thedaily 10/21/68 pennsylvania* - penn · pdf fileout lehigh, 34-0, for the ... i etormed...

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10/21/68 THEDAILY Local PENN CREW FINISHES FIFTH IN OLYMPIC FINALS Perm's four-with-coxswain shell finished fifth in the Olympic finals Saturday over the Xochimilco course in Mexico City. The race was won by the crew from New Zealand, who captured the gold medal, while East Germany and Switzerland picked up the silver and bronze medals respect- ively. The Quaker oarsmen took the lead at the start of the 2000 meter race, but soon relinquished first place to the New Zealanders, and later were passed by three other shells. The United States had a boat in each of the final events, but was not able to win any gold medals in either rowing or sculling. Harvard's Olympic eight finished sixth and last in its event, won by West Germany (see page six). PENN FOOTBALL TEAM REMAINS UNDEFEATED The Pennsylvania football team remained undefeated Saturday, shutting out Lehigh, 34-0, for the twenty-ninth consecutive Quaker victory in the Pennsylvania-Lehigh series. The Engineers last won in 1889. The Red and Blue's four-game winning streak is the squad's longest since 1959, which was the last year Pennsylvania enjoyed a winning football season. Although only the most optimistic experts had predicted a 3-6 record for this year's team prior to the start of the campaign, a winning season now seems within reach. This Saturday is Homecoming, with the Quakers hosting Princeton at Franklin Field. Princeton is only 2-2 on the season, but, like the Red and Blue, is 2-0 in Ivy League play. Free student ticket booklets are still available at the Franklin Field Ticket Agency (see page six). National By United Press International HUMPHREY SAYS FIGHTING LULL IN S. VIETNAM "SIGNIFICANT" Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey said Sunday the current lull in lighting in South Vietnam "has some significance" and should be a factor in the U.S. decision on whether to stop the bombing of North Vietnam. The Democratic presidential candidate also said the final decision on bombing was for the United States to make, and the Saigon government should "exercise no veto." Humphrey said the decline in large scale fighting in the south during recent weeks "has some significance and it surely ought to be taken into account" by the administration when a decision is made on the bombing. But he emphasized later that this view was his own and he was not trying to "substitute my advice" for that of President Johnson. JACKIE MARRIES ARISTOTLE ONASSIS Mrs. John F. Kennedy Sunday married Greek shipping multimillionaire Aristoble Onassis in an intimate Greek Orthodox ceremony on Onassis* private island Skorpios. The couple then retreated to Onassis' yacht Christina with a small wedding party. Vatican sources are "unsure" whether the marriage will be recognized by the Roman Catholic Church. Onassis was previously married to Athina Livanos, who obtained an Alabama divorce. International By United Press International COMING WEEK CRUCIAL TO VIETNAM PEACE TALKS The next few days may decide the fate of President Johnson's hopes for moving toward peace in Vietnam before he leaves office, informed Western diplomats sources said Sunday. U£. negotiators, led by Ambas- sador W. Averell Harriman, were waiting for some word from Hanoi on their proposed package plan which could halt the bombing of North Viet- nam and open the doors to peace. While the United States has kept a dis- ciplined official silence about the plan—and even the fact that it had been advanced--a North Vietnamese delegation member has privately concirmed they received a proposal and that it was under study in Hanoi. U.S. BOMBERS RENEW ATTACKS IN S. VIETNAM, STRIKE IN NORTH U£. B52s blasted the A Shau Valley near Hue Sunday in a renewal of attacks against an old Communist lair in South Vietnam's northern reaches. Other jets raided North Vietnam. Operations by American pilots over North Vietnam's southern panhandle were described as "routine" even as UjS. Am- bassador Ellsworth Bunker held another round of urgent talks in Saigon with President Nguyen Van Thieu amid speculation of a "peace breakthrough." Layers of clouds down to 4,000 feet and lower and thunderstorms hampered air" strikes against the panhandle Sunday as pilots relied on radar to guide them through the weather to target areas. WARSAW PACT TROOPS ON MOVE IN CZECHOSLOVAKIA Warsaw Pact troops were on the move throughout Czechoslovakia Sunday to new garrison barracks and, in some cases, in apparent pre- paration to evacuate the nation they invaded by night exactly two months ago. As darkness fell Sunday, long convoys of Soviet tanks, trucks, and armored personnel carriers were observed on the main-line tracks into Prague. Czechoslovak television viewers saw their first film clips of the somber ceremony in which Soviet and Czechoslovak leaders signed a treaty providing "temporary" occupation by about 75,000 Soviet soldiers. In the films, i etormed leader Alexander Dubcek stood with his head bowed. TITO AFFIRMS CONTINUED YUGOSLAV INDEPENDENCE President Tito of Yugoslavia said Sunday the Soviet Union and its allies were guilty of a "brutal lie" in accusing Yogoslavia of selling out to the West and capitalism. He was interrupted by loud cheers when he told an audience of about 150,000 persons that they "must resist all outside pressures" as they have done in the past. Tito said Yugoslavia needed no outside "assistance" and warned that those who tried to come in uninvited would face a " sharp welcome." Tito complained about Bulgaria's anti-Yugoslav campaign but offered his hand to the Bulgarian leaders. He said the two neighboring com- munist states should be "bulwarks of peace" in the Balkans. LEBANON PRESIDENT HEADS OFF POLITICAL CRISIS President Charles Helou averted a major political crisis in Lebanon Sunday by withdrawing his resignation after parliament refused to accept it. Helou submitted his resignation Saturday night after the failure of his premier- designate to form a new cabinet because of squabbling between the various political parties. But the refusal of all political groups in parliament to accept his verbal resignation apparently convinced Helou to change his mind Sunday. He told members of parliament their overwhelming support "encourage me to resume my duties." PENNSYLVANIA* Vol. LXXXIV No. 61 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Copyright 1968 The Daily Pennsylvanian Monday, October 21, 1968 Spock asks New Left toformfourthparty BENJAMIN SPOCK Worries about Wallace in 72 photo by PAUL SCHWARTZMAN Resistance debates future plans, tactics By RONA ZEVIN Confrontation with police and types of effective demonstration were the major topics of discussion at a national Resistance conference held at the University on Saturday and Sunday. Resistance workers from New York, Boston, Philadelphia and smaller cities in the northeast ex- changed experiences and philosophies about the antiwar and antidraft move- ments, trying to reevaluate their own action and make plans for the future. The conference began with a dis- cussion between Resistance workers and Daniel Finnerty, 1967 College graduate, questioning the effective- ness of confronting police at demon- strations. Finnerty was the author of an article in the first issue of 34th Street magazine, in which he asserted that confrontations do not serve any purpose except to antagonize the police and spectators. While Finnerty claimed that con- frontation was often tactically poor, many of the others argued that it could be effective if the press and the public could be made aware that it is the police who started the trouble. "You and the policeman might know that you are right, but the millions of people reading about it will not know," Finnerty said. Most of the group agreed that direct confrontation just for the sake of confrontation is useless, unless demonstrators are very sure that they can prove that the police began the trouble. In many cities resistance w *ers noted, they have begun setting up chains of movie photographers who can provide tangible evidence if the demonstrators end up in court. "The problem," one worker said, "is that just having a film of a cop beating up a demonstrator is not sufficient. The courts cannot tell whether the demonstrator hit the cop (Continued on page 4) By ALBAN SALAMAN Dr. Benjamin Spock Friday night called upon the New Left to organize a fourth party to stop a George Wal- lace Presidential drive in 1972. "I've conceded the Presidency to Nixon, even though Hubert Humphrey hasn't," the famed pediatriciancom- mented, speaking at the University Museum, Spock suggested the fourth party be composed of welfare recipients organized on a community level, blacks "with leaders who will pre- sent a united front," liberal pro- fessors and doctors, and students in a well-organized rather than spon- taneous movement. "We are in for repression for the next four years, so let's or- ganize and educate our sympathizers now," he said. The doctor also called for an end to infighting among leftist groups. The gathering of approximately 1,000 in the auditorium and an ad- ditional 1,000 outside listening to a public address system was sponsored by the Greater Philadelphia Council of the Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy. Spock, who is best known for his book, "The Care of Babies," was convicted June 14 of this year for conspiring to advocate illegal re- sistance of the draft. He said he was confident that the Court of Appeals in Boston would overturn the de- cision when his case comes up in January and he said he was prepared to bring his case to the U.S.Supreme Court if necessary. "I'm not trying to be a martyr and I really don't want to go to jail," he asserted, "but if I do go to jail, I will be a thorn in the government's side." Spock said nothing about the draft system during his entire speech. Spock did say that of those ac- cused of conspiring along with him some had never met and others who did work together did not conduct their activities secretly. He told the very friendly audience that the philosophy he represented was a minority view in the United States and it was very important "to win the uncommitted people to our side." He praised the demonstration at the Pentagon last October and the incidents at the Democratic Conven- tion in August for "awakening the young and radicalizing their par- ents." Spock suggested winning the police to the peace movement. He added that insulting police during a dem- onstration only gives them a greater sense of self-justification for their actions. He asked protesters to have more self-discipline and avoid con- frontations. The doctor instructed his listen- ers "to get up and do something," to explain the essence of the can- didacy of George Wallace, and to "spread the word that fascism is not democracy." For a good portion of his speech, the white-haired 65-year-old pedi- atrician told anecdotal stories. Calling himself, "just a pedia- trician who joined the peace move- ment in 1962," he tickled the audience with stories of campaigning for President Johnson in 1964, his en- counters with New York City police in a demonstration before a draft induction center, and how he learned of his indictment by glancing at a fellow subway rider's newspaper. He said one of the advantages of his activities was that the Soviet Union published one of his books on baby care. All news and sports staff mem- bers and heelers must attend a meeting at 7 P.M. Tuesday at The Daily Pennsylvanian. This meeting is mandatory. Noble convicted of manslaughter By STEPHEN MARMON Former University student Rich- ard J. Noble was convicted Friday of three counts of involuntary man- Slaughter for his acts at the Delta Tau Delta fire last year. A seven-man, five-women jury deliberated for four hours beginning late Friday afternoon before acquit- ing Noble of charges of murder and arson, but finding the tall blond young man guilty of involuntary man- slaughter. Noble's attorney, Bernard L. Segal, was given the right to file for a new trial by Judge James T. McDermott after the verdict was announced at 9 P.M. in the City Hall courtroom. Segal said the motion for a new trial will be based on Mc- Dermott's redefinition of the crimes to the jury when the 12-member panel requested a redefinition of the charges just 20 minutes before reach- ing their decision. It is expected that the motion for a new trial, which will also be based on the question of intent to commit the crimes, will be filed very shortly. If the motion for a new trial is not granted, Noble could receive from one and one-half to three years (Continued on page 3) RICHARD NOBLE, in glasses, smiles and shakes hands " friends outside of Room 453 of City Hall Thursday. next day. Noble, 20, a former Inside the courtroom tht photo by KEN College student, was found guilty on three counts untary manslaughter in the deaths of three person Delta Tau Delta fraternity fire Dec. 10. ROUSER of invol- s at the Issues sharpen in ROTC debate By BARBARA SL0PAK As the College Committee on Instruction debates whether to discredit the military and naval science programs on campus, two concerned roommates tried to clarify pro and cons of the issue in a weekend meeting. Elliot (Chip) Sober, one of three seniors who drafted the Student Committee on Undergraduate Education (SCUE) report calling for removal of credit for ROTC and NROTC, and College senior Robert Peck, ROTC brigade commander and co- author of a dissenting ROTC report to be published this week, clashed in a discussion of the SCUE- ROTC controversy. Peck said a liberal arts education "talks about man and his potential" and stressed that military science as a discipline has a place in that ed- ucation. "Man has an unfortunate propensity toward violence and the study of institutionalized force is quite relevant to a liberal education," the highest-ranking ROTC undergraduate said. Peck added that ROTC helped "preserve the civilian completion of the army," noting the UJ5. defenses rested "on a tradition of using civilians for the military rather than developing a pro- fessional armed force." Sober said it was not the relevance or service- value of the ROTC program that the SCUE com- mittee questioned but its position outside of the structure of the University. "One of our larger concerns is the idea of the University as an institution," he said. "The fact that military science may be important is secondary. The University should give credit for only those courses it is financially responsible for." The instructors hired in the military and naval science courses are paid by the Army and Navy, not by the University. Provost Goddard can approve or disapprove candidates whose names have been submitted by a list made available by the head- quarters of the First Army Division. Peck said military science was in a unique position because instructors who were not cur- rently in the Army could not be acquainted with the newest military tactics.His roommate questioned this statement, saying the argument might be ex- tended to say only field economists could teach Wharton School economics courses. "The University is only secondary, not fund- amental in the selection of ROTC faculty," Sober said. "If a guy's in Vietnam and he doesn't like it, the army can't give him the chance to apply for Continued on page 4

