Lang Receives Spoon Molloy, Neuman, Ragan Honored Honor Men Announced at Hey Day Ceremonies Men's Student Government, president of Alpha Tau Omega social fraternity, chief of the Sphinx Senior Society, and as a member of Kite and Key, a senior service organization. He is also a member of the Tnterfraternity Council, was Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps batallion Thomas F. Laag, Bruce E. Molloy, Jeffrey L. Neuman and Richard R. Ragan were named Honor Men of the Class of 1966 yesterday afternoon *in Irvine Auditorium. The Awards, presented before 400 people climaxed the 50th annual Hey Day ceremonies by acknowledging scholastic and academic acheivement and symbolizing the formal moving up of classes. Dr. David R. Goddard, Provost of the University, explained that Hey Day is "a time to respectfully acknowledge contributions of undergraduates to the University. In their study and extracurricular activities these young men have enriched University life." Goddard further stated that the presentation of honors and awards '' reiterates the importance of undergraduates'con tributionsto University strength." Lang received the Spoon, most coveted of the awards presented. He served as president of the VOL. LXXXH Tom Lang receives coveted 1966 Spoon commander, and is a former member of Phi Kappa Beta junior honor society. Lang is a senior in the Wharton School. After receiving the award, Lang said, "I am very honored, and would like to thank the members of my class for bestowing me with this honor." Aword from John T. Cumbler, 1941 winner. "My years at Penn have been a very enlightening experience," explained Lang, '"and I have gained deep insight into the University." Lang emphasized that the University is changing rapidly, and feels that it is the student's duty to accept change, but it is also their responsibility to '•speak out" on issues of importance. Molloy, received the Bowl, second highest honor voted by members of the senior class. He is a member of Phi Gamma Delta social fraternity. A member of this year's varsity football and baseball teams, he is secretary of the Varsity Club, and is a member of Sphinx Senior Society and a former member of Phi Kappa Beta. Molloy is a senior in the Wharton School "I think the highest honor anyone can receive comes from his own peers," commented Molloy. ''I am very proud of this award." Neuman, the Cane Man, served (Continued on page 2j anian.i enns FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1966 PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIAL ISSUE NO. 21 Skimmer Tickets Still Rifkin President of Class of '67/ Available Until 5:00, Honor Societies Select Members 5000 Already Sold By BRUCE DE RIENZE Skimmer concert ticket sales have passed the 5000 mark, exhausting the supply of regular tickets available, the Houston Hall Board announced yesterday. Tickets will continue to be sold today until 5:00, however, with the use of improvised stamped passes. Franklin Field will "easily accomodate" all ticket holders, according to coordinator Jeff Freedman. Tonight's concert at Franklin Field spotlights fours: the Isley Brothers, the Temptations, the Sherelles, and Martha and the Vandellas. Door open at 8:30 and show time is at 9:00. Skimmer concert ticket sales have passed the 5000 mark, exhausting the supply of regular tickets available, the Houston Hall Board announced yesterday. Tickets will continue to be sold today until 5:00 however, with the use of improvised stamped passes. Franklin field will "easily accomodate" all ticket holders, according to coordinator Jeff Freedman. Tonight's concert at Franklin Field spotlights four groups: the Isley Brothers, the Temptations, the Shirelles, and Martha and the Vandellas. Doors open at 8:30 and show time is at 9:00. Spectators at the concert will be seated on the grass and should (Continuedon page 8) JE| Nmwfy Elected Class President The election of Jerry Rifkin as president of the class of 1967 along with the new membership of several honor societies was announced at the Hey Day ceremonies yesterday afternoon. Other class of '67 officers announced were vice-president, Marc Turiletaub; secretary, Jeff Freedman; and treasurer, Alan Weitz. Four special awards were presented at the proceedings in Irvine Auditorium and the new members of Phi Beta Kappa, Beta Gamma Sigma, Tau Beta Phi, Phi Kappa Beta, Hexagon, Friars, and Sphinx honor societies were announced. The new officers of the Sphinx Senior Society are, chief, Bill Lawrence; scribe, Chuck Sturtevant; pharisee, Marc Turtletaub. New members are: Marty Reddish, Jerry Rifkin, Steven Sarshik, Ray Terry, Al Turkus, Jerry Petrisko, Tim Huber, Kevin Carr, Ed Cohen, Mike Lawrence, Andy Gelman, Alan Weitz, Lou Pichini, Paul Woddy, Henry Smith, Bill Floyd, Guy Blynn, Dan Cassidy, Bob Dea, Bob Kniffin, Clay Hamlin, Gregg Springer, Earl Greenberg, Rod Berens, Ed Serues. The new members of the Friars Senior Society are Joseph D. Allen III, Saul Berman, Ronald Bornstein, Chip Block, Dave Felser, Jeff Freedman, Rick Heacock, Peter Herwick, Maurice Heckscher II, Tom O'Connor, John B. Nutter, Thomas Owen Jr., James Patton, Roger Rowers, Jeff Ross, Warren Levin,Craft, Goddard Join Hey Day Cane March "I salute the class of '67 and hope they will be as good as the class of '66." Provost David R. Goddard told 200 juniors and seniors in front of College Hall yesterday during the annual Hey Day cane march. Goddard then joined with Vice Provost A. Leo Levin and Dean of Men James Craft and accompanied the marchers to Irvine Auditorium for the presentation of senior honor awards. Honor Societies Take Part DeonXiroft, Prove' Godderd, and Vlc«*Provost Levin descend Logan Hall steps flanked by cheerleaders in yesterday's Cane March. Members of the Sphinx, Friars, Hexagon, and Phi Kappa Beta senior societies took part in the march which began at the junior balcony in the Men's Dormitories at 3:30. Cheerleaders led the cane bearing students in the traditional songs ''Drink A Highball" and "The Red and Blue" as they paraded out of the dormitories and up 36th street to Logan Hall. The marchers, many wearing straw hats, formed two columns in front of Logan Hall and greeted Levin and Craft who joined the group and walked to College Hall. About 200 spectators looked on as the exuberant upperclassmen chanted "Tough as nails, Hard as bricks, Pennsylvania '66!" and "Forget the classes of the past, '67's here at last!" The entire crowd of 400 spectators and marchers streamed into Irvine Auditorium for the Hey Day ceremonies as the tower chimes played "The Red and Blue". (Continued on page 2) Bulletin Philadelphia police arrested three University students and chased an estimated, 2,000 more during a oneand-a-half-hour-long rowbottom shortly after 10:15 p.m. last night. Students tore down sections of the wooden fence surrounding the Fine Arts Building construction site. Several windows were broken in a trailer at the site. The crowd halted traffic on Walnut and Spruce streets for several blocks by pushing parked automobiles into the traffic lanes. A Police Fire Deportment truck was brought to the corner of 34th and Walnut streets at 10:35 p.m., but fire hoses were not used on the crowd. The disturbance gradually subsided around 11 p.m., after more than 40 policemen had arrived. Names of the three students arrested were not available. THE PAGE TWO DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1966 Honor Men CW Leaders Honored 9 In Women s Hey Day •• Outstanding scholars and activity leaders were honored yesterday at the annual Women's Hey Day ceremony in Irvine Auditorium. The Reverend Stanley E.Johnson, chaplain of the University, delivered che invocation, and Dr. Nancy R. Leach, vice-daan of the College of Liberal Arts for Women, spoke on behalf of the University. Janet Freedman received the first annual Margaret A. Fleischmann Award in memory of the former director of the Bennett Union, and Rebecca Bowers received the Althea K. Hottle award. The Outstanding Senior Award was presented to Prudsnce String; Penny Goldsteinreceived the Fathers'Trophy; Sandra Garson was presented with the Anne B. Speirs Panhellenic Award; and the five-year class officers .were installed. They are: Prudence String, Rebecca Bowers, Nelle Colder, and Sandra Garson In other awards, Joanne Davison, valedictorian, was presented with the Ethel Wallace Craig award; Carol Dakin received the Women's Faculty Club award to a senior planning to enter grad# uate school; and Katherine Mo •Dovvell won the Faculty Tea Club Award for academic excellence and contribution to the University. The Alumnae Club of Philadalphia Award for Creativity was presented to Marie Winkler; Mary Ann Morgan received the Sigma . Theta Tau Award to an outstanding senior in nursing; and Mary Kay Brown won the Dalta Delta Delta Scholarship. The Hexagon Sorority Award for activities, service, and scholarship went to Phi Sigma Sigma women's fraternity. Eliza• beth Van Wezel was presented (Continued from jmge ij with the Alpha Xi D3lta aw as outstanding sophomore, and Linda Schurr received the Pi Lambda Theta Award. Barbara Berger was installed as the President of Women's Student Government Association by the retiring President, Judith Seitz. The new member of Mortar Board, Sphinx and Key, and Athlon Society of the Women's Athletic Association were also announced. Those included into Mortar Board are: Sandy Bernstein, Connie Coleman, Sharon Highstein, Lisa Holseber, Judith Hope, Betty Kaminetz, Diane Kaplan, Nancy Levy, Carol Lieb, SimmaMargolis, Lynn Miller, Lynn Snyder, and Susan Tattlebaum. The Pennsyngers performed a brief choral selection and the Reverend William E. Wegener, Lutheran campu3 pastor, gave the benediction. Susan Pollak and Susan Weinstein served as co-chairman of Women's Hey Day. Bruce Molloy is presented with the traditional Bowl by Louis D. Day, Jr. '41. University faculty and alumni have been invited to a cocktail party sponsored by the Interfraternity Council from 4 to 5:30 p.m. Friday at Zeta Beta Tau, 235 S. 39th st. Michael Lawrence, IF presi- dent, said he hopes the event will promote "greater co-operation and understanding," between faculty members, alumni and fraternity men. He encouraged all faculty members to attend. as abbot of the Friars Senioi Society, a leadership organization. A former member of Phi Kappa Beta, he served as cocaptain of Pennsylvania's h. League championship basketball team, and played varsity baseball. He is also a member of the Varsity Club and of the Marketing'Society, and is a senior in the Wharton School. Ragan, the Spade Man, served as chairman of the Houston Hall Board, scribe of the Sphinx Senior Society, and vice-president of Phi Kappa Beta. He was active in varsity soccer and was co-captain of the lacrosse team. A member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity, he was a member of Men's Student Government. Ragan is a senior in the College of Arts and Sciences. Installation of the 1966 alumni cl. 18 officers preceededthe Honors Men Award. The officers are: Howard Coonley, II, president; Stanley V. Pawlak, vice-president; Gerald Lee Gates, secretary; and Cary M . Schwartz, treasurer. An IDYLLIC SUMMER for GRADUATE and UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS Study at Wagner College's scenic, woodland campus on Staten Island Class of '67 (Continued from page 1) Smith, Joseph Stevens, Michael Schiffman, David A. Soltz, Roland Steiven, Mike Stiles. The new members of the Delta Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa are seniors: Stephen Adelson, Ira R. Carp, William Cipolla, Larry Cohen, Harry First, Frederick Goos, Charles Greenberg, Thomas Koppel, Barry Lentz, Franklin Scatton, David Singer. The new juniors are Arnold Brodsky, Stanley Cohen, Charles Fetterhoff, Jr., Paul Ginsberg, James Lewis, Albert McGlynn, Mark Mutchnik, Jeffery- Ram. Joel Schwartz, Frank Weinstein. Beta Gamma Sigma, an honorary fraternity to encourage and reward scholarship and foster integrity in business administration, announced the following members: juniors: Donald Cassidy, David Cohen, Keith Sachs, Mike Uchitel, Alan Weitz, seniors: Mel Hertzig, Mike Kline, Jay Rubenstein , Larry Berman, Beryl Bugatch.Gary Charlestein, Ted Doll, Al Gorman, Larry Haverty, Dick Hirshberg, Steve Kogan, Kenny Kaye, Richard Morris, Howie Simkowitz, Vu Khac Dung, Shail Anjaria, Alan Casnoff, Olarn Chaipravat, Dave Eagleson, James Keenan, Peter Kimmelman, James Loughery, Judith Schagrin, Thomas Valunas, Jr., Edwrd Williams, Jr. Sanford Asher, and Kenneth Robins. The Class of 1946 Award, for a distiguished member of the ! senior class was given to Thomas C. Curtis Jr. Dave Libowsky of the wr 'sUing team was presented with the ! K. Riley Award for the most outstanding freshman athelete. , Lincoln Center lor the Performing Arts Enjoy New York City's cultural highlights ...museums, concerts, theatres. Wagner's beautiful 86 acre hilltop in Staten Island is conducive to serious study...yet it is only minutes away from