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1 Cathy Barlow resigns black studies position; coittee halts work By JOAN RIEDER The ad hoc coittee on black studies has teporarily suspended its official work following the resignation of one of its os{ influential black ebers, several sources close to the coittee revealed last night. Cathy Barlow, a proinent eber of the Society of African and Afro-Aerican Students (SAAS), last week infored the coittee in a resignation letter that she feels she is no longer qualified to represent SAAS. Last night, Miss Barlow refused to discuss her resignation.^ Miss Barlow's resignation cae before the release of a report by the Black Research Studies Coission an all black research group headed by Miss Barlow. The coission has been working since last suer. This opened the possibility that the coission ight never coplete its job. Over $5,000 have been spent by Miss Barlow's coission, a eber of the coittee said. Several ebers of the coittee said last night that if SAAS was withdrawing support fro the black studies coittee, the coittee ight be forced to dissolve itself. Wilbur Coodore, and Barbara Giles, two other SAAS ebers, are still officially ebers of the coittee. Last July, Dr. Alarin Phillips, chairan of another black studies coittee, dissolve his coittee when blacks refused to cooperate. Cathy Riegelan, a s'udent eber of the black studies coittee,.-aid she felt there would be no point in the coittee presenting a report if it lacked the backi. % of the ost influential black organization on capus. Miss Riegelan said that Miss L irlow was "not terribly thrilled" with the working proposals of the coittee and that the other ebers of SAAS viewed the with ever ore disfavor. All of the coittee ebers readied h».=v night said that all the political iplications of Miss Barlow's resignations were still unclear. One source had intiated that there was a (Contiriued on page 5) CATHY BARLOW Vol. LXXXV No. 102 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Copyright 1970 The Daily Pennsylvanian Wednesday, January 21, 1970 College to allow students on faculty reorganizing coittee By JOHN RILEY The winter offensive began yesterday at a eeting of the College Faculty-with an ipressive victory for the advocates of increased student influence In acadeic decisions. By a vote of 43 to 17, the faculty of the University's largest undergraduate school, overriding the wishes of its dean, authorized the selection of two students to serve on the Coittee on the Reorganization of the College Faculty. The faculty reorganization coittee, whose seven faculty eber's appointents were approved at yesterday's eeting, has been charged to study the present set-up of the College faculty and recoend changes and iproveents. Willia E. Stephens, dean of the College, said last week that students had no place on a coittee dealing exclusively with faculty affairs. The approved otion, presented Clark criticizes by Dr. Alfred Rieber, chairan of the history departent, authorized the student governent to recoend two qualified students for service on the newly fored College coittee. These students will then be subject to the approval of the faculty's noinating coittee, which previously failed to nae any students to the coittee. Rieber coented yesterday, "I was very pleased that there was no real verbal opposition to y otion. It is part of the general policy to put students on coissions and obviously the faculty agreed." The faculty, however, failed to reach a decision on two other ites on yesterday's agenda; the report by the College coittee on adissions, which contained no specific recoendations for action, and a proposal of the College Coittee on Instruction, calling for the acceptance of any student in good acadeic standing into the ajor of his choice. Dr. Roger Walsley, associate professor of physics and forer vicedean of the College, subitted a otion relating to the adissions coittee's report, asking the coittee to "study the iplications for the College of a policy of preferential adission of the children of aluni." Walsley's otion referred to the suggestion ade by a subcoittee to the University's budget coittee that 75 additional children of aluni not requiring financial aid be aditted to the University. This reccoendation, presently aking the rounds of a nuber of University coittees, was entioned in the College adission coittee's report but, Walsley said, "was not investigated. We have to question anything." "The College faculty can't arrogate to itself the authority for adinistrative decisions," Walsley aan CIA drops capus recruitent visit WILLIAM STEPHENS By ARNOLD El SEN The Central Intelligence Agency had decided not to hold the capus eployent interviews it had scheduled for next onth, the Rev. Jack Russell, vice provost for student affairs, announced yesterday. The CIA had been the object of a successful Counity of Students petition drive requiring the agency to hold a public eeting on its "policies and character." However, the CIA had previously infored University officials of its intention to cancel capus interviews. At its Oct. 15 eeting the University Council adopted a policy requiring "any eployer requesting use of the University facilities" for recruitent, upon peition, "to have its appointed representatives in a public eeting discuss those aspects of the policies and character of the organization which are specified in the petition." The "aspects" naed in the student governent petition included "secrecy and repression" contrary to the University's ideals. Arthur J. Letcher, director of the University's placeent service, who infored Russell of the CIA's deci- Phi Psi will not seek IF probation waiver Phi Kappa Psi fraternity decided last night not to try to escape punishent for violating an Interfraternity rule which forbids the "one-ball" selection syste. The Locust Walk fraternity voted alost unaniously not to seek a one-year waiver of punishent fro the Interfraternity President's Council. The punishent for violating the rule is "pledge probation," which eans that it ay not officially accept new ebers. Phi Si's president said the house is going ahead with accepting ebers unofficially adding that he be- lieved that the punishent would not be detriental to the house. The 12 to zero vote, with one abstention, reversed an earlier decision by the president of the house. Cayetano Cabanyes, the fraternity's president, had decided to seek an exeption fro the punishent slapped on by the Interfraternity judiciary because the fraternity did not eet the deadline last week for coplying with the regulation. Last Friday, Cabanyes sent a letter to Martin Duffy, assistant dean for fraternities, stating Cabanyes would go before the President'sCoun- sion, said the change in plans could not have resulted fro the petition drive. Letcher said he received the news Dec. 19, before the drive got started. He added, however, that the decision to interview at the copany's regional office instead of on capus, was at least partially caused by past confrontations on other capuses. "Agencies in governent work have put out less effort to encourage people to sign up to see the," Letcher said. "Where there have been confrontations, they felt no need to encourage the in the future." Charles Beck, the CIA regional representative responsible for the change