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10/21/68 THEDAILY

Local PENN CREW FINISHES FIFTH IN OLYMPIC FINALS

Perm's four-with-coxswain shell finished fifth in the Olympic finals Saturday over the Xochimilco course in Mexico City. The race was won by the crew from New Zealand, who captured the gold medal, while East Germany and Switzerland picked up the silver and bronze medals respect- ively. The Quaker oarsmen took the lead at the start of the 2000 meter race, but soon relinquished first place to the New Zealanders, and later were passed by three other shells. The United States had a boat in each of the final events, but was not able to win any gold medals in either rowing or sculling. Harvard's Olympic eight finished sixth and last in its event, won by West Germany (see page six).

PENN FOOTBALL TEAM REMAINS UNDEFEATED The Pennsylvania football team remained undefeated Saturday, shutting

out Lehigh, 34-0, for the twenty-ninth consecutive Quaker victory in the Pennsylvania-Lehigh series. The Engineers last won in 1889. The Red and Blue's four-game winning streak is the squad's longest since 1959, which was the last year Pennsylvania enjoyed a winning football season. Although only the most optimistic experts had predicted a 3-6 record for this year's team prior to the start of the campaign, a winning season now seems within reach. This Saturday is Homecoming, with the Quakers hosting Princeton at Franklin Field. Princeton is only 2-2 on the season, but, like the Red and Blue, is 2-0 in Ivy League play. Free student ticket booklets are still available at the Franklin Field Ticket Agency (see page six).

National By United Press International

HUMPHREY SAYS FIGHTING LULL IN S. VIETNAM "SIGNIFICANT" Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey said Sunday the current lull in lighting

in South Vietnam "has some significance" and should be a factor in the U.S. decision on whether to stop the bombing of North Vietnam. The Democratic presidential candidate also said the final decision on bombing was for the United States to make, and the Saigon government should "exercise no veto." Humphrey said the decline in large scale fighting in the south during recent weeks "has some significance and it surely ought to be taken into account" by the administration when a decision is made on the bombing. But he emphasized later that this view was his own and he was not trying to "substitute my advice" for that of President Johnson.

JACKIE MARRIES ARISTOTLE ONASSIS Mrs. John F. Kennedy Sunday married Greek shipping multimillionaire

Aristoble Onassis in an intimate Greek Orthodox ceremony on Onassis* private island Skorpios. •

The couple then retreated to Onassis' yacht Christina with a small wedding party.

Vatican sources are "unsure" whether the marriage will be recognized by the Roman Catholic Church. Onassis was previously married to Athina Livanos, who obtained an Alabama divorce.

International By United Press International

COMING WEEK CRUCIAL TO VIETNAM PEACE TALKS The next few days may decide the fate of President Johnson's hopes

for moving toward peace in Vietnam before he leaves office, informed Western diplomats sources said Sunday. U£. negotiators, led by Ambas- sador W. Averell Harriman, were waiting for some word from Hanoi on their proposed package plan which could halt the bombing of North Viet- nam and open the doors to peace. While the United States has kept a dis- ciplined official silence about the plan—and even the fact that it had been advanced--a North Vietnamese delegation member has privately concirmed they received a proposal and that it was under study in Hanoi.

U.S. BOMBERS RENEW ATTACKS IN S. VIETNAM, STRIKE IN NORTH

U£. B52s blasted the A Shau Valley near Hue Sunday in a renewal of attacks against an old Communist lair in South Vietnam's northern reaches. Other jets raided North Vietnam. Operations by American pilots over North Vietnam's southern panhandle were described as "routine" even as UjS. Am- bassador Ellsworth Bunker held another round of urgent talks in Saigon with President Nguyen Van Thieu amid speculation of a "peace breakthrough." Layers of clouds down to 4,000 feet and lower and thunderstorms hampered air" strikes against the panhandle Sunday as pilots relied on radar to guide them through the weather to target areas.

WARSAW PACT TROOPS ON MOVE IN CZECHOSLOVAKIA Warsaw Pact troops were on the move throughout Czechoslovakia

Sunday to new garrison barracks and, in some cases, in apparent pre- paration to evacuate the nation they invaded by night exactly two months ago. As darkness fell Sunday, long convoys of Soviet tanks, trucks, and armored personnel carriers were observed on the main-line tracks into Prague. Czechoslovak television viewers saw their first film clips of the somber ceremony in which Soviet and Czechoslovak leaders signed a treaty providing "temporary" occupation by about 75,000 Soviet soldiers. In the films, i etormed leader Alexander Dubcek stood with his head bowed.

TITO AFFIRMS CONTINUED YUGOSLAV INDEPENDENCE President Tito of Yugoslavia said Sunday the Soviet Union and its allies

were guilty of a "brutal lie" in accusing Yogoslavia of selling out to the West and capitalism. He was interrupted by loud cheers when he told an audience of about 150,000 persons that they "must resist all outside pressures" as they have done in the past. Tito said Yugoslavia needed no outside "assistance" and warned that those who tried to come in uninvited would face a " sharp welcome." Tito complained about Bulgaria's anti-Yugoslav campaign but offered his hand to the Bulgarian leaders. He said the two neighboring com- munist states should be "bulwarks of peace" in the Balkans.

LEBANON PRESIDENT HEADS OFF POLITICAL CRISIS President Charles Helou averted a major political crisis in Lebanon Sunday

by withdrawing his resignation after parliament refused to accept it. Helou submitted his resignation Saturday night after the failure of his premier- designate to form a new cabinet because of squabbling between the various political parties. But the refusal of all political groups in parliament to accept his verbal resignation apparently convinced Helou to change his mind Sunday. He told members of parliament their overwhelming support "encourage me to resume my duties."

