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Wqt JBatlg f mnsglitamait ® founded 1885 Vol. I.XXXVIII No, 120 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Copyright 1972 The Daily Pennsylvanian Tuesday, December 12, 1972 Nader Unit Hits Clinic's Use of Morning-After Pill P l Wi<**er It's Rosengarten Time again for these students as classes end and finals approach. President of Villanova Cuts Off Funds for Campus Paper By THOMAS PAPSON Funding for the Villanova University student newspaper was cut off Thursday by the school's president, reportedly due to what he considered bad taste in the paper's Dec.6 issue. The editor-in-chief of "the Villanovan,"Peter Schrader, said the "indefinite suspension" of the paper's yearly $18,000 allocation forced cancellation of today's issue, which was to be the last of the semester. Schrader said the paper will not be able to continue publication next semester unless the funding is rein- stated. He said the Villanovan's editors had been given no indication when the suspension might be lifted. The Philadelphia Inquirer reported that Villanova President Rev. Ed- ward J. McCarthy said "the paper haj been very tasteless in the things it has published, and I felt that the publications board should be giving it better advice." Schrader said the paper's editors were informed of the decision Thursday afternoon by Villanova vice provost for student affairs Rev. James Duffy as today's edition was about to go to the printers. Father Duffy informed the editors Linguistics Dept. to Share Resources With Columbia By LEE LEVINE The University's Linguistics Department is finalizing plans for an inter-university graduate seminar with Columbia University. The seminar, scheduled to begin next fall, will be taught by faculty members of both schools and will be open to both student bodies. University administrators hope the venture will be the first step toward a broad program of inter-institutional cooperation. Dr. Robert Zemsky, executive aide to President Meyer- son, said the project is one of "long range hopes and short range ac- complishments." The proposed seminar in formal linguistics is the result of work by Dr. Zelig Harris, Benjamin Franklin professor of Linguistics, who opened Police Disclose Possibility of Ten pes in U. Area Rap By MITCHELL BERGER Following assertions last week that there were increasing incidents of rape in the immediate off-campus vicinity, a spokesman for Philadelphia police today admitted there was a "possibility" that at least ten rapes had been committed since the beginning of the year in the area, some of them involving University students. Information was also released by University security officers that there was an attempted rape of a University student on Nov. 28 at 40th and Pine streets. According to University security officials, two unidentified men atr tempted to rape a University student Nov. 28 at 40th and Pine streets. The University security force would not identify the woman, stating their policy was never to release the name, age or address of the victim. Allegedly, two men jumped out of a white Chevrolet at 8:00 P.M. on Nov. 28 and attempted to force the woman into the car at knifepoint to rape her. The woman, however, resisted and screamed, driving her assailants away. Police from the 18th District Police headquarters immediately responded, according to University security officers. Nosuspects have been named in the case, and the license number of the car was not recorded. Neither the West Philadelphia Detective Division, (Continued on page 7) informal discussions with members of the Columbia faculty and ad- ministration this fall. Harris will be the University professor teaching the course. Chairman of the Linguistics Department, Dr. Leigh Lisker, ex- plained the experiment grew out of President Meyerson's interest in the possibilities of institutional cooperation. "The idea was that universities ought to combine their strengths, and the President thought that given the history of Linguistics at l'enn, that a good place to begin any cooperation with other institutions would be Linguistics," he said. Lisker explained that Linguistics at Columbia is in a "precarious situation," He said that there is a "desire to restore linguistics" and that this cooperative venture will benefit the study of linguistics at Columbia. Lisker suggested future programs of cooperation would benefit some of the University's weaker departments He said any further progress in the area of institutional cooperation must be implemented on a "point by point" basis. Zemsky referred to the experiment as one that will provide the University with "valuable information." He said that in the future graduate centers "would have to become far more complimentary rather than com- petitive." The future of institutional sharing is limitless, Zemsky said. He said the possibility exists for a conglomerate of eastern centers to cooperate, each choosing "different areas in which to specialize" in the future. Zentsky said the administration feels that in the future the University will have to utilize the cooperation model "on an international basis " He suggested that a continuous exchange of talented faculty with foreign countries will become commonplace at some future date. Although plans for the linguistics seminar have not been finalized, Lisker said, "Presumably Columbia will make the arrangements for announcing the course which will probably deal with the mathematical aspects of linguistics." He suggested the future of experiments of this kind depend on the success of this venture. that the suspension was a result of •'bad taste" in previous issues Schrader said. Schrader speculated that the "bad lasle" may have involved a Gay Activist Alliance news article, which used the word "penis" in its copy. The editor termed the suspension a "grave disservice to the school." In order to continue to publish without University funding next semester, Schrader said, "We'd have to go to a much smaller newspaper." it looks very discouraging," he commented. It's the end of a newspaper started in 1927." The Villanova student newspaper has apparently had a tenuous relationship with the school's ad- ministration in recent months. Schrader said the Villanovan had been threatened with suspension of funds in November, after the paper ran two controversial editorials in the Nov. 15 issue, one dealing with the abolition of football and the other critical of the Villanova dean of arts and sciences. Father McCarthy, in authorizing the suspension, stressed that "'previous efforts have failed" to influence the staff to meet "minimum requirements of good taste." The publications board is an ad- visory body composed of faculty, students, and administrators. By CHAT Bl AKEMAN A Ralph Nader task force Monday accused the University's Student Health Service of treating women "as guinea pigs" in testing the effects of a morning-after pill. A report by the Health Research Group said clinics at Pennsylvania and the University of Michigan were dispensing diethylstilbesterol iDESi to rape victims and women who feared unwanted pregnancy "without even the most rudimentary ob- servance of professional standards und informed consent." Dr. Paul Schrodc, director of Student Health, said the drug had been administered to about 12 patients this semester. He called the allegations of poor standards "preposterous." Dr. Luigi Mastoianm, chairman of the gynecolgy department, termed the allegations "ridiculous" and said Nader was "an irresponsible son of a bitch" for allowing the report to go out under his name. Dr. Michael Shimkin, professor of oncology at the University of California, cautioned the drug warrants further study, but also termed Nader's conclusions questionable. The drug was used extensively in the 1940's to prevent miscarriage. Although later found to be ineffective, the drug was administered in heavy doses to women throughout their pregnancy. Some female offspring of women who used the drug have been found to have an increased chance for developing genital defects during puberty. Some of these defects are cancerous and women whose mothers took the drug are urged to undergo tests for possible deformities. The drug is now administered as a post-coital pill to prevent pregnancy. It is given in heavy doses for five days after intercourse. Nader's report charges that since the drug is not 100 per cent effective, w iiinen who take it as a morning after pill may bear offspring suseptible to genital cancer. The report also calls on the Food and Drug Administration iFDA) to require stricter labelling on DES and urges the medical profession to stop prescribing the drug unless ac- companied with proper control and adequate follow-up care. Several experts in the field, in- cluding Mastroianni, disputed the report's findings in strong language. Schrode said that when used throughout unwanted pregnancy to prevent miscarriage the drug may have led to harmful effects in the offspring because harmful amounts accumulated in the fetus. Hut when taken to prevent pregnancy the drug prevents the fetus from forming so there is no such build-up. Schrode said that no studies have (Continued on page 2) Revision of Affirmative Action Plan Released By MARILYN MLRPHY The University Monday released revived components of its affirmative action plan concerning grievance procedures for support staff, maternity leave and recruitment, and hiring policies for administrative and professional personnel. The documents are revisions of the University's Affirmative Action Program released last May. In ad- dition to the nne\ance. maternity and hiring components, documents concerning faculty hiring policies and Dev. Report May Go Unaltered to Trustees By SCOTT GIBSON Although the Development Com- mission has invited comments on its draft report released two weeks ago. the document may go to the University Trustees essentially as it stands now. Commission co-chairman Dr. Eliot Stellar said Monday minor changes might be made but that major suggestions would most likely be referred to the Trustees as "amend- ments" or "minority reports" after the draft is submitted at its Jan. 11 meeting. Stellar said criticism from mem- bers of the University community would be given to the Trustees by 1'rresident Meyerson and Provost Reitz between January and March in preparation for a discussion of the commission's full report at a Trustees meeting in May. Stellar listed two principal reasons for the commission's decision to defer Admissions Office Seeks to Boost Pa. Applicant Pool By MICHAEL SILVER When it comes to University ad- missions, the political sensitivities of the Slate Legislature in Harrisburg and the sensitivities of University Council both weigh heavily on policy and practice. While the legislators want proof that their appropriations to the University are benefiting their con- stituents, some members of the University community argue that the University's committment to the state has a harmful affect on its reputation as a school of national standing. Meanwhile, the University ad- ministrators grapple with the News Analysis level," Schell said. Schell said that residents of Penn- sylvania account for one-third of the University's applicants and one-third of its matriculants. In past years, members of the recruiting staff were assigned widely scattered areas as territories. The (Continued on page 5) the bulk of University criticism: to allow the commission to end 'crisply" in January, and to allow a three-month discussion period without the throat of an impending deadline. While he said there was some danger the Trustees would not seriously consider all amendments to the report. Stellar said "If the criticism is compelling and con- structive, the report will be changed." Stellar would not speculate on whether the commission's stand on the athletic department's budget would change before the report was given to the Trustees. He did say, however, the commission would document whatever position it took more fully than it had done in its recently-released draft. "We want to review our position again in light of discussion," he said. At a meeting of the University Council last week, many objected to a segment of the commission's report which ordered schools to meet their direct costs by 1976 but put no such restrictions on the athletic depart- ment The report's section dealing with tenure problems also drew ex- tensive criticism. Stellar also said the commission had recommended it be disbanded after its report is submitted in January. He said some of the com- mission's long-range work should be carried out by standing University committees but more immediate problems might be considered by a proposed University Planning and Evaluating Committee. FINAL ISSUE Today's Issue is the final edition of The Daily Pennsylvanian this semester. The Dally Pennsylvanian will resume publication on Jan. 17, 1973. problem of trying to keep a balance between keeping both Harrisburg and Council happy, or at least pacified, through attempts to enroll the Commonwealth's best students. Admissions officers are proud of the fact that they were able this year to recruit in every county in the state. However, they say their intensified drive to attract top Pennsylvania students is only part of a broader effort to make more efficient use of the University's recruiting staff and supporting agencies, such as alumni groups. Admissions director Kent Schell said that the qualifications of Penn- sylvania matriculants as a group match those of 'he non-Pennsylvania students. However, he said the figures are not complete and would not release them. "We have to make sure we have a Mood strong applicant pool for Penn- sylvania so we can maintain this parity. If for some reason the ap- plications dropped in quality, it would lie difficult in maintain the present NOAM CHOMSKY, noted linguistics theorist and antiwar activist criticized the development of elitist power concentrations In a speech at SL Mary's Church last night. (Sec page 5 for details). promotion are now being circulated among the various schools and departments. Although the report concerns three areas of affirmative action, the revisions in the grievance procedure are considered the most important James Robinson, the University's equal opportunity administrator, said Monday that a "termination, tran- sfer, and promotion" draft will soon be released. The entire plan is eventually to be submitted to HEW. The grievance procedures for support staff in cases of alleged violation of equal opportunity prin- ciples or policies, which covers "all University employees except teaching staff and those covered by collective bargaining agreements," state: "University policies require that appointments, promotions, job classifications, compensation, and other conditions of employment be made without retard to race, sex, or minority group status...The following is intended to serve as a procedure to resolve employee grievances." The grievance procedures provide for informal review of grievances by the Ombudsman, the Equal Op- portunity Office and the Personnel Office. If this fails to remove the conflict, the Office of Equal Op- portunity could initiate a formal review by submitting a summary of the complaint to the Personnel Office. Two types of grievance specified in the report are: cases where an in- dividual is denied promotion or ap- pointment "in favor of another in- (Continued on page 6) U. Dining Service Will Not Refund Money to Frosh By KEITH MERRILL The University Dining Service announced Monday that freshmen pledging fraternities would not be released from their meal contracts with the University. The Dining Service policy, a break with tradition at the University, has caught fraternities by surprise. In previous years, freshmen pledges have been released from University contracts in order to eat in frater- nities. This year, however, the University has refused to return payments collected by the Dining Service. The Interfraternity Council (IFC) has not totalled the number of fresh- men pledged to campus fraternities and it is not known how many students the announcement will affect. "The intent of the University is no cancellations for the second semester," Thomas Stempkowski of the Delta Management Corporation which runs the University dining facilities said. "The cost of labor and the loss of revenue is the crux of the problem. 11 used to be that labor was a percentage of the cost of food, but now the situation has been reversed." The Dining Service has operated at a deficit over recent years. Last year the total exceeded $1 million. The University Development Com- mission, in a report released two weeks ago, said all auxiliary services, including the Dining Service, should meet direct costs by 1976 or be shut down. "Our biggest objectives are to stem the deficit of last year as well as supply the students," Stemkowski said. "To do this we are adhering to the policy announced in our ad- vertising." A brochure mailed to all students last sununer explained that "Refunds (Continued on page t)

Transcript of Wqt JBatlg f mnsglitamait - Penn Libraries · Wqt JBatlg f mnsglitamait ® founded 1885 Vol....