in plans, was unavailable for coent. Letcher said that while exact figures do not exist, the University has prepared any students for CIA ACTIVITIES BAN SALARIES The Activities Council last night passed a resolution prohibiting any activity receiving funds fro the Council fro paying salaries to its ebers or officers. The action resulted fro anger over the fact that The Daily Pennsylvanian began paying its editors salaries last year. Rona Zevin, who proposed the resolution, recognized the fact that the provisions would not effect this year's allocation to the paper, but would go into effect later this spring. Another resolution, put forward by Neil Lutsky, called on eber activities to withhold advertising in The Daily Pennsylvanian until the paper stops paying salaries. This otion, however, was not acted on last nigh;. Those supporting the resolution, which passed by a vote of 33-5, contended that an activity receiving funds fro the Council should not be paying its ebers salaries when soe activities do not have sufficient revenues to reain solvent The Daily Pennsylvanian now Q-partite, science center to Nixon court noinees By ALBAN SALAMAN Rasey Clark, a Johnson Adinistration Attorney General, charged here yesterday that President Nixon is "packing the court" through his noination of conservatives to the Supree Court. Clark, who visited classes in the University Law School yesterday, told 150 persons in an afternoon question and answer session that the President should consider the "integrity, objectivity, and greatness" of a prospective noinee rather than his ideological posture. Monday, the White House announced that Federal Appeals Judge Harold Carswell of Florida, described as a "oderate conservative," would be noinated to fill a vacant Supree Court seat. During his capaign, President Nixon had proised to appoint "strict constructionists" to the high court. Clark, who described hiself as troubled by the noination of Carswell, said he thought "the Warren Court was the greatest institutional force in governent for huan dignity and civil rights and I'd hate to see that change." The Warren Court, naed for Chief Justice Earl Warren who served fro , produced landark decisions concerning school desegration, bible reading in schools, legislative reapportionent and due process of law. The 42-year-old son of forer Supree Court Justice To Clark also said he doubted Justice Departent was spearheading a national effort to eliinate ebers of the Black Panther party on the grounds that the justice departent does not control, local police units. He said, however, that the labelling of groups as the "ost dangerous" in the country is "contributing to the eo tional tenure of the dialogue and bad law enforceent." Clark, now a eber of the Nrw CJark, now a eber of the New York law fir of Paul, Weiss, Goldgerg, Rifkind, Wharton and Garrison, held an open discussion session and then spent the rest of the day addressing classes and dining withuniversity faculty and students. Clark, coenting on questions concerning the draft said he was opposed to the creation of an allvolunteer ary because he feared RAMSEY CLARK such a professional unit would not understand all the iplications of the issues involved in war. "We've seen too uch ilitary action against civilian populations such as Czechoslovakia," he said. Clark said he favored the institution of universal service, in which persons would be chosen randoly for ilitary duty and all reaining young en and woen could choose to serve in service organizations such as the Peace Corps or Vista. Clark, who also served as deputy attorney general before being prooted, said he favored the idea of a selective conscientious objector classification in theory, but thought there was no objective way to ipleent it. For a ajor part of the discussion, Clark focused upon the adoption of new laws by the governent to expand huan rights in a swifty changing odern Aerica. In touching upon the areas of education, environent and criinal procedure, he said the great inequalities that exist between rich and poor, black and white are intolerable. By BOB HOFFMAN The Board of directors of the University City Science Center voted yesterday to begin foral negotia- :ions the quadripartite coission concerning the establishent of low rent housing on science center land. The board established a negotiating coittee to deal with representatives of the Quadripartite Coission on University Counity Developent. The action foralized the unofficial agreeent ade last Friday by representatives of the two parties. Science center board chairan Paul J. Cupp said yesterday that the creation of a negotiating coittee was "within the spirit" of that agreeent. The resolution approved at the Friday eeting included a phrase, inserted at the insistence of quadripartite coission chairan Howard Lesnick, stating that "the science center coits itself to a propt, sincere and intensive effort to arrive at a utually satisfactory proposal." The quadripartite coission had asked the science center to relinquish 3.4 acres of its present allotent in Renewal Area 3 to provide land for the construction of 156 new units of low incoe housing. In early January, Cupp, who is also a University trustee and chairan of the board of Ace, Inc. declared in a letter to the Philadelphia City Planning Coission, that the center had no such intention. Following unanious criticis of Cupp's stateent by the quadripartite coission early last week, the science center said that no final decision had been ade thus paving the way for the negotiations. Dr. Lysle Peterson, executive vice president of the science center, who will head the center's negotiating begin negotiations this week tea, said the center is hopeful of exploring the needs of counity housing in the area and reconciling it with the goals and needs of the science center. In a foral resolution passed at the eeting, the science center board stated its desire that the "negotiations are to be consisent with recognition of the science center's present objectives as well as with the corporation's desire to serve the best interests of the surrounding counity." Larry Goldfarb, forer chair- an of the quadripartite coission who will head the quadripartite delegation, said its principal objective is to obtain 3.4 acres of land, an aount which he tered "daned little." The science center holds clai to 22.4 acres of land and its officials have said that the parcel of ground requested by the coission -- located between 36th and 38th Streets on the north side of Market Street is essential to the "con- McCollu selected for recreation post By DON HOROWITZ The appointent of Dr. Robert H. McCollu, forer supervisor of Trenton State College's graduate progra in health and physical education, to the position of Director of Recreation, was announced yesterday by Fred A. Shabel, director of the division of recreaton and intercollegiate athletics. McCollu will direct the newly established departent of recreation which covers recreational and instructional progras that fall outside the progra of intercollegiate athletics. Since oving into his office in Gibel Gy earlier this onth, Mc- Collu has been busy setting up an expanded voluntary recreational progra to take the place of required gy classes which were abolished last seester. McCollu, interviewed in his office yesterday, said one ai of the recreation progra is to encourage students "to develop a skill in soe sport or recreational activity well enough to begin to enjoy it and not be ebarrassed to perfor in front of a group of people." The new progra will feature individual instruction for both en and woen in progras ranging fro squash and handball to "sensitivity awareness through creative oveent." Registration for the progras, which will run for half the seester is going on this week, McCollu rearked, "The first people to register have been those who would pursue physical activity whether or not they had a structured progra to participate in. We are hoping to attract the have-nots (those students who lack physical exercise)," he said, noting that required >