PENNSYLVANIA* Vol. LXXXIV No. 61 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Copyright 1968 The Daily Pennsylvanian Monday, October 21, 1968

Spock asks New Left toformfourthparty

BENJAMIN SPOCK Worries about Wallace in 72

photo by PAUL SCHWARTZMAN

Resistance debates future plans, tactics

By RONA ZEVIN

Confrontation with police and types of effective demonstration were the major topics of discussion at a national Resistance conference held at the University on Saturday and Sunday.

Resistance workers from New York, Boston, Philadelphia and smaller cities in the northeast ex- changed experiences and philosophies about the antiwar and antidraft move- ments, trying to reevaluate their own action and make plans for the future.

The conference began with a dis- cussion between Resistance workers and Daniel Finnerty, 1967 College graduate, questioning the effective- ness of confronting police at demon- strations. Finnerty was the author of an article in the first issue of 34th Street magazine, in which he asserted that confrontations do not serve any purpose except to antagonize the police and spectators.

While Finnerty claimed that con-

frontation was often tactically poor, many of the others argued that it could be effective if the press and the public could be made aware that it is the police who started the trouble.

"You and the policeman might know that you are right, but the millions of people reading about it will not know," Finnerty said.

Most of the group agreed that direct confrontation just for the sake of confrontation is useless, unless demonstrators are very sure that they can prove that the police began the trouble. In many cities resistance w *ers noted, they have begun setting up chains of movie photographers who can provide tangible evidence if the demonstrators end up in court.

"The problem," one worker said, "is that just having a film of a cop beating up a demonstrator is not sufficient. The courts cannot tell whether the demonstrator hit the cop

(Continued on page 4)

By ALBAN SALAMAN

Dr. Benjamin Spock Friday night called upon the New Left to organize a fourth party to stop a George Wal- lace Presidential drive in 1972.

"I've conceded the Presidency to Nixon, even though Hubert Humphrey hasn't," the famed pediatriciancom- mented, speaking at the University Museum,

Spock suggested the fourth party be composed of welfare recipients organized on a community level, blacks "with leaders who will pre- sent a united front," liberal pro- fessors and doctors, and students in a well-organized rather than spon- taneous movement.

"We are in for repression for the next four years, so let's or- ganize and educate our sympathizers now," he said. The doctor also called for an end to infighting among leftist groups.

The gathering of approximately 1,000 in the auditorium and an ad- ditional 1,000 outside listening to a public address system was sponsored by the Greater Philadelphia Council of the Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy.

Spock, who is best known for his book, "The Care of Babies," was convicted June 14 of this year for conspiring to advocate illegal re- sistance of the draft. He said he was confident that the Court of Appeals in Boston would overturn the de- cision when his case comes up in January and he said he was prepared to bring his case to the U.S.Supreme Court if necessary.

"I'm not trying to be a martyr and I really don't want to go to jail," he asserted, "but if I do go to jail, I will be a thorn in the government's side."

Spock said nothing about the draft system during his entire speech.

Spock did say that of those ac-

cused of conspiring along with him some had never met and others who did work together did not conduct their activities secretly.

He told the very friendly audience that the philosophy he represented was a minority view in the United States and it was very important "to win the uncommitted people to our side."

He praised the demonstration at the Pentagon last October and the incidents at the Democratic Conven- tion in August for "awakening the young and radicalizing their par- ents."

Spock suggested winning the police to the peace movement. He added that insulting police during a dem- onstration only gives them a greater sense of self-justification for their actions. He asked protesters to have more self-discipline and avoid con- frontations.

The doctor instructed his listen- ers "to get up and do something," to explain the essence of the can- didacy of George Wallace, and to "spread the word that fascism is not democracy."

For a good portion of his speech, the white-haired 65-year-old pedi- atrician told anecdotal stories.

Calling himself, "just a pedia- trician who joined the peace move- ment in 1962," he tickled the audience with stories of campaigning for President Johnson in 1964, his en- counters with New York City police in a demonstration before a draft induction center, and how he learned of his indictment by glancing at a fellow subway rider's newspaper.

He said one of the advantages of his activities was that the Soviet Union published one of his books on baby care.

All news and sports staff mem- bers and heelers must attend a meeting at 7 P.M. Tuesday at The Daily Pennsylvanian. This meeting is mandatory.

Noble convicted of manslaughter By STEPHEN MARMON

Former University student Rich- ard J. Noble was convicted Friday of three counts of involuntary man- Slaughter for his acts at the Delta Tau Delta fire last year.

A seven-man, five-women jury deliberated for four hours beginning late Friday afternoon before acquit- ing Noble of charges of murder and arson, but finding the tall blond young man guilty of involuntary man- slaughter.

Noble's attorney, Bernard L. Segal, was given the right to file for a new trial by Judge James T. McDermott after the verdict was announced at 9 P.M. in the City Hall courtroom. Segal said the motion for a new trial will be based on Mc- Dermott's redefinition of the crimes to the jury when the 12-member panel requested a redefinition of the charges just 20 minutes before reach- ing their decision. It is expected that the motion for a new trial, which will also be based on the question of intent to commit the crimes, will be filed very shortly.

If the motion for a new trial is not granted, Noble could receive from one and one-half to three years

(Continued on page 3) RICHARD NOBLE, in glasses, smiles and shakes hands

" friends outside of Room 453 of City Hall Thursday. next day. Noble, 20, a former Inside the courtroom tht

photo by KEN College student, was found guilty on three counts untary manslaughter in the deaths of three person Delta Tau Delta fraternity fire Dec. 10.

ROUSER of invol- s at the

Issues sharpen in ROTC debate By BARBARA SL0PAK

As the College Committee on Instruction debates whether to discredit the military and naval science programs on campus, two concerned roommates tried to clarify pro and cons of the issue in a weekend meeting.

Elliot (Chip) Sober, one of three seniors who drafted the Student Committee on Undergraduate Education (SCUE) report calling for removal of credit for ROTC and NROTC, and College senior Robert Peck, ROTC brigade commander and co- author of a dissenting ROTC report to be published this week, clashed in a discussion of the SCUE- ROTC controversy.

Peck said a liberal arts education "talks about man and his potential" and stressed that military science as a discipline has a place in that ed- ucation.

"Man has an unfortunate propensity toward violence and the study of institutionalized force

is quite relevant to a liberal education," the highest-ranking ROTC undergraduate said.

Peck added that ROTC helped "preserve the civilian completion of the army," noting the UJ5. defenses rested "on a tradition of using civilians for the military rather than developing a pro- fessional armed force."

Sober said it was not the relevance or service- value of the ROTC program that the SCUE com- mittee questioned but its position outside of the structure of the University.

"One of our larger concerns is the idea of the University as an institution," he said. "The fact that military science may be important is secondary. The University should give credit for only those courses it is financially responsible for."

The instructors hired in the military and naval science courses are paid by the Army and Navy, not by the University. Provost Goddard can approve

or disapprove candidates whose names have been submitted by a list made available by the head- quarters of the First Army Division.

Peck said military science was in a unique position because instructors who were not cur- rently in the Army could not be acquainted with the newest military tactics.His roommate questioned this statement, saying the argument might be ex- tended to say only field economists could teach Wharton School economics courses.

"The University is only secondary, not fund- amental in the selection of ROTC faculty," Sober said.

"If a guy's in Vietnam and he doesn't like it, the army can't give him the chance to apply for

Continued on page 4

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"On Your Toes, Men Viee Presidential Candidate Coming Iu"

Save the Factory God knows there are few enough things to do for

recreation in Philadelphia. When the annual flower slow at the Civic Center and the Devon Horse Show disappear for the season, entertainment seekers are left pretty much out in the cold.

Far from being a source of embarrassment to the city fathers, however, the lack of anything to do in town seems to be the most desirable state of affairs.

To wit: The Electric Factory, the one and only rock-light

club in the entire city of 2,000,000 people, is being threaten- ed with extinction on the basis of several trumped-up charges hurled by the police.

The Electric Factory is on trial right now for its sur- vival. Charged with disturbing the peace (for its loud music),. contributing to the delinquency of minors (for allegedly allowing persons too young to do so stay after city curfew), and harboring known criminals (because a 16-year old runaway was found hiding in the crowd at the Factory).

In testimony in the trial last week, it was established by several witnesses that 1) neighbors of the club were not bothered by the noise, and 2) that complaints of bothersome racket were urged by police officers and later withdrawn by the complainants.

Beneath the pros and cons of the case, there is a basic issue. Simply, it seems that the old ward heeler- types who run Philadelphia do not want a club like the Electric Factory around. The cries of "hippie!" and "drugs!" and "perversion!" seems to fill the minds of these men. Rock music is automatically associated with all its possible bad aspects, just as motorcycles were anathema to straight citizens until recently.

A casual cruise by the Factory on one of its open nights will reveal the forces stacked against the place. Police patrol cars are parked on every available inch of con- crete. Foot police pace up and down in front of the club's entrance. But there has not been a single incident which would indicate the need for such massive police presence.

Leaving the question of its policy towards customers aside, the Factory deserves a chance to live for the sole reason that at no other place can Philadelphians (both permanent and transient) hear such groups as Cream, Procol Harum, Jimi Hendrix Experience, Moby Grape; for that matter, there is nowhere else in the city for local groups such as the Edison Electric to get work.