Wqt JBatlg f mnsglitamait ®

founded 1885 Vol. I.XXXVIII No, 120 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Copyright 1972 The Daily Pennsylvanian Tuesday, December 12, 1972

Nader Unit Hits Clinic's Use of Morning-After Pill

P l Wi<**er

It's Rosengarten Time again for these students as classes end and finals approach.

President of Villanova Cuts Off Funds for Campus Paper

By THOMAS PAPSON

Funding for the Villanova University student newspaper was cut off Thursday by the school's president, reportedly due to what he considered bad taste in the paper's Dec.6 issue.

The editor-in-chief of "the Villanovan,"Peter Schrader, said the "indefinite suspension" of the paper's yearly $18,000 allocation forced cancellation of today's issue, which was to be the last of the semester.

Schrader said the paper will not be able to continue publication next semester unless the funding is rein-

stated. He said the Villanovan's editors had been given no indication when the suspension might be lifted.

The Philadelphia Inquirer reported that Villanova President Rev. Ed- ward J. McCarthy said "the paper haj been very tasteless in the things it has published, and I felt that the publications board should be giving it better advice."

Schrader said the paper's editors were informed of the decision Thursday afternoon by Villanova vice provost for student affairs Rev. James Duffy as today's edition was about to go to the printers.

Father Duffy informed the editors

Linguistics Dept. to Share Resources With Columbia

By LEE LEVINE The University's Linguistics

Department is finalizing plans for an inter-university graduate seminar with Columbia University. The seminar, scheduled to begin next fall, will be taught by faculty members of both schools and will be open to both student bodies.

University administrators hope the venture will be the first step toward a broad program of inter-institutional cooperation. Dr. Robert Zemsky, executive aide to President Meyer- son, said the project is one of "long range hopes and short range ac- complishments."

The proposed seminar in formal linguistics is the result of work by Dr. Zelig Harris, Benjamin Franklin professor of Linguistics, who opened

Police Disclose Possibility of Ten

pes in U. Area Rap By MITCHELL BERGER

Following assertions last week that there were increasing incidents of rape in the immediate off-campus vicinity, a spokesman for Philadelphia police today admitted there was a "possibility" that at least ten rapes had been committed since the beginning of the year in the area, some of them involving University students.

Information was also released by University security officers that there was an attempted rape of a University student on Nov. 28 at 40th and Pine streets.

According to University security officials, two unidentified men atr tempted to rape a University student Nov. 28 at 40th and Pine streets.

The University security force would not identify the woman, stating their policy was never to release the name, age or address of the victim.

Allegedly, two men jumped out of a white Chevrolet at 8:00 P.M. on Nov. 28 and attempted to force the woman into the car at knifepoint to rape her. The woman, however, resisted and screamed, driving her assailants away. Police from the 18th District Police headquarters immediately responded, according to University security officers.

Nosuspects have been named in the case, and the license number of the car was not recorded. Neither the West Philadelphia Detective Division,

(Continued on page 7)

informal discussions with members of the Columbia faculty and ad- ministration this fall. Harris will be the University professor teaching the course.

Chairman of the Linguistics Department, Dr. Leigh Lisker, ex- plained the experiment grew out of President Meyerson's interest in the possibilities of institutional cooperation. "The idea was that universities ought to combine their strengths, and the President thought that given the history of Linguistics at l'enn, that a good place to begin any cooperation with other institutions would be Linguistics," he said.

Lisker explained that Linguistics at Columbia is in a "precarious situation," He said that there is a "desire to restore linguistics" and that this cooperative venture will benefit the study of linguistics at Columbia.

Lisker suggested future programs of cooperation would benefit some of the University's weaker departments He said any further progress in the area of institutional cooperation must be implemented on a "point by point" basis.

Zemsky referred to the experiment as one that will provide the University with "valuable information." He said that in the future graduate centers "would have to become far more complimentary rather than com- petitive."

The future of institutional sharing is limitless, Zemsky said. He said the possibility exists for a conglomerate of eastern centers to cooperate, each choosing "different areas in which to specialize" in the future.

Zentsky said the administration feels that in the future the University will have to utilize the cooperation model "on an international basis " He suggested that a continuous exchange of talented faculty with foreign countries will become commonplace at some future date.

Although plans for the linguistics seminar have not been finalized, Lisker said, "Presumably Columbia will make the arrangements for announcing the course which will probably deal with the mathematical aspects of linguistics." He suggested the future of experiments of this kind depend on the success of this venture.

that the suspension was a result of •'bad taste" in previous issues Schrader said.

Schrader speculated that the "bad lasle" may have involved a Gay Activist Alliance news article, which used the word "penis" in its copy.

The editor termed the suspension a "grave disservice to the school."

In order to continue to publish without University funding next semester, Schrader said, "We'd have to go to a much smaller newspaper."

it looks very discouraging," he commented. It's the end of a newspaper started in 1927."

The Villanova student newspaper has apparently had a tenuous relationship with the school's ad- ministration in recent months.

Schrader said the Villanovan had been threatened with suspension of funds in November, after the paper ran two controversial editorials in the Nov. 15 issue, one dealing with the abolition of football and the other critical of the Villanova dean of arts and sciences.

Father McCarthy, in authorizing the suspension, stressed that "'previous efforts have failed" to influence the staff to meet "minimum requirements of good taste."

The publications board is an ad- visory body composed of faculty, students, and administrators.

By CHAT Bl AKEMAN A Ralph Nader task force Monday

accused the University's Student Health Service of treating women "as guinea pigs" in testing the effects of a morning-after pill.

A report by the Health Research Group said clinics at Pennsylvania and the University of Michigan were dispensing diethylstilbesterol iDESi to rape victims and women who feared unwanted pregnancy "without even the most rudimentary ob- servance of professional standards und informed consent."

Dr. Paul Schrodc, director of Student Health, said the drug had been administered to about 12 patients this semester. He called the allegations of poor standards "preposterous."

Dr. Luigi Mastoianm, chairman of the gynecolgy department, termed the allegations "ridiculous" and said Nader was "an irresponsible son of a bitch" for allowing the report to go out under his name.

Dr. Michael Shimkin, professor of oncology at the University of California, cautioned the drug warrants further study, but also termed Nader's conclusions questionable.

The drug was used extensively in the 1940's to prevent miscarriage. Although later found to be ineffective, the drug was administered in heavy doses to women throughout their pregnancy. Some female offspring of women who used the drug have been

found to have an increased chance for developing genital defects during puberty. Some of these defects are cancerous and women whose mothers took the drug are urged to undergo tests for possible deformities.

The drug is now administered as a post-coital pill to prevent pregnancy. It is given in heavy doses for five days after intercourse.

Nader's report charges that since the drug is not 100 per cent effective, w iiinen who take it as a morning after pill may bear offspring suseptible to genital cancer.

The report also calls on the Food and Drug Administration iFDA) to require stricter labelling on DES and urges the medical profession to stop

prescribing the drug unless ac- companied with proper control and adequate follow-up care.

Several experts in the field, in- cluding Mastroianni, disputed the report's findings in strong language. Schrode said that when used throughout unwanted pregnancy to prevent miscarriage the drug may have led to harmful effects in the offspring because harmful amounts accumulated in the fetus.

Hut when taken to prevent pregnancy the drug prevents the fetus from forming so there is no such build-up.

Schrode said that no studies have

(Continued on page 2)

Revision of Affirmative Action Plan Released

By MARILYN MLRPHY The University Monday released

revived components of its affirmative action plan concerning grievance procedures for support staff, maternity leave and recruitment, and hiring policies for administrative and professional personnel.

The documents are revisions of the University's Affirmative Action Program released last May. In ad- dition to the nne\ance. maternity and hiring components, documents concerning faculty hiring policies and

Dev. Report May Go Unaltered to Trustees

By SCOTT GIBSON Although the Development Com-

mission has invited comments on its draft report released two weeks ago. the document may go to the University Trustees essentially as it stands now.

Commission co-chairman Dr. Eliot Stellar said Monday minor changes might be made but that major suggestions would most likely be referred to the Trustees as "amend- ments" or "minority reports" after the draft is submitted at its Jan. 11 meeting.

Stellar said criticism from mem- bers of the University community would be given to the Trustees by 1'rresident Meyerson and Provost Reitz between January and March in preparation for a discussion of the commission's full report at a Trustees meeting in May.

Stellar listed two principal reasons for the commission's decision to defer

Admissions Office Seeks to Boost Pa. Applicant Pool

By MICHAEL SILVER When it comes to University ad-

missions, the political sensitivities of the Slate Legislature in Harrisburg and the sensitivities of University Council both weigh heavily on policy and practice.

While the legislators want proof that their appropriations to the University are benefiting their con- stituents, some members of the University community argue that the University's committment to the state has a harmful affect on its reputation as a school of national standing.

Meanwhile, the University ad- ministrators grapple with the

News Analysis

level," Schell said. Schell said that residents of Penn-

sylvania account for one-third of the University's applicants and one-third of its matriculants.

In past years, members of the recruiting staff were assigned widely scattered areas as territories. The

(Continued on page 5)

the bulk of University criticism: to allow the commission to end 'crisply" in January, and to allow a

three-month discussion period without the throat of an impending deadline.

While he said there was some danger the Trustees would not seriously consider all amendments to the report. Stellar said "If the criticism is compelling and con- structive, the report will be changed."

Stellar would not speculate on whether the commission's stand on the athletic department's budget would change before the report was given to the Trustees. He did say, however, the commission would document whatever position it took more fully than it had done in its recently-released draft.

"We want to review our position again in light of discussion," he said.

At a meeting of the University Council last week, many objected to a segment of the commission's report which ordered schools to meet their direct costs by 1976 but put no such restrictions on the athletic depart- ment The report's section dealing with tenure problems also drew ex- tensive criticism.

Stellar also said the commission had recommended it be disbanded after its report is submitted in January. He said some of the com- mission's long-range work should be carried out by standing University committees but more immediate problems might be considered by a proposed University Planning and Evaluating Committee.

FINAL ISSUE Today's Issue is the final edition of

The Daily Pennsylvanian this semester. The Dally Pennsylvanian will resume publication on Jan. 17, 1973.

problem of trying to keep a balance between keeping both Harrisburg and Council happy, or at least pacified, through attempts to enroll the Commonwealth's best students.