2 Page 2 1/21/70 By United Press International CONGRESS PASSES $19.7 BILLION BILL DESPITE THREAT OF VETO WASHINGTON The Senate yesterday overwhelingly gave final Congressional approval to a $19.7 billion education and health bill and Deocrats, seeking an election year issue, dared President Nixon to carry out his threatened veto. Nixon has proised to veto it as inflationary and too costly by $1.3 billion and Sen. Clifford P. Hansen, R-Wyo., denounced the easure yesterday as a "grab-bag of fat and pork barrel." But Sen. Warren Magnusen, D-Wash., setting the tone of the Deocratic challenge to Nixon's veto threat, said it was necessary because school children, the poor and the sick need ore federal assistance. If Nixon does veto the bill, Deocrats can be expected to capaign in the Noveber elections charging that the President was unsypathetic to the nation's needy. Senate Deocratic Leader Mike Mansfield, in calling for Senate approval, said the vote "should affir the insistence of the Deocrats in the Senate that this Republican adinistration ust strike a better balance in the distribution of national funds as aong urgent needs at hoe, expenditures for foreign policy and inexhaustible deands in the nae of ilitary security." AFTER A TWO YEAR BREAK, U.S. AND CHINA RESUME TALKS WARSAW~The United State and Counist China renewed official contacts yesterday in a one-hour eeting of their Warsaw envoys that ended a twoyear break in talks between the two superpowers. The U.S. abassador described the session as "useful" and businesslike. U.S. Envoy Walter Stoessel said afterward the Aericans were pleased to resue contacts with Peking in the draatic get together that provided the first chance for President Nixon's adinistration to probe the Chinese on their willingness to iprove relations with Washington. Substance of the eeting the 135th in Sino-Aerican abassadorial talks and the first since Jan. 8, 1968 was not disclosed in accordance with a long-standing agreeent. Stoessel said no specific date was set for the next eeting but "It was agreed we would be in touch at an early date to consider the question further." Observers said Stoessel and Lei apparently were ore concerned about renewing the talks than getting down to details iediately. Once the dialogue has been restablished, they said, both sides could then get down to serious discussion of key issues such as the Vietna war, Forosa and the release of each other's nationals. Bilsky (Continued fro page 3) night doesn't figure to give Hatter's forces too uch trouble, but a City Series battle can be as wide open as the race for University President was in its initial stages. The Red and Blue will have to beat the Owls in order to reain at the top of the City Series standings and keep alive Bilsky's hopes for a 25-1 ark overall. "Anything can be done." Colubia, figures to present the biggest hurdle twice but the New Yorker has a lot of incentives there. The rivalry aongst the two teas takes precedence only over Bilsky" s individual clash with forer high school ate Larry Gordon. Sophs Corky Calhoun and Bob Morse have taken soe of last season's scoring load off the backs of Bilsky and his running ate in the backcourt, Dave Wohl, and Harter is pleased with the results. "Steve and Dave have ade the adjustent fro being. the teas' only scorers to becoing part of the tea," the skipper lauded. But although he's changed his court habits soewhat, he's still in the lielight off the court, and he hasn't becoe any less outspoken. When asked about his plans for the future by WPHL-TV's Gene Kelly after Penn's triuph over Massachusetts, Bilsky told the boob tube audience, "I plan to get a sandwich and go back to y apartent." SPKINCS AW \kl\l\(.! CAVANAUGH S The Daily p en nsylvanian Wednesday. January 21, 1970 Scientist says first en were black By MAURICE OBSTFELD The ancestors of all odern en were probably black if a theory expounded by C. Loring Brace, curator of physical anthropology at the University of Michigan, is true. Brace states that he feels that his theory, printed in this onth's edition of the Journal of the Aerican Museu of Natural History, can be deduced fro the fact that an's ancestors were "faced with the proble of dissipating etabolically generated heat." In order to survive, he states, these ancestors had to shed their hair and develop a skin "richly endowed with sweat glands," uch like huan skin. But this loss of hair, according to Brace's theory, left these prehuan beings unprotected fro the sun's harful ultra-violet rays. The ultra-violet rays, he says, are particularly dangerous in the tropical latitudes in which an evolved. This early an, usually referred to as Hoo erectus, ust have developed elanin, a natural protective pigent that akes the skin black or nearly black, Brace says. However, at the University, Soloon Katz, professor of anthropology, questioned yesterday the validity of Brace's reasoning. Katz suggested that there ay have been ore than one site of the early origin of an. The fact that ost anthropological research up until the present tie has been done A good place to eat. Close to capus at 23rd & Sanso. Lunch and 4- course dinners. Cocktails and Food oderately priced. Hot sandwiches and pizzas served till 2 A.M. closing. in Africa, he said, does not iply that an originated there. In support of this, Katz said that recent research in the Siwalik Hills of India has revealed evidence of the presence of en siilar to Hoo erectus. Katz also entioned that elanin is not the only possible physical protection against ultra-violet rays. Keratin, a pigent found in the skin of any Asiatic peoples is a possible alternative to elanis, he said. By United Press International WASHINGTON -- General Motors Corp. told Chevrolet dealers last onth not to fix non-safety autoobile defects covered by warranty unless the custoer requests repair and It is needed, Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., said yesterday. When Hart's office told GM it had a copy of the letter to dealers and probably would use it insenate hearings, the copany quickly issued a revised letter deleting the instruction, he said. Warranty repairs are perfored by the dealer but paid for by the anufacturer. Hart disclosed the GM incident at a hearing of the Senate Consuer Stibcoittee on a bill intended to Wanted SKIER WANTED TO ORGANIZE WEEKEND SKI trips. Free roo and board. Caelback area. Call SH after 6 P.M PART-TIME DRIVER (SALES) WANTED. Choose your own hours. Call Ed Breen, GR SNACK FOOD DISTRIBUTORSHIP - 5 DAYS, will train. Blue chip corp. 