Manhattan and all it has to offer. Co-ed Liberal Arts summer sessions in 30 major areas of learning—two sessions of four weeks each begin June 13 and July 11. One credit per week may be taken. Campus dormitory living facilities are available. Credits may be obtained also for 3 special programs: "Exploring Art in New York", July 11-22; "New York City Writers' Conference", July 11-27; and "Drama in the Church", June 13-July 1. Undergraduates may take courses leading to degrees in Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Science and Bachelor of Science in Education. Graduate students may take courses leading to Master of Arts, (English, History, Philosophy, Religion), Master of Science in Education, Master of Business Administration, (including Hospital Administration), Master of Science in Bacteriology. Send coupon for detailed information. ^ WAGNER COLLEGE Staten Island, N.Y. 10301 212 GI 7-7880 Director of Summer School Wagner College, Box C, Staten Island, N. Y. 10301 I am interested in: □ UNDERGRADUATE Q GRADUATE Q SPECIAL SUMMER SESSIONS □ Exploring Art in N.Y. □ N.Y.C. Writers'Conference D Drama in the Church I Name Address I am presently attending. (College or University) I THE FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1966 1885 [ Pennsylvanian The Dailyy DAILY FEIFFER 1966 Published (or the University of Pennsylvania community by its undergraduates Early Celebration The Fine Arts Building Wall came down again last night, but a new kind of wall went up in its place. Student leaders had reportedly been negotiating with University officials since the last student disturbance (March 1) to secure an agreement that would eliminate much of the alleged "police brutality" that has marked recent rowbottoms. But last night's rampage has, beyond all doubt, thrown a barrier into the ever-widening gulf between Philadelphia police and Penn students. The proposed agreement reportedly would have 1 made the campus guard office the only place from which a call to the city's riot squad could eminate. Presently any irate old lady can bring the blackleather-jacketed, club-swinging bruisers down on boisterous students. . University officials had shown enthusiasm for the plan. They had reportedly promised the police that students would behave this spring if the cops eased up. Now they have no basis for negotiating. The Interfraternity Council and the Provisional Student Government had even planned wild mixers for all undergraduates on the last two weekend of the semster to help dissipate pre-exam riot-sparking tensions. Now it looks as if it's all too late. The police will turn cynical at further peace efforts. The next rowbottom will turn out hoards of the city's toughest skull-busters. And Dean Craft, it is rumored, may retaliate by shutting off tonight's Franklin Field shpw. Have a nice Skimmer , anyway. Heyday We congratulate the Honor Men, class officers and new honor society members who received accolades at yesterday's Hey Day assembly in Irvine Auditorium. They represent the University's finest. The University community is gradually regaining pride in its traditions. An outstanding group of honor winners is alwavs something to be proud of. PAGE THREE PENNSYLVANIAN V0U ReMfTM&eR, THAN, THAT ^HeW T. RAr^fJP VWR FB6 FROM#^T0#3S A yOU COULPWT AFFORP IT. AFTeP SIX 56SSIOM9 THAT Y<X> MAC£ A 9X> C0USCIOU9 MONev PROBLEM - couuECTiou Beweeu Mowev Ajjp uwe. W otttHtmw CLAMP AW tfr no soe^eooe^r &<&<&>, 0)H6M I 'RAIS6P <rWR FE6 FPOH *35" T<9$4^, AWP TWO), FROM $45 T>*55, KW TH5U, FROM $55 TO 4AC W QBV&TW BACfC TO THE VfRV ^AM£ M9UFV PPCBteM- CAWT w evBR owe&rtw 3EAM, THAT MY OVTRASeOUS Letters To The Editor ( STEVEN SARSHIK Editor-in-Chief MARCTURTLETAUB Managing Editor JOANNE OCHMAN Business Manager STEPHEN CRANE News Editor GUY M. BLYNN Sports Editor DAVID B. SACHSMAN Features Editor DAVID HARDMAN Photography Editor EDWARD BLUTH, DAVID ROMANOFF Co-Financial Managers DONALD MORRISON Associate Editor (Editorial Page) DENNIS WILEN Associate Editor (Personnel) RICHARD SHAPIRO Associate Editor (City Desk) HUGH NORTON and KATHLEEN SITTIG Associate Editors (Bookend) STEPHEN PERMUT Associate Sports Editor RANDY SWARTZ Associate Features Editor L.tt.rs to the Editor should be typed double-spaced w.th 60 characters to the line. All letters must be signed by a member of the University community. Nomes w.ll be withheld upon request. Address correspondence to the editor, Sergeant Hall, 34th and Chestnut Streets. The Daily Pennsylvanian is published Monday through Friday at Philadelphia, Pa. during the fafi and spring semesters except during vacation periods, and the last seven class days of each term. One issue published during August. Subscriptions may be .ordered at Sergeant Hall. 34th and Chestnut Streets af the rate of HO.OO per annum! Second Class Postage Paid «* Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. 9)IJB OF 0FF\Oc% IAJHEM T os&e WB Fee Fftw^f io*K A sewcM TO em Accuse Me CF mm A UVIM6 OFF va>L b£ LN6 IN A FR66" MARKET gCOWOMY- Feet NZAPAZTOFW& me&kwp PSG MESSAGE Editor. The Daily IVmisy Uanian Spring at Penn has often been the time for letting off some excess steam in the form of what has been called a Rowbottom. I have learned that should such a disturbance happen again this year strong individual disciplinary action will result. In addition, there is a strong chance that Skimmer and other Spring festivities will have to be cancelled. I would hope that the student body realizes that for a few minutes of fun they are jeopardizing the fun of Spring at Penn for the entire student body. Now is the time for the mature Penn student to show his maturity. Exercise restraint and remember: Rowbottoms can and probably will mean the cancellation of Skimmer. Chip Mod. President, PSG 5.0ANS TO FRESHMEN Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian: I must clarify several rather critical misunderstandings that somehow crept into your story in today's issue. One will surely be evident to any reader of the story. It must appear strange that in one sentence our total loan offers to incoming freshmen are (correctly) stated to total $330,000 and in another it is (incorrectly) stated almost all prospective freshmen who will be aided have been offered loan arrangements or loan/job options. It is certainly not my belief that loans are an unfair or unwise method of financing higher education. I believe they represent a necessary and reasonable source of funds for college. My concern is with excessive educational debt and with those needy students who have in the past been offered no help except loans. The source of our misunderstanding was my statement that this year I could recall only one prospective freshman who had been offered a loan (incidentally not a very large one) without any other form of aid. This represents important progress for the University's financial aid program, I believe. Another misunderstanding occurs at the end of the story. In discussing the increase of $400,000 in scholarship aid offered to the Class of 1970, I indicated that not all of this offered aid would be accepted and that the actual increase would Uiere'fore be less. Of the actual increase, some $50,000 will come from federal Educational Op- PI<TC0V6R\U6 \F I COQLOtiT GeT'WU TO PAY \&& HOW UJOULP ewes OF us wooa; i WA^ H&PNUG VOU? portunity Grant Funrls, and we h- much as $100,000 may come from the new state aolarship program in Pennsylvania. The balance, whatever that turns out to be, will come from general University incoi But the last paragraph of the story could be read to mean that all but $50,000 of the t scholarship aid to the Class of 1970 will come from general income. That inference would be uafair "to the many friends and alumni of University who have provided substantial endowment and current gifts specifically for scholarship purposes. Dnuglas link BOII WOLrE'STrlEORr Editor, The Daily Peiins.vlvaiii.i I With reference to your front page article of Tnursday, April 21, concerning '"Wolfe's Theory of the Kennedy assassination", it is without a doubt an outstanding example of libelous rm'srep^rting. I am sorry that Andrea Rothberg has used the good name of Tne Daily Pennsylvanian to add credibility to such a distorted recording of the facts. As is well known by everyone who has ever had rtlan Wolfe for an instructor, examples of theories such as is elaborated in yesterday's article are a creative teaching device employed by him to stimulate the minds of his students into lively and constructive discussion. To assert that such a theory is openly supported by him is not only in direct contradiction to the facts, but is libelous in that it threatens his good standing as a capable instructor in his department. Many mornings, it was the thought of looking to his creative and stimulating lectures which lured me oat of bed and into my day's classes. To see his excellent intentions clouded by the misguided pen of Andrea Rothberg is seeing a death blow dealt to scholorship, initiative, creativity, academic freedom, and good teaching. Rtindld p S(ljr|/ coi. 'flap. ANSWERS All facts in the April 21 article are true, undistorted representations of Alan Wolfe's theory as related to me by him in a personal interview. Mr. Wolfe was fully aware that the information would be publicized and was told before the newspaper went to presswhat the article contained. Your accusations prove that you read the story very cursorily. I stated in the second paragraph that Mr. Wolfe used his theory in class "as an example of how mass movements attach themselves to belief patterns. I further wrote that he is still evaluating the validity of his hypothesis, while omitting another statement made during the interview in which he said, ' I m beginning to believe it (the theory he expressed)." Andrea Rothberg THE >AGE FOUR DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1966 ■■ Cinema Roundup ♦♦♦-Excellent ♦♦-Very Good ♦-Fair None-Poor ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE Sip and Sup If you're wondering where to take your date after tomorrow's Skimmer festivities, your search need go no further than the following ARCADIA-"The Trouble With rundown of the top restaurants in town. For the Beefeater, it's Arthur's Steak House Angels."Harmless imitation Disney comedy with Hayley Mills (1512 Walnut St.) while the seafood lover should and Rosiland Russell should pro- find satisfaction with either of the two BookThe Old Original is at 125 Walnut vide substantial amusement for binders. the average twelve year old. ♦ and the new establishment is at 15th and Locust. Eating at DaVinci Restaurant (20th and Walnut St.) is like taking a trip to Italy. Also aboundBOYD-"Doctor Zhivago." For in atmosphere is the Pub Tiki at 1821 those of you who requested it, a ing Both are easy on your pocketbook. serious catalogue of the reasons Walnut. Bedecked in all the finery of a bullfight for the film's failure: 1) The characters are presented as if in Spain is Tarello's at 1621 Chestnut St. If we had known them all our lives you prefer a Continental menu, try Helen Segal and understood their motivations Wilson (17th and Walnut St.) The luxury of relaxed dining with Old World thoroughly. 2) The plot is confused, choppy, and leads nowhere. service and gracious charm is to be found at 3) The significance of the his- Shoyers (421 Arch) a fine family restaurant torical background and actions is nestled in the heart of Colonial Philadelphia. never clarified. 4) The actors are Kelly's Famous Oyster House (on Mole St.), at unable to make us feel any sym- 5 South, has the largest variety of fish in the pathy for the people they are city. portraying. 5) Most of the action in the second half comes across Sophisticated Dining as laughable melodrama. 