Admissions officers are proud of the fact that they were able this year to recruit in every county in the state. However, they say their intensified drive to attract top Pennsylvania students is only part of a broader effort to make more efficient use of the University's recruiting staff and supporting agencies, such as alumni groups.

Admissions director Kent Schell said that the qualifications of Penn- sylvania matriculants as a group match those of 'he non-Pennsylvania students. However, he said the figures are not complete and would not release them.

"We have to make sure we have a Mood strong applicant pool for Penn- sylvania so we can maintain this parity. If for some reason the ap- plications dropped in quality, it would lie difficult in maintain the present

NOAM CHOMSKY, noted linguistics theorist and antiwar activist criticized the development of elitist power concentrations In a speech at SL Mary's Church last night. (Sec page 5 for details).

promotion are now being circulated among the various schools and departments.

Although the report concerns three areas of affirmative action, the revisions in the grievance procedure are considered the most important

James Robinson, the University's equal opportunity administrator, said Monday that a "termination, tran- sfer, and promotion" draft will soon be released. The entire plan is eventually to be submitted to HEW.

The grievance procedures for support staff in cases of alleged violation of equal opportunity prin- ciples or policies, which covers "all University employees except teaching staff and those covered by collective bargaining agreements," state:

"University policies require that appointments, promotions, job classifications, compensation, and other conditions of employment be made without retard to race, sex, or minority group status...The following is intended to serve as a procedure to resolve employee grievances."

The grievance procedures provide for informal review of grievances by the Ombudsman, the Equal Op- portunity Office and the Personnel Office. If this fails to remove the conflict, the Office of Equal Op- portunity could initiate a formal review by submitting a summary of the complaint to the Personnel Office.

Two types of grievance specified in the report are: cases where an in- dividual is denied promotion or ap- pointment "in favor of another in-

(Continued on page 6)

U. Dining Service Will Not Refund Money to Frosh

By KEITH MERRILL

The University Dining Service announced Monday that freshmen pledging fraternities would not be released from their meal contracts with the University.

The Dining Service policy, a break with tradition at the University, has caught fraternities by surprise. In previous years, freshmen pledges have been released from University contracts in order to eat in frater- nities. This year, however, the University has refused to return payments collected by the Dining Service.

The Interfraternity Council (IFC) has not totalled the number of fresh- men pledged to campus fraternities and it is not known how many students the announcement will affect.

"The intent of the University is no cancellations for the second semester," Thomas Stempkowski of the Delta Management Corporation which runs the University dining facilities said. "The cost of labor and the loss of revenue is the crux of the problem. 11 used to be that labor was a percentage of the cost of food, but now the situation has been reversed."

The Dining Service has operated at a deficit over recent years. Last year the total exceeded $1 million. The University Development Com- mission, in a report released two weeks ago, said all auxiliary services, including the Dining Service, should meet direct costs by 1976 or be shut down.

"Our biggest objectives are to stem the deficit of last year as well as supply the students," Stemkowski said. "To do this we are adhering to the policy announced in our ad- vertising."

A brochure mailed to all students last sununer explained that "Refunds

(Continued on page t)

Page]

The Music People at the John Wanamaker Music Center will

sell you anything from Beethoven's "Fur Elise" to Satie's

"Gymnopedies."

Wanamaker Music Center, 8th Floor, Philadelphia store.

MEDICAL AND DENTAL STUDENTS

t ti n wo lor a weekend You (and your wife) i 01 the comfortable surroundmqs ni a

doctor'* hom< Wa -.uppiy tjo plus AM meals AII you do is house and babysit for physicians, on weekends you are free Call the Up ion n Co , Homemahcrs Oivision weekdays 9 to 5 Tel

MLim ,

The Daily Pennsylvania!! Tuesday, December 12,1972

Nader

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- Harper Torchbook Sale Continues

Christmas Gift Books & Vacation Reading

Open till the last day of finals

Akira Kurosawas Film Classic

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Fine Arts Aud. 7 & 9:30 p.m. Ausp. SMC Wednesday Dec. 13th

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PENN VARSITY ICE HOCKEY

Tickets Now: 7 0 AM 3 PM, Class of 7 923 Ice Rink * Call 594-6607

The l>ail> Fcnnsylvantan is published Monday through Friday at Philadelphia. Pa., during the fall and spring semesters, except during vacation periods. One issue puhlished in August. Subscription! mas bi Ofdawd .tl Sergeant Hall, 34lh and Chestnut Sts., at the rate of SI 3.00 per annum. Second class postage paid al Philadelphia. Pennsylvania 19104. Phones: (215) 594-6581. Display and Classified Advertising may he placed al the same address.

(Continued from page 1)

.shown Uii' druj; to be harmful to the women who take it. only to her off- spring and only then when the druK was administered for a considerable length of time.

Scrode said that in the instances when the dm", docs not prevent pregnancy, the women are ur^ed to have abortions. He added that since the tli u.. was administered only to women who did not want pregnancies, they would have had abortions in most cases anyway.

Mastroianni said however that it was unlikely the drug would cause genital defects when taken as a morning after pill since the genital tract of a fetus is not developed until several weeks after conception.

"The story of the morning after pill gives chilling witness to the recalcitrance of the FDA, the medical profession, and the drug industry to learn from tragic experience," the Nader health group said.

Shimkin said the tragic experiences had occurred when the drug was used to prevent miscarriage, not when used as a morning after pill.

Mastroianni said DES was the only drug known to be feasible for use as a morning after pill at this time. He said it was administered with precautions to aid victims of rape.

•'If Kalph Nader had ever been raped he'd know what I'm talking about." Mastroianni said.

CO/VIE IN AHD

/MEDITATE CNYOJR MIORITE SFORT!

Whether your game is skiing. tennis, squash or hockey - you'll find plenty of food for thought here! Come in and browse to your heart's content. Ski equipment rental and serv- ice .. . racket testringing too! Just two blocks ftom City Hall.

iU'lutll & '\OHH Sports

1312 ARCH STREET • LO 7-0160 IN CENTER CITY SINCE 1905

A Special

Christmas Coffee Hour

with The Pennsyngers punch

hot wassail cookies

tues., dec. 12, 11 - 12 AM Houston Hall

'Benny Franklin's Greatest Hits!"

(the cabaret) the two final per

formances of this semester

7:30 and 10:30 PM sat., dec. 16 Houston Hall Aud. pickets available

Houston Hall I formation Desk

Mon. and Tues. FREE

Midnight

Movies present

A Cartoon and Short Festival

featuring The Three Stooges Two Road Runne Cartoons and Two W.C. Field Shorts: "The Phar micist" and "Th Barber Shop"

Quad Film Series (Phase IV) -Comedy-

WOODY ALLEN IN

What's Up Tiger Lily

&

Two Wild Short Flicks

McClelland Hall 7:00 & 9:00 PM

50 Tuesday, Dec. 12 th

Campus Events

OFFICIAL

/.(■PL ( A1 KINS Are no* he.nq accepted 'Or resource people »nd residence counselors throughout Un.v housinq H interested, please tont.it I the huxldinu m which you would MM 'O WOrk

CAWrtR ALTERNATIVES ADVISING What does your course work at Ptnn have lo do with , ,„.» no* living? Talk lover Career Altern.il IvO* Adv.smg on AAon , Wed . Fn , Vocational Advis.no

1-.J3 Locus! Walk, 3rd floor, 594 5?6i

CORO ' i Hows Program Internship in Public |j nfO and applications are now available HI

Placement otI I -M deadline, Dec 15. SO hurry

RFADING CLINIC Individual interviews, small i . .tor improving (OitcQe rcadinq and studv .

... | our** bfOtn Wttk of Jar 7? Take a test . in- Wed .Jan IMMiPW.Of Thur , Jan 18. n ; 30 PM . or 7 309 PM , Room A 3 Education BiO, . 594 8434

CAMPUSAGENDA

DOT WEEKENDS I Ml Paley Seminar", wilh Or L SlIbtrttOM, fiiio'ous Thouqhl Depl ,

n culm and Student Proles! Deadline. Ore 11 Questions, call Bob, BA7 14)7

ENVY DICK TRACY* Ralph Nader' Penn Con Board needs nvestiqators and resear

rhers W'-Will (*■ here even after your enams Join us. 3'tJ llOOr. Mouslon Hall, fall S9< A600

i Al I LECTURE SERIES Sponsored by Grad Student Assor Dept ol Ci«iss<cal Archaeoioqy. f rank i tar-Mi, Sub Sahara* Ainca and the

' rranMn World," Wed . Dec 13. Museum. Room 138. 5 30 P.M

GIVE BIOOD Today, Phi Kappa S.gm*. 36lh and rrom 10 AW JXIPM

PFNN SEXUALITY CENTER Room 604. H R E . I Mon Thur. i 30 7 30P M , into and

referrals, pro* counselmq. call M.ss Ward. BA 2 r$T4

PENN UNION COUNCIL In vies you t© a

■mat Hour Mo! wassail, truit punch Ang rookie1' Chrl»lns«l cuols sung by Pennsynqwv today. II AM., Houston Hall, lobby

IAIKING POINT Confidential counsel.nq fly indents. Sun thru Thur , I II P M , Mouslon / Clfttand Mall. H«n#rll Mouse. Van Pelt.

74 t\r phi ■• iv 343/

/VXl'N f M 88 9 Today. 4 P M Magazine. 6 P M New Oireclions in Music. 8PM Sunnys.dc

ACTIVITY NOTICES

ALPHA tPSILON DELTA Honor Pre med . t. ■ ■ : . btri to iom its lunior board

■Tl lOT n«Hl ytar Will bi selected from among ■ I

NEWSPAPER DRIVE Today, parking lot at 40th tnd locust Walk, from 8 PM 3PM Matt fro,

, <iv / 30 PM , 3/33 Walnul

PHILOMATHEAN ART GALLERY John Costan/a.sculpture, thru Dec 30.4tblloor. College Han. open weekdays. I? 5 P M

I COURSE GUIDE important meeting for ■mberi ot Matt, today. » 30 PM. Bishop

White Room, Houston Hall Materials for course wnleupsw'll be handed out It you cannoi attend ,ou must call Jim at EV 7 6618

UNDERGRAD BIOCHEMISTRY MAJORS I), i 13 I 30 P M Room 101

HfOloqy Bldq

FINANCIAL AID NOTICE Kliyiblc students who did not apply

for PHKAA scholarships, or who applied after the deadline, can now apply for these scholarships for the spring semester. Application forms should be obtained immediately from Miss Conway, office of student financial aid, room 222. LogBXI Hall.

THE CENTER CITY STORE MINUTES FROM YOUR CAMPUS

a big wonderful selection of famous brand

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4*CS OSAGE AVE.-fwo bedroom apt tor rent Dt'i-ohttui. well kept 3rd floor apt unfurnished Available Jan 1.19/3 SI/0 month Call ME S 5'69 6012 3400 BLOCK SANSOM One bedroom.kitchen and living room shared! For one girl for SIS and 15 hours typing per month 349 938/ 6004

HELP WANTEO FEMALE BABYSITTER WANTED t*0 at tor noon-, .i Aril- (01 Spring Semester One. three

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i ■ ..liable Food service and ■.it,on Appty m person, between 12 4 P V..

KOV Rogi • iValnul ami WANTED; COUNSELORS, over 20, for unique

boy's summer camp in Penna Able to instruct one of me following Water

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•• . i. ,■..■•', S< ■HO Track. Pioneering. Ikefrom Director Write Cdrnp Director, 138

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No 7 5 bedroOms, 1 balhs, livmq. dminq. ourl yard, plus a real wood

For appointment call BA7 7113 ■ . ■•> and 3pm

ROOMMATES UNLIMITED Need a place to live?