City fathers should remember that the old political power play isn't as easy as it used to be. They should also remember that the world's yardstick for quality is not their own outdated and antediluvian taste.

CHARLES A. KRAUSE Editor-in-Chief

BERL N. SCHWARTZ Managing Editor

MARK LIEBCRMAN, Editorial Chairman, ERIC T. TURKINGTON, Editorial Cnairman XLLLUAM R. BURCHILL, JR., News Editor; WILLIAM K. MANDEL, Associate Editor, BARRY JORDAN, Sports Editor; STEPHEN D. RUTTER, Executive Editor, MMMMVPH KAKLAN Photography Editor; PHILIP S. ARKOW, Associate Features Editor; NORMAN H. ROOS. Associate Sports Editor.

STANLEY H. BERKE Business Manager

ELLEN M. COIN, Financial Manager;

KEN R. DROSSMAN, Advertising Manager;

JILL P. MESIROV. Production Manager

RONA ZEVIN Issue editor

MARVIN DASH Night editor

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Letters to the editor iiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiMMHiiiiiuiiiiiiuiiiin

If you've got the time, we've got the car.

can be des- the following

SCUE'S REBUTTAL

Sin As one of the authors of the SCUE Report on Army and Navy ROTC, I would like to concisely pre- sent the assumptions, logic, and general nature of one of the arguments which was used in our recom- mendation that ROTC be denied academic credit toward any degree at the University. Once the basis of this point of view is known, 1 hope a fruitful discussion and debate will ensue superior to the innuendo, emotionalism, and misinterpretation that have been the case until now.

My first assumption is this: If a course or course is to receive credit in any college in the Univer- sity, then the department in which that course, or courses, is offered must be a part of the University as an institutional structure. This " in- stitutional structure" cribed, in part, in way:

1. University faculty are salaried by the University.

2. University faculty are subject to the tenure system.

3. University faculty are free to choose those textbooks and cur- riculum which they feel will best suit the subject matter that they wish to present.

4. University faculty are hired and fired by members of their own department who act as representatives of the Univer- sity as a whole.

Each of these "faculty-characteris- tics" is not the case with regard to the faculty of the ROTC programs:

1. ROTC faculty are salaried by the military.

2. ROTC faculty are professional soldiers and are assigned for a tour of duty at a particular campus ROTC program for a period usually not in excess of three or four years.

3. ROTC faculty are required to use textbooks and curriculum designed by the appropriate branch of the Armed Forces for use in any ROTC course.

4*". Although the University is per- mitted to review appointments made to ROTC posts in the University, this is usually only a formality. And even if it were not, the fact remains that the real power of appointment rests with the military.

Since the ROTC departments are manned, salaried, and structured by an institution other than the Univer- sity, ROTC is institutionally inde- pendent of the University.

If this is the case, I feel th« ROTC no more deserves academic credit than does a course given by General Electric Co., the State De- partment, or SDS. Despite the possible academic value to be found in the courses which these institut- ions might offer, they should not receive University credit because they are not within the institutional structure of the University as an aggregate of departmentalized aca- demic disciplines. A student should be absolutely free to pursue any or

all of these programs. But none of these programs should receive University credit.

That ROTC does or does not contribute to the welfare of this country is irrelevant to this argu- ment. That ROTC does or does not present a worthwhile forum for free inquiry so necessary in a University is irrelevant to this argument. That ROTC courses may or may not be well taught and designed is irrelevant

to this argument. The argument pre- sented above, although only one of several possible approaches, deals only with the institutional structure of ROTC and the institutional struct- ure of the University.

It is because of this institutional independence of the departments of Military and Naval Science from the University, that I feel that ROTC courses should not receive academic credit at the University.

Elliot R. Sober Col. '69

The Daily Pennsy 1 vanian is published Monday through Friday at Philadelphia, Pa. during the fall and spring semesters, except during vacation periods. One issue published' in August, Subscriptions may be ordered at Sergeant Hall, 34th said Chestnut Bts. at the'rate of $10.00 per annum. Second class postage paid at .Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104.Phonea: (215) 594-7935.

AN OPENING

Sir: Students have long been clamor- ing for an active membership on Faculty and Administration com- mittees. This year the students cry has been answered and many such committees are "opening up." A difficult question now faces the student body, namely, how should students be chosen to sit on these committees.

Let rnr ■aagrrci° hriof'y ^namrhnTr what the purpose ot Having students on these committees is , for the method of selection must be consistant with the original goals. The philosophy of student participation is one of "opening up" the University, of having the students' voice play a meaningful role in the decision making process. It is important to note that no student or small group of students can claim to represent the student opinion on any given issue for the simple rea- son that there is no unified, collective student interest. In the opinion of Vice-Provost Rusell at least 20 students would be needed to paint an adequate picture of the range of student opinion. The role of the student on a committee is, then, to present a student view, to present a new perspective on a problem, not to

present the student view. Keeping this in mind, what criteria

can be used to judge who would make a good student member of a faculty or administration committee? In- telligence? Aggressiveness? Elo- quence? Interest? Appearance? In my mind only one criterion can and should be used: interest. Any student who is interested in a given area, be it crriculum, athletics, com- munity relations, or any other field, deserves the chance to have an equal opportunity to sit on a given committee, for his contribution has the same potential value as that of any other interested student, regard- less of all other factors.

I am told that next Monday the UPSG will pass a bill setting up a committee composed of leaders of campus organizations which will in- terview those students interested in a given committee and then decide who is most fit to serve on it. This bill must not pass. It defeats the ideal for which students have been fighting for - an "open" University. Such a committee perpetuates the cliquish- ness so prevalent on this campus. Those students who are able to favorably impress the "leaders" in a short interview or who are the leaders' friends will be selected.

What happens to the underclass- man who is awed by the senior campus leaders, or the student who simply interviews poorly? We have all been through admissions interviews and realize their shortcomings, but at least these interviews have some remote relationship to desired qualities in the candidate. Here, there is no such relationship - the potential value of a students contribution to a committee can not be measured by a group of student leaders in a brief interview.

I propose the following alternative:

1) All student openings on faculty or administration committees should be published in the DP along with a short description of the committee's func- tion. 2) Any interested student should submit his name and class to the UPSG. 3) A member of UPSG will then randomly select the appropriate number of students, some from each class. This system will not work for only one reason: if students who are not truly interested apply for committee openings for ulterior motives. This may well happen to some small degree, but inherent in student power or student participation is student responsibility. If we as students want to take part in the University decision making process, we must assume that we are capable of acting responsibly.

My system of selection will truly "open up" the University. It will benefit not only the students but also the faculty and administration, for they will get the closest thing to a cross-section of student opinion as

possible. Granted, we may occassionallyget

a student on a committee who will make no contribution at all, while the UPSG system more or less guarantees that the students selected will, if they do nothing else, participate in

discussions. We must make a value judgement as to whether we, as students, want a truly open University in which all students have an equal chance to participate in the decision making process and risk the chance of a few uninterested appointees, or whether we want a "half-opened" University in which only a small group of students, "the articulate few" or even worse the friends of the

leaders, are given a fair chance to participate.

I for one prefer the former. Think about it.

Michael Lehr College 1969

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Monday, October 21, 1968 The Daily Pennsylvania!! Page 3

PROFESSOR GERALD A. POGUE Of The Sloan School Of Management, Massachusetts

Institute Off Technology, Will Be At The Placement Office On Friday, October 25.

students interested in pursuing graduate work in the

Noble convicted of manslaughter All

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EMORY NOBLE, father of the defendant in the Delta Tau Delta fire case, lights a pipe on leaving the City Hall court- room Thursday. He is a janitor in the Orofino, Idcho, high school.

A DELT FRATERNITY BROTHER accompanies Richard Noble as he leaves the courtroom for a lunch break, a daily routine during the last two weeks for the for- mer College student facing murder, involuntary manslaughter, and arson charges.

(Continued from page 1)

on each of the three counts. Pro- bation or a suspended sentence is possible.

Before the jury retired Friday afternoon they heard an emotional summation by Segal and a quiet concluding speech by Assistant Dis- trict Attorney William Stevens.

Stevens recommended the jury bring in a verdict of guilty of mur- der in the second degree. However, McDermott said that if he was sitting on the panel he would vote for a not guilty verdict on the murder and arson charges, which is what the jury did.

In his summation Friday morning, Segal, his voice about to break, pleaded with the jury to "let the tragedy that began Dec. 9, 1967, end here today."

On that night Noble lit a match to a paper snowman in the living room of the house at 3533 Locust St. The fire quickly spread, and by the time it ended in the cold early Sunday morning, two members of the fraternity, Kent Smith and John Grochowski, as well as high school student Susan Sagendorff, were dead, and the house itself had been gutted.

Five days after the fire Noble, a College sophomore from Orofino, Idaho, was arrested. He was later indicted on counts of murder, volun- tary and involuntary manslaughter, arson, and setting fire to personal property.

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The three charges of voluntary manslaughter, which involves a kill- ing made in the heat of passion under provocation, were dismissed by Mc- Dermott just before the jury began their deliberations. The charge of setting fire to personal property was also dropped when the judge sus- tained a demurrer by Segal that the prosecution had not formally proved that the property burned had a value of more than $25.