6) No coherent theme, "meaning," or even purpose can be attached to The Lewis Towers Penthouse at 15th and the story line. 7) The film is too Locust is recommended for sophisticated city long. ♦♦ dining. The Saturday night crowd is dressy in keeping with the atmosphere and decor. FOX-' The Silencers.'' ImiSome specialty restaurants in the neighbortation James Bond movie tries to hood include the Stokesay Castle on Rt. 176 prove that Silence is Goldfinger and The Middle East (935 Ellsworth), with live and is moderately successful. Arabic music and Oriental belly dancing. n Martin stars in the first There are three Stouffers in Center City, cinemadaption of a Matt Helm offering dinners in the $2-5 range — at Penn 'novel. ♦ Center, 1526 Chestnut St., 250 South Broad St. Midnight snacks are good at the two Harvey GOLDMAN - 'Harper." The Houses. They feature big sandwiches and a wide old - fashioned blood-and-guts variety of ice cream treats at moderate prices. private eye returns in the person of Paul Newman. Entertain- Location: Broad and Spruce Sts. and 18th and Spruce Sts. ing if nothing else. ♦♦ For after-date entertainment, try the old LANE-'A Patch of Blue" is a campus stand-bys — Pagano's (37th and Spruce batch of blooe.v. Overrated tear or 3633 Walnut), The Artist's Hut (2006 Walnut), jerker is redeemed by some The Second Fret (1836 Sansome St.) or The In exceptional performances from (40th and Walnut). So whatever your taste, there's an eating Sidney Poitier and Elizabeth house somewhere in Philadelphia to fill the bill. Hartman. Academy Award winner Shelley Winters is there, too. In Town Fun and games get under way this afternoon as the Pentathlon Games kick off the Skimmer weekend. Tne co-ed athletics commence at 4 on the Hill Hall field. Tonight at 8, Franklin field will sway under the influence of the Isely Brothers, the Temptations, the Shire lies, Martha and the Vandellas, and alcoholic refreshment. Saturdiy afternoon it's off to the Schuylkill for the crew races and whatever inevitable mad frolic will develop on the water's edge. The racing begins at 2, by the way. Saturday eve most Penn fraternities have sched' uled their Spring blowout. If you're interested in the night club and jazz circuit, the place to go is 15th and Locust where it is a stone's throw away from the action. Sonny Stitt and Don Patterson will swing out at the Showboat, Broad and Lombard Street (S3/head cover charge), while Pep's at Broad and South will be closed this weekend. Plays And Shows "Sammy Davis, Tnat's All" is at the Forrest tonight at 9 and two tomorrow night at 7:30 and 10:00 p.m. Tickets are still availaboe (S2.50 to S7.00). Tickets for "Mame", now at the Shubert, can be obtained only through ticket agencies. "Miss Julie" continues at the Theatre of the Living Arts at 334 South Street. Curtain at 8:30. Best bet as far as movies go is "A Thousand Clowns" at the World Theatre, 19th and Market, and "Shallah" at the Yorktown in Elkins Park. The Philadelphia Orchestra will l)e in concert as usual this weekend with a performance today at 2 and tomorrow night at 8:30. Eugene Ormandy conducts the music of Copland, Ginastera, and Shostakovich. Tickets for the Academy of Music concert are available from $2.50 to S6.00. The Liberace show is now at the Latin Casino, Route 70, Cherry Hill, New Jersey. There is a S3 minimum for the early show and S6 minimum for the late show. Aqua-Skimmer at the Aquarama features dancing from 8 to 2 with the music provided by Mike Pedicin. The S2 tickets for the Satur night dance car. be gotten at the Houston Hall desk. ** MIDTOvVN - "The Sound of Music." Acting-wise, this musical has the services of the exquisite Julie Andrews. Song' wise, it's a delight. And Robertwise, it is just about perfectly directed. But the truecharmand creativity of the film are that of Rodgers and Hammerstein, and thus its success cannot be considered an achievement for the movie makers. And in case you haven't heard, it's the Best Picture of the Year. ♦♦♦ Franklin Field Braces for Skimmer RANDOLPH - "Cast a Giant Shadow." The casting director of this picture seems to have interpreted the title as a personal instruction, for all the characters display as much intensity and depth as a shadow. Kirk Douglas is a shade better than the rest of the performers. * STANLEY-"The SingingNun." must have been shot on glucose instead of celluloid. Makes "The Sound of Music" look like a Fellini film. With Debbie Reynolds.♦ STANTON - "The Ten Commandments." Vulgar, naive, overindulged, and thoroughly entertaining Biblical spectacle in color and 70 DeMillimeter. See it again. **** TRANS-LUX - "The Group." Needs therapy. See review on this page. ♦ WORLD - "A Thousand Clowns." Academy Award supporting performance from Martin Balsam in the delightful Jason Robards tour de farce. ♦♦♦♦ Several years ago Mary Mc Carthy wrote a best selling treatise on birth control and social mores which had overtones of a novel. It was called "The Group" and focuses on the sexual awakenings of a group of " Vassar graduates during the Thirties. Today --The Group" is still a treatise on birth control and social mores, only now it has overtones of a motion picture. The I sley Brothers and The Shirelles are jus* two of the groups that will be making the scene at Franklin Field torn orrow night at 9 o'clock as Shimmer gets going in earnest. Penn's own Cappy Bergen is on immovable force in "The Group." It is analternatinglydirty and boring account of eight young girls who set out with grim determination to make a mess of their lives. While they succeed beyond anyone's wildest dreams, the picture succeeds only in l)eingconfusing, ill-structured and generally in bad taste. Sidney Lumet, who skillfully directed ''The Pawnbrobker," stated shortly after production that if he had read the book prior to taking on his directing assignment he never would have made the picture. Unfortunately he did. The film's overall effect is that of watching three hours of 'The Secret Storm" strung together without commercials. The same principle was used with the old "Batman" serial which played at the World Theatre. Sex, however, is not camp. To make matters worse, Lumet handles the distasteful material in a distasteful way. His camera perpetually encircling the actors as if it was a band of Indians attacking a wagon train. The quality of the acting with two exceptions was on a par with the material and the directing. Shirley Knight as Polly and Jessica Walter as Libby are somewhat convincing in their respective roles. As for the six other young ladies they leave much to be desired. Penn's own Cappy Bergen, as the Lesbian, Lakey, walks through the picture as if she were posing for a Revlon cosmetic advertisement in Vogue. The only things that move are her legs when she walks and her mouth when she talks. Joan Hackett as Dottie, Elizabeth Hartman as Priss, Joanna Pettet as Kay, Mary-Robin Redd as Pokey, and Kathleen Widdoes as Helena appear to be in different stages of discomfort throughout the film as if director Lumet used a cattle prod for motivation. If the film developed just one of the girl's sordid tale instead of jumping helter-skelter trying in vain to tell all eight stories, the film would at least have had a semblance of structure and unity. THE FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1966 DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE FIVt University Choral Society SDS to Offer Honor System for Columbia Literature, Accepted by Faculty Vote Performs at College Ha Upon acceptance by Columbia Examination Columbia College faculty has The University Choral Society sity, studying composition. He CHICAGO (CPS)—Students for voted to accept the proposal for College, applicants shall receive and Orchestra and the Swarthmore College Chorus will perform tonight at 7:30 p.m. in room 200 of College Hall. The program is: Bach Motet VI, Den Herrn, Schickele Hymn oi Our Lord, Gascongne Missa Mijn Hert, and Beethoven Mass in C. Roman Pawlowski, Assistant Director of the Choral Society anc Orchestra, will conduct the Bach, Toel Thome, Graduate Teaching riellowr in Music, the Beethoven. Soloists for the Mass in C will be: Kathy Stein, Alto and David Getty, Tenor, from Penn, Nancy Dolph, Soprano, and Edward Crafts, Bass, from Curtis Institute of Music. Swarthmore College Chorus will sing the Shickele and the Gascongne under the direction of Peter Gram Swing. Pawlowski is a graduate Assistant in Music at the Univer- graduated from Philadelphia Musical Academy with a major in composition and a minor in conducting. He has studied composition with Joseph Castaldo, Hugo Weisgall and George Rochberg, and conducting with Mehli Mehta, Pierre Monteaux and Max Rudolph. Pawlowski is presently Conductor of the University Brass Ensemble, Assistant Conductor of the Oratorio Society of New Jersey, and Conductor of the Philharmonia Accordion Orchestra. Thome has studied conducting with Hans Swarowsky of the Vienna State Opera, and with Herman Genhardt. He was director of the First Israeli Percussion Ensemble, the Eastman Percussion players, and the University of Rochester Hillel Foun dation Orchestra. a Democratic Society will distribute literature and a "counter draft test" across the nation on each of the three draft dates the Selective Service System has chosen for its examination for college students. SDS National Secretary, Paul Booth estimated that two-andone-half million students will take the Selective Service examination '-because they don't want to go to Vietnam." Local draft boards use the results from the tests in determining college deferi rents. The two-page "examination" on the war in Vietnam which SDS hopes to distribute at all of the test sites will contain factual questions about the war with the answers included. On another matter Booth said the FBI promised investigation of his organization. an honor system, as formulated by the student Commission on Academic Integrity and amended by the faculty Commission on Instruction, announced the Dean, David B, Truman. According to the Columbia Spectator, the faculty ••authorized" a student referendum on the honor system and calleci on the Dean to implement the plan, if the program receives student approval. The honor code which all undergraduates will be asked to accept contains the following points: • Students shall not engage in any form of plagiarism. "No proctor shall be present during any examination. An instructor or other authorized person may attend an examination in order to administer or clarify it. m \ THE ADVENTURES OF PAM AUSTIN CHAPTER SIX "Coronet saves the day." copies of this Code and the Constitution of the Honor Board. A°. a condition of admission, applicants shall be required to sign. . .(a) pledge." The faculty also called for an annual report on the effectiveness of the Code if it is adopted. Dean Truman stated that "'all four classes would participate including incoming freshmen," in a student referendum of the system in the fall. According to Dean Truman, 'the system would have to be accepted by a two-thirds vote." '•The faculty did not want it (the honor system) adopted by a minority," he said. The Committee on Instruction introduced one major modification in the code and constitution proposed by the student group. It reserved the right to suggest amendments to the system and noted that the faculty as a whole must approve changes ljefore they can be referred to the student body. The Commission's proposal includes a non-mandatory reporting clause which binds any student who sees another cheating to take '"positive action," by either reporting "'in full detail" the incident to the honor board or discussing the incident with the student involved, reported the Spectator. Senior History (Continued from page 10) Last time, we left Pam, hanging way out on a limb ... with only one way to go. Alas! Is there nothing to save her from "Boredom Falls"? .* appeared on his way toward making Penn an Ivy power. A short block away from the tlklin Field gridiron, at 34th street, some other earth was in danger of being torn up. The SOS Committee succeeded in having the Fine Arts Building proposal rejected twice by Philadelphia Zoning Boards before City Council doomed our favorite trees. Undaunted, we summoned up our latent artistic talents and adorne the Wall surrounding tthe building site with colorful trees and incisive poetry. Vietnam Issue Wait. Coming through that * cloud of dust! Those suave good looks. That strong, silent demeanor. That mighty V8 power. rw-* iHSij & Those comfort-contoured bucket seats. And ... and that silver center console! It can only be ... CORONET 500 to the rescue! How about you ... isn't it time you dropped in to see Coronet 500 up close? Maybe it will save you from falling into a rut! j THE DODGE REBELLION WANTS YOU DODGE DIVISION H! :l7H MOTORS CORPORATION We became involved also in a debate over the War in Viet Nam and listened attentively as Norman Thomas, Se nators Proxmire, Javits, and Thurmond spoke and later in the year, when Senator Morse packed Irvine for a Connaissance lecture. We sent Christmas cards to the GI's and watched as a mild demonstration outside College Hall turned into a veritable free-for-all. The University's Institute of Cooperative Research denied working specifically for solutions to war problems, and the debate raged on. We noticed students being reclassified around the country and anticipated having to pass a National Qualifying Test to continue our studies. Art, sex, nonsense, and love pervaded the campus at one time or another during our Senior year. Curious masses thronged to the opening of Andy Warhol's pop art exhibit at the Institute of Contemporary Art, while Student Health decided that the Pill was really out of their province. The trivia craze led to a Penn Comment-sponsored contest, and we even computerized our romances through a game called Operation Match. The amazing physical transformation of the University continued. The Social Sciences Center was dedicated and the Deitrich Library neared completion. The Physical Education Center (Continued on page 7)- > THE PAGE SIX •<>MlMll|i'llMlllHtt\lMm*lllt<niHI<l| CAMPUS EVENTS Official Announcements The Interfraternity Counci will hold a cocktail party for faculty and alumni, 4-5:30 