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There is therefore, he said, no a priori validity in Brace's assertion that an's hairlessness is Chevy dealers told to liit repairs outlaw phony or deceptive warranties and guarantees. Hart released copies of a letter dated last Dec. 5, written on the Detroit headquarters letterhead of GM's Chevrolet Motor Division, and addressed "to all Chevrolet Dealers." It was signed by Robert D. Lund, Chevrolet's general sales anager. The two-page letter coplained of "an alaring increase in warranty costs" and urged dealers to help GM reduce the. Of six directives to dealers, Lund's first was: "Unless a safety defect is discovered, no warranty work is to be perfored unless requested by the custoer and needed." Classifieds PINE STREET PLACE PINE STREET - 1, 2 & 3 bedroos, decorated tile bath, airconditioned, garbage disposal. Furnished or unfurnished. KI MODERN CENTER CITY APT. - AVAIL. TO June. $125 plus util. A negotiable deand. Call Bob. EV APTS. _ 2 AND 3 ROOMS. ELEVATOR. 24 hour service. $90 to $ Chester Ave.See Supt. or call PE S ^ BEDROOM APARTMENT FOR RENT STARTing June or Septeber. Nicely furnished, low rent, great location. 43rd & Chestnut. EV »»,..»» «Miscellaneous»»»»» «PART-TIME JOBS - FLEXIBLE HOURS, 10 hours per week. Males preferred, ust be 21. CallGR Ext EXHIBITION OF PHOTOGRAPHS BY MICHAEL Sith. Houston Hall Bowl Roo. Jan. 13 to Feb. s PLAY DUPLICATE BRIDGE: NOVICE AND Experienced players welcoe. Mon., Wed., Fri., Sat.. 1 P.M. & 8:30 P.M. $1.50 per session. Ebassy Apts. Refreshents free Walnut St. LO MAKE YOUR MOST EXCITING CLASS THIS SEMESTER PHOTOGRAPHY. Beginning and advanced classes. B/W 35 MM to 8x10 including developing, printing, etc. Dark roo facilities provided. Classes in evenings in Phila. near U. of P., class size li ted. If interested call collect station to station. Michael Sith JOCKS a result of excessive body heat. "Hairlessness is a fairly recent phenoenon," he added. "If I had absolute evidencethat en did evolve in Africa," Katz said, "theni'd agree that he was probably black." But, he went on to say, no such absolute evidence exists, and the question of exactly where an evolved "is a very open one in ters of research." Brace's theory is by no eans new, Katz rearked, but at present, there are not enough facts available to deterine its truth or falsity. Hart got Lund's letter fro a Chevrolet dealer, who said he was "writing anonyously for fear of reprisals." GM issued a stateent saying it "was certainly not the intent of the letter" to keep dealers fro perforing necessary repairs not requested by a custoer. A GM spokesan called attention to another portion of Lund's letter in which he told dealers, "We are asking, however, to ake certain that any warranty expense is being used for its intended purpose, which is to benefit the custoer by correcting ites caused by a defect in aterial or workanship." 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3 Wednesday, January 21, 1970 Talking Point expanded; library location added By THOMAS PAPSON Talking Point, the University's unique walk-in counseling service, is expanding on all fronts to broaden its range of services to the University counity, a spokesan for the group announced last week. "The group, whose advice was originally confined ainly to general social and edical probles, can now handle any sort of proble," Gary Uapid, third year edical student and chairan of" the group, coented. When necessary. Talking Point can now refer people directly to a professional in any specialized areas. Staffed by a core of 30 University edical students, Talking Point offers confidential, inforal advice and counseling to anyone who wishes to discuss personal probles. Probles frequently encountered by Talking Point include drugs, fear of pregnancy, acadeic probles, depression, and quite often, loneliness, according to Lapid. The service handles about 40 persons a week. Lapid ephasized that, unlike other advising services, Talking Point is staffed by people who are essentially the advisee's peers. "People can talk to us, we've gone through the sae things," Lapid explained. "We don't tell people what they ust do, but rather present and explain their alternatives." Due to what Lapid called an increasing deand for its service, Talking Point last week announced the creation of an additional location on the second floor of the Van Pelt Library to suppleent the previous locations of Houston, Mc- Clelland, and Hill Hall. In additiontalking Point aintains a 24-hour answering service. Talking Point is open fro 8 P.M. to 11 P.M., Sunday through Thursday. Bilsky (Continued fro page 6) "They were" getting soe oentu. We wanted to slow it down for a inute, like calling a tie out. Instead of trying for a steal, they just fouled e right off," he recalled. So all Bilsky did was step to the foul line and swish 13 to 15 charity tosses to insure the Quakers' win. Bilsky, who's about as shy as Joe Naath, and carries the nicknae of "Broadway Bilko" to prove it, thinks the Quakers can finish the season without another bleish on their record. The Teple squad (7-7) that the quakers face at the Palestra to- (Continued on page 2) Ongoings JOAN RIEDER Local news coordinator The Daily Pennsylvanian Dr. Mike Thewell, professor of English at the University of Massachusetts, will lecture today, on "Education, Colonalis, and the Destruction of Black Culture." The lecture, sponsored by the history departent and coordinated by Theodore Hershberg, instructor of history, will coence in Roo 200 College Hall at 4 p.. The lecture and the seven additional lectures are open to the public free of charge. Dr. Thewell, coordinates thecoittee on Afro-Aerican Studies at his univeristy. ******* The Annenberg School of Counications* spring docuentary fil laboratory will present the second fil in its spring series today at 4 p.. and again at 8 p.. The fil, Frederick Wisean's "Law and Order," can be viewed at the auditoriu of the school. Wisean's docuentary is a study of the Kansas City Police force. The spring series, prepared under the direction of Dr. Sol Worth of Annenberg, will cover a large variety of subject aterial. Fils will be shown every Wednesday through April 29. ******* All students interested in aking changes in the architecture ajor are urgued to coe to a eeting Thursday, 7 a.., in B-13 Fine Arts Building. Anyone who is interested in sitting on a student-faculty coittee should also attend. ********* The third annual International Affairs Association Model United Nations Conference will be held at the University this weekend.two hundred University students and 50 representatives fro 10 different universitites and colleges will be participating. Arthur J. Goldberg, forer United States abassador to the U.N. will speak to the group Saturday, 3 p.. The speech, to be delivered in the Fine Arts Building auditoriu is open to the public. Clark Upon entering the roo for his afternoon session Clark noted a sign taped to the wall which read, "Welco Rasey Clark, defender of free speech, except for SpockandCoffin." Clark responded by saying the sign was kind because he had done worse things while in office. The sign referred to the p»osecution of Dr. BenjainSpock, noted pediatrician, the Rev Willia Sloane Coffin, Yale University chaplain and others for draft conspiracy during Clark's ter as attorney