The courtroom Friday was very crowded, as it had been throughout the two week trial, with an audience including many students from the

University and Law School. Noble's parents and his former high school teacher, Mrs. Nancy McNicholls, sat in the front row, just a few feet away from the broad-shouldered 20 year old, who was neatly dressed in an olive three-piece suit.

Noble had taken the witness stand Thursday and noted that he had had 15 glasses of champagne, as well as several glasses of scotch and bour- bon, the night of the formal winter party which ended tragically. A pyschologist called by the defense testified earlier that Noble had drunk so much alcohol that he did not know

what he was doing. Other witnesses at the trial in-

cluded many members of Delta Tau Delta, as well as fire department officials. The defense called in num- erous witnesses, including the mayor of Noble's home town, to provide character evidence.

Segal in his summation pleaded for an acquital on all counts. Stevens argued that such a verdict would be " absolutely ludicrous and a miscar- riage of justice." After the jury an- nounced the verdict, Stevens said that he was not displeased and that "Noble can consider himself very fortunate."

-

DEFENSE WITNESSES in Noble's behalf, three of Noble's testimony heard last week. The testimony of friends, in- fraternity brothers, confer with defense attorney Bernard eluding fraternity brothers, was crucial to Segal's strategy L. Segal (wearing raincoat) before taking the stand during trying to prove Noble's lack of intent to injure.

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Page 4 The Daily Pennsylvania!!

o

ROTC-SCUE (Continued from page 1)

an ROTC teaching position and leav. his post," Peck countered, explaining why it is necessary for the Army to submit available names.

Sober criticized that the syllabus for ROTC courses is prepared by the Army'and not by a University de- partment. Peck admitted the outlines were prescribed by the Army but in- sisted that professors in advanced courses could structure material freely.

Only advanced courses receive credit at the University. Introductory courses, where materials and texts are assigned by the Army, receive no credit here.

Peck mentioned the campus de- partment of naval science was restructuring its program itself, although it had to submit the program for Navy approval.

"When you come down to it, the real approval comes from them, not the University," Sober remarked.

In the SCUE report, the committee criticized the necessity of ROTC and NROTC program participants to take a "loyalty oath."

Peck said the discussion of the loyalty oath was "a large and fatal flaw" in the SCUE report. He said he only had to sign an oath of al- legiance, "the same as any kid en- listing in the Army," when he joined the program.

He called the security question- naire, a list of organizations con- sidered subversive with which a third-year contract student must de- clare* any affiliation, "a matter of the Army, outside the realm of the ROTC program."

"It has nothing to do with the institutional framework of ROTC. You can take advanced courses and not sign the security questionnaire. It is to protect the internal security of the U.S. Army," Peck explained.

Monday, October 21, 1968 Affiliation with an alleged sub-

versive organization may mean an ROTC participant will not receive a commission when he enters the Army, according to Peck.

Peck said cadets have been warned that affiliation with Students for a Democratic Society, an organization recently criticized by J. Edgar Hoo- ver, may lead to difficulty in obtaining a security clearance in the future. "This is clearly a limitation of a student's freedom of expression," Sober said.

The two roommates came to odds over a point expressed in the recently published NROTC dissenting report which drew a distinction between the military and naval programs and the courses which the departments of military and naval science teach.

Non-ROTC or NROTC members can take courses in military or naval science and the NROTC report postulated that the courses exist to a degree apart from the actual training programs. Sober said it is impossible to draw a distinction be- tween the courses and the program.

The Committee on Instruction of the College began discussing removal of credit from ROTC two weeks ago.

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Since the publication of the SCUE report there have been several debates between students and faculty members concerning this issue.

The NROTC report, published by undergraduate midshipmen, was pub- lished last week.

Peck said the ROTC report, which he said "is not a direct rebuttal of the SCUE report" but an explanation of the ROTC report, does not represent an official statement of the Army unit. The report was pre- pared byPeckandAlCandell.aWhar- ton senior and ROTC participant.

Peck was appointed cadet Lieu- tenant Colonel, the highest ROTC office, earlier this year.

Resistance (Continued from page 1)

first. In order for films to help us at all, we must have continuous movies of the demonstration."

Another speaker suggested that cameramen follow the well-known demonstrators, because they will usually be the ones that police pick on.

Everyone at the conference seemed to agree on the need to do

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something to change the attitude of the police.

"We are developing a military establishment of police," one Resis- tance member charged. "They are getting new machine guns, and they like being an army."

Many Resistance members ex- pressed fear that police are organizing against demonstrators, and that brutality is not the result of specific antagonisms or events happening during a demonstration, but is planned and rehearsed before hand. One worker said he had proof that the police chiefs of most majorcities held meetings with military leaders over the summer to discuss counterinsur- gency tactics.

"Because the police have been organizing, they are standing together in the courts," another speaker asserted.

The group decided that lawsuits brought against a city or an entire police force are doomed to in- effectiveness. Suits against an indi- vidual policeman, however, might be more effective in altering attitudes of brutality toward demonstrators, the conferees suggested.

"The individual cop does not

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separate himself from the crowd," someone said. "If he is singled out, and feels personally threatened he may realize his situation."

The Resistance conference also focused on the question of future actions. Many members siad that the "old types" of demonstrations are becoming useless. Several of them suggested that Resistance stop placing so much emphasis on draft card turn-ins.

The group unanimously agreed that mass actions such as the April, 1967, march in New York or the October, 1967, demonstration at the Pentagon are no longer feasible.

"Many of the people who joinedus then now seriously believe that the administration is making a serious effort to end the war, and they don't want anything to interfere," one worker siad.

Several workers also asserted that ordinary protests no longer lend the sense of community that they did four or five years ago. "It is this sense of community that drew many of us into the movement," one person said. "Someone who has recently turned against the war does not find this feelingi, and hesitates to join in."

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1361. THE HUDSON RSV23 VA-i.2Y. Oy John Red. Over 275 magnificent photo; depicting :-.J history, iifc - - scenic beauty of America's most romantic river; tie farms, stee- ples, houses, bridges, shipping, trees, etc. 9'/a x 12%. Orig. Pub. at $iS.OO. . 0;;.y 55.95

3C43 GREAT PAINTINGS JAOM 7.-U PUSHXIN MUSEUM, ay K. M. Ma.tskaya. With 100 hand-tippod plates in Full Color Sumptuous volume, 'O-V* x 13, containing reproductions of famous masterpieces from Egyplo-ftorr.an Faiyum portraits of about tne second century through a wonarous array of Itanan, Dutch, Flemish, British and a magnif.cent all-inclusive pageant of French paint.ngs of all schools. Puo at $25 00 Only $14 9$

9597.' TAU^S' GUIDE TG OIL PAINTING. By p. Taubes. Illus. in Color i Monochrome. r„r,-.ous author.;/ on oil painting techniques gives a complete i-volumc course for beginners with easy-to-follow procedures, color charts materials, etc. Pub. at $6.95. Only S3.49

9547. HOGARTH TO CRUIKSKAls.:: SOCIAL CHANGE IN GRAPHIC SATIRE. By M. D. George. Over 200 illus., 14 in Full Color. Beautiful volume covering the period from 1720 to 1833 in which the art of caricature flourished. Included are reproductions of the finest work of the period, amongst them Hogarth, Rowlandson, Giliray, and the CruikshanKS. 9'/« x 12. Pub. at $20.00. Only S9.95

C637. HISTORY OF ARCK.TZCVJ.-.;. By P. Jeccjuet. Over 100 pages of illustrations in beautiful color and monochrome. A fascinating account from the earliest Madltsrranean civili- zations to modern structures in ail parts of the world. 6:/4 x IO'/j. Pub. at $5.95. O.-.iy S2.93

9533. NEW TENDENCIES IN ART. 2y A. Pellegrini. 303 illus. in full color and black & white. Eeuutlfai volui-.e on the work of contemporary artists in ali countries providing a basic M-^»..>"^t— *»a o~- A-» M.... IL.I..^.. D-A.

gremed linn Rnthkn Gnttliob AH Sninh^rHt n. r

Only $5.95

• 9340. DRAWING THE FIGUA2 F20M TC? TOfaTOE. By Arthur Zaidenperq. Covers all the irr.por.-nt aspects of figure drawmq with stcp-by-stcp instructions and illustra- tions. Incl. practical information on i-lunce, perspective, proportion, anatomy, lighting and shading plus drawing from casts, photographs and models. Pub. at $3.95. Or.ly SI.93

2313. CA."LY CK.~!ST:A:; AR7. 3/ W. F. Volbach. 250 Full-Pago Illus., 34 In Full Color, handsome volurr.u, 9'/j x I2'/I, containing penetrating, authoritative discussions of individual works of the lato .loman anc. -y:antine Empires from 3rd to 7th centuries. Tha striking colors of Illumi- nated manuscripts and textiles novor have beon mcro faithfully reproduced, ar.d t-.j beauty and excellent text make this an important book for ail art lovars. Pub. at $25.03. O.-.iy 5;<.vS

9537. MASTERPIECES OF JAPANESE SCRSEN PAINTING. The Momoyama Period—Lata 16th Century, uy Jon C. Covell Portfolio size III'/, x I6'A). printed in beautiful Full Color with tipped-.n plates that may be removed for framing.. Pub. at $10.00. Or.iy S5.9S

9053. COLOR MANUAL FOR A.TTiSTS. By A. L. Guptill. 15 full page plates of color charts plus numerous alack & white illustrations in this classic book on the use of color in o.l and watercolor painting. More than 60 exercises on the various techniques of mixing, blending, glazing, narmony, illusion, textures, etc. Pub. at 510.00. Only S3.95

3966. TIEPOIO. By V. Oivellato. 44 Pa.nt.ngs in Vivid Full Color plus Drawings in Duotone. Brilliant study of the !8th Century Venetian master filled with examples of his varied subiects- sacred, profane, |OVial, dramatic, scenes of ornate visual opulence. Informative text and detailed chronoiogy 7'/a x B'/a. Only $2.93

9S47. LCTTSa DESIGN In TSo Gropl.ic Arts. By M. Loach. Profusely Illus. Complote roforonce book on stylos of type, hand lettering and photo-procoss lettering with practical examples in display advertising, package design, posters, and many forms of hand lettering. 6>/, x 12. Pub. at $12.50.