p.m. at Zeta Beta Tau, 235 S. 39th St. University Agenda • Don't Just Gripe About the Dormitories — Do Something! House Council Elections for women are coming. Nominations begin April 15 and end April 22. Petitions to run will be accepted until April 29. Contact the election representative for the house you plan to live . in next year. Their names are posted on the bulletin board in Hill Hall. • People to People and the Folk Dance Club will hold an International Dance Party tomorrow, 7:30 - 11:30 p.m., at the C.A. All students are invited and the dances will be taught. • Aqua-Skimmer At Aqua- rama — The place to go Saturday night. Dance to the sounds of Mike Pedican Jr. and his group. A porpoiseful evening to top off Skimmer. Schuylkill Expressway at South Broad St. 10 minutes off campus. Tickets at H.H. Desk. • The All African Students' Union of Greater Philadelphia presents the following reduced prices for THE AFRICAN FREE DOM DAY. Time - Saturday, April 23, from 8 p.m. to . . ., at Drexel Activities Center, 32nd and Chestnut Sts. Student prices: $1.75/single, $3.50 couple; nonstudents: $2.00 single, $4.00/ couple. Tickets are available at Houston Hall Information Desk (do you know where that is?) « Alpha Phi Omega is sponsoring its annual Books for Asia drive, from April 18-29. If you have any books in good condition and published since 1945, please drop them in our collection boxes. Your books will help build libraries and universities and good will toward the United States in Asia. A FREE bus service to the DAILY FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1966 PENNS YL VANI AN river bank and back to the dorms and free entertainment following the crew races will be provided for Skimmer on Saturday, April 23, by the Men's Residence Board. The shuttle bus service will begin at 12 noon and extend until 4 p.m. The FREE entertainment will be provided in the large quad of the men's dorms. In case of bad weather, McClelland Hall will be used. The entire university community is invited. o The Pennsylvania Players will present an evening of original one-act plays, written by University undergraduates in competition for the J. Howard Reber Award. One evening only — Monday, April 25, at 8:15 p.m., in Houston Hall Auditorium. Admission free. 9 The paintings and drawings of British abstractionist Rodney Gladwell are on exhibit at the Philomathean Art Gallery. The exhibit, the premier American showing of Gladwell's work, can be seen until April 30. The Philomathean Art Gallery is located on the fourth floor of Logan Hall (past the Lippincott Library) and is open to the public Mon.Fri. from 2-4 p.m., Saturday, 1-5 p.m, and Mon. and Wed. evenings, 7-9 p.m. For further information telephone EV 6-0692 or EV 2-5630. o The University of Pennsylvania Glee Club invites all students and faculty members to attend its coffee hours during the week of April 18 to meet the members and Small Groups in the Club. The Coffee Hour will be held from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. o David Patterson, Cowley lecturer in Post-Biblical Hebrew at the University of Oxford, will lecture on "The Making of the Modern Jew: from Ghetto to Freedom" tonight, following late services at the Hillel Foundation (approx. 8:15 p.m.). o FACULTY-STUDENT HIKE AND COOKOUT - English Dept. faculty members. Sonsored by in the Bowl Room and hosted by The Outing Club. Sunday, May Miss Mae Cook of the Univer- 1, contact John Politis, EV 2(Continued on page 7) sity Dining Service. the in features this weekend LIVE ENTERTAINMENT Open 24 hours a day for Skimmer the in coffee house cabaret EV 6-4049 COFFEE: Reduced RatesThurs.&Sun. (--ializing in Rorld Famous • Classical Coitors and Lotas Old—or New—Write for particulars iiwm^CABARET walnut at fortieth Pom THU !l»u SUN Opt* 7:30 l« "SUPfHI FM » SOUS" 2 SHOWS 1110 • E.tr. Sjt Shoa 11.30 174 iMustn fee.. InaltMi '»»«W d TIHKKH s IWHII;II:KS THE FINEST OF EUROPE I AT PRICES YOU CAN AFFORD ". MASTER CRAFTSMEN CONVERTING AND RESTORING BY MAIL 21-23 SOUTH 18TH STREET, PHILA. 3, PA. Fiction, Poetry, Playwriting PEN Colorado, summer 19o6: resident writers: Robert Creeley, Paul Blackburn, poetry; Donald Barthelme, fiction, & staff of six. For brochure: Director, AWW. 855 West End Ave , NYC 10025 WRITERS' WORKSHOP LOcust 7-2972 NOW OPEN! GOLF 45 Tees Golf Driving Range Professional Lesson 18 Hole Miniture Golf Course New Balls And Equipment Refreshments Free Parking GR 7-2055 Open 9 A.M. to 12 Midnight SUMMER STUDENTS STAY SUBMERGEDASATURDAY NIGHT 6 Room House (with 3 bedrooms) Near Law School. Furnished; Utilities Incl. $70.00 Call MR. ROBERT LO-3-7528 PARKSIDE GOLF RANGE 52ND AND PARKSIDE AVENUE ■.1MB TEACHERS WANTED — SOUTHWEST, ENTIRE WEST AND ALASKA SALARIES $5400 UPFREE REGISTRATION SOUTHWEST TEACHERS AGENCY AT AQUARAMA SAT. Apr" 23 ■""IMG I B.M.-2 ■. MUSIC BY TICKETS $2 Miki Priicii Jr. ■t H.H. DESK 1303 Central Ave., N.E. Albuquerque, New Mexico TEE 2ND FRET 1902 Sansom St. faAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA^ NITELY:9,10:30, FBI*SAT 8,9-30,11 • WHAT WILL THE FINE ARTS BUILDING LOOK LIKE? TONIGHT THRU MAY 2nd • WILL THE HOUSE SYSTEM KILL FRATERNITIES? • WHAT ABOUT ODELL'S LATEST TEAM? mm mmm "World's Greatest Flamenco Guitarist" ^ • WHO IS GOING TO GET DRAFTED? As a graduating member (good luck!) of the Class of 1966, you can follow the news of the University with a special Senior Subscription to THE DAILY PENNSYLYANIAN Dear Sirs: MAY 4 - MAY 16 JUDY RODERICK MAY 18 - MAY 23 MITCH GREENH ILL MAY 25- JUNE 6 Please eater my subscription for the Daily Peaasylvaaioa for the year 1966-1967. Enclosed fiad $10 BBOS QG«8(DK1 JUNE 8- JUNE 20 Name- Address. Zip. TOM RUSH Daily Pennsylvanian Sergeant Mall University Of Penn AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA Phila. 4, Pa. THE OLDEST FOLK CLUB in the EAST It's worth Twice the Price. THE FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1966 Penn Players to Present Plays by Student Authors The Pennsylvania Players will present an evening of original one-act plays in competition for the J. Howard Reber Memorial Award on Monday, April 25 in Houston Hall Auditorium at 8:15 p.m. The plays were selected by a panel of judges from those submitted by students at the University. Directly following the performances the judges will make their final decision in keeping with the conviction that the full potential of a play cannot be realized until it is produced. Serving as judges for this year's competition are Mr. Walter Abel, prominent actor and director and recently elected President of the American National Theater Academy (ANTA), Miss Kathleen C. Quinn, Director of Dramatic Production at the University, Mr. Christopher Davis, in the Creative Writing division of the University's English Department, and Mr. John B. Muir, member of the faculty at Episcopal Academy in Philadelphia. The plays selected by the judges are 'The Butcher of Bien Hoa", written by Thomas Ciccone, Col. '66 and under the direction of Trent Jones, Col. '68; "Shadow of a Doubt", written by Gary Stern, Col. '67 and under the direction of Alan Glass, Col. '68; 'Jimmy' written by Thomas Wilson, Col. '66 and under the direction of Theodore First, Col. '68. Admission to the plays will be free. DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN EVENTS PAGE SEVEN R.A. to Check WXPN - Highlights of ProDeterioration grams for Friday, April 22. 4:00 - PRELUDE: HAYDN: Concerto for Harpsichord & Of Apartments Orchestra in D., Op. 21. WXPN (Continued from page 6) 2070. AU welcome. Activity Notices 5:00 - NEWS: David Conant ACTION PARTY - Convention 7:00 - THEATRE PHILADELfor election of officers for PHIA : Randy Swartz' guest next year, Tuesday, April 26 will be Elliot Elisophan at 11 a.m. in Room 11 of Houston Hall. All Action 7:30 - EVENING REPORT: Onehalf hour of news in depth, party members and interested with anchorman Jon Bixby undergraduates are invited. 8:00 - ROCK 'N' ROLL: Billy BALALAIKA ORCHESTRA - Important rehearsal today, Lee & Doug Borwick with the Golden Oldie Get-To3 p.m. in Room 11, Houston . Hall. gether, for those who forgot HILLEL - Evening services will to buy Skimmer tickets. be held tonight - Early;5p.m. 12:00 - THE JAZZ MESSAGE: Late: 7:30 p.m. Morning serWould you believe Len Borvices will be held tomorrow deaux will do his show on at 9:30 a.m. Skimmer? We do. KITE AND KEY - Cocktail Party, Sunday, April 24, at 2 p.m. at Sigma Chi Fraternity. RECORD - Compulsory meeting for all staff members of the 1967 Record Tuesday, April 1902 SANSOM ST |10 3 8?96| HONDA of N0RRIST0WN NIT^^Sin^FntSatMaOJl 26, 4 p.m. in the Record Office. Compulsory meeting WHERE THE Tonight thru. Monday for all Junior Editors and S. HUROK Senior Board Members of the PRESENTS IN CROWD GOES 1967 Record Monday, April JUAN SERRANO 25, 4 p.m. in the Record KING OF THE SALES & SERVICE Office. FLAMENGO GUITAR SPHINX Cocktain Party for the EASY TERMS old members of Tau Delta FACTORY TRAINED MECHANICS Phi 7 p.m. tonight. 7 EAST GERMANTOWN PIKE PHONE 277-2424 EUROPE BY CAR CO. Ivy, Lease or Rent your car in Europe SAVE UP tO 35% aid oi car rental 1 purchase. * Electric Starter Ask for free 72 page catalogue which quotes finest prices OR all * 12 Month Warranty * 200 MPG makes * Complete Parts & Service * No Money Down aid models, not mere estimates W.A. de Brayi 315 N 37th Street EV 6-2371 * Easy Terms Suzuki World's Lightweight Champion" Rapco Automotive Center 6841 Frankfort) Avenue, Philadelphia DE 2-8890 FRIDAYS TILL 8:30 P.M. SKIMMER HEADQUARTERS Bermudas • Skimmer Hats Penn T Shirts - Sweat Shirts Varsity Shop Oppoiit* Mai's Dorm Senior History (Continued from page 5) and Fine Arts Building were begun, two new levels were planned for the parking garage, and the Moore School added a new Research Center. SAM, however, burned down. SCUE Report Why should a traditional Shantung print have a loop label? To keep the small end neatly in place. No other tie fabric can match the handsome texture and design depth of all silk Shaptung, particularly when hand-printed. The meticulous craftsmanship of these Resilio ties extends even to the authentic loop label on the back. Tuck the small end through, and if stays always centered and lying flat. At knowledgeable retailers or write Resilio, Empire State Building, New York City, N.Y. P.S. All Resilio ties have loop labels. The SCUE report indicated that most students were dissatisfied with their education and immediately thereafter a "free University" was established. MSG and WSGA finally merged, and Project Mississippi succeeded in getting its church built. The squash team retained its Co-Ivy League Championship and finished second in the Nationals, as Coonley captured the Singles Title. Jack Mc Closkey's basketball team kept winning games and captured itsfirst Ivy League Crown in thirteen years, a feat that not even the NCAA controversy could mar. The Class of '66 has played an important part in the continuing development of the University: we have been shaped by it fertile minds and abundant resources, and in learning we have added our perceptions and accomplishments to its ever-increasing body of knowledge. When we look back years from now upon our undergraduate days at Penn, we may remember only an inspiring lecture by our favorite professor, a touchdown pass during the homecoming game, or our The Redevelopment Authority will maintain "mimimum standards" of cleanliness set by the Housing Code Standards on all condemned housing, according to I. Milton Karabell, West Philadelphia Corporation Planning Associate. Referring to the Redevelopment Authority, Karabell said, "Using the rental income that they get, they will remedy defects. They will not allow unsanitary or unsafe conditions to exist." The owners of the property are being paid "fair market value" for the property. If those properties are in poor shape, they will receive less money, stated Karabell. He continued that the Redevelopment Authority "will certainly not allow the property to fall apart or become infested with vermin. The student should refuse to accept property that is unsatisfactory." In explaining the appropriation of property by the Redevelopment Authority from local landlords, Karabell said, "Condemnation will take place before May 15, 1967, but this means only that students will pay their rent to the Redevelopment Authority. The rent will be no higher than it presently is." Presently issued leases will be legally invalidated and students will be advised to pay rents to the Redevelopment Authority, Karabell said. He continued that the RA would issue no notices for tenants to move before February 15, 1967, but that a possibility existed that the first ones would be mail ed to residents in March or April of next year for a June or August move. In no case will students be given less than ninety days notification, Karabell said. Karabell suggested a possibility that "some of the buildings in Unit 4 will be available for time beyond May 15, 1967. Which buildings these are will be determined