Can • afford to i>vealone* Let us find yoi .i p>t complete with people

Is your roommate leaving? Don't be forced *u pay for an empty room Wehave| male female, and student divisions For into.. KIS 3816,1/34 Addison f So! P.ne), Mon F.LuJam 8pm,Sal.10am Sp.m

YOUNG I. AOY'Scomp.iny wanted whiledrivinq to lomia, and back over Chnstmas

vacat-on Dec 19to Jan 14. Call Bill. EV6 4053 W

MISCELLANEOUS FACULTY MEMBER WITH PARKING SPACE

car 101 « >'y travel durmu Cnristmas rece*S 349 fill- 6013 EARRING LOST' v.'ouqht uold with amethyst

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5PIECE MAHOGANY BEOROOM SET Paid S1700 Ask.iui woo Extrtycle lika ntw Pa.d S90 AjkllSflSSO other turti.turo Ct 9 8!34 6006

PLANT SALE Sunday 10 AM 6 PM G ve sonethinq orownn to someone you love 737S Spruce Street S9BC

FOUND BASKETBALL TICKET BOOKS. Can BA7 7010 6070

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Spend a racy Saturday in Philadelphia?

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Liberty Bell Race Track

PHILADELPHIA

Daily Double * Post 12:30 * Exacta Wagering

CUP COUPON AND PRESENT AT GRANDSTAND GATE

I I L.

UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA DAY GOOD SATURDAY DEC. 16

ADMISSION COUPON This coupon good for one ad- mission to Grandstand on above date ONLY. 50f service charge.

THOROUGHBRED RACING AT LIBERTY BELL RACE TRACK

1 r- I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I

.1 L.

UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA DAY

GOOD SATURDAY DEC. 16

ADMISSION COUPON This coupon good for one ad- mission to Grandstand on above date ONLY. 60f service charge.

THOROUGHBRED RACING AT LIBERTY BELL RACE TRACK

I

New Pennsylvania Law admits persons 18 years ot age. Minors 10 to 17 ad- mitted at regular admission prices when accompanied by parent or guardian.

Tuesday, December 12.1972

News in Brief The Daily Pennsylvanian Page 3

Astronauts Take Final Moon Walk By United Press International

SPACE CENTER, HOLST0N-- Apollo 17's EugOie A. Cernan and Jack Schmitt made a near-perfect landing Monday in a mountain canyon of the moon-a "geologist'! paradise"- -and eagerly began a record 75-hour search for debris spanning the ages of lunar history.

Awed by the spectacle surrounding them on America's sixth and last manned moon exploration in this decade, Cernan and Schmitt, the first civilian scientist ever to set foot on the lunar surface, successfully tested their lunar rover and deployed a 25 million dollar scientific station within hours after landing safely at 2:55 P.M. EST.

But the astronauts were late getting on the surface, and lost 20 minutes repairing a fender of their moon vehicle. Ground controllers chopped 15 minuted off the end of their first seven-hour expedition because "the oxygen from the backpacks is being used at a slightly higher rate than expected."

Cernan was the first to step onto the surface at 7:05 P.M. in eye-blinking sunlight. Schmitt followed. The Challenger had a rear leg about one- third the way down a shallow dish-like crater, but so perfect was the landing that the craft still had extra fuel left in its descent stage after the 12-minute power dive from lunar orbit.

Hush l{r|»l;i<T» Dole AM

(.or Niiij.diiii Chairman WASHINGTON-President Nixon

extended his second-term shakeup to the Republican Party Monday, Choosing George Bush. U.S. Am- bassador to the United Nations, to replace Sen. Bob Dole as GOP National Committee Chairman.

The choice of the former Texas Republican Congressman will have to be ratified by the National Committee itself Jan. 19, but that will be a for- mality.

The GOP chairman and White House Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler went to pains to assure reporters that Dole was departing under his own steam.

JIHI»«' Declares Mistrial In KIUI>«T»-H 11-<<> Case

UN ANGEI.ES-A mistrial was declared today in the Pentagon Papers case against former govern- ment Vietnam analyst Daniel Kllsberg, U.S. District Judge Matt Byrne said he would dismiss the jury selected four months ago and select a new one.

Kllsberg and co-defendant Anthony J. Russo are charged with illegal removal and possession of secret government documents about the evolution and escalation of the war in Southeast Asia.

Byrne had Hid last Friday he in- tended to declare the mistrial because appeals and legal maneuvers had kept the jury waiting for so long to hear the case that the defense con- tended it could have become prejudiced, He delayed Ins formal order until Kllsberg could be present today.

Truman Speaks to Family.

Reports 11«- Peels Okuy KANSAS CITY, MO.-Former

President Harry S Truman, seriously ill but rested, improved, and off the critical list, said Monday from his hospital bed: "I feel all right."

The 88-year-old former President, who rallied so strongly over the weekend that he was removed from the critical list, got a good night's sleep,a spokesman at Research Hospital said. Doctors were ad- ministering extra medication for an abnormal rh\ thm in his heart. His once-congested lungs were free cf fluid.

"Mr. Truman was asked how he felt," Research Hospital spokesman John Droves said Monday. "He replied. I feel all right.' He also was asked if he hurt anywhere. President Truman's response was No.' "

Christmas Party TUGS., Dec 19

from 9 P.M. on

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1675 East 16th Street Brooklyn, N.Y. (212)336 5300

PHILADELPHIA ST (215) CA 4-5145

DAYS, EVENING^

WEEKENDS

BranchM m Majoi Clliet In U.S.A.

BE AN ANGEL Bring Your Gifts

to Santa's Christmas Party

GIVE BL • • i

at Phi Kappa Sigma 36th & Locust

10:00-5:30 Door Prizes

and Christmas Goodi

SEASON S GREETINGS

FROM SCUE Many Thanks to Faculty and Staff Whose Co-operation in Course Guide Returns Was Invaluable.

And a New Year's Resolution from Us to the 50 Professors Who Inevitably Assist Us in All Our Advising Seminars and Creative Work

WE ARE TRYING TO STIMULATE A CONCERN FOR UNDERGRADUATE EDUCATION AMONG OTHER FACULTY MEMBERS AS WELL AS ALL STUDENTS

L. Knight J. Jacobs

1885 • 1972 The !\eirspa/)er of the I'niversity of Pennsylvania

Tuesday. December 12, 1972 Page 4

( MAI HI \KI M \S.Edilori>iChie) IIIOMAS PAPSON. Managing Editor • IIIOMAS I iWINp, Huwicst Manager

SCOTT GIBSON. Editorial Chairman. NANCY SPARKS. Ntwt Editor, STF.VFN W1NN. 34th Street Editor. PHILIP N. SHIMKIN. Sports Editor: EDWARD ROTH. Photography Editor. Ml RRV HI NIC.. Advertising Manager HOWARD P. Nl-WMAN. Financial Manager: K. SCOTT SHELDON, III. Credit Manager: MKTIALL STEPHEN GROSS. 34th Street Business Manager: ALICT I. GOETZ, Production Manager: ROBIRI WhMISl HNLR. 340t Street Associate Editor: BILL W1TTI. Associate Sports Editor. DANIEL A. KASLV. Associate Photograph\ Editor. ANTHONY KOVATCH, Assistant Sports Editor. BINJAMIN L. CilNSBI RG. Contributing Editor. MARK MclNTYRt. Contributing Editor

Undergraduate education snubbed

Free speech at Villanova II is bad enough that SDS and other groups have

seen fit to harass a professor whose views they hold incorrect. And it is equally bad when certain women at this University make idiotic statements to the effect ihat representatives from Playboy magazine have no right to speak on campus, no matter how sexist their opinions might be.

But it is quite a different thing altogether when the president of a university suspends the campus newspaper because he does not feel the paper has acted in '"good taste." That is essentially what has happened at Villanova University, however, and it represents a most serious infringement on basic Constitutional guarantees.

The Rev. Edward J. McCarthy, president of the university, announced Thursday he was cutting off tunds to the newspaper because "the paper has been very tasteless in the things it has published, and I felt that the publications board should be giving it better

advice." It is only with a supreme amount of arrogance and self-righteousness that Father Mc- Carthy could feel confident in elevating himself to a position of deciding what a newspaper should print and what it should withhold. His action should be condemned by everyone concerned.

Unfortunately the press has also come under governmental abuse in recent weeks. At least two reporters have been thrown in jail for refusing to reveal confidential sources of information. It is time that this country wake up to the fact that attempts are being made to discredit or silence the most important medium of news and commentary. This cannot be allowed to continue.

Accordingly we would urge President Meyerson, faculty and students to write, call or telegraph their outrage to Father McCarthy. Unfortunately, Villanova is, for the time being, without any other means of receiving public opinion.

Letters to the Editor More in l'<ii-in.11i>>ii

'■II ll-IIIICC l)0\('Oll

The life expectancy of migrant farm workers is 4!l years, compared to an average of 70 years for Americans as a whole. The average farm worker makes under $2500 a year. According to the Senate Sub- committee on Migratory Labor, :i75.000 children between the ages of ten and thirteen work in the fields to supplement the meager income of the hardworking family breadwinner. The California Health Department Survey revealed 150 cases per thousand workers of pesticide poisoning.

After the struggle to unionize grape workers was won, the United Farm Workers' Organizing Committee (UFWOC-AFL-CIO) turned to the lettuce fields where thousands of men. women, and children were working under subhuman conditions. Here too, times were ripe for a change.

But. the owners of the lettuce fields. California's and Arizona's wealthy growers, represented by the American Farm Bureau Federation and the Free Marketing Council, decided that they too, had to act. A sweetheart contract with the In- ternational Brotherhood of Teamsters was signed and the farm workers were told that the Teamsters represented them. At this point, the workers walked out and 7000 went on strike.

The Teamsters and United Farm Workers have since reached an agreement over who should have jurisdiction over farm workers. On March 26, 1971, Frank Fitzsimmons, then general vice-president of the Teamsters Union, and Geoarge Meany, President of the AFI.-CIO, countersigned an agreement between the United Farm Workers and the Teamsters. Farm workers have never voted to be represented by the Teamsters. When elections over union representation have been held, farm workers consistently chose the UF'W as their union.

Under the Meany-Fitzsimnions agreement, the UFW has jurisdic- tional rights over organizing in the fields, while the Teamsters have picking and distribution rights. The growers may i ..cognize the Team- sters' right over harvesting, but no one else does including the unions

concerned. The lettuce boycott is not a jurisdictional dispute between two unions, it is a dispute between the farm workers' and the growers.

As of now, 15 per cent of the lettuce grown is covered by contracts bet- ween the UFW and growers. These growers include: Inter-Harvest, Frcshpict, D'Arrigo Brothers, and Mel Finnerman Co. The other 85 per cent is still non-union lettuce. That is why the UFWOC is asking people not to cat scab lettuce. That is why the University's refusal to buy only UFW union lettuce is such a sickening little show of callousness and disregard for human rights.

More than 1200 Penn students with dining contracts have signed petitions indicating that they want only UFW union lettuce. Temple, Lasalle and other area schools have all made arrangements for the purchase of only UFW union lettuce. They all complied willingly with the boycott after an initial request from con- cerned students.

So, President Meyerson, a few days ago on WXPN's forum, you said you were not fully informed about the boycott. It is for this reason that we have written this letter explaining the situation. We call on you to overrule the decisions made by Paul Caddis and his assistants. We call on you to occupy the moral vacuum at this University, iastead of filling up the spaces of Philadelphia papers with visionary rhetoric. And, we call on you. still, despite everything, to support the struggle of farm workers, or at least not to hinder it by con- tinuing to purchase non-UFW lettuce. This open letter to President Meyerson was submitted by members o/ the Venn Committee to Boycott Lettuce.