general. Clark, a native of Texas, defended the governent's prosecution, insisting that laws ust be executed whether they are orally right or wrong. He said law enforceent officials ust carry out their duty or resign. Phi Psi cil eeting tonight to seek a waiver until after his national's convention in Septeber. Cabanyes said in his letter that a proposal to eliinate the exclusive selection syste fro the national constitution is already on the agenda and that he wanted to wait until then for a ruling. The- Phi Psi president said last night that he had originally sent the letter in hope that the letter would College further rearked, "out we ust state properly the considerations of the classroo which the faculty is involved in." George Schlekat, dean of adissions, has already expressed soe reservations about the budget subcoittee's recoendations. Willia E. Stephens, dean of the College, called a eeting for next Tuesday to deal with the two ites not dealt with yesterday. Art Read, a eber of the Student Coittee on Undergraduate Education, said he hoped the decision of the faculty to include students on the reorganization coittee would "act as a precedent that students belong on any coittee in the College except the tenure coittee." Read said he wasn't sure how any College coittees were presently without students, but singled out the adissions coittee as one. Page 3 allow his fraternity's bids to be published in tie for Friday afternoon's acceptances by freshen. However, the bids were never published. Last Thursday, the IF judiciary voted to enforce a ruling of the President's Council of last spring giving fraternities until January of 1970 to eliinate the one-ball, two ball or secret ballot fro ebership procedures. Phi Kappa Psi was placed on pledge probation after it refused to define its position last week. Kappa Siga also had not officially coplied with the new ebership ruling. However, Duffy said that Kappa Sig agrees with the ruling in principle, but has not yet been given perission by its national office to coply. He said that the fraternity will seek a waiver of punishent at tonight's eeting. The eeting is scheduled for 7:30 P.M. in Phi Siga Kappa fraternity. Cabanyes said thecouncil's intrusion into internal atters of his house has nothing to do with the one-ball syste. He claied that he could not reeber any freshen being denied ebership because of a blackball. However, Cabanyes aditted that he saw "nothing wrong" with the use of the one blackball selection syste if a eber was "sincere" in eploying it to deny ebership. Ji Hively, president of the Interfraternity Council, said yesterday he was opposed to the one-ball or twoball syste because the ball syste ade fraternities too "conservative" and "inflexible." The one-ball syste perits any individual fraternity eber to prevent a pledge fro becoing a eber solely by announcing his opposition to the pledge. AL6AN SALAMAN WOMEN GRADUATE STUDENTS Is English your first language? * Were you born in the Northeastern or Mid-Atlantic States? * Are you a Liberal Arts ajor? (except English, linguistics or languages). YES? Then be part of a language study. Call (afternoon) or BA for an appointent. One session, l'/j hours. $ Then coe to a free Mini-Lesson. Ir. this one hour Mini lesson Tv you'll increase your reading speed and be able ot use this beginner's technique iediotely on oil of your hoe reading The Mini Lesson is tree and open to the public Wed Thurs Ml Fi far 23 Sat Ian 24 PHILA. & SUBURBS Wellington 19th 4 Walnut Chestnut Ha'l 39th 4 Chestnut Downgtown H.S. R Manor Ave. Noon if. Noon 10 AM 1 Downgtown Inn Rt 3fl sn - It Jenktown 119 York Rd. 8PM 10 AM K. of Prussia Vail. forge Cent. 105 Town Center Rrt l?nsd,-ie N Penn H.S. R. 4 40C Penn St % H Media Inn Bait. Pk S Prov. Rd. Neshj. Ma'l Counity R. 2 PM N.E Phila Castor Ply. Meeting Mall Co. R PM Pottstown Holiday Inn 8 FM. ' Untie, r --.- *\ i the apron strings. *%? Mo wants you to coe back hoe and arry the girl next door. Dad wants you to coe back hoe and arry the faily business. But aybe you're not quite sure what you want to do with your life. And you need a little tie off to decide. Tie to sow a few wild oats. Reap a few wild investents. Find out what the world has to offer you. In Europe, for exaple. Your Pan A" Travel Agent is the an to see. He knows all about the ups and downs of Paris, the inns and outs of Roe, and how to swing two weeks of London, including theatre tickets and hotels, for as little as $275 Econoy round trip fro New York. v 0 u can ask hi about Pan A's big new 747 Jet. too. Because chances are he's flown one. Or about our new low fares that go into effect in early Spring * For day trips day trips, and trips that go on into infinity. Just call hi or us at LO And ask your parents for a suer out in the world. You*ll get it, too. Because nothing's too good for their little baby. : Ran A akes the going great. Pan Aerican World Airways. Ticket Office: 30 North 17th Street, Philadelphia, Pa.*Effective March 1st subject to Governent approval. Wynnewood Hse. 300 E. Lancaster WILMINGTON Independence Mall R Concord Pk. NEW JERSEY Atlantic City Lafayette Motor Inn ft. Car Ave Cherry Hill Mall Co. Roo Cherry Hill Mall Office Build 2nd Fir Trenton Fisher Jr. H.S. Library 1325 L. Ferry Veiand White Sparrow Inn Pk. Ave. Oeisea Dr. Wilhngboro Plaza Poeroy's Counity R 10 AM 10 AM 7:30 7:30 The Lyceu * TU PM

4 Page S3, Ptennsylvanian /21/70 by neil lutsky Ethics and the oney gae SCUE vs. Languages At a eeting on Tuesday, January 20, 1970, the faculty of the Departent of Roance Languages reaffired its belief in the value of language study as an essential part of a liberal education. However, in the atter of retention or abolition of the present language requireent for the B.A. degree, the Departent of Roance Languages aintains an attitude of ab solute indifference. Russell P. Sebold, Chairan Reeber when rewards were intangible? Obviously the editors and staff of Per's crusading pulp have forgotten. They voted theselves pay in what is sure to survive as one of the 60's ost undeserving egotistical actions. The arguents proposed in favor of this innovation flow as follows: The Daily Pennsylvanian is unique aong capus organizations in that it receives no subsidizing Uniersity funds. However, the University reiburses the DP for services rendered, e.g. providing copy to read during class, covering capus events, publicizing activity notices and the like, by offering it free use of its Sergeant Hall floorspace and by paying for x nuber of subscriptions of the DP. You see, Virginia, your DP isn't really free, for your benevolent big U. pays for it with funds fro... right, you. Anyhow, DP peopie like to view this as a free econoy. They provide a service for which the University pays just as it pays for stationary,atchbooks, pencils and other essentials. Lo and behold, this year the DP earned a profit, a substantial one at that. And, coincidentally, at the sae tie, the institution of these salaries was approved. The factors that allow for this then are these: 1. The DP views itself as a unique entity on capus. 2. The DP requires of its staff long hours (which could alternatively DAVID N. KAYE Managing editor ROBERT A. SAVET7 Sports editor JILL P. MESIROV Financial Manager TOM APPLEQUIST 34ih Street editor JUDITH L TELLER Editor-in-Chief be spent working at paying jobs). 