by the RA and the University by next Spring". Rent A T.V. Set New UHF/VHF oil 82 channels 19" Portables * Color Sots Available •Free Delivery ft Pick op 'Very low Rates 'Short ft Long Tom Rates He who is lost- Hesitates" .TREX RENTALS 2655 S. JUNIPt ST. PHILADELPHIA. HO 8-3760 Freshman roommate. The faces in the crowd may become hazy, and we may even romanticize, idealize, or glorify what we once took for granted. But in every sense/our brief moment at Penn has been very real: for it has taught us to question not only those around us but ourselves —and to change when it becomes necessary. • THE PAGE EIGHT School of Social Work Move Commemorated A housewarming today will mark the move of the University of Pennsylvania's School of Social Work from its Center City location at 2410 Pine St. to the University's campus in West Philadelphia. A formal dedication will take place later. The School shortly will move into its new home at 3701 Locust St., one of four buildings in the Social Sciences Center. The other buildings in the $7,209,000 Center are those of the Graduate School of Education, Department of Psychology, Stiteler Hall (a common-use classroom structure) and a student lounge. Opening DAILY PENNS YL V ANI AN Skimmer Weekend Program (Continued from page 1) bring blankets. No alcoholic beverages will be permitted. Incase of rain, the show will be moved under the Franklin Field stands. Also on the agenda for this secretarial area. A spacious library and research center are weekend are the traditional boat on the second floor. The third races tomorrow afternoon on the story contains the Marion Clark Madeira Seminar Room, a general seminar room, and faculty offices. Faced with red brick, the building is complemented by precast concrete columns. Smoked gr^y glass is used in all exterior windows, and the building is air conditioned. Harbeson, Hough, Livingston and Larson, Philadelphia architects, designed the building and the other structures in the Social Sciences Center. Built by GSA Ceremony The General State Authority )f the Commonwealth of PennThe opening ceremony will be sylvania built the Social Sciences held in the auditorium of The Center and provided $5,275,000 Annenberg School of Communica- of the funds. tions, 3620 Walnut St. Participants will be Dr. Rosa Wessel, associate dean of the School and opening ceremony chairman; Dr. Gaylord P. Harnwe'l, president of the University; Mrs. Howard A. Wolf, chairman of the Board of Education for Social Work; For the Authentic Dr. Ruth E. Smalley, dean of the Sound of the Time* School; Randolph Wise, commisThe Gretsch Folk Guitar is the sioner of the Commonwealth's hands-down favorite on campus Department of Public Welfare; and at folk festivals. For and Owen Davison, executive diGretsch gives you the rich, rector of the Philadelphia Health resonant bass and the clear and Welfare Council. singing highs that only come from' Portraits of four School of the uyrk of skilled guitar makers. Social Work emeritus professors At Gretsch we work with will be unveiled by Ernest Goldsaged woods carefully chosen borough, president of the School for mellow resonance. Seasoned of Social Work Alumni Associarosewood is used for fingerboards, tion, assisted by Michael Ruvel, molded to specially contoured chairman of the School's StuAction-flo necks to make dent Organization. The emeritus fingering fast and easy. professors are: Dr. Isabel CarMagnificent sound ... a wider ter, who first taught at the School world of music... is yours when in 1935 and retired in 1962; Dr. you join the Gretsch Set. Goldie B. Faith, who came to the School in 1934 and retired GRETSCH GUITARS in 1962; Dr. Virginia P. RobinFoik • Classic son, who came to the then-PhilaTh« Fred. Gretsch Mfg. Co. 60B'way.,B'klyn.'N.Y. 11211 delphia Training School for Social Dep't. D-3 Work in 1918 and retired as vice Please send hie your Free folk dean in 1952; and the late Dr. guitar catalog. Jessie Taft, who was appointed Namt. to the faculty in 1934, retired | Address in 1952, and died in 1960. ! Cfcjr Guests will tour the School's i new building after the opening Zip Code• Stale cere money. A reception then will be held in the neighboring Stiteler Hall. The Social Work building is the southernmost structure of the Social Sciences Center. Itsmair entrance opens onto the Center's courtyard, beneath which is an underground garage. JOIN THE "GRETSCH FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1966 THE TEMPTATIONS Skimmer Guests At 7:00 Schuylkill and the newly created Skimmer Pentathlon to be held this afternoon at Hill Hall field. Three free buses will provide a constant shuttle service to the boat races between noon and 4:00 p.m. They will leave from Spruce st. between 37th and 38th street. The Men's Residence Board will sponsor entertainment in the large qaad of the men's dorm immediately following the boat races. Tne VIP's will play from atop McClelland Hall. All four groups performing tonight are well-known recording stars. The Isley Brothers broke into the big-time in 1959. Since then, they have recorded such smash hits as "Shout" and "This Old Heart of Mine." The Temptations, who recorded such hits as "The Way You Do the Things You Do" and "Slow Down Heart," have many album? and single releases to their credit. The Shirelles, most famous for their hit "Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow?," have also recorded •'StoptheMjsic,""Mama Said," and others. Martha and the Vandellas have just released "Then He Kissed Me" and "Just One Look." In the aast they have done such classics as "Heat Wave" and "My 3oy Friend's Back." MARTHA & THE VANDELLAS Franklin Field "Heat Wove" ^ ;1 rt? COME ON DOWN AND JERK OUR ROPE at the first annual IF-PANHEL post-chug-a-lug TUG-A-LUG 2:30 P.M. AT THE RIVER 4 all undergraduates eligible (except students who fail to comply with NCAA scholastic requirements.) WINNING SIDE receives the (boys or girls) GOLDEN GRAIL DONATED BY RHINEG0LD SENIORS: Includes Group Work Studio The time has come. The Senior Class Fund has already hit you for a pledge Pretty soon, Measuring 65 by 95 feet, the building includes workrooms and utilities on the ground floor. A group work studio there is equipped to teach program skills to the School's students. The first floor has administrative and faculty offices and a you'll hear from Alumni Annual Giving: Wouldn't you like to see where all your money is going? You can follow Pennsylvania-'s continuing growth & development with a Daily Pennsylvanian Senior Subscription. It's worth twice the price Dear Sirs: Von Pelt Hot According to the librarians at the reference desk of Van Pelt Library, Buildings and Grounds have neglected to clean the air-conditioning system filters and have also been tardy in placing the water inside the system. As a result the temperature has been an uncomfortable 85 degrees since the beginning of March. The librarians do not know when Buildings and Grounds will correct the malfunctioning. • ! minimum Pleas* eeter ay subscription tor the Doily PeiRSflvooioo for the yoor 1966-1967. Enclosed tied $10 Nom Zip Address - Moil To: Doily Pennsylvonion Sergeant H_!. University Of Penn Phila. 4, Pa. FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1966 THE DAILY P E NNS YL VANI AN PAGE NINE Senior Class History By LANCE E. LAVER Reprinted by permission of the "Record' Si(^J£f^:L^ SPECIAL OFFER... your first /lying lesson Ever wanted to pilot a plane? This coupon and $5 will buy the fun of your first flying lesson. ^&. Cessna dealers are making this special offer so that everyone might get to know the fun experience of piloting a plane...the free feeling of a gentle bank left or right, the power of a climb, the tranquility of level flight... all under your own control! A licensed instructor at your Cessna dealer will explain the operation of the plane. After takeoff, he will let you take control and fly the plane yourself. When the instructor has landed, your flight time will be entered in an official Pilot Flight Logbook which is yours to keep. Absolutely no hidden charges or obligation. So join the fun! Clip this certificate now . . . and pilot a saucy Cessna 150 for $5. Get full information about this $5 flying lesson from any Cessna dealer listed under Aircraft Dealers in the Yellow Pages, or from participating Cessna 150equipped flight schools. Or write Cessna Aircraft Company, Dept. CN, Wichita, Kansas. CESSNA More people learn to fly in Cessnas than in all other airplanes ! . mmimjm^BmsniMSJissm^s^mmmjy fr- A History of any kind is nothing more than a series of continuous events, a stream of experiences and impressions that define a group or an age. Through four years of life at Perm, the Class of '66 has undergone perhaps the most significant political, academic, social, and moral changes of any Pennsylvania class in recent times. From the shocking tragedy in Dallas to the blatant uprising at Berkeley to the rampant outburst at Los Angeles, Rochester, and Watts and the brutal reality in Viet Nam has the Class of '66 passed. The face of the nation-and of the Universitywas changing, and our Class changed with it. Reflecting on four years of life at Perm, however, one immediately envisions a melange of experiences, a kaleidoscopic remembrance of things past. . . a Volvo in the drinks . .a discussion of Kant's ethics. . .the chariot race that Penn always won. . .the arduous ascension up the College Hall steps. . . automobiles zipping down Spruce Street at 3 a.m., while you're cramming for two mid-terms that happen to fall on the same day... a book you didn't want to buy. . . a girl you never met. . . A razed building where once you had a Freshman English class... the raucous, smoke-filled Palestra, as Penn wins another. . . talking and stalking in the Undergraduate Library. . .admiring that green Corvette or red Porche or '55 Chevy. . .Chuck Berry and Lloyd Price. . .Captain Barcus. , .cigar ashes in your roast beef sandwich at Pop's or a roach in your pie at Freshman. . . in your pie at Freshman Commons. . .an Eisenstein film at Annenberg. . .an IF basketball game, where the only spectators were the refs. . .trying to stay awake in an 8 o'clock French class. . .Furness Building gargoyles with beards of icicles after a winter snowfall, or the some countenance of Ben nklin in the center green. . . Beer cans strewn along the banks of the Schuylkill. . .a good night kiss in the foyer oi WRH. . .Al's as it was, anci the Drug as it is and alw will be. . .an egg thrown in your face or a chicken scamoering across your back during initiation. . .a quick cup of coffee among the stream of faces in the crowded confines of Houston Hall. . .that first glance at the DP each day. . .Freshmen on the field. . .orange juice on your head and on your date's new dress . . .an Art 140 lecture. . .the steady drone of the Library lights . . .an abortive attempt to find a parking space and the inevitable ticket. . .Blanchard Hall . . .Woodland Avenue. . .the Pennsylvania News. . . Playing the Pins until you hit. . .cursing out Penn State . . .listening to some virtuoso play a polonnaise in the West Lounge. . .reading the guy across the hall's Playboy.. .pledge raids and meter maids. . .hamburgers at the Wnite Castle as a last resort to hunger. . .drinking a highball after all. . .being surprised by the ever-ambitious University cleaning woman at 8:30 in the morning as you're gettingdressed. . .an innocuous Campus guard telling you to keep off the grass. . .wild-looking girls floating by starry-eyed at a fraternity bash. . .a beer at Smoke's or the Deck. . .Radio 99. . .peering down into thepit to watch a squash match. . . switching courses the last day of Drop and Add. . .long thoughts j and bull sessions and gaudy nights I . . . a C-minus on vour best theme. . . a shoe shine outside Campus Corner. . . It is at first a mixture of these unique experiences that one recalls-but four years at Penn has meant more for the Class of '66 than just brief moments. As our Freshman slogan proclaimed, we were "tough as nails, hard as bricks "-we had to be, for as the structural allusion prophesied, the forthcoming years were to be years of change, not only of the physical plan of Pennsylvania but of its academic outlook, its conception of student responsibility and increased role in University affairs, and its attitude toward athletics. And the Class of '66 has played an integral part in this formidable and continuous change toward the ideal Community of Scholars. It all began with Freshman Camp, where late at night your Senior counsellor would reveal the inside dope on fraternities, where the girls were, how to become a BMOC, and of course the lyrics to all the Penn songs. When we arrived at Penn the next week, the campus was in a state of flux-but then so were we. If the immensity of the University was at first overwhelming, it was soon accepted along with the food at Commons, Student Health, English 1, a sub-par football team, the necessity for going fraternity-or at least rushing-and