0..!y 55.95

1«* ^

PERIOD pages of

8731. THE CONNOISSIUR'S CO.'.CPLSTE GUIDES to English A.-.tic.uas. Illus. with 576 r

photos with many line drawings, diagrams t prints. Most comprehensive volume on English antiques by experts in each field of the arts and crafts including tho customs and costumes of past years—furniture & furnishings, art architecture, silver, china, clothing, etc. 1536 pages. Orig. Pub. in 6 vols. at $52.00.

Now. complete 1 vol. cd. Only SI2.95

I

understanding of Pop Art, New Abstraction, Pro- gramed Art, Happonings, etc. including works of tviotherwell, de Kooning, Rothko, Gottlieb, Ad Reinhardt, etc. Pun *t $12.50.

9521. THE ARTIST-S SKETCHBOOK AMD ITS USES. By Rex Brandt. Over 100 illus. 115 in color). Dynamic j^proach to the sketch and its use in developing the final painting. Best light-weight equipment for travelinq, techniques, colors, piqments, inks, etc. with notable examples from the works of Geo. Post, Joan Brandt, and otners. Pub. at $8.50. Only S3.69

6536. AN IHU5TRATE3 HISTORY Or FURNISHING, from the Renaissance to the 2CtS Century. By Mcrio Praz. 400 illustra- tions, about 100 in color. A lively and informative history of home interior! through 5 centuries magnificently illustrated with hundreds of paintings, drawings and prints many in full color. 9;/j x I2M. Pub. at $25.00. Only $14.95

9427. BAUMEISTER: Life and Work. By W. Grohmann. Long overdue study of this Important artist's life and ex- tended development. 1.143 illus. with 53 plates in full color covers his palntinqs. drawings, graphic works and theater desiqns. Pub. at $35.00. Only 522.95

9529. ENGLISH FURNITURE Fro* Goihic to Sheraton. By H. Cescinsky. Over 900 illustrations. Mammoth history of the development of English furniture and woodwork from the 15th century to the classic revival of the early 19th with a wealth of pictures of chairs, tables, chests, cabinets mirro.-s, tapestries, screens, clocks, etc. 9 x l2»/4. Long out of print selling at high premium prices. rjn|y $6.95

9S44. WOODEN IMAGES. Sy N. Laliberta & M. Jones. 296 pictures. 32 In Full Color. Creative handbook for workinq in wood-portraits, figures, animals, puppets, toys plaques games, etc. Pub. at $7.50. bnly $3.95

8B90. tAROUSSE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF P.-.EHISTORIC AND ANCIENT ART. Ed. by Rene Huyghe. From the earliest manmade objects to the magnificent achievements of Greece and Rome, magnificent world-wide art nistory-750 Illus., 32 in Full Color—covers painting, sculpture, architecture, the "minor" arts in Asia, Europe, Africa, India and the Pacific. B'/a x IP/2. Pub. at $17.95. Only 59.95

C°-<^

9539. OBJECTIVE DRAWING TECHNIQUES. New ap- proaches to Perspective ar.d Intuitive Space. Sy C. Burnett. Over 350 illus. including 140 diagrams. Stimulating, new method for learning drawing especially deslqncd for stu- dents at the colleqa level. Pub. at $12.00. Only $4.95

9367. COMPLETE COURSE IN OIL PAINTING. By OHe Nord- mark. 200 Illus. with 14 in Fuil Color. Steo-by-step guidance in traditional and new methods of oil paintinq—tools and materials, uses of light and color, etc. Orig. pub in 4 Vols. at $15.80. Complete 1 Vol. Ed., Only S3.95

8223. Art and Archaeology: DEITIES AND DOLPHINS. 3y N Glueck. Illus. with over 400 photos plus maps 4 drawings. The noted explorer-archaeologist reports his discoveries in present day Transiordan, the land of the ancient Nabateans in the 1st centuries B.C. and A.D. He reveals their art and culture, com- merce, relationships, likenesses and differences with the Ju- dears. Syrians, Perthians, Egyptians and Romans. 8 x lO'-i. Pub. at $15.00. Only $6.95

2310. RUSSIAN ART: 1863-1922. By Camilla Gray. 257 Illus.. 24 in Full Color. 10 x 11. The first book to examine the Russian contribution to the modern movement in art and architecture. Exciting, important volume with such artists as: AAalevich, Tat- lin, Podchenko and others depicted in full stature. Pub. at $25.00. Only $14.95

9122. THE SPLENDOUR OF AFRICA. By D. C. Steffen 54

howPino*thP.h0,°1' 2? '" fU" C°'°r- Sparkli/g, beautiful voTum. by wild ^2£S7 efft °- A,ric?-th8 9reat parks inhabited and ml™ J" .k a S£**L?£ '.-ndseepe. cities, castles Pub aSmtf1 r'b#l "d ,h,ir CUI,<""'. •»<=• 8'/a x II. ruo. ar Jis.oo. 0n)y J^J

9591. THE TECHNIQUE OF ETCHING AND ENGRAVING. By J. Brundson. Illus. with 40 photos & 68 drawings. Basic processes from Studio layout to techniques of aquatint grounds, relief etching and lithographic crayon, engraving, color etching as well as wood-cutting, silk screon and dry point. Pub. at $12.50. Only 53.95

9395. 5000 YEARS OF ART G7- MESOPOTAMIA. By E. Strom- manger. Photos by M. Hirmer. 324 illus. incl. 44 Fuil Colcr plates. Bronze, ceramics, alabaster, architectural ruins of

ZZH „■■>!/ * JUHdaT%n-,,,iLCui,ur" in archaeological study. 9Va x I2y4. Pub. at $30.00. Only S19.95

•*SL- PA-'NT"??. FO" ALL "V "**¥« Levy. With 87 reproductions. 13 in color. A complete guide for the amateur and student atrist. Pub. at $6.95. 9 On?y S3 95

University of

Pennsylvania

Bookstore

3729 LOCUST

8779 CIVILIZATION PAST AND PRESENT. By Wall- bank, Taylor A Bailkey. 2 Vols in I. Hundrods of Pictures * Maps in Color A Monochrome. Huge book surveying the history of man—his artistic, political, economic, social and religious activities-from earliest times to the pres- ent, in Europe, Asia, Africa and the Americas. 650 poqes. Pub. at $10.60. Only S2.98

Monday, October 21, 1968

LA5-3375 The Daily PennsyJ^ifl Page 5

l$m ERIC ANDERSEN THURS-SUN.0CT24-27-ALL AGES 874 LAHCASTEK

SRYNKAWR.

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The CPO CLASSIC OUTERSHIRT If you've studied the classics, you'll know this is one of them! It's tailored in choice, rugged wool with long tail you can wear in or out to suit your style. Neat, button-down pockets . . . your choice of windowpane checks, club or English glen plaids. Sizes S.M.L, XL. $15.00 Prep Sizes 12-20. $13.00

Jacob Reed Sons I. Goldberg - P

OFFICIAL NOTICES

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY GRAD- UATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION: Mr. Michael J. Horowitz, Assistant to the Dean of New York University Graduate School of Business Administration, will be on campus Thursday, to interview students planning graduate study in business administration. For ap- pointment, call Office of Fellowship Information and Study Programs Abroad, 18 College Hall, Ext. 8348.

UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER COLLEGE OF BUSINESS ADMI- NISTRATION: A representative of the University of Rochester College of Business Administration will be on campus Wednesday, to interview

students planning graduate study in business administration. For ap- pointment, call Office of Fellowship Information and Study Programs Abroad, 18 College Hall, Ext. 8348.

CAMPUS AGENDA

CIC: Coffee hour, 4 P.M. today, CIC office, Rm. 25, basement, Irvine. All invited.

COMMON SENSE COALITION: Rally at 11:00 A.M. tomorrow, Houston Hall Plaza, to defend Army and Navy ROTC, Fraternities, Soroities, Football, etc.

COMMUTERS: Come to Coffee Hour. Tuesday. 11:00-12:00 A.M. Penniman Room. Houston Hall.

INTER TRIPS: Plan a picnic for the afternoon of Oct. 26

- Phil hilad

adelphia elphia

COMMUTERS! Meet at the Coffee Hour During The Free Hour

Tuesday 11 to 12 Penniman Rm. Houston Hall

ALL INVITED SPONSORED BY C.A.B.

F

There's a service right here on the Penn campus that can help you do just that.