Praise for

■ llllll III' (ll'IMM .Ull

Recently many people, including our student newspapers, hace voiced strong opposition toward the sports program which exists here. I think the other side of the coin should be voiced. 1 believe student support for sports might be shown by the student en- thusiasm for events such as soccer, basketball, iBig 51 and football.

Response can hardly be called apathetic. For the record, in regular season play. Penn holds the all-time

•-JII-I In Keep "Km Coiiiiiip. N\ bul Do You J*a)

We Send Them Something?"

attendencc record for a soccer game (the Harvard game last year i. Hardly apathetic. Yes. the athletic budget is large, but to run our program, it's necessary. We are not unique, other academic "Ivy" schools like Har- vard, do the same. Many people truly enjoy sporting events. It relieves the Penn "blah," and for many people it is a greatly needed change which greatly deviates from the normal day- to-day college life routine.

An example was Penn's soccer game with Howard which can truly be called a unique experience. That fact is that Penn spends a lot of money, simply to keep the school running. Having Vance Hall, Superblock, the McNeil Building, Williams Hall, and, and, and.... is expensive. Such ex- pansion over a short period of time does cost money, which could ob- viously lead to financial problems for any school.

Cutting the sports program would only eliminate one strong part of the overall college "experience." When making financial cut backs, why do fingers always point to the sports program? I guess with a large financial debt, any direct deviations from the academic priorities are most strongly considered. I hope the University realistically evaluates the role of sports at Penn, considering its very nature.

RANDY HARRISON Wharton '74

Recreution progrum

poor for student* The student recreational program

at Penn is a disgrace. After nearly four years here, we can say that the recreational program is far more suited to the so-called "student athlete" than it is to the ordinary- undergraduate or graduate student. This bias is reflected in a number of subtle and overt discourtesies.

First, of the monies appropriated for athletics, far too small a share goes for the student who would like to play an occasional game of tennis, squash, or basketball, and too much for the gourmet tables of illegally recruited athletes.

Second, the hours that Gimbel and liutchinson Gymnasiums offer to the non-varsity athlete are inconvenient and insufficient. For example, most graduate students find themselves taking seminars which fill most of the afternoon and are forced to study in the evenings. The optimum time to go to the gym would be early morning. But the gyms don't open until nearly lunch time. Moreover, weekend hours are even more preposterous. With all this, the employees are so eager to leave that they usually close facilities fifteen minute" to a half an hour early.

We would like to add that we find it pathetically appropriate that the University has matched the childishness of towel stealing with an equally childish method of super- vision. The spectacle of students fumbling for discs and cards is, to put it mildly, ridiculous. The thought that money, which ought to go towards an athletic program best serving the needs of the mpjority of students is being devoured by "jocks"-some of whom ought not to be here in the first place-is shameful. We recommend that the University takes steps to redress this situation.

DAVID BIANCHI ADAM GARFTNKI.E

Correction A letter to the editor appearing in Monday's Daily Pennsylvanian listed Ellen Holden as being a student of the Wharton School. She is actually a junior in the College for Women. Our apologies, Ms. Holden.

li\ Laureine kni»lit I would like to thank the Develop

ment Commission for their report on undergraduate education. At last, the stepchild of undergraduate education is no longer excluded from the priorities of the University of Penn- sylvania. The need for new teaching incentives, closer student-faculty contact, and additional innovative programs has been formally recognized.

But how far does this report go to toward providing a strong, com- prehensive educational program? I believe the commission has ignored larger directives for action and imagination by presenting a sketchy and schematic report that does carry any real conviction.

The work team's original report iZuckerman-Keller) carefully diagrammed a programmatic structure for its recommendations. Its intent was, as the commission mentions, to "provide students closer contact with faculty, especially in the first two years," and to "offer opportunities for greater in- dependence in study and research in the later years.'' Unfortunately, in re- writing the work team's report, the commission has obscured this plan, leaving us with a potpourri of recommendations and proposals which, mysteriously,"require further study."

For instance, how does the com- mission treat the first two years of undergraduate education? It makes note of the existence of the already operative Freshman Seminars and Thematic Studies. It mentions a Tutorial College, a Freshman Humanities Year, and a Great Books Program, but quickly brushes them aside for " further study." The commission submits only one recommendation for the first two years: the guarantee of a seminar each semester for freshmen and sophomores. Curiously, the com- mission goes further to suggest that this recommendation affords a "program that could encompass the

above ideas and go beyond them i Italics mine).

In planning for the second two years, the work team's report offered, as the commission mentions, "a number of different paths to the baccaulaureate degree." These degree options, originally suggested by President Meyerson, consist of early specialization (the continual option), self-education and examination , research, collegiate residence, as well as the conventional B.A. program.

The commission fails to make clear the purpose of these degree options-to provide alternative modes of study in the advanced years of undergraduate study. The only recommendation the commission submits is the continental option (renamed the University Scholars Program), which is isolated from the other options under the rubric of "One University." While I do not intend to detract from the value and potential of this program. I am disappointed that the other degree options were not clearly explained or supported in the commission's report.

The commission does recognize the need to upgrade the conventional B.A. option by increasinv the flexibility of course instruction. F'ieldwork, study abroad. learning cells, in- terdisciplinary courses, tutorials, and learning residences all receive mention. Many of these options already exist; the commission's support of them will help ensure their continuation. However, the new ideas of learning cells, tutorials, and student-taught courses need more than notable mention in order to begin their implementation.

What are our final results0 The commission's two recommendations- freshman and sophomore seminars and the University Scholars Programs-provide alternatives for only a small proportion of the un- dergraduates. The hints of other multiple options are essentially ad hoc proposals., features abstracted from the work team's report. The utility and urgency of these proposals diminish when a broad educational framework is not apparent to support them. The vision of the origianl report was compelling; the proposals thai

functioned as a part of this vision were made even more compelling.

I realize that one cannot hope for a gigantic, revolutionary educational campaign when schools, depart- ments, and disciplines are still at- tached to traditional loyalties and ideas. I realize that it may be politically expedient to change things at the margin, and hope increments of success will encourage new support and innovation But I cannot un- derstand why the commission con- tinued paying lipservice to a com- prehensive educational philosophy which they did not substantively support

Despite my objections above, I still feeel somewhat optimistic. The commission does make very im- portant recommendations for creating new incentives for teaching. Specifically, 1) the commitment of some teaching time to the University as a whole, 21 released time for the purpose of developing detailed proposals, and )3 more endowed chairs for the purpose of developing new teaching capabilities where they are needed most Hopefully, these recommendations will provide mechanisms for implementing many of the proposals which were relegated to the status of "requiring further study "

Furthermore, there do exist ad- ministrators, professors, and students, who share the vision of the work team's original report. For example. Dr. Humphrey Tonkin's report on undergraduate education. which appeared last spring, contained many of the proposals that the work teani integrated into their document Perhaps if such effort persist with the support of the President and the Provost the work team's vision for undergraduate education will one day- be realized

lauretne Knight, a senior in the College for Women, is co-chairman o/ SCUE. This column was submitted as an open letter to the University Development I -ommission Com- mission.

The ALM generation B) Mark Mancini

Somewhere back in the misty reaches of the early 1960's i that golden decade of academic ferment and agonizing self-evaluation), it was discovered by People Who Count That American students of the foreign languages were not learning them quite as well as they might In fact they were, upon completion of their courses, unable to speak or com- prehend the language above the level of the precocious two-year-olds of the native countries involved.

This apparently, was due to the fact that for hundreds of years. Americans had learned living foreign tongues from a series of rather stuffy, dull and repetitive grammars, in which new ideas were introduced in discrete quantities, like bushels and pecks ("Chapter XX: The Complementary Infinitive and Its Friends"), causing that ugly phenomenon i and uglier word), "compartmentalization." This made students capable of reading and writing foreign languages passing fair, but real blanks when confronted by a native speaker, or an ap- proximation thereof. Pooling their meager resources, the nation's educators came up with an emergency remedy for twenty generations of highly literate func- tional mutes, a bizarre phenomenon which looms large in the racial memory of many in these parts - Audio-I.ingual Materials, or, more commonly, Al.M.

Out went the Jenneys and the Chardenals, out went the dog-eared copy-books with "Bunny 5-4-27" scribbled in the margins, and in came Technology with a Vengeance. The sounds of flipping pages and droning, rote memorization gave way to the sounds of whirring, decibel-level adjustment and droning, rote memorization. The dulcet sounds of

' 'La plume de ma tante est sur la table des matter**" were never to be heard again in now, au go go America; in- stead, we had thirty people adjust their headphones and tune in to trenchant, real-life situations culminating in moments of truth, where Paul would return a library book or Maria would spill her soup. One time someone broke his leg skiing, and the class went wild.

Conceptually, ALM presented students with vignettes of life across the sea (they were the same for all languages, with necessary ad- justments: Jean would mange a soucisse. Juan would come a taco.

and wcw n't go into what Ivan would eat), as opposed to participial units ;ind Intransitive Verbs on Parade. In reality, as it took astute high-school freshmen about ten minutes to figure out, Al.M presents students with partcipial units. Etc., cleverly- disguised as vignettes of life across the sea. For all practical purposes, Jean, Marie, et al. might just as well have confessed themselves to be mere tools of their grammatical over-lords and facades for the inculcation of linguistic principles, instead of trying to slip today's lesson in among the visits to the Eiffel Tower and the

dimanchps en familU-. At least Peter Participle and Jeannie Gerundive are honest, though dull folk.

All the cleverness of the language people having been foiled by the uncanny perception of the average thirteen-year-old when it comes to hypes, one might have thought Al.M would fold its tents and go back to Ilarcourt Brace and World where it belonged. But the incredible ex- penditures of most schools on the chromium trappings of this "new direction in lingual science" more or less precluded that Because of this, most students spent four years I at least) looking like junior contestants on The $64,000 Question, and learning, I fear, much more about tape recorders than pronouns. Come with me, then, to the Marshall Mcl.uhan Memorial Language Laboratory (formerly the French room) of Kiverdale High School, looking for all the world like the aftermath of a boiler explosion on the CBS F:vening News.

Enter a vast crematorium of knowledge shored up by fifty glass partitions, like the visiting rooms at the State Correctional Institution. Take your assigned module in silence and put on a set of earphones, always fitted to the head size of i a I the hydrocephalic in the previous class or i b) one of the Kebler elves, and not admitting of a great deal of ad- justment Do not, under any cir- cumstances short of electrocution, touch any of the plethora of tempting

knobs and dials labeled with arcane abbreviations which confront you. Open your lesson plan and listen carefully.

JEAN: Ou est la bibliotheque.' JEAN: Repetez. JEAN: Ou est la bibliotheque? DISEMBODIED VOICE: Repelez. ALL: Ou est la bibliotheque? Answer loudly and repeat very

carefully, because Miss Johnson may at any time begin a little electronic eavesdropping. If you are not repeating, you'd better have a good excuse ready. Pick one: la) I fell asleep, i b) I'm not hearing anything, id I fell asleep because I'm not hearing anything. If you are telling a dirty joke to Tommy Hathaway in the next booth, be prepared to shudder as Disembodied Voice comes over with, "I heard that."

Highlights of language lab: Discover that by a series of ad- justments of knobs in certain Strategic booths, you can send an unbelievably piercing feedback into Miss Johnson's headset-more deliriously, a feedback she can't trace i though she eyes you knowingly). Flooi Miss Johnson. m

Discover that you can dupe her into believing you are repeating the thrilling adventures of Jean and Marie by making your mouth move and not saying anything, until Disembodied Voice says, "I'm not hearing you."

Discover that by complicated maneuvers with levers marked "6 Bins Riv Vu" and knobs called "Amp i Adj Aux," you can pick up the local rock station and leave Marie looking confused on the steps of the library.