of dating high school girls, Harcum honies, and Moore School artists. All summer you had hoped that your roommate would be a "nice guy," and it was just another r.nnoyance if he turned out to !je a "fink." Van Pelt had just been built, and it didn't take long to discover that the best place for socializing was the Undergraduate Library. You could get all your supplies at the Corner, and if you got in good with Al, the upperclassmen said, you'd get invited to his annual Penn House Christmas party. If you didn't particularly care for a Student Snack late at night, there was always the Quad Grille with its fabled red stars that never came up. And McClelland Hall, with TV sets where you could watch the Series, or serpentine couches where, without too much effort, you cold fall asleep while studying. The first dorm meeting in the counsellor's room was intended to make us aware that we were at Penn to study. "Look around you," the counsellor would say, addressing the 25 dorm members. "Four years from now, six of you won't be here." But we were determined to assert our identity upon the University and conducted the most outlandish, ludicrous Freshman Class Election in Penn history. With over 60% of the Class voting, we eleeted the spurious Otto Schmink to the Presidency. Mr. Schmink wasn't a Freshman at all; in fact, he did not even exist, but he won out by doubling the other five candidates votes put together. We also joined in various committees, such asthePSCTPAAPPenn Students Committee to Prevent Action Against Pop's, which also failed. The Pennsylvania News folded, but the Punchbowl made a glorious return. Even dinks were abolished, giving our Class a modicum of respectability. The football team upset Yale, and All-American Lou Buck led the soccer team to a share of the league championship. Stan Pawlak broke the Freshman bas ketball scoring record but the varsity, paced by Rhodes Scholar John Wideman, missed the Ivy lltie. (Continued on page 10) THE PAGE TEN DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN Rugby Club Holds 3-4 Record, Team Battles Columbia Saturday By STEVE RUTTER Six years ago, an informal Penn Rubgy team played Villanova under the leadership of Bill Shane, now Assistant Dean of Men for the Penn Law School. Since then, Rugby at Pennsylvania has flourished to such an extent that Captain Oli Larmi now fields an "A" and a "B" team and plays during both spring and fall seasons. Furthermore, membership in the Penn Rugby Team has doubled in the space of a year to 40 players and Captain Larmi predicts that in 3 to 4 years, 70 men will be playing Rugby at Penn on three seperate levels. Says Captain Larmi, "It is interesting to note that we are a club sport and therefore field both graduate and undergraduate players". The result of such a combination is an enormous wealth of potential, for it provides Penn Rugby with both the strength and experience needed to field a fine club. In previous years, Penn Rugger sported only an "A" team for play, and competed only with teams in the local Philadelphia area. This year, however, the Rugby Club traveled South for its first extended tour, playing the University of Richmond and Duke. Although Penn lost both games by substantial margins Larmi feels the caliber of Penn Rugby play is improving rapidly. Last fall, Penn won the "Seven a Side Tournament" held at Villanova by beating 12 other teams in the Philadelphia area, and also held an impressive 5-2 log for fall season play. This spring, the Rugby Club has been hurt by a number of injuries to its first team, and as a result, its play has been below par. Penn hold wins over Jefferson Medical College, the Philadelphia Rugby Club, and Drew University, while it has lost to Villanova, Duke, Richmond and Cornell. with rugby as the big Skimmer sports attraction". Larmi feels he can best do this by holding an annual game with Princeton, that would provide Skimmer fans with more excitement than seen at the crew races. Rugby Spectacular For Skimmer According to Larmi, "Rugby "Most of all' says Larmi, is the sport to watch; in 3 years, 'we are trying to replace crew we willbe the best in the East." cia who says, "my feet are the fastest in the world." Other fine players are Soccer Co-captain Bobby Dee, Joe White and Englishman Julian Robinson of Oxford. Tin* Paul Restaino looks to lateral out of trouble. Senior Class History his force and vigor were sorely The campus was rapidly chang- missed. We returned to camous for secing shape. Kahn's Towers were ond semester and saw the basbuilt, and Chief Justic Warren helped dedicate the new Law ketball team defeat St. Joseph's School. The Annenberg School for the third straight time. Senrose, and President Harnwell ior curfews for women were abolannounced plans for the Struc- ished, and the University acture of Matter Building, the So- quired two hotels, the Cheston cial Sciences Center, and un- and Harrison, for use as coed veiled University Mews, fore- dorms. The Wharton School liberalized its program, and a runner of University City. Malcolm X drew the largest student honor system was procrowd of the year, and over- posed. As Penn celebrated its 100th flow throng at Irvine, Loren Eiseley published another book, year in Intercollegiate athletics, Archibald MacLeisch became President Harnwell appointed a poet-in-residence, and the folk- committee of distinguished truslore department was established. tees, faculty, and alumni under Penn coeds smoked pipes while the direction of Robert Kiputh to debating the feasibility of hav- evaluate the entire athletic pro ing their own apartments, and gram. Skimmer brought the year the KAPPAS ALMOST BEAT ZBT to a close, but not before the anin football. The Daily Pennsyl- nual rowbottom, as spring-happy Penn Rugby Host Columbia vanian attacked apartment dis- students rioted outside the wocrimination and ran an expose men's dorms beneath a shower *This Saturday, the Club hosts of the unhealthy eating places on of lingerie, and other sundries. Our Junior year featured naColumbia, 12 noon at Murphy campus, which resulted in much tional elections, student proField, and as Oli Larmi says, needed reforms but no better "The game should be a toss food. The Houston Hall Board tests, academic controversies, up." Both Clubs have lost to presented Peter, Paul, and Mary, intense University development, Cornell, but Larmi feels Penn Miriam Makeba, and Lambert, and a new footbaU coach. Barry Goldwater delivered a might have the advantage of home Hendricks, and Bavan, and after speech to a Standing Room Only a semester of informal, formal, ground. audience at Irvine but lost the Roughly half the "A" team is and Ulegal rush, we accepted bids comprised of veteran graduates at various fraternities. The Penn campus mock election by a 3 to with previous experience in col- Players put on Bruce Montgom- 1 margin to Lyndon Johnson. lege. Among the best players ery's original production of Salinger and Keatingwere elected for Penn are Mark Hallom, "Spindrift," and Freshman year by students, but Murphy and Bruce Wagner, Bill Strong and ended with the Limelighters and Kennedy became the new senators. Argentinian Lucio Mansilla Gar- Skimmer. Students began protesting When we returned to canwus as Sophomores, nothing much had Lthroughout the country, and at really changed: it was still im- Penn. At Berkeley, free speech possible to buy books during the riots resulted in 700 student (Continued from page 12) first two weeks of the term, the arrests, while on campus, the Alter che Brown loss, Coach debate over Stiegman's single Save Open Spaces Committee Burnham was quoted as saying was beginning its long fight "We have a strong team, but wing continued, and fraternities against the proposed Fine Arts were accused of prejudice. But everyone in this league is tough; Building by protesting the deonly three or four teams in the then, the University refused to struction of trees near the FurGovernor Wallace to nation better than the top Ivy permit speak on campus, inisisting that ness Building. The Students Opsquads." posed to Dorm Rent Equalization Pen*, with its victory Wed- the expected protestors would not Committee was formed and suchave enough time to organize nesday, ts riding a three game The issue of free ceeded with the Daily Pennsylwinning streak, and is 1-2 in properly. Ivy League play. After losses speech was at stake, but Wallace vanian's help in working out to Brown, who is currently in never did appear. The football a compromise solution with the team snapped Harvard's nine- Administration to this annual first place, and to Yale, the Red and Blue has been strong in every game winning streak, 7-2, and problem. a near riot ensued on Spruce The Student Committee on Undepartment. dergraduate Education was Street. The attack of Rich Ragan, Jim formed and announced plans to On November 22, we learned Patton, and John Nutter has consurvey the student body on acatinued toj be a potent scoring in terror and disbelief that demics. And the women were President Kennedy had been shot. machine. Both midfields have granted a new social code. While done almost equally well, and Words failed; action was im- some were speaking out on U.S. possible; rational thought dulled. the Dick Drury, Rich Plotkin, and Mike San Philip defensive We could only look within our- foreign policy, civil rights, free speech, or tree destruction, alignment has been particularly selves for some answer, but nothothers were marching with canes jing came. Kennedy's death signitough the last three games. •fied the end of an era for us, and and skimmer hats, marking the Lacrosse (Continued from page 9) FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1966 Classified Ads AIR-CONDITIONED si MM! R SI MMI K SUBLET. 3 ROOM II RVSII1I 1) Dl I I \l apartment, for 2. ' \ in IVlt lib- aprt. In heart of Campus. Three bedrc rary. Call Sue Bollar-594-536] M Pal Breath Completely renovated this year. Call I \2-770<>. 2077 594-5363. ,394 BUMMER SUBLEASE. OOMPORTABLl PEMDN TO sn \KI I" \ivil\<. STUDIO. furnished, spacious a rt. for three in elevaiO*. Skylight, air-conditioned. Center City 830.00 Call k 1-6-5493 after 6:00 P.M. tor building. Convenient to campus; reason* able rate; Call CH. 2-3944. ll KNISIIED BOUSE FOR RENT: IDEAL >r 4 atudenta: Three floors, air condit- TYPING EXPERTLY DONE AT REASONable Kates: Theses, term papers, manuioned, I Diversity Area. Reasonable ratesscripts, etc. I'roff reading included HI-6-1297 Call KY-2-0956. 1397 SUMMER SUBLET: BEAUTIFUL, NEW. COUNSELLORS. PA BOYS CAW NEEDS three bedroom apartment. Paneled walls- counseller aide to teach Swimming I \I1CExcellenl Location-37th A Chestnut. Fully WSI). Boating & Canoeing. Biology, Tennis furnNhed-Danish Modern. Call EV-2-8135. Basketball,-\ fencing. Male, single, 1883 20, experienced, call Mr. Goldberg, H \MOTORCYCLE: 1963 HONDA 305< r, 2-4481 after 5 p.m. Dream touring Model, white, 95 mph. 65mil. gallon! $350 complete. Call FV-2-6438. 3924-3926 SANSOM si. MODERN ll RNp 2080 ished. One to three bedroom ants. Available SUMMER RENTAL FOR 2-3 STUDENTS for one to four students. CR-6-2571 or 4 rooms: 2 bedrooms, livingroom, kitchen, MI-2-9916. 2078 tiled bath, furnished. Excellent Location, VOLUNTEERS FOR PAID RKSI \RC II 36th & Walnut. EV-2-31 20gl Male students, 18 to 27 years old, for psychological experiment involving APARTMENT FOR 2 TO SUB-LET FOR group a standardized measure of hypnotic suscepeither summer aession-tlOO for six week tibility. I'. of P. Medical School Research. I at 34th & Sans,,i, St. Call EV-2-2455. Initial session approximately 2 % hours. 2238 Reimbursement—$5.00. Telephone: V LOST: McElroy between 9 and 5, 787-2377. Zoo 202 Notehk. Hwrd. M- 1-1547. ' 2127 2587 MALE COUNSELLORS HANTED NY., RIDi KS BANTED TO BOSTON AM) Co-ed camp is looking for counsellors able vacinity. Friday, April 23. Return to teach various camp activities. If you are Sunday. Call Sid or John Towera tonight. over 21 and single,. Call EV 2-6261 for EV 64444. 2588 interview. 1879 ■\I'\RTMENT: 3 OR 4 OCCTP/NTS. ON CAMPUS. ATTRACTIVE ROOMS FOR Furnishes, television. 3 bedroom 2 bathmale students. Available for summer and rooms, kitchen, -V. "livingroom. $37.00 next year. Maid Service. Refrigerator for Man Monthly. Call I \ ■ snacks. Call WA-2-29 1392 MUST SELL IMMl.ni \l I IV MCI SI APT. ON CAMPUS FOR SUMMER Silling to take loss. Spacious 7 room apt. Danish Mod. Fum. Two bedrooms. Kitchen, Beautifully furnsihed. iuni>iii«^«»* Modern »n"i"-*u 1.1* l.iv in ^i >'<'■", Living rm., tile bath. New rags. All walls 1 excellent kiitchen, I : baths, 2 or 3 bedrooms panelled, Wired for Air Cond. EV 2-6965. ,e,ls. Ml SI SI I TO BELIEVE with new be Call KY-2-7208 anytime. 2969 SUMMER RENTAL: 34th and SALNUT si MM IK MPARTMENT! For 2-3 students, V rooms: 2 bedrooms, Beautifully rornsihed double. Convenient to Livingroom, Kitchen, Tiled Bath, FurnState store. Library, Call EV. 2* ished. Excellent Location, 36th $ Walnut EV 2-3863. 