We call it our Insurance Counseling Service. And it's designed to help you solve your insurance problems in any or all of the following areas: automobile, homeowners, marine, personal catastrophe or professional lia- bility needs.

We study your present insurance policies in terms of today's stand- ard of living and determine if you have adequate coverage.

Through a plan such as this, we can then offer faculty and staff members complete coverage at attractive low rates. This plan is underwrit- ten by Pacific Employers Insurance Company, a subsidiary of the Insurance Company of North America.

A convenient, salary-deduction payment plan is available that lets you save because no interest or carrying charges are added to your premium.

We offer the opportunity to share in cash dividends. Dividends de- clared are based upon the combined experience of those participating in the program. For example, just last March,our auto- MHHMHHHHHHHHHHH

mobile policyholders received dividends in the amount of 14.7% of their annual premium.

For more information on this unique service, call EVergreen 2-2800 (or University extension 5850) to set up an appointment... or stop in at 3725 Chestnut Street. Or, send coupon for a free brochure.

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(Saturday.) Joint trip to Winterthur Gardens with International House. Cost minimal. Register by Wednesday at the office of International Services, 36th and Locust. All welcome.

MEN'S RESIDENCE' BOARD: Discount tickets for Rangers-Flyers hockey game, October 31 5:00-7:00 P.M., Houston Hall.

WOMEN'S SAILING TEAM: Any girls interested in sailing at Princeton, October 26-27, please con- tace Tracy Sutro, EV 2-5602.

ACTIVITY NOTICES

CHORAL SOCIETY: All members - sharply at 7 P.M. - bring Verdi - tonight in Christian Association - also bring Bach tonight.

CIC - GRAYS FERRY PROJECT: Meeting for Grays Ferry Project, CIC office. Room 23, Irvine, 6:30 P.M. today.

CIRCLE K: Circle K board meet- ing, tonight, 7:30, Room 10, Houston Hall.

ENGINEERING STUDENT AD- VISORY COMMITTEE: Meeting

tonight, 6:30, Room 266, Towne Building.

EXPERIMENT IN INTERNA- IONAL LIVING: Important meeting for all who have been abroad with the Experiment, Wed., October 23, 4 P.M., Room 1, Houston Hall. If you cannot attend, call EV 2-0699.

GERMAN CLUB: Meeting to- morrow, 11 A.M., 303 College Hall. All interested in German are welcome.

HEXAGON SENIOR SOCIETY: Meeting Wed., 3:00 P.M., Room 17, Houston Hall.,

I.A.A. MODEL U.N.: M.U.N.dele- gates. Nation packets and procedural information available today, I.A.A. office, basement, Christian Associa- tion, 1-5 P.M.

OUTING CLUB: Meeting tonight, 7, second floor lounge, Christian Association. Square dance, hiking to be planned. All welcome.

REPERTORY THEATER OF THE AIR: Actors, and Would-bes: Open try-outs for Rod Serling's Escape Route - 7 tonight in Houston Hall, Rm. 1.

SOCIETY FOR THE ADVANCE- MENT OF MANAGEMENT: Business meeting today, 3 P.M. Dietrich Hall, W-124.

SOPHOMORE WOMEN: What do you want done at Penn? Tell your UPSG Representatives - 4 P.M. to- morrow, Houston Hall Aud.

STUDENTS FOR CLARK: Work for Sen. Clark, 3-6:00, 6-9:00, Room 33, C.A.

UPSG COMMITTEE ON COM- MITTEES: Mandatory meeting today, 3 P.M., UPSG office: Brown, Cody, Corbet, Gerstenfeld, Heiser, Kalin- sky, LeWinter, Mahon, Marmon, Pierce, Stokes, Weber.

UPSG COMMUNICATIONS COM- MITTEE: Meeting for all members and others interested, 7:30 P.M. Wednesday, UPSG Office, Irvine.

URBAN AFFAIRS MAJOR: Any students interested in forming an urban affairs major, please attend an exploratory meeting 11 A.M. tomorrow, Houston Hall.

YOUNG DEMOCRATS: Tuesday - 11 A.M. - Room 1, Houston Hall. Constitutional Amendments to be considered.

Football (Continued from page 6)

be as sloppy as the field was. On the first sets of downs, Penn incurred two 15-yard penalties, one nullifying a 25-yard completion to Blumenthal. A Lehigh lineman was hit by the second Sudhaus punt, however, and Quaker guard Joe Armao recovered the pigskin on the Engineer 14. A Zbrzeznj first down pass to Blu- menthal was intercepted at the two, but the visitors were deep in their own territory.

Burrell took the ensuing punt, returning it 20 yards to the En- gineer 35, and a Sudhaus fumble recovered by Blumenthal on the six set up Santini's fourth TD of the season. Soph Eliot Berry connected on his tenth straight extra point attempt, making the spore 31-0.

The reserves were stopped at the Lehigh 32, 11, and 4 on suc- cessive drives, but Berry booted a 32-yard field goal to put the Quak- ers on the scoreboard for every quarter.

Berry, who was 2-for-2 Satur- day in field goal attempts, now has six (of eight) for the season, one short of the all-time Red and Blue record set 43 years ago by Al Kruz.

The well-drenched crowd, which was far more vocal than its size of 8,916 might indicate, then followed its earlier chant of "We're number one" with resounding yells of "We want Princeton."

Defensive end Ben Gifford is ex- pected back in the lineup for Satur- day's game. During the pregame warmup, Gifford suffered a bloody nose which required hospitalization. Soph Chuck Aho replaced the 6-foot- 2 junior, doing so fine a job that it didn't seem Gifford was missed. Another replacement also was out- standing--when soph Steve Steinberg sustained a calf injury which re- quired eight stitches, junior Bill Ostrowski came in and intercepted a pass.

G 3

Penn four fails to win medal in Mexico By BARRY JORDAN

sports editor (Exclusive to the D.P.)

XOCHIMILCO - The dream of a gold medal ended abruptly for Perm's four-with Saturday as they finished fifth in the Olympic rowing the race was won by a magnificent boat from New Zealand.

It was a disappointing finish for the young Quakers who were confident before the race that they had a shot for a medal. But the reace went to the more experienced crews, the New Zealanders, the East Germans and the Swiss.

to 38. It felt like somebody had an anchor hanging out of the back of the boat."

The Penn four had third place at the end of the first 1500 meters of the 2000 meter course but could not move and was passed by the Italians, Swiss and Germans at about the 700 mark.

The New Zealanders led for most of the race, passing the Quakers soon after the start. They won easily in a time of 6:45.62. The Germans clocked 6:48.20 while the Swiss boat had a 6:49.04 mark. Penn was caught in 6:51.54 and the Russians finished last at seven minutes flat.

"This is the best an American four has done in many years," Ted Nash commented. "Those boys have nothing to be ashamed of."

"These are the finest of men, the finest of Americans and I'm proud to have been in the boat with them." cox John Hartigan said. "We are all indepted to Ted Nash. It's been a long road for these boys, after losing the eights, but I can only sum it up by saying that we were beaten by better crews. This is the finest competition in the world."

a mere shadow of their former selves, finished last in the final for the eights. It was a sad ending for a great Harvard crew.

The eights final was won by the West German's and it marked only the second time, the U.S. has failed to win this event. Other medals went to East Germany, who copped two, Holland, Russia and Italy. The United States had been the only country to have a representative in every final.

Coxed four results

i 2 3 4 S 6

1000 M NZL GER USA SUI ITA URS

Final NZL GER SUI ITA USA URS

3:16.96 3:20.07 3:21.41 3:23.38 3:23.67 3:24.31

6:45.62 6:48.20 6:49.04 6:49.54 6:51.41 7:00.00

NEW ZEALAND'S four-with (lone 4) pulls ahead of Penn (lane 5) soon after start of Olympic finals at Xochimilco

photo by BARRY JORDAN Sunday. The Quakers only managed a fifth place finish, but the black shirted New Zealander's won easily.

a little less than Martin said wistfully, to be perfect to win

photo by BARRY JORDAN

GARDNER CADWALADES and rest of Penn crew carry shell to dock in preparation for Saturday's final race.

"I was scared stiff, and I'm the most experienced," Bill Purdy said didn't have it. Irwasju didn't have it. It was just one of those

If they were nervous the Penn fifth in the Olympic rowing finals. The race was won by a magnificent boat from New Zealand.

It was a disappointing finish for the young Quakers who were confident before the race that they had a shot for a medal. But the race went to the more experienced crews, the New Zealanders, the East Germans and the Swiss.

"I was scared stiff, and I'm the most experienced," Bill Purdy said afterwards on the dock, "but we just didn't have it. It was just one of those days, kind of like Sunday."

If they were nervous the Penn oarsmen didn't show it at the start as they jumped off in the lead. How- ever, they settled too low and never did get the smooth powerful surge they showed in the semifinals.

"We planned to go fifteen at 46 and then ten or twenty at 41 and then drop down to 38," Luther Jones ex- plained. "But we settled right down

"We were perfect," Tony "And you have here."

"We gave it everything we had," Purdy said. "I'm not going to cry over spilt milk. We tried real hard. It would have been nice to get a medal though."

The crew will now take a vacation for several months before returning to Penn for the spring semester. Purdy will soon report for Peace Corps duty, and Hartigan will return to his job in Philadelphia.