Examination time: After long and ■ .'ii.plicated instructions are given in the French you cannot possibly have learned, begin at least three questions bclund because you dropped your pencil and got your glasses caught in the headphones. Then hear:

JEAN: Je vais a la liVAA I.UGOSI: Ah. JEAN: Tour F.iffel (beep) BELA I.UGOSI: Bay. JEAN: Oh. Mon Dieu. mes skis neufs! (beep) BELA I.UGOSI: Say. JEAN: Bibliotheque. I beep) BELA I.UGOSI: Day. JEAN: Huevos rancheros (beep.) Discover that Harry Teasdalc has

perfected the aaswers by a code of haii'l-signals down at booth 31. You can't see him very clearly, but miss questions 18, 19, and 20 as you decide whether or not he could possibly be right a bout day on question 17.

"The examination is now complete i beep whirr zhizzi. Place your papers

Jean vous souhaitc; laiFeliz Navidad (b)fhton Natale (OBon Noel idiDes saucisses. sans doute.

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Tuesday, December 12,1972 The Daily Pennsylvania!! Pane5

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U. Dental Students Gain Chomsky Raps 'Elitist Clinical Med Practice Power"1 in U.S.,Russia

By MARGIE SAMPI.INKK Students at the University's School

of Dental Medicine are gaining unique medical experience in a new program providing comprehensive dental health service for patients with complicated diseases.

Since November, senior dental students have participated in joint clinics with the Medical College of Pennsylvania (MCP) and Albert Einstein Medical Hospital-Northern Division to treat patients dentally who have "compromised health," ac- cording to Assistant Dean for Hospital Extramural Affairs Dr. Malcolm Lynch.

Patients with such ailments as severe heart disease, high blood pressure, difficult diabetes and bleeding and clotting problems are treated along with those who are physically incapacitated.

Lynch, who has coordinated plans for the program, explained, "We're getting more experience for our students which we couldn't get at our school alone. Our students are able to see patients who would not likely come to the University's Dental Clinics."

Approximately 60 dental students spend four consecutive weeks at the hospital-dividing half their time between the medical clinics and the medical surgical in-patient depart- ments and the other half treating patients in dental clinics.

"In addition dental students learn how to treat such emergencies as cardiac arrests, spend time in the operating room and gain proficiency in anesthesiology," Lynch said.

The prevailing concept in medicine today, is to provide total patient care." Lynch said'.'Dental medicine is part of this," Lynch explained "in that it entails the student being able to interact with the medical physician and to take care of the complete health needs of the patient"

In hospitals with complete medical facilities, the students' horizons are significantly broadened. The Medical College of Pennsylvania has renovated their dental facilities "to make them top-notch and unique among dental schools," Lynch said.

•| don't anticipate that the facilities could be better anywhere else.

"Problems of money and space along with a general lack of interest have deterred the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania from providing complete medical services in conjunction with the dental school," Lynch explained.

ByJIMKAHN Noam Chomsky, vanguard theorist

in psycholinguistics and noted critic of American foreign policy, scored alleged concentrations of elitist power in both the U.S. and Soviet Union before 200 persons in St Mary's church Monday evening.

In a talk sponsored by the

Pennsylvania Admissions (Continued from page I)

nation has now been divided into three-regions-The Northeast, Penn- sylvania and the remainder of the United States.

Schell said that each of the geographical divisions produce one- third of the total applicant pool.

While the number of days spent recruiting on the West Coast has been cut back in favor of less expensive recruiting efforts such as school visits from local alumni, the number of man-hours spent in Pennsylvania has increased.

A key part of the Pennsylvania recruiting drive is the Small Com- munities Talent Program, which attempts to attract students from the slate's small towns and rural areas.

Admissions officials deny the program is designed to placate rural legislators, but University ad- ministrators have pointed to it in appeals for funding before the legislature.

In seeking to attract rural students, admissions officers are faced with the problem of informing them of a University about which they know little and convincing them that the City of Philadelphia is a suitable place to spend four years.

"The city of Philadelphia is not attractive to a small-community student," assistant admissions director Maury Matthews com- mented. "It's a big, dirty city."

This year, the admissions office has also targeted 20 schools in the Philadelphia area for recruiting. Many schools within the city are covered by the University's minority recruiting drive.

The Commonwealth Relations Council, an alumni and student group

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established two years ago to promote better relations between the University and the state, is also at- tempting to boost the applicant pool through its efforts to make the University "more visable."

The Council last year paid for a week-long Glee Club tour across the state in a bus painted with hundreds of facts about the University. The group also helps arrange for weekly radio and television coverage of campus activities through videotapes prepared by the University.

Admissions office officials claim that they give no "overt" preferential treatment to residents of Penn- sylvania but sa> they do"take notice" of Commonwealth residency in reviewing applications.

While members of the admissions staff say they have heard reports that Pennsylvania admissions may be given preferential treatment in the future, they add that no definite plan exists.

Such a plan, which is reported to have been suggested by the Development Office, would guarantee Pennsylvania students with certain academic qualifications admission to the University.

Craig Sweeten, vice-president for development refused to discuss the relationship between admissions policy and commonwealth ap- propriations. "I'm not in the ad- missions business," Sweeten said.

Philadelphia Book Club and Philadelphia Resistance, Chomsky, a Universityalumnus, reviewed leading French Communist Roger (iaraudy's book, "The Crisis of Communism."

Accusing Caraudy of making "a serious misinterpretation of history" by overlooking antidemocratic trends in the Russian Communist movement, Chomsky said the Communist party there has adopted a philosophy of elitist power very similar to the ideas of 'technocrats like Robert Mc- Namara."

He cited numerous incidents of repression by the Soviet government, adding that Russian citizens are "beaten with a stick labeled the

peoples' stick.'" Chomsky also said liberals in this

country have pacified citizens by asserting that undisturbed growth of the entire U.S. economy is the best path to material benefits for all citizens. However, he added, this rationale may eventually lose in- fluence when ecological restraints prevent unlimited economic gains.

Criticizing (iaraudy's praise of American technological achievements as monuments of state- supported efforts, he asserted that the book's examples-the H-bomb, moon landings, and computers—were dubious achievements which served only the upper strata of American Society.

When asked about the Indochina peace negotiations, Chomsky responded that the Nixon ad- ministration, despite the press's "deceptive" reporting of an imminent

settlement has given no indication it will sign the proposed agreements. However, he said the U.S. will sign a peace pact soon because America's lowered military power can no longer affect the situation and Saigon's "police apparatus" has silenced

much Communist opposition to the Thieu regime.

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Page 6

Affirmative Action Report (Continued from page I)

dividual on bases that allegedly violate either University hiring policy: federal executive orders; or state, local, or federal laws pertaining to equal employment opportunity," and cases where a violation occurs but it is not in favor of another in- dividual.

The complaint summary is to be reviewed through administrative channels, including deans, the President, the Provost, or the Vice President for Management

Carol Tracy, president of Women for Equal Opportunity at the University of Pennsylvania, 1WKOUP1 termed the grievance procedures "'inadequate.'"

"The long time span involved in adjudicating a grievance will ef- fectively prevent women and minority group members from filing a complaint," she said. "Dealing with high level administrators like deans and vice presidents will intimidate the employees."

The final step in the grievance procedure is the establishment of a Complaint Appeals Panel which is to submit findings and recom- mendations to the Provost.

Ms. Tracy objected to the fact that there is "No requirement that any member of a panel have expertise in the area of employment discrimination." She also took issue with the report because "no decisions of the panel arc binding. The ultimate decision rests with the ad- ministration."

Under the new procedure it is up to the employee to prove that he or she was discriminated against. The grievance draft states: "The burden of proof is upon the complainant to demonstrate discrimination." Responding to an objection that this requirement would make discrimination difficult to prove. Dr. Bruce Johnstone, executive assistant to President Meyerson. said Mon- day,'Discrimination should be hard to prove. A hiring or promotion decision is usually based on a com- bination of discrimination with a valid assessment of potential and per- formance. It is usually based on quality but with some other subtle element added. We won't get justice through individual grievance cases. The real effect of the grievance procedure will be to change the system, to have an effect on a decision-maker who is called upon to justify his actions,"

Johnstone said "affirmative action is better served by pressure on our management than by use of outside judicial proceedings and agencies. However, in the event that an outside agency such as the Kqual Em- ployment Opportunity Commission i EEOC i is brought into the case, these steps, with the complaint summary, will enable EEOC to know what steps have been taken and what people are held responsible for abuse and mismanagement of personnel."

The draft is now being presented to the University community for com-

| r h fc t "

ment. Anticipating criticism by WEOUP and the A-3 Assembly, Johnstone said, "Advocacy groups like WEOUP see their role as that of a loyal opposition.' Whatever we do,

they want to drive us harder." Ms. Tracy said, "An ongoing

grievance committee should exist with the power to make decisions and overrule discriminatory actions."

Johnstone said, "Advocacy of in- dividual cases is to be left to informal groups like WEOUP and the A-3 Assembly. The Office of Equal Op- portunity is not an advocate lawyer for complaints but an advocate for principles."

The new grievance procedures draft does not apply to faculty but Johnstone said an academic com- mittee in equal opportunity designed to resolve faculty discrimination disputes is now being formed.

The revised maternity leave policy, which is now in effect provides for "personal leave without pay or

benefits for up to five months following the termination of the allowable period of sick leave with full pay" for women who have worked six months or more.

The draft slates: "The inability of a woman to carry out normal duties due to or contributed to by pregnancy or childbirth, including miscarriage or abortion, will be treated as a temporary medical leave and will entitle the employee, staff or faculty member to all sick leave benefits currently in force for the individual, including the right to draw on accrued sick leave < 30 work days) and vacation time."

The third component in the revised report concerns compliance with University affirmative action policies in recruitment and hiring for ad- ministrative and professional positions." It requires the following: notices of vacancies must be filed with the personnel office, vacancies must be advertised internally for seven days, a "statement of Com- pliance" must accompany all per- sonnel actions, and "all positions must be offered to the candidate best meeting the qualifications specifically relevant to that job."

In a further statement of policy the report says: "It shall be the policy of the University in filling ad- ministrative and professional positions to give special con- siderations to women and minority persona when all other relevant considerations fail to provide a basis for clear choice among the top can- didates."

Johnstone said this means "people in Ihe department where the vacancy OCCUrS have first shot at this position. The vacancy is then advertised within the University, then outside. This is a fundamental inconsistency with the affirmative action program because it is not including more women and minority group members but looking first at the women and minority persons within the University "

Johnstone said the affirmative action plan will be implemented as soon as possible.

The Daily Pennsylvanian

Contracts (Continued/rom page I)

on meal contracts will be granted when a student withdraws from the University. Any part of the first six weeks of tlie semester will be granted a refund equal to one half of the semester fees. Students withdrawing from the University after the sixth week of the semester will not be en- titled to a refund for that semester."

'"Eating with the brothers is an integral part of becoming a member of the house," incoming IKC president Ted Fastis said. "By the end of the second semester the pledge should be 8 brother, a member of the house. The decision hurts the effort of making the pledge a brother since he loses day by day contact with the house."

Fraternities in the past have always anticipated one good and one bad semester per year. First semester debts are not considered crucial because the house is only operating with three active classes. In the second semester, however, the house draws from the freshman class as well and thus has more money to deal with fixed costs.

ZBT president Kith Chirls an- ticipates the loss of new revenue at almost $8700. while both Sigma Nu and Sigma Alpha Mu estimate losses of about $4000.

Unlike other University auxiliary services the Dining Service billed freshmen for two semesters this summer, the first time this has been done. The cost of eating ranges up to $590 per academic year depending on the meal plan. Some students payed for only one semester, in effect creating their own contract, but the majority payed for two.