2615 AIR CONDITIONED APT, FURN, SUMMER or sear 'round rental, kitchen, bath, living SAILING EXPEDITION, CARIBREW rm,1)edrm; Only $65/mon. 110 S. 38th St. share adventure, expense. Airmail yate. 3rd fir. rear-quiet Call EV-6-4200 or EVFairwinds Club Pesca, Cartagena, Column 2-8746 after S. 3121 bia. 1881 FOR 2-3 STUDENTS. 4 BOOMS. 2 BEDAPARTMENT FOR 2 TO SUB-LET FOR rooms livingrm, kitchen, furnished excellent either summer session-$100 for six week Location 39th & Locust EV-2-8159. Summer period-at 34th & Sansom St. Call EVSchool Second Session Only Spacious Villa2-2455. 2?38 like Quality!! 1122 APARTMENT FOR RENT: DOBNTOWN; NEWLY AVAILABLE APARTMENT 5 RM. Beautifully furnished; air conditioning: lncl. 3 bedrooms, June-August, furnsihed, Large brick fire place. Stained floors, 34th and Walnut S135, mo. incl. utilities iust painted, very clean, 2 bedrooms; I'erf. Ev-2-7327 after 6. 5992 for 2 or 3 Call K1-6-231 2240 FOR SALE IN UNIVERSITY CITY: LIGHT airv, end-of-row. 2 story house owned by HOUSE TO SHARE FOR SUMMER: Former Faculty Member. Four bedrooms 3 rooms, Center City, air con d., garden. (or 3 plus study.) bath, 23ft. living room, $50 including utilities, (women) Call:WA-2-4684. 2079 dining room, large breakfast room, kitchen, two enclosed proches. Basement with laundry, lavatory storage. Walk to Penn Campus, THE PERFECT APARTMENT TO WM Lea School or take bus at corner. 17,500. this summer; 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, kitchen, Call BA-2-6296 for app't. 0,,0 living-rooms; unbeatable location at 36th N*EW L USED HI FI & STEREO EQUPand Sansom; Stained-glass windows and m ei»* for sale. All component parts- Amplivaulted ceilings; frabjously furnished; infiers, speakers, turntables, etc. All brands expensive too! Call: EV 2-6039. 2966 available Call LO 7-7252. 3207 APARTMENT FOR TWO STUDENTS. FOR SUMMER RENT-STARTING JULY 1 July first thru August. Two bedrooms, Spacious apt. on 3640 Chestnut. Two larlivingroom, kitchen. Recently renovated. ge double bedrooms, bath, kitchen, dining Modern furnishings,, 37th and Chestnut. room, and living room. 3-4 persons. Call Call EV 2-2969 or EV 2-0419. BA-2-9898. Ask for Jim. 2967 3119 revival after a five-year absence finished third. The Quaker squash of the traditional Junior Cane team, however, which tied for the March. Ivy Title, captured the National President Harnwell received Championship at the Ringe the 1965 Philadelphia award, ded- Courts behind Howard Coonley's icated Locust Walk, and an- second place individual finish, nounced the University's plan for The publish or perish controa $93 million expansion program, versy imperiled faculty longevity to include a house system, three more buildings for the Wharton but not creativity, as a University professor even then disSchool, a Graduate Arts and Sciences Center, and a new Phy- covered a hormone for stimulating hair growth. Ed Falk ran sical Education Building. for Miss University, and the Penn Both the Daily Pennsylvanian Players, with Cappy Bergen in and fraternities faced mild setbacks in 1965. The D.P. was the lead role, put on "The Ensaddled with an editor whose chanted" under the direction of liberal views led to editorials Walter Abel. Bayard Rustin and Joan Baez and columns decrying athletics, appeared on campus, and novelist tradition, fraternities, and adPhilip Roth was named an Engministrators, while the fraternities were being punished or lish lecturer for the coming year. were simply dying. Beta was A teach-in on Viet Nam drew thrown off campus, AEPi was 1200 in Irvine, and the new honor placed on social pro. for having system gained faculty approval. too many sweat sessions and In Harrisburg, Senator Donolow realistic movies, ZBT was put attempted to block University alon social pro. after a liquor locations but was rebuffed, and raid, and Acacia was dissolved Skimmer featured Chuck Berry, by order of its National head- Marvin Gaye, and the Chiffons. It is only natural to think of quarters. our Senior year as the culminaQuaker athletics, entering their second century, regained tion of our undergraduate life some of that old lustre. The com- at Penn. If we were part of a pleted survey called for in- transition duringfour years at creased funds for varsity sports the University, our Senior year and additional facilities for un- was the year of greatest change and the year in which we united dergraduates; and President Harnwell's plan for "integrated as a class in a manner reminathletics" began to take form. iscent of our Freshman year. The football team made coBob Ode 11, one-time Penn A11American, inherited an unde- hesiveness easy-with Jock Hanfeated Freshman football team num and Bruce Molloy leading upon replacing John StieRjnan, the way, the gridders infused the who completed his sixth.Slight campus with a spirit that was to losing season with only 6«*B'*ric- remain throughout the year. Stuntory. ning vitories over Lehigh, BuckJeff Neuman and Stan Pawlak nell, Brown, and Columbia led tc were named All-Ivy for the second the first .500 season since the time, but the basketball team '59 championship year, andOdell ran into Bill Bradley again and (Continued on page 5) THE FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1966 Hamlin Joins Tennis Squad Against Harvard, Brown ■■ By MARK BAUER A big weekend for Penn tennis begins today when the Quaker varsity meets defending Ivy cochampion, Harvard, in a 2:00 match. Following this match, the varsity travels to Providence for tomorrow's match with Brown. The weekend is just as important for the Quaker freshmen, who host a tough Princeton squad tomorrow at 2:00 p.m. Last year's Crimson squad tied with Penn and Princeton for the E.C.A.C. championship, and this year's squad is just as good. "This is a solid Harvard team", says Harvard coach John Barnaby, "with good depth and strength." Harvard's strength is evenly balanced along the line. Harvard's number one man, Bernie Adelsberg, is only a sophomore, who should not give Perm's returning Clay Hamlin too much trouble. The remaining five singles players are experienced veterans. Captain Dave Benjamin and senior Clive Kileff who play at number two and three singles respectively, held those same spots last season. Penn narrowly edged out Harvard, 5-4, last year, but it will take fine performances from the Quaker raquetmen to repeat again this year. One encouraging note in Wednesday's 8-1 loss to Yale was the victory of junior netman, Fred George. With number five man George "coming into his own", as Penn coach Al Molloy put it, and experienced seniors, Maurice Heckscher and Howard Coonley, playing fourth and sixth singles, respectively, Penn will try to match the depth of the Crimson squad. Hamlin's return to the Quaker squad leaves Penn in far better position than it has been in its previous two matches. Hamlin's return not only reunites P,enn's first doubles team of mf> FRED GEORGE M "Cnming Into His Own Hamlin and Ed Serues, it also allows thp other players to move back down to tneir familiar singles spots. Tomorrow's varsity match against Brown promises to be another close one for the Quakers. Brown has beaten both Amherst and Columbia, two teams that Penn also defeated, earlier this year. Both the Quakers and the Bruins beat Amherst by an identical four match margin. The freshman match against Princeton is expected to be the roughest test of the year for the undefeated, 3-0, frosh. Princeton Ivy Powerhouse" The Princeton squad has been perenially the.strongestinthelvy League and this year's team is no exception. Meeting the Tigers in tomorrow's home match will be what coach Molloy has described as "one of the strongest freshman 'earns in years." Leading the Quakers at the number one spot is Spencer Burke, followed by Rich Cohen and Bill Powell at numbers two and three, respectively. These three players, all regionally ranked, provide Penn with one of the strongest freshman teams in the nation. Does this I spot V„.-' DAILY S M U l_TO r>* PAGE ELEVEN Quaker Nine Bows to Yale, 10-6, Meets Army Tomorrow at Home By LARRY KR0HN Despite the batting heroics of first baseman Dave Felser, the Quaker baseball squad lost its second league contest, Wednesday, bowing 10-6 to Yale at New Haven. Coach Bob Murray's charges attempt to even their Eastern mark at 2-2 in Saturday's 2 p.m. clash with Army at Stewart Field. Felser was the bright spot in an otherwise dismal setback Wednesday. The junior first sacker went 3 for 4, raised his batting average from .296 to .355, and drove home two runs in Penn's losing effort. Brian Kochunas suffered his fourth setback against one victory in his least impressive performance to date. The soph righthander yielded only five base CHUCK SHIELDS hits, but he walked ten and hit Dr/ves Home Tw0 ,„ Quofcer Loss one batter, taking the loss when the bottom half of the inning on Yale scored six times in the two walks and an error by shortbottom of the eighth to wipe out stop Murray. Penn's 6-4 lead. Yale tied up the ball game in . . the bottom of the fifth on a two c c Quakers Score Early run outburst. With one out, Wis- P The Red and Blue started off with a two run first inning. Hench .... , . Murray and Pete Wismewski opened the ball game with consecutive walks off Bulldog starter Bob Kenney. After a passed ball moved each man up a base, Felser singled, scoring Murray and sending Wisniewski to third. Wisniewski then tallied on Chuck Shields' double play grounder to give the Quakers an early 2-0 margin. Penn scored again in the top of the second when Jim Nocito walked, moved to second on Kochunas' sacrifice and scored on a passed ball. The Bulldogs scored their first run off Kochunas jn ^wski displayed Eli captain fob Bartlett's grounder Bartlort lett tnrAr took cor-rmrl second nrt on aa unlfi wild nitron pitch and when Jed Devine also drew a pass, both men advanced abase on another wild pitch. Ed Goldstone popped to second, but Kochunas walked the next three batters and forced in the tying runs. The Quakers bounced back with a three run seventh inning sparked by Kochunas' single to right with one man down. Murray forced Kochunas at second, but Wisniewski moved the Quaker shortstop to second with a single and Felser drove him home with a clutch rightfield double. Shields then came Track Teams Face Brown, Lions in Triangular Meet : through with Penn's key hit of the afternoon, a single to leftcenter that scored Wisniewski and Felser. Yale scored once in the bottom of the inning on a single, walk, wild pitch and sacrifice fly. And then in the tragic eighth, the Bulldogs scored six times off Kochunas to virtually wrap up the ballgame. A hit batsman, followed by three walks, a single and a triple finished Penn for the afternoon, although Kochunas remained to complete the contest. The Quakers, now 1-2 in Eastern League play, 5-4 over-all, will face the conference champions in tomorrow's clash. The Cadets will probably go with hurler Barry DeBolt (6-1 and 1.38 last season). Army is led by All-League shortstop Ken Smith (.344) and outfielder John Boretti (.294). 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 0 10 0 0 1 10 0 2 1 Penn Yale Quaker Batting AB 31 i elscf II drhiwe 31 II e f f ern an 25 Kel( hncr 12 31 Hollo] 37 Murr.i\ 20 Nocito Shields 33 HisiiM'wski 30 3B Moiio> i H R 4 5 7 3 6 9 3 4 8 11 8 7 1 7 7 2 10 6 Mwras 1 Bl 2B 5 4 1 1 2 2 2 9 3 2 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 Ave. .355 .258 .280 .083 .226 .189 100 3t3 200 IIR Marlowe Penn Linksters Face Harvard, Columbia/Today By TOM GEB0W Pennsylvania's freshman and varsity golf teams celebrate Skimmer weekend with road matches as the frosh head for Lawrenceville Saturday and the Penn's track teams move north to New York City Saturday for varsity tees off against Harvard a triangular meet with Brown and Columbia at Baker Field. and Columbia this afternoon in The Quaker cindermen have been running into some rough Cambridge, Mass. competition thus far this season and should not find things too The freshman team's match much easier Saturday. with the New Jersey prep school Although Brown has lost its is the Quaker yearlings' second only dual meet of the year to match of the season with a prep Harvard, 107-47, the Bruins school - They previously lost boast a strong group of runners to Hill School April 13. After and will exploit this glaring Lawrenceville, the Quakers have weakness in the Penn squad. only two matches left, against Princeton April 27 and Navy Ankawa Bruin Ace April 30. Win Ankawa, a Brown junThe varsity is also beginning ior, has been showing some ex- its stretch drive today in the Harcellent times and against the vard-Columbia triangular. After Crimson was clocked in 10 flat this match, the Quakers return in the hundred and 22.6 in the to Philadelphia for a match with 220. Penn's top threat in the Princeton. They then face century, Rick Owens, is out for Lehigh, Georgetown, and Lafaythe season and the Red and Blue ette before closing out the regwill have to count on sprinter ular season by hosting tough Jerry Duchovnay. Navy. Brown will also be bolstered