim Tuppeny is so cocky.

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The Case of the

Plausible Pro By Phil Sliiiiikin

Pierre Guite is the kind of person most universities would be proud and eager to admit into their hallowed inner sanctum. He is affable, bilingual, a good student, was selected "Mr Collegiate" by the students of his secondary school, and was the first winner of the Canadian Alumni Scholarship

Oh yes, he also just happens to be a superb hockey player. In fact, Pierre Guite is the kind of player that national powers are built upon The Quebec native is considered one of the top pro prospects in Canadian hockey. In his final year o( prep school at St. Catherine's Collegiate in Ontario he played Junior A, Tier One hockey, the highest level attainable for a Canadian amateur. _

Needless to say, when former Penn ice coach Jim Salfi managed to get this blue chipper's blue chipper to matriculate here last Fall he reached a coach's nirvana. "Pierre is the finest scholar-athlete ever to enter our program," fresh- man coach Rich Broadbelt enthused back in those early days of autumn.

Then the mess began. As a Junior A player, Guite had accepted meal money and travel expenses from the St. Catherine's Black Hawks, a rather common practice that most American universities subscribe to, but which was sufficient grounds for the Ivy League to declare the freshman ineligible for competition. 'The Leafaie takes the stand that all Canadian players are ineligible until declared eligtole," Red and Blue athletic director Fred Shabel commented. "When Pierre came here we foresaw no problems in his being declared eligible. We certainly would have discouraged him from coming here otherwise."

Shabel and Dean of Students Alice Emerson thought that the University was in a strong enough position to protest the Ancient Eight ruling, and prepared to appeal the case to the East Coast Athletic Conference (E.C.A.C.) in January. "We hoped that if the E.C.A.C. approved his eligibility, then we could go back to the League and try to get it to change its position," Shabel remarked.

But at the last minute, the University withdrew its request far a review and decided to stand on the Ivy decision. Since then, confusion has been the order of things in the mysterious case of Pierre Guite.

"We did what we did because when all of the financial data was assembled, we found that some of the monies that Pierre received were beyond the scope of amateur athletics," Mrs. Emerson noted "We decided that it would be the best thing for all concerned to withdraw the case " By so doing, Guite and the University were saved the embarrassment of engaging in a controversial struggle over the Inter- pretation of professionalism, a fight they were sure to lose, because it turned out that Guite accepted bonuses from the St. Catherine's dub which were added on to his meal and travel allowances.

The question is whether Guite actually realized that he was accept- ing these bonuses, and the answer seems to be that he did not. "Nobody looked at the financial statements in that much detail," Mrs. Emerson explained. "There was nothing dis- honest involved. The financial forms that the E.C.A.C. required were fill- ed out completely and accurately." It was only until after the University had submitted the request for a ruling that tax forms arrived which clearly indicated that Guite had received more than Just expense money.

It should be realized that American and Canadian rules of professionalism are different. Canada allows Junior A players to accept bonuses and still remain amateurs. America dost not, bat yet allows athletes to receive grant in aids, which, in turn, Canada decries as profrarionsHim of the moat obvious order. It does not seem inconceivable to think that Pierre Guite was caught naively in the middle of these conflicting value systems. "I had to live," he stressed simply yesterday. "I was a long way from home (Guite lives In Quebec and was playing in Ontario) and I had to have some money..."

Guite paid for his actions by being exiled from the sport he loved for a long, cold winter. "I felt I was part of the freaman team even though I wan't playing," he said. "But when I went to the varsity games in the beautiful (Class of '23) Rink and heard the band playing - we don't have anything like that in Canada - my legs were kind of shaky. I missed the competition very much then."

But he never became disenchanted with Penn, even though he was suffering inside. "I came here because I wanted a good college education," Guite com- mented. "I didn't think I would get into the Ivies. Cornell recruited me, but they said I wouldn't get into the college, so they would put me in the Hotel Ad- ministration school. In other words they wanted to use me as a hockey player and not as a student. A friend of mine told me about Perm and Jim Salfi and how they wanted a hockey player, sure, but I would also be a student. Thai was im- portant."

Guite's future is still uncertain. The amateur hockey draft takes place on June 1, and the Wharton freshman is sure to be selected in it, but whether he is chosen by the pros in an early round or a late round will determine whether he tries out with a National Hockey League team or transfers to college in Canada, where ha is still eligible for competition. "If I'm chosen high in the draft and can get a nice contract I will turn pro," he nodded. "I would then go to summer school here at Penn until I get my degree. But if I do transfer Penn will just be another page in my life. I'll remember Penn, not because of the eligibility, but because of good times."

ED ROTH

PIERRE GUITE

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