"The reasons for billing for two semesters are interrelated," Stem- pkowski stated. "We had to know the amount Of operating money we would have for the whole year and project how many people we would be ser- ving. We had to be sure of the number cil people involved because we must hire help for bold semesters." he said.

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Tuesday, December 12,1972 The Daily Pennsylvanian Page 7

Cindermen Hope History Repeats Following Heps, IC4A Successes

By DANNY SHERR I a-t year the Penn indoor track

team climaxed a 4-1 regular season with Hep'agonal and IC4A cham- pionships. The Quakers may be hard pressed to repeat that performance this year.

Although hurt by graduation, Penn does return many of last year's performers back plus a talented new freshmen crop.

At this point, the trackmen's strongest even would seem to be the hurdles. Outdoor NCAA titlist Bruce Collins will be back, trying to break the record he set in the 60 yard high hurdles I7.0I last year in the Hep- tagonals. He will be aided by foot- baller Don Clune and freshman Harold Schwab. Schwab distinguished himself last year as New York State

Rap es (Continued from page 1)

under whose jurisdiction the University area comes, nor the 18th District Police headquarters have a record of the case.

••Sometimes when a girl is molested like this, she won't report it to the police," a spokesman for the West Philadelphia Detectives said. The spokesman declined to be identified.

When asked to comment on the assertion that approximately 10 rapes have been committed in the 40th to 43rd streetarca since the beginning of the year, the spokesman for West Philadelphia Detectives said, "I couldn't tell you for sure if these rapes have been committed, but just off the top of my head, I would say it was probable." When asked if he thought it was a high number of rapes, the detective replied, "I think it's outrageously high, especially if they're while girls being raped, which would mean they're students, not lifelong residents of the area."..

He said the area between 40th and 4:<rd and Baltimore streets had a lot of crimes involving students because "there a lot of cheap apartments in that area that students like."

Calling the police's apparent ignorance of the attempted rape "a bureaucratic mix-up". University Director of Safety and Security Donald Shultis said the victim "did exactly the right thing by screaming and resisting her assailants." He added that the incident was "regrettable," adding the case was

not closed and the University and Philadelphia police were working on finding the attackers. Shultis noted, however, the chances of finding the assailants were "slight"

champion in all hurdling events. He also set a national 18 and under 330 yeard intermediate hurdling record.

The pole vault also looks like a bright prospect at this point, but the vaulters' success will depend on the recovery of some key people from various ailments. Mark Mondschein is a consistent 15 footer and has been doing well in practice.

Steve Kaab, who suffered a shoulder dislocation playing touch football, Mati Haus, who has been doing well but has a history of leg problems, and co-captain Fred Samara, who is still recovering from a pulled muscle suffered in the Olympic trials, are all question marks, however.

High jump prospects include juniors Mike Sperger and C.K, Buddington, who placed in the Hep- tagonals last year. However, due to a sprained ankle suffered in a volleyball game, Buddington's ability at this time remains suspect. Peter Rutherford should be the high jump squad's third man.

The broad jump features Samara, with plenty of varsity experience, and l.en Stachitas, who surprised everyone on the team last year as a freshmaa Converted sprinter Bill Wilson will try the long jump also. "We kind of think that he has some talent in that area," said Coach Jim Tuppeny.

Bcrnie Gansle comes back to lead the sprinting corps after a fourth place finish last year in the Heps. An exciting freshman prospect is Ed James, "who ran very well in high school," said Tuppeny. Collins will take time off from his hurdling duties to round our the sprinting team.

The same runners will be used for the 1000 yard and the mile events. Dennis I.unne, Denis Kikes, co- captain Bob Childs, and Peter Christ are all experienced cross-country veterans while freshman Russell Carson and sophomore Bob Marman are strong in the shorter race.

More harriers fill the two mile event, where Paul Barbary, Kent Staver, Jimmy Rafferty, Dave McKee, and Vinnie Waite will represent the Ked and Blue."The coach says he's going to put some speed into me," Staver joked. "I wonder where he'll find it."

Up to now, the team has not had a roof under which to practice, and is behind schedule. Tuppeny pointed out that other Ivy League schools, like Harvard, have already had their first meets, while few weeks have passed in which Penn has even had five days of practice."Usually at this time we have a bubble," said Tuppeny, "but the new one hasn't been put in vet and

we don't have anywhere to practice in bad wheather. And of course, there's no practices over vacation.

Coincidentally, it's right after vacation that the track team goes against perhaps its toughest com- petition of the winter in Navy. For the Quakers, there is never anything like a home track advantage, because Penn does not have an indoor track of its own, but Navy, says Tuppeny, will have practiced and be in "great" shape because of its indoor track facility. Navy was the only team to beat Penn indoors last year, and has lost a much smaller percentage of its squad than Penn has of its own.

476 Icemen (Continued from pane 8)

Hamano moving up to join Ed Parkinson and Dick Lanktree on the Red line. On defense, the new pairings will see Paul Stewart and Steve Siba, and Dick Goryl and Paul Akey trying to thwart any Princeton rushes on the Penn goal

In spite of the changes, Davenport maintains that he still is generally pleased with the frosh's showings to date. "(Last weekend) we were just out-manned, and our defense didn't play as they should have," he com- mented. "But each individual is developing and improving with each game, and that's really what fresh- man hockey is all about. As a team, I'm confident that they'll come back."

As for Princeton, Davenport ad- mitted he knew nothing of today's opponents, but he added that he didn't feel they would be too difficult for his squad to handle. "I'm just hoping we can play as we're capable, and come up with a win," he concluded. "It would be nice to break I for vacation) on the upswing."

Matmen (Continued from page 8)

about the other guy. We did that against Army, and it cost us. I want to prepare our guvs to win every mat- ch."

In the end, to quote Capobianco, "It all boils down to this. Wrestling is 95 per cent mental. The team that wants to win most Wednesday is going to win"

So, two days before regular exams start, the Penn wrestlers will have their most important test, against the Tigers. If they pass, it will be a very merry Christmas for them.

UNUSUAL GIFTS FOR CHRISTMAS

VISIT THE UNIVERSITY MUSEUM SHOP

Eskimo Stone Carvings and Prints - Canada

Seals, Whales, Fish and Walrus

Baskets and Crafts - Ethiopia and Africa

Pottery and Weaving - Mexico and Guatemala

Gold and Silver Jewelry - Navajo Indian,

Mexico, India, China

University Museum

33rd & Spruce

EV 6-7400

Are you a person who: 1) Can't afford to spend $2.50 & tip each night for dinner ?

2) Is tired of hamburgers every night ?

3) Is sick of cooking and cleaning up ?

If any of the above describe you, look into a

University Dining Service Meal Contract • economical meals with unlimited quantities of practically everything!

plan 1-10 meals per week plan 2-15 meals per week

• a variety of delicious foods at each meal! breakfasts range from blueberry hot cakes to Philadelphia scrapple lunches and dinners include your choice of 3 entrees, soup, 3 vegetables,

a variety of salads and desserts and at least 10 beverages • Dieters please note: cottage cheese, yogurt, jello,

and heaps of salad are available.

• convenient locations around campus! use your meal card at:

The 1920 Commons facility near the high rises Stouffer Triangle near the Quad or Hill Hall on 34th Street

For further information come to The University Dining Service 3732 Locust Walk 594-7585 (across from University Bookstore)

Bantom Waits in Wings for Untried Quakers By GLENN UNTERBERGER

Only the Devil's Advocate could find fault with the performance of Pern's basketball team to date. The Quakers 13-0) have shot just a shade below 50 per cent from the floor, have outrebounded the opposition by 13 per game, and currently hold a con- siderable 31.3 average margin of victory. Only one ingredient, which would lend these figures real signifigance, is missing. That missing element is competition.

The Quakers figure to have that situation remedied rather quickly, though, as they are challenged by a talented and experienced St. Joseph's (2-2) quintet in the second game of a Palestra twin bill i Temple vs. Navy is first on the card I Wednesday night

The contest marks the 1972-73 opening of that ritual known as Big Five competition, but perhaps more pertinent to the Red and Blue's prospects is the fact that the con- frontation begins a stretch of the toughest four games on the Quakers' schedule. "Playing your two biggest rivals before Christmas is almost unheard of," pointed out Penn mentor Chuck Daly. "This four-game set could be the toughest in the nation."

But right now it is the Hawks about whom Daly's charges are most concerned, and more specifically Mike Bantom, who in his own right could be the nation's toughest. Operating a good six feet nine inches above the court, "The Stick" has posted 18.1 and 21.8 scoring averages

over the past two seasons (as well a^~" being a double figure rebounder) and is within range of the school's all-time scoring mark. He gained additional experience as a member of the U.S. Olympic squad, and should present the first genuine problem for Daly's man-to-nian match-ups. "You have to give special attention to standout players," the second-year coach acknowledged. "According to the foul situation, different people will be covering him."

Daly's formula worked last year to keep Bantom in tow when it mattered as the Quakers pounded out a 77-64 win. To make things tougher this year. Hawk headmaster Jack "McKinney has installed a 1-2-2 of- fensive formation. "Penn defensed

Western Swing Highlights Lengthy Holiday Schedule for Penn Cagers

By BI1X W1TTE DP Assoc. Sports Editor

It would be nice if an away game with Navy were the toughest assignment handed Penn's basketball team this season. Even this December.

To listen to Coach Chuck Daly talk, though, you'd think the Quakers haven't really played a game yet.

They haven't. Tomorrow night's Palestra free-for-all against St. Joseph's has been billed as the Big Five title game for longer than an anxious Daly cares to remember; it's the type of energy -sapping game you like to follow with a King's or a Citadel.

Instead, after enduring finals! a breather i. Daly's charges enter Title Came Two against Temple December 23<has a Harry l.itwack team ever lost a Big Five game by more than five points? i.

And then the schedule gets tough.

•'Everybody talks about i the weakness of I our schedule", Daly moaned, looking like a man who'd been hearing choruses of "When the Haw'-, goes marching in" in his sleep for b.e last couple of weeks. "We have two of our major rivals before Christmas ..."

St. Joe's-on-the-brain prevented the Quaker mentor from expounding on the explosiveness of Cincinnati or the incredible size of San Franciseo- Penn visits the Bearcats! 12th ranked nationally by Sports Illustrated, though losers toMiami of Ohio. 63-61,) in their opener December 27 and travels toS.F. two nights later The Dons (6-10, 6-9 6-8 up front l have won four straight including victories over LaSalle, 73-721 after being up by 17) and Duke 72-68 to win their Cable Car Classic.

"Each team seems to be more difficult than the next," said Daly ruefully." St Joseph's has great

efficiency in the middle, Temple and Cincinnati have overall excellence, and San Francisco has great ef- ficiency in the middle AND overall excellence."

There will be no King's on the horizon, either. The Quakers open Ivy U-ague play with potentially their toughest loop road trip, facing Dart- mouth and Harvard on back-to-back nights i Jan. 5 and 61. From there it's back to the Palestra for a single game with Yankee Conference favorites Massachusetts Jan 10 i the Kedmen recently beat Rhode Island, which beat Brown, which was suppose to challenge in the Ivies . . . I, and then on to the snakepit that is Jadwin Gym to test Princeton on Jan. 13.

Up till now, Penn's practices have really been geared for St. Joe's and Mike Bantom, though few coaches will admit they aren't "playing them one at a time." Daly will have little choice in the matter during the next three weeks.

Kantom very well last year," he conceded. "In this year's offense, Bantom has more flexibility. He can move to more different areas of the court, and it will be easier to get the ball to him."