3. The DP hasfnancialresorces such that it can afford such a ove. 4. Therefore, why not vote yourself soe cash? Because: 1. The staff of the DP has siply redefined itself. In reality, however, the position of the DP on capus is not uch different fro that of any other capus organization. Houston Hall Board could be said to provide services to the capus in return for office space and funds (they could call it a general ovie fee and could charge the University for providing the capus counity with the opportunity to pay to see ovies and nae entertainent). Athletes certainly (I a told) provide services to the capus in ters of upholding the school honor, providing entertainent outlets etc., and in return for their tie I suppose they ought also to receive pan of the season's receipts at Franklin Field. And absurdly, the Philatelic-Nuisatic Club provides services too, in ters of attracting bright scholars (or whatever it is that we attract) who happen to be interested in staps and coins. 2. No one doubts that DP people sacrifice in order to spend long hours at the DP. But other people on capus (athletes, Larry Cohen, David Sweet, etc.) put in just as uch tie, and they are not paid nor should they be. Many ebers of the DP staff spend no ore tie there, than STANLEY H.BERKE Business Manager JEFFREY STERLING Photography editor MIMI ROGERS NEIL B. BUNIS Advertising anager Production anager DEBORAH KRAVETZ MARK PEARLMAN Course guide editor Associate sports editor Th«Daily Pennsylvanian is published Monday through Friday at Philadelphia, Pa. during the fall and spring seesters, except during vacation periods. One issue published in August. Subscriptions' ay be ordered at Sergeant Hall, 34th and Chestnut Sts. at the rate ot $12.00 per annu. Second class postage paid at Philadelphia Pennsylvania Phones: f21s) Display and Classified Advertising ay be placed at the sae address. any other student invests inhis favorite activity, yet they, too, were voted bonuses. Soehow soeone forgot why one supposedly becoes involved with soething around here. You use your tie because you enjoy what you are doing and because it ay be worthwhile to others. DP people are rewarded by their increased opportunities to eet adinistrators, professors and students in their daily interaction and by their ability to use their positions in nuerous ways (such as using press passes to attend dinners, concerts or whatever ay be worth one line of news). Hell, if it isn't worthwhile enough personally, intangibly, to be a person to work for the DP, then he doesn't belong there. 3. The DP has financial resources because we provide the. We indirectly pay for subsc riptions. We buy their classified ad space. And the Counity of Students, our clubs, and godda stores that charge too uch buy their 1/4 and 1/2 page ads. It the DP ade so uch oney, did it ever occur to their financial whizzes that aybe they are exploiting the capus? They could have helped to deflate our whole econoy. Or aybe even they could have contributed that oney (our oney) to soething ore deserving than theselves. 4. And finally, beyond allofthis.it sees highly unethical to vote oney to oneself. Even governent officials often vote pay increases effective when the next person takes that position. How ironic that the crusading pulp, which has often (even justifiably) criticized others for being blinded by self-interest, should be so blind in a atter that "concerns the personally," setting an irresponsible precedent for all capus organizations. LATE RESULTS Rocky Marciano over Muhaed Ali KO 16 rounds. "Since language is a required course, language departents are not under any pressure to ake their courses attractive for students". Fro a SCUE report on the language requireent. In reply to this stateent by SCUE, Dr. Paul M. Lloyd of the Departent of Roance Languages suggested the following as possible copy for the undergraduate catalog! Have you been getting the ost out of your education lately? Have you been feeling left out of the latest educational advances? Do your classes thrill and excite you as they should? Are you relevant? H? Well, what you need is ROMANCE I That's right, ROMANCE I And Where can you find ore roance than in its original hoe, the up-to-date, odern, relevant, swinging DEPART- MENT OF ROMANCE LANGUAGESI Take a language course in the Departent of ROMANCE LANGUAGES and you'll see what a really great college course can be like. You can take French 1, Italian 1 or Spanish 1, without any hoework, with absolutely no effort on your parti Yes, sir, that's right, no strain, no pain, just interesting, entertaining classes that keep you in- volved at every inute. And get this--as a special added attraction the faculty has eliinated all IRRE- GULAR VERBSI No ore confusing conjugations to addle your brain. Just think, now you can learr French, the original language of love, Italian, the language of the world's greatest ovie stars, or Spanish, the language of Latin lovers. All our courses are taught by real swingers, gorgeous French lovelies, sexy senoritas, handsoe, virile Don Juans, Italian lover boys. Not only will you find your classes exciting, but to top it off, the departent guarantees to any student who coes to ore than half of all scheduled classes, an All That's right. Allll And at the end of each seester, the departent will provide to all students enrolled in its classes, AB- ifiw CPS SOLUTELY FREE the following stupendous attractions: in Franklin Field a real live BULL FIGHT with six Miura bulls and the top toreros of Spain and Spanish Aerica, anltalian fil festival, and a banquet featuring genuine French cuisine, followed by a real "Dolce Vita" orgyll What other departent can offer all of these things? Plus, absolutely free to all students who register early, autographed photographs of Brigitte Bardot, Sophia Loren, MarcelloMastroiani, Verna Lisi, and any others of your favorite stars. WOW! Register nowl You'll be glad you didl And reeber we guarantee coplete satisfaction or your oney cheerfully refunded. The DEPART- MENT OF ROMANCE LANGUAGES is the departent for you!!! Hurry today while there is still roo! THE UNDERGROUND ' 4 The DP anages to put out one of the top colleges dailies in the country fro the baseent of Sergeant Hall. But usually, the day to day exciteent of knowing the news when it happens keeps things fro getting too glooy. Soeties, when things get hectic, there isn't enough desk space to go around. If you want soething better than exas or papers to spice up your life, why not give the DP a try. It doesn't cost anything and it just ay turn your world upside down. y Pennsylvanian Soker tonight at 7 P.M. Sith Pennian Houston Hall