The Quaker linksters now by a flock of returning letter- boast an 8-1 record, and good men who captured points in last showings in their final matches year's triangular meet at Frank- would give the team an excellent lin Field. The Bruins won that chance for their second straight encounter notching 79 points to invitation to the NCAA champion66 for Columbia and 47 for Penn. ships. Brown co-captain Bruce Ross These two matches with the will be defending his victory in Cantabs and the Lions will be the shot put event which he won important in getting Coach Robwith a put of 47-10 1/4 last ert Hays' golfers off on their year. Clark Hopson will also be stretch drive. After this weekback to try to duplicate his win- end, Penn will have the home course advantage in all their ning 150-5 discuss toss. remaining matches excepting Durgee, Pawl ok Bolster Penn Lehigh. Coach Hays has been juggling The Quakers should be able his lineup in an effort to find the | to count on strong performances best combination. Against Lafrom Jeff Durgee and Stan Paw- Salle last Tuesday he had Jarry lak who have been the only con- Kling playing number one, cosistent winners for Penn. captain Arty Kern number two, Durgee has dominated the Brent Arcuni number three, soph hurdles events in the three meets Dave London fourth, with cothis season, and Pawlak has captain Pete Humphrey, TedLinscored points in the shot put and genheld.and Bruce Schlechter in discus. the fifth, sixth and seventh spots. feel sticky? NEITHER DOES OLD SPICE STICK DEODORANT Dries as it applies ... in seconds. And stays dry! Gives you fast . . . comfortable . . . dependable deodorant protection. Lasting protection you can trust. Try it. Old Spice Stick Deodorant for Men. 1.00 plus tax. PENNSYLVANI AN 74e VeUfy PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE TWELVE THE ye On Sports Days of Wine and Roses I^T h DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN Not Dead, Remmicks Instead FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1966 Penn Seeks Fourth Straight Win , Faces Potent Dartmouth Squad GU r M75L Y m Once upon a time, not too many years ago, there was a group of evil men who sat in Logan Hall and spent each and every hour of each and every day thinking the most heinous thoughts they could think. One dark and dreary day, after they had gone on unusually long stretch without doing anything particularly wicked, they hit upon the most dastardly scheme they had ever conceived. That morning, their leader, a young vest-wearing, cigarchewing flibish who went by the mystical oriental title of Long Lee, burst into their planning room. Having just finished presiding over the expulsion of three perfectly innocent students, Long Lee was in a particularly resplendent mood. Smiling that evil smile which was his trademark the Chief Grand Ogre and Executioner (for that was Long Lee's official title) announced this evilist of evil plans. "We are going to kill Skimmer," he cried with unbountiful glee. "We are going to kill it dead !!!!!" "Kill Skimmer?" the others wailed. "Oh no, great one, you cannot kill it for it is too powerful to be killed . . . they love it too much." But, the insidious Long Lee, who once had frolicked by the banks of the Schuylkill as freely as anyone, stood towering in front of the others casting a dark shadow ever them. Unmoved by their pleas for mercy, he dictated that "from this day forth, Skimmer shall be dead." And so it came to pass the great and mighty Skimmer died. SPORTS Attackman Jim Patton leading Assault on opponents Goal. By JIM RESTIV0 The Red and ^ue stickmen, who ran their season log to 5-3 with Wednesday's 14-1 win over Drexel, travel to Hanover tomorrow on a scalping exhibition. Their projected victims - Dartmouth's Indians, who are the current Ivy League Co-champions. The Indians of Coach Whitey Burnham currently sport a 1-2 record, having defeated Holy Cross 19-2, and lost to Baltimore and Brown, 11-10. Brown defeated the Quakers early in the season. "If we have any strength at all," says Burnham, "It's in protecting our net." Junior goalie Gary Rubus has been Dartmouth's replacement for departed All-Ivy goaltender Brian Walsh. The Indians also boast a meaty defensive line, led by the Green's '65 football captain, Tom Clark. Teaming up with Clark are two more beefy stickmen, 200 pound Bob MacLeod and the 1966 grid captain-elect Bill Calhoun. It was muscle that gave Dartmouth its 10-6 win 6ver Penn last year. Tne Quakers had gone into the game with a 7-1 record on the line against Dartmouth's 2-1 showing. While Penn was locking the Indians, 3-3, in the first period scorewise, they were getting mauled by their bigger opponents. First Dave Rahilly received a shoaldar injury .later in the second period, Howie Freedlander received a gash on the cheek, and Ung Kim's face was bloodied. Bruce McKissock, first team All-Ivy, leads a potent midfield. An All-American candidate, McKi ssock tallied four points in the Green's loss to Brown. Teaming up with him are senior Gene Freshman Lacrosse vs. Delaware 2 00 Delaware Nattie and sophomore Bill Rich. Heavyweight Crew vs. Columbia, On attack, the Indians have Princeton had some early season problems. (Childs Cup) Princeton Lightweight Crew \ s. (olumbia, Yale Sophomore Bob McCormick, who 2:00Schuylkill had amassed seven points aVarsity Tennis vs. Brown gainst Holy Cross, has had to 2:00 Providence Freshman Tennis vs. Princeton assume leadership of a cut-and2:00 Princeton paste attack since a shoulder Varsity Track vs. Brown, Columbia separation ended the season for 1.00 Baker Field. N\( the Green's only veteran attackKreshman Track vs. Brown, Columbia 1:00 Baker Field. NYC man, Dick Meyer. Weekend Sports 1 rid ay Freshman Baseball \s. Swarthmore J.V. 3:30 Swarthmore Yarsit> Qoll \ s. IIar\ard, Columbia 1.30 Cambridge Yarsitv Tennis \s. Harvard 2 00 Cambridge Saturday \arsit\ Baseball \s. Army 2"00 River FleM , hsiinidii Baseball %*• Drexel 2 00 Drexel Freshman Gall vs. Lawrenc eville 2:00 Lawrence vil I e Varsil\ Lacrosse \ s. Dartmouth 2.00 Hanover. N.H- But, Skimmer did not really die. It seems, so the ancient chronicles say, that there were defectors within Long Lee's organization. They deposed the Chief Executioner and ressurected the old beloved institution after only a year had passed. However, the ressurected Skimmer, the Skimmer that returned to campus a short year ago, was not the same as it was before Long Lee's near kill. Rugby Club vs. Columbia 1:00 River Field (Continued on page 10) No, there will never be Skimmers like the Skimmers of years ago. Too many of the old traditions have fallen by the wayside. For those who are too young, or those who do not remember, a short journey into yesterday is in order. Imagine if you will, a row of tall, sturdy archers poised with Hvywt's Open Away BVBARRY JORDAN bow in hand. Across the mighty Schuylkill stood the targets. 150'sin Skimmer Race Coach Joe Burk's varsity heavys and Ted Perm's lightweight crew will add much deterThe event was the annual William Tell proboscis. Shoot, one of Nash's frosh oarsmen swing into action Satmination to the spirit of Skimmer when \hey the most ivy of Ivy League traditions. Archers from the world over came to compete with the best meet Yale and Columbia for the Dodge Cup urday when they vie for the Childs Cup over a mile and three quarter Lake Carnegie course. from the University and the Ivy League, until, it seems, one Saturday afternoon. Their rivals will be Columbia and defending "We're hoping for five out of five" said coach archer's aim failed him. champ Princeton. Fred Leonard with a broad smile. "Yale has Sinks The Shell The Red and Blue holds a vast edge in this a real first class varsity," he added, "but we competition but the Orange and Black has won should do well." it two years running. "We're hoping to reverse Competition for the Cup is in its third year, As the story goes, instead of reaching the targets, his shaft fell far short. Unfortunately, to the delight of many bacchan- and in each annum the home crew has taken the trend" commented Burk. "Princeton looks good and you never know what can happen in a alians who stood at the sidelines viewing the contest, the arrow the honors. The lightweights, under the leaderfirst race." in question landed smack in the middle of a Princeton shell, which ship of captain Larry Walsh, will try to keep that This will be a revealing race for coach Burk The varsity rowed tradition intact. just happened to be way out in the lead. its best race in several who is sending a boat The results were disasterous. With each stroke, the Princeton manned by five sophoseasons last week and shell sunk deeper and deeper into the pollution. When it was all mores and three junhave worked hard over, four Tigers were dead and the others were considerably towards a repeat periors. It is an inexthe worse for their little trip. Needless to say that was the last perienced crew but formance before the William Tell Proboscis Shoot. they will have one home crowd. "They There are other old traditions that will never again be part thing in their favor. have been going well" of the Skimmer festivities. For example, there was the annual This plus factor commented Leonard. 150-yd Nude Swim Across the Schuylkill. It used to be, before The freshman crew will be the new electhe Fairmount Park Guards got the issue of water-wings, the contronic system built inwhich has been most testants could swim with freedom, but modern science finally impressive this seato the shell which will caught up with the mermen and the 150-yd Nude Swim was no son suffered a bad blow each man to know exmore. actly how well he is during the week when Even the Friday night blowout in Franklin Field isn't quite stroking. The device they learned that their to be that you could count on at least two or the same. It used was developed by Dr. number six man, Keith three Deans from the University getting tapped out with beer John McGinn and uses Munroe, was operated bottles. Now, they don't even bother to show up, or, if they do, PETE MALL0RY CHILDS CUP a system of lights to on for appendicitis. they come with various disguises and wigs. Varsity Stroke Heavyweight's Goal measure the pull on Don Blue has stepped up from the second each of the eight oarlocks. Not Quite The Same freshmen to fill the vacancy. Leonard has no Frosh coach Ted Nash is enthusiastic with idea how the change will affect his boat's time No, Skimmer will not be quite the same even though the Houston in competition, but he noted that "we have a real this year's squad. As of now the lineup will Hall Board has done one great job in arranging this year's good substitute". be the same as it was when the 69ers swept festivities. the Class Day race. Two of the oarsmen, The coach also made changes in the JV boat, Always mindful of the campus' wishes, HHB has added a new moving Dennis Custage into the stroke seat. Nat Reece and Tom Conners, have been ill and and most interesting event to the Skimmer Weekend program. In addition Terry Carr and Steve Ziph have been Nash is not certain as to whether they will row Realizing that is more fun to "get into the mood" in a group moved up from the third varsity. on Saturday. rather than individually, the Board has scheduled The First Stroking the shell will be Dexter Bell anc In early afternoon ceremonies the 150s will Annual Skimmer Olympics. This athletic contest, which happily christen their new shell the Jordan. The boat the coxswain is Kenny Dreyfus. Nash is happ\ promises to degenerate into a first class orgy given University is named after J. Richard Jordan who was capwith his crew's practice performances noting cooperation, will kick off the weekend's festivities. that they lost a practice race to Vesper by onl\ tain and stroke of the '33 heavies. He coached On another part of the Hill Hall Field, 759 of the University's the lightweights to three national championships four tenths of a second. finest squamish players will do battle for the first annual Farquard in his tenure during the '40s. Burk announced the final lineup for his shell. Cup, donated by the Harcum College Athletic Association. SquamCoxswain is Joel Kanton, stroke is soph Nick The race will be held over the two thousand ish, by the way, is the favorite game of potrzebies and ferns meter river course. It has been moved into LaMotte followed by Bill Purdy. Rowing six the world over. It promises to be fun. is Steve Cook with the fifth seat occupied bj the center lanes to protect the shell from overIn fact,the whole weekend promises to be fun. There will be zealous Skimmer celebrants. Austin Godfrey. The boat is filled out by Phil plenty of wine, women, and song, and a good deal else going on McKinley, Robbie Meek, John Henderson and Nick There will be five races in the regatta during those fantastic forty-eight hours that Long Lee once tried highlighted, of course, by the Cup competition. Paumgarten. .to kill. \ Fenn Crews Vie for Dodge, Childs Cups Jk
© Copyright 2024