Despite the disappointment the Olympic experience proved woth- while. The boys can now relax and get to meet more of the athletes. "This week we will probably realize we're here," Martin pointed out.

America's biggest hopes for a gold medal fell just inches short in the second race on the program as Tony Johnson and Larry Hough were nipped by an East German pair by 0.15 seconds. The duo had been rated the top U.S. chance at gold.

Long Beach's John Van Blum finished fourth in the singles while the coxed pair of Bill Hobbs, Dick Edmunds and Steve Mac Donald finished fifth. America's four-with - out cox also finished in fifth place while the double sculls team of John Nunn and Bill Maher put on a great stretch run to capture a bronze medal.

Harvard's misfortunes became all the more poignent as the Crimson,

Football team rips Lehigh, 34-0, goes into Homecoming undefeated

By BOB SAVETT According to the weather bureau, it had been four

months since Philadelphia had had such a rain, but then again, according to the Pennsylvania football records, there had been a nine-year drought since the Quakers had won four straight games.

So the pollution poured forth from the sky Saturday, and the mud flowed on a freshly-reseeded Franklin Field, as the Red and Blue flooded the scoreboard, 34-0 over Lehigh.

It was the Quakers* biggest rout since Lafayette's 1963 appearance on the Penn football schedule, when the Leopards were sent home to Easton as 47-0 losers, not to return to Franklin Field until 1970.

Although Lehigh will be back in Philadelphia next season to try to break a losing streak to Penn spanning 29 games--the Engineers last won in 1889--the visitors from Bethlehem may have second thoughts.

The highly-vaunted Engineer offense, which had tallied 111 points in four games, was stopped cold by a combination of slippery field and mud-caked Quaker defenders. The Penn defense, which had allowed but 31 points in three games, tying for tenth in the nation in that statistic, did not permit the Engineers to get closer to the Red and Blue end zone than the 38-yard line.

And the Quaker offense, which usually consists of Jerry Santini carrying the ball for four yards and a cloud of dust, took on a new look Sturday, scoring four touchdowns, four extra points, and two field goals in the process.

Harriers score upset over strong Yale team

■it

By MARK SCHLESINGER

was a tremendous team effort all the way," commented coach Jim Tuppeny after the Red and Blue harriers upset a strong Yale team, 28-29, Friday afternoon at Fairmount Park. "Everybody on the team had a part in It."

The Elis came to Philadelphia with a 4-0 slate and an air of confidence. They had never lost to Penn in a dual meet and they did not expect to start losing Friday.

At the start of the race, the home team quickly jumped into the lead to show the Elis that they were not going to hand the race over without a fight. George Lokken, Jerry Williams, and Dan Stevens broke from the pack as the teams ran along the short striaghtaway which leads to the first hill. On the hill, however, Yale captain Frank Shorter forged into the lead, while Stevens dropped back.

At the end of the first mile, Shorter was still in first place, with Lokken and Williams at his heels. The remaining runners were be- ginning to spread out, as the teams disappeared into the woods for three miles. Everyone ob serving the race now realized that the final outcome would be close.

Coming out of the woods, Shorter had a 40 yard lead over Lokken, with Williams 20 yards further behind. Steve Bittner and Bob Yahn of Yale were fourth and fifth, while five Penn runners were sixth through tenth. It appeared Yale would need a miracle to pull a victory out.

Shorter held on to his lead and crossed the finish line with a very fast 25:53.6 clock- ing. Everyone in the crowd strained their necks looking for Lokken to appear over the hill. Instead, Williams came running down the

last stretch to take second with a time of 26:57.

When Williams was asked where Lokken was, his response shocked the crowd. "He's hurt," panted Williams, "I think he sprained his ankle." Coach Tuppeny immediately sent some of the frosh runners out to find Lokken.

Perm's hope for a victory dimmed when Bittner and Yahn finished third and fourth, to give Yale a fairly large edge. However, Jud Lavin, Dan Stevens, and Bill Caldwell suddenly appeared over the crest of the hill to give Penn the fifth through seventh slots, with times of 27:49, 27:50, and 27:57.

Penn got its hard earned victory when Bill Kelso and Bob Acri came through with their eighth and ninth place finish to give the Quakers the 28 points and one displacement it needed.

All attention now focused on the bottom of the hill, 100 yards from the finish line, where Lokken was slumped over, unconscious. Apparently, the high humidity and his all out effort to catch Shorter got to him, and he passed out, proving not all track casualties happen at high altitudes.

"It's a shame this had to happen so close to the finish," said Tuppeny. "George was running one of the best races of his life, trying to pick up the extra point we might need. He was also well on the way to establishing a new school record for the course."

Lokken, who has been the top Quaker in every previous meet this season, was taken to HUP for an examination and an overnight stay. It appeared that his collapse was strictly the result of fatigue from his efforts and that he would be able to rejoin the team for the rest of the meets.

The home team, which is now 4-0 going into next Saturday's Homecoming Classic with Princeton, could have further rolled up the score, but coach Bob Odell mercifully sent in the second-stringers as early as the second quarter. The first team played for only 12 plays in the second half, as Odell let his reserves take over. When the gun went off at the end of the game, even the third and fourth stringers were wearing muddy uni- forms.

Every Red and Blue football player got into the game. "Bob was nice to take the troops out," commented Lehigh coach Fred Dunlap after the rout was over.

It was the brilliance of the first string offense, how- ever, which gave every Penn player the opportunity to see himself in the game film. The Lehigh defense had prepared for the usual Quaker attack—namely Santini-- and had figured that if they stopped the senior halfback- fullback, who was fourth in the nation in yards rushing per game, they would stop Penn.

Instead, some surprises awaited the Engineers. As Lehigh's line shifted to one side to stop Santini,

quarterback Bernie Zbrzeznj sent fullback Bill Sudhaus to the less defended side. Sudhaus, who had carried the ball but once in three previous games, became the leading Penn rusher Saturday, lugging the ball 12 times for 50 yards. Santini, resting for Princeton this weekend, carried 11 times for 47 yards, far below his 35-carry per game average.

Zbrzeznj quickly found a second flaw in Lehigh's "Stop Santini" strategy. The Engineers played with but three defensive backs,positioning the other eight players near the line of scrimmage. Thus, split end Pete Blumenthal found himself with but single coverage, and more often than not, Zbrzeznj had an open target.

On a wet day, however, a passing attack isn't supposed to work. "Yes, we were gambling," explained Odell, "but the way Lehigh was setting up, we felt there was nothing else we could do."

On the first Quaker set of downs, Zbrzeznj hit Blumenthal three times for 31 yards including the TD-toss, and Ken Dunn once for nine. The rout was on.

"I've never seen a boy throw as well on a day like this," exclaimed Odell. On the next set of downs, Zbr/eznj completed three more passes, including a second TD to Blumenthal, leading Penn to another

Photo by DAVE COHEN

CHARLIE KETCHEY (86) nearly bats down Jim Baxter pass Saturday in Baxter's only throwing attempt. Lehigh's quarterbacks, Rich Lau- bach and Baxter, were able to com- plete but 4 of 1 1 passes for 28 yards.

first period score. Zbrzeznj didn't miss until the second quarter, going ll-for-15 for 127 yards on the game.

As at Cornell, the defense became an offensive weapon, forcing

Lehigh to punt the first six times it had the ball. Safety George Burrell returned the fourth punt past six Lehigh would-be tacklers, running from the right side of the field to the left, back to the right and then into the Engineer endzone, 62 yards in a straight line from where he picked up the ball. It was the longest Quaker TD on a punt return since 1949.

A 28-yard run by Zbrzeznj, who broke three tackles, and another reception by Blumenthal, this time for 17 yards, set up a 30-yard Eliot Berry field goal which completed the first half's scoring.

The first half saw but one fumble; the second half saw 11. Play began to

photo bv KEN KAPLAN

ELIOT BERRY, soph kicking specialist, boots his ninth consecutive extra point in the second quarter Saturday, as Bernie Zbrzezni holds- Berry was 2-for-2 in field goals, notching his fourth extra point of the day later, in the third quarter.

Sports notices Freshmen and sophomores are invited to heel ice hockey

managerial. Earn your Freshmen numerals and receive Phys-Ed credit. Call 594-6147.

*****

Any freshman or sophomore interested in managing the defending Ivy Leauge champion wrestling team, please call EV 2-7699 or EV 2-9283.

*****

Tryouts for all interested freshman basketball players will be held on Tuesday, Oct. 22 at 4 P.M. at the Palestra. Positions on the team are available. All players should be dressed and ready to play by 4 P.M.

(Continued on page 5)

Weekend results Football

PENN 34 Lehigh 0 Frosh football

PENN 21 Lafayette 0 Cross country

PENN 28 Yale 29

Frosh cross country PENN 15 Yale 48

Soccer PENN 1 Navy 3

Lightweight football PENN 13 Cornell 31

Girls- Girls - Girls "Fun-Fur Try-Ons"

Million Dollar Fur Collection

Walnut Hall Lounge 6:30 - 8:00 P.M.

"TODAY" Hill Holl Formal Lounge 3:00 - 5:00 P.M.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22

Houston Hall Bowl Room 10:00 - 12:00 A-.M.

Hill Hall Formal Lounge 3:00 - 5:00 P.M.

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1114 llll HAVENS In Concert

Saturday, October 26th 8:30 P.M.

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