5 Wednesday. January gy classes with tests and grades ight have turned people off. Speaking about facilities, McCollu said the Lhiversity presently has adequate facilities to handle the present deand for recreation. He expects deand to increase, however, with the addition of the new progras along with requests fro counity groups and aluni to use the facilities. The new recreation director entioned that a group is currently reviewing priorities for the use of the Recreation University's recreational facilities. McCollu's departent has a division of counity relations which has as a function the screening of requests of legitiate counity groups for use of facilities as well as advising on priority atters. A director of counity relations will be naed later this week, McCollu noted. Espousing his own personal view that undergraduates should use the facilities "the lion's share of the tie," McCollu said his departent would be flexible in eeting the, yearly deand for athletic facilities. He explained that rather than aking only PANHEL SPRING RUSH OPEN HOUSES TUESOAV Alpha tptiloo PTti WEDNESDAY Alpha Eptilon Phi Chi Oan Dalta Dalta Dalta Kappa Kappa Gaa S.»a Dal la Tap THURSDAY Chi Oaga Dalta Dalla Mta Kappa Dal la Kappa Kappa Gaa Phi Sif/na Siga S.ajna Dalla Tau Alpha Epadon Phi Chi Oan OWla Dalla Dalta Kappa Data Kappa Kappa Gaa Phi Siga Sapi Sionia Dalla Tau -W&M : :.;>:;:;>:;:K:;^^ 3-5 p p p p p p :30 p :30 p p p Walnut Straat 5<7 Chlnul Hall 139th & Chaatnut Stiaanl 3732 Locust Straat 3809 Walnut Straal 225 S 39th Straw 4032 Walnut Straat 3926 Spruca Straal "SUMMER JOB"! MONDAY AND TUESDAY NIGHT JANUARY 26th AND 27th imm- MAY DECIDE NEXT SUMMER'S JOB Coll Jaes Grant GRanite EXT 762 long range plans for additional facilities, the departent will keep close tabs on the deand for recreational facilities. Citing an exaple he entioned that the pool in Hutchinson Gy would be reopened for recreational swiing on Saturdays and Sundays. Reflecting on present intraural progras, McCollu noted that a woen's intraural progra was alost nonexistent. He observed, "Girls need and enjoy copetition and the intercollegiate progra for woen only eploys girls who are already talented athletes." Another "need" area McCollu cited was the lack of locker facilities in Gibel Gy, noting that with the addition of superblock, ost students would be housed close to that facility. McCollu took his B.S. in 1952 at Slippery Rock (Pa.) State College, and his M.S. and Ed. D. fro the University of Oregon. He taught in Oregon public schools fro 1955 to 1958, worked as a graduate assistant at the University of Oregon In , and served as departent chairan and athletic director at Biola College in California fro 1959 to He was assistant professor at Teple University fro 1962 until he joined Trenton State College in January, A prolific writer of articles for professional and religious periodicals, McCollu is co-author of the forthcoing "Measureent and Evaluation: A Laboratory Manual for Students of Health and Physical Education," to be published by Allyn and Bacon this spring. COURSE GUIDE If you are interested in writing up French, Spanish, Italian, Biology,Marketing, Statistics, ES 110, Please contact the Course Guide, We need writers in order for these departents to be included in the Course Guide. The Dally Pennsylvania!! Mike Thelwell FREE UNIVERSITY: Teacher registration for the.free U's spring seester begins today through Jan. 30, 10 AM. -. In the West Alcove of Houston Hall. STUDENTS FOR ISRAEL: Meeting toorrow, 7;30 P.M. roo 1, 3rd floor, Houston Hall. All Interested are invited. INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL: President's council eeting, 7 : 30 P.M., Wednesday, Jan. 22, Phi Siga Kappa fraternity. BRIDGE CLUB: Two gaes tonight-regular gae and special gae for ACBL ebers at 6:45 P.M., Houston Hall West Lounge. WXPN CLASSICAL MUSIC: 88.9 FM, idnight - 3. Tonight hear Schuann, Honegger's Syphony #2, Beethoven, Sponto, Ponchielli, Haydn's syphony#60, Falla, Schoenberg's Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte, Schubert Nocturne, Bartok's Violin Concerto #1, Strauss's Don Juan. SR. LIFESAVING: CoedRedCross sr. lifesaving begins tonight at 7 P.M. in Hutchinson Gy. BALALAIKA ORCHESTRA: Rehearsal tonight, 7:30 P.M., in Houston Hall. Our concert is soon, attendance is andatory. THE BOOKMART: The Bookan, on the 2nd floor of Houston Hall, Capus events East Wing, is open this week fro Special sale on certain books, selling for 1/2 price or $1.00, whichever is less. PENN DRAFT COUNSELING COMMITTEE: DRAFT PROBLEMS? See us for help Monday-Friday Baseent of Houston Hall, ext. 744}. HELEN'S PARTY: 9:00 Saturday night at 3409 Hailton St. Food, Fun, Folksinging. NEXT STEP FOR THE ANTIWAR MOVEMENT: Four way debate with RYM-2, YSA, Resistance. SMC speaking. Friday, January 23 at 8;30 P.M. MILITANT LABOR FORUM: 686 North Broad Street (at Fairount). RALPH: You can't always get what you want except at RALPH Participate! in Ralph, Houston Hall Rl, Thurs. at 3:00 P.M. ECON MAJOR COMMITTEE: Meeting today for econoics ajors and other interested persons with Drs. Whitney, Phillips, and Levine to discuss curriculu refor. 4:00 P.M. in Harrison Roo of Houston Hall. PHILOMATHEAN SOCIETY: Philo eeting Friday, January 23, at 8:00 P.M. Prospective ebers invited. BLOOD DONOR CLUB: Do you care? Don't just talk... Give blood to save a life. Bleed-in January 27, Houston Hall 9-5 P.M. STUDENT-FACULTY COUNCIL: There will be a eeting of the Stu- Black studies power shake-up going on within SAAS. SAAS ebers reached tonight, however, refused to discuss Miss Barlow's resignation or its iplications. The noinating coittee of the University Council ay be forced to reconvene and fill the vacancy created by Miss Barlow's resignation as well as replace Miss Riegelan, who is departing this week for London, and also Professor of English and Coordinator of the Coittee on Afro-Aerican studies, University of Massachusetts, Aherst. will speak on "Education, Colonialis and the Destruction of Black Culture" 4:00 P.M. New Fine Arts. Aud. Q-partite tinuity" of its developent plans. The science center parcel is a key site in the coission's plan to provide nearly 400 additional units of low cost housing in the largely.black counity. The coission's plans for the site consist of a cobination of high density efficiency and sall apartents for the elderly together with a series of larger two story townhouses, stacked in two levels. Goldfarb said that if less than the requested 3.4 acres was eventually returned, it would lead to a higher density construction of the residences. This, he added, would result in higher construction and selling costs as well as diinishing the apartent's "social desirability." The quadripartite delegation will consist of one eber fro each of the four groups represented on the coission; Lorenzo Graha, the counity representative, student eber Jules Benjain; Frank Betts, assistant to President Harnwell for external affairs, and Lesnick, in addition to Goldfarb. MANTUA MOBILIZATION You want action and you want it NOW...right? Well get up and do soething. Coe to H.H. R. 1. Jan. 21, 7:30 P.M. P.S. If you see C.I.C, please tell the. BLOOD DONORS WANTED FEE PAID Write Blood Donors Club, 2511 Rittenhouse Claridge, Phila., Pa Give nae, age, phone no. PageS dent-faculty Council of the School of Nursing today, Jan. 21st, at 4:30 P.M. in Roo 105, Morgan Building. KOREAN KARATE CLUB: Meets Mondays and Wednesdays 6-7;30 in Weightan Hall Gy. UNIVERSITY COUNSELING SER- VICE: Educational, career, and personal counseling available for all full-tie University undergraduate and graduate students without fee. For appointents, call or coe to 3812 Walnut Street. ACLU: Iportant eeting toorrow (Thurs) night. All ebers please attend. 