The City Liners do employ an alternate route to the basket through the outside shooting of 6-5 senior forward Pat McFarland, who has already passed the 1000-point plateau in his career. Mike Moody, a strong 6- 2, is back after a year's suspension to play the tough defense, while 6-0 junior Jim O'Brien I who played with Bantom and Moody at Phillys Roman Catholic High i has been erratic as a playmaker. Fifth man Bob Sabol is only fi-4 . but he doesn't jump too well, either.

The Hawks have already run into some competition of their own in the Bayou Classic last weekend, losing 85- 74 to Southwest I-ouisiana and 63-62 to UTEP. '"Southwest Louisiana was an excellent team with better personnel than Penn or St Joe's," McKinney explained, "but I don't think the losses will have a strong effect on our play. This is a City Series game."

Which brings us to another ingredient that some Quakers will be encountering for the first time. "They i the sophsi had better be ready," Daly stated. "After the first three games they should have gotten their feet wet." For that matter, the entire team will have to keep their cool in the face of the various pressure defenses that have become a St. Joe's trademark.

Hut the thing that will make the game toughest for both squads is that it is Big Five. "You have to live with a game like this throughout the year," Daly remarked. "In these games some unknown often comes to the fore, so you have to play everyone honest. The game will be our first quiz, but not our final test."

F.ven so, For the first time the Quakers will have to cram pretty hard.

Bon Mahn

REJECTION -St Joe's center Mike Bantom 1441 is about to return the shot of Penn's Corky Calhoun from whence it came in last season's "7-64 Quaker win. The graduated Calhoun held the 6-9 Bantom to 14 points on 6-20 shooting, but how Penn will defense the Hawk star Wednesday is still in doubt.

Elis Seek to Copy Harvard In Hockey Clash With Penn

*■ " — * - - - ... ..till la .1,L,.t.t ,1..., »,. 4h„

ALL FALL DOWN - Penn tri-captain Dietrich Gyetko (141 slides the puck just wide of Merrimaek goalie Pat Finch ic the Quakers' 7-1 victory earlier this season. After putting

MikcRosenman

together five relatively easy wins, the Penn icemen were brought to earth by Harvard this past weekend, but hope U. bounce back against Yale tonight.

RyBUZZYBISSINGER For years now, every Yale graduate

dressed in a style that seems to have been re-created almost perfectly by some of Penn's more saintly fraternities, have been known to literally tear their Brooks Brothered suits right off their Brooks Brothered bodies in preaching the supremacy of Yale as the number one school in the country.

When you come right down to it, however, this really isn't true. Har- vard, which seems to be the basic flaw- to Yale's claim, was founded before Yale, has a greater endowment than Yale, has a bigger library than Yale, and last but not least always comes before Yale in the Penn hockey schedule. Considering the nature of the feud that lias been going on in- terminable between the Crimson and the Bulldogs, this fact is as valid as any of the other ones mentioned above.

Harvard just got through devouring Penn 9-1. and whether Yale 12-01 will follow right at the heels of the Johns in

MORE SPORTS INSIDE

Page 8 Tuesday. December 12,1972

Cap€)bianco and Matmen Ready forPrinceton By ED WIEST

last year Mike Capobianco was one of the junior co-captains i the other being Rich Zweigi. who led the Penn wrestling team to a 20-17 victory over Princeton that clinched the Quakers a tie with Old Nassau for the Ivy grappling crown.

Wednesday afternoon at 3 P.M. at the Palestra, Penn will wrestle Princeton 11-21 again in a match that will probably decide who will be the top team in the Ancient Eight this season. And again, Capnobianco, now a senior, will be leading the Quakers {1-0) onto the mat.

•We won last year. That means they're going to be coming in pretty high. It's not going to be an easy match." That's how Capobianco views the situation for the meet versus the Tigers, who opened their season Friday at Army at a quadrangular meet where they lost to both the Cadets and Indiana State, while beating Montelair State. The meet was something of a diaster for the Orange and Black, but not for Capobianco's probable opponent, 158 pounder Paul Martinclli; he won all three of his matches.

VAC A TION HOOP DUCATS Students may exchange coupons foi

Perm basketball games to be played during the vacation break beginning at 9 A.M. on December 18.

For the Temple game on December 23, exchange coupon 8; for January 10 w ith Massachusetts, exchange coupon 11; for Jlanuary 17 with Villanova. exchange coupon 13; for January 20 with Manhattan, exchange 14.

The editor* />/ The Daily I'ennsvlvanian with

the staff inn! ihr vampiii <i very merry Christmas mul

ii happy new year

Martinelli's weekend success, however, doesn't bother Capobianco. His philosophy toward his oppoents is "If I know I'm stronger and more experienced, I know I can win. It's a psychological advantage- after all, the other guy's not stopping. I want to know that I worked harder than he did." The Wharton marketing major is confident of repeating his 10-2 victory over Martinelli of last >ear.

Nobody, it seems, ever really started out to be a wrestler, and Capobianco is no exception. Originally, he was a junior high school basketball player, until "the assistant coach didn't think I was working hard enough, so he told me to start running. After a while, I got fed up with it so I walked up to him, he got mad, and since I had friends on the wrestling team. I couldn't see why not to try out. I liked the sport, and did very well."

That's an understatement, for "'the Capper" was second-team All-Ivy in his 158 class last year, and he cer- tainly has no regrets. "I'm glad," he says. "•Sometimes I think about it, but with all those big basketball players around, I'm glad I'm in wrestling. I've gotten a lot out of it too- discipline, and rigorous training that will carry over into anything else I do."

In regard to his second year as co- captain, the Red and Blue leader said," it's different. 1 don't think I took it as seriously last year. It was a learning experience for me; Rich i Zweig l had been a captain in high school, unlike myself, and knew more. I developed, and picked up the same qualities as my roomate (football co- captain i Phil Adams and Rich."

The man praised by coach larry Lauchleas "a great team leader, and outstanding wrestler", who, along with Zweig take a lot of things off my back, like psyching the team up", Shares all areas of responsibility with his partner. "We talk about things we

should do as a team. We compromise a lot. When the team thinks of Rich, they think of me and vice-versa."

Princeton's two top wrestlers are probably 118 pounder Lee Klepper, and heavyweight Karl Chandler, both of whom won their classes at a tournament Dec. 1 at the Coast Guard Academy, as Princeton finished second to College Division power Slippery Rock. They will face, respectively, the relatively inex- perienced Dewey Golkin I I- I and Steve lgnersoll 10-1). which prompted coach Iauchle to say, "We've got to win through the middle- it's going to be a very tough, toss-up battle." Capobianco, agreed with his coach. "We have to win all the way up the middle. . . it's very important for the middle eight to win them all. The tought of an early pin (worth six points to a decision's three I really scares me."

Princeton's coach, John Johnson isn't seeing things in terms of any particular match, though saying that "Too many coaches worry too much

(Continued on page 1)

tonight's contest with the Red and Blue at 7:30 in the Class of '23 Kink depends to a great extent on how much pride the Quakers will have regained after Saturday's humiliating defeat

'Except for our vanity and pride," said head coach Bob Crocker, "things look all right. After our game against Harvard, however, if I was Yale I wouldn't come down awed. Yale and Penn have always had a heated rivalry. It will be a tough game."

It shouldn't be. Although the playing status of goalie Tun

McQuiston is still in doubt due to the i racked ribs he received in the RPI contest, the Quakers still have good enough material to make the Bulldogs look sickly.

In lackluster wins over Williams (7- I and Boston State i8-5i, the Yale team has looked anything but healthy. The loss of defenseman D'Arcy Ryan and forward Dan Hurtubise, both of whom elected to take a year off.

With Ryan gone, the burden of the defense has fallen upon captain Dean Boylan. He leads a corps of inex- perienced players that are back- stopped by an even more inex- perienced goalie in sophomore Ken MacKenzie.

Offensively, junior Bob Kane leads the Bulldogs along with firstline teammates Gary Balzhiser and Dave Buchar. Kane leads the squad in goals with four to his credit, including a hat trick against Boston State. Speaking about his team, head coach Paul l.ufkin commented, "We really haven't played anybody yet, so it's bard to tell how we are. I'm hoping that we can win against Penn.

The only question is will Penn, after everything, be able to discount that Harvard contest. Games like that are always hard to forget-too hard.

Vacation Means Work And Play for Icemen

W . , i Dann ii>(ir> im -jm»th*»r rlivnuteii

tf orP MIKE CAPOBIANCO

TigerTamer?

Sports Shorts Banquet Department: The fall

sports dinners came hot and heavy last week. At the lightweight football feed, GEORGE HEINZE was named "Outstanding Freshman", DON FISHER was tabbed "Outstanding Soph", CHUCK HITCHLER won the "Schmucker Award", and A I. NOCCIOI.INO garnered "Most Valuable Player" kudos. At the cross country chow line, DAVE McKEE grabbed "Outstanding Freshman" mention, and BOB CH1IDS was Most Valuable"

+ -t + + + U-adership Department: At the

same lime, DON RIES and STEVE BAUMANN were named soccer co- captains for next year, RAY

BROADHEAD and DAVE l.aVALLEE got the nod for the lightweights, and DENIS FIKES will lead the harriers.

+ -f + + + Publicity Department: The word

from assistant athletic director DICK CORRIGAN is-you think that Penn basketball is good, huh? Wednesday night is their first real test Give them your support-buy a hat, and be a part of the Big Five spectacle.

+ + + + + Applications for intramural

basketball are now available at GimbelGym. Deadline for sign-ups is December 20. Competition will begin January 20.

ByTEDMETZGER Christmas may be merry for the

Penn icemen but the celebrating won't last long. They'll be back on the Ice of the Class of '23 Rink on December 27th, working off their holiday paunches and getting into shape for a tough stretch of games during the rest of the vacation period.

"We'll be back to wrk at 8:30 sharp," remarked coach Bob Crocker. "The past weeks have put a lot of pressure on the team because of our heavy schedule and the exam period but after Christmas we're going to gear ourselves for some really hard work. I expect total dedication to hockey from the team during this period."

The Quakers will need total dedication to get through the vacation games unscathed. They play three teams in six days and none of the teams are pushovers.

Clarkson is first in the Red and Blue's agenda on January 4th and they have a special incentive this year, last season Bill Macdonell scored with two seconds left in the game to give the Quakers a 2-1 win. Clarkson protested that time had run out before the score but to no avail. This year Clarkson has scored 50 gails in compiling a 7-1 record, their only lost against a powerful St Iawrence squad. Center Brian Mason is their leading point scorer with one goal and 15 assists. Goalie Kevin Woods with a 2.1 gpg. average will be hard to beat

K.P.I, and ex-Penn coach .1 im Salfi are waiting in Troy. N.Y., with baited breath for another shot at the Red and Blue on January 6th. Earlier this

season Penn won on another disputed goal and Salfi was clearly unhappy. Senior wing John Donahoe and sophomore Jerry Bailey caused much trouble in the home opener and they will be worrisome the second time around too.

Brown rounds out the vacation schedule and though the Bruins have not been very impressive to date they have the potential to cause trouble. They were beaten twice by St Uuis early in the season but they clobbered Boston College 9-4 and only suc- cumbed to B.U., 5-4 in overtime.

'76 Icemen Try For Redemption Tliis Afternoon

By JOE BARKS Sensing a chance to redeem

themselves after their weekend performances, Penn's freshmen hockey players will skate onto the Class of '23 Rink ice this afternoon at 4 P.M., sporting a slightly different look and eager to hand the Princeton freshmen the type of drubbing the Quakers absorbed while touring New F.ngland.

Frosh coach larry Davenport has decided to realign both his offensive and defensive personnel for this contest in an attempt to tip the scales back in the Quakers' favor. Mark Irwin. who enjoyed a four-goal weekend, will be moved up to his natural position of center, with John

(Continued on page '•)