7:30 P.M. Stitler Hall C-10. SENIOR CLASS: Special Mask & Wig night on Wed. Feb. 25, 1970 for SENIORS ONLY and their dates. Tickets available wherever M & W tickets are sold. ARMENIAN CLUB: Iportant eeting today 11:00, Roo 10, Houston Hall. Please ake every effort to attend. Secrets to be revealed. All welcoe. SHODOKAN KARATE CLUB: Training session today, 4:15 P.M., Gibel Gy. No experience needed. Male or Feale. SOCIAL WORK SCHOOL AD HOC COMMITTEE ON MORATORIUM presents panel discussion "The United Fund: Conflict of Priorities?", Stitler Hall 3701 Locust, today at 7:30 P.M. leaving the coittee. The present black studies coittee, the second ad hoc coittee appointed by the University Council, was chosen late in Septeber and charged to review the recoendations of the Provost - appointed black studies coittee, chaired by Dr. Alfred Reiber chairan of the history departent. The 13-eber Reiber coittee's proposal for a separate school of black studies, was turned down by the University Council on May 8. CIA work, especially because of its language, foreign policy, political science, and econoics departents. He said that in the past "scientific people" have not been "particularly interested" in the CIA. The Counity of Students in another petition drive, has already collected 450 of the 500 signatures necessary to require General Electric to hold a public eeting prior to its capus recruitent visit, now scheduled for Feb. 24. Representatives fro Dow Cheical, the object of a past capaign, et with students Nov. 25. Activities pays its board of anagers salaries ranging fro $70 to $100 a onth. The paper contends that the oney used to pay salaries does not coe fro the Activities Council allocation, but fro other revenues, such as advertising and paid subscriptions. The Council gave The Daily Pennsylvanian a $6000 allocation for operating expenses last year. This represents 4 percent of the paper's operating budget of $150,000-a-year. Judith Teller, editor-in-chief of The Daily Pennsylvanian, said at the eeting that the University had guaranteed the paper the right to pay salaries as long as the financial position of the paper allows, and providing that the size of the paper is not cut. SOCIAL CALENDAR A fresh look at The technology of oving things That's tight! Gruan's real business is the technology ot oving things... en and achines in purposeful patterns within a great diversity of origins, destinations and tactical situations. Speed is often, but not always, the answer. Perforance reliability in spite of any interfaces is the thing. In close-in cobat "dog fights" an aircraft with speed, aneuverability and araents... the F-14 Air Superiority Fighter. In lunar exploration The Lunar Module which successfully landed the astronauts on the oon. In areas of eney activity an aircraft with track and search radar that can locate, identify and lock on to the target, even in zero visibility... the A6A Intruder, and advanced versions. In early warning eergencies an aircraft that can extend the eyes and ears of a Navy task force at sea through radar and coputers that alert interceptor aircraft to ipending eney attacks... the E2A Hawkeye, and advanced versions. Far above the earth, a satellite that can discover ore about the evolution of the universe... the Orbit-ng Astronoical Observatory. Add Deep Subersibles, Hydrofoil seacratt, High-speed Ground Transportation systes, Corporate aircraft and Lunar Surface vehicles, and you get soe idea of how Gruan is extending the perieters of the technology ot oving things. At Gruan the opportunity for oving is presented in abundance to Physics, Aero, Civil, Mechanical,, Electrical/Electronic, Cheical, Industrial Engineering or Technology Majors deterined to find the right vehicle for their careers. Gruan Representatives will be ON CAMPUS FEBRUARY To obtain Gruan Literature and arrange an on-capus interview, contact your College Placeent Olfice. II an on-capus interview is not convenient, send coprehensive resue to Mr. Richard N. Haug. Manager. College Relations/Recruitent, Dept. GR-251. GRUMMAN AEROSPACE CORPORATION Belhpage Long Island New YorK An Equal Opportunity Eployer (M/F) It's tonight. THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN'S Introductory Soker. 7 PM Sith-Pennian Roo, Houston Hall REFRESHMENTS JC's One Hour Cleaners 4300 Walnut St. 20 % Discount With Presentation Of This Ad Ptioi* IA

6 The Daily pennsylvanian Wednesday, January 21, 1970 Page 6 " y *" ' NCAA still on Bilsky's ind-, so is Teple By MARVIN DASH A 5-10 guard in a gae of giants ight find it easy to get lost in the shuffle. Not Steve Bilsky. Penn's little floor general, who's averaging over 15 points per gae, soehow anages to sneak into the lielight often. Soeties the publicity is for his perforances on the hardwood. Other ties it's not. Bilsky's light flashed brightly against Massachusetts Saturday at the Palestra, and he was naed to this week's ECAC All-East tea as a result. He earned the recognition by sinking four foul shots down the stretch and hitting two key shots on oves that looked ore appropriate for Joey Heatherton than Steve Bilsky. Coach Dick Harter wondered where Bilsky got the oves for the pair of unbelievable buckets which insured the Quakers their 12th win in 13 tries, but Bilsky hiself knew all along. In the lockerroo the outspoken junior confessed they cae "out of y." Saturday wasn't the first tie Bilsky's been noticed on the basketball court. Last season as a sophoore he was a first tea Little All-A'erican selection (for players 5-10 and under) and ade second tea All-Ivy. But he's best reebered for his 25 foot bob against Villanova, ninth ranked nationally at the tie; the one that exploded in the Palestra with three seconds reaining to give Penn a stunning upset. "It was great to win, but it didn't put us anywhere. We were still last in the Big Five," he coented. That's why Bilsky's decision not to play in the Maccabian Gaes this suer was such a difficult one to ake. Or wasn't it? "I was looking forward to it. I didn't think about it all at the tie, but it was in the back of y ind," Bilsky aditted. "Under the conditions that were present, that was the only decision I could have ade." The contoversy cae to a head in July. By that tie classes had long since been over, and Bilsky's teaates were scattered across the country. Bilsky was attending suer school at Penn. "The coaches were away. There were very few people at school," Bilsky reebered. "If it happened in the spring at least we would have known what other people thought about it. It would have given us ore tie. "When it happened, the first thought was to get it changed. If we fought then, there wouldn't have been any chance for us to go. "As for Penn, they couldn't just leave us flat on our faces. "Mr. Shabel was about the only adinistrative person still around, but y decision was ade before I et with hi. He reained neutral and explained the consequences." The choice that athletic director Fred Shabel gave hi and Alan Cotler, the other Penn basketball player who was picked for the United States tea, boiled down to two weeks of fun in Israel and face ineligibity for intercollegiate varsity copetition, or stay at hoe and skip the chance to represent the U.S. in a prestigious worldwide athletic event and playing basketball for Penn this winter. Both Bilsky and Cotler opted for the latter. JEFF STERLING "Alan and I realized that the basketball tea had a good chance to win the Ivy League title. We didn't want to STEVE BILSKY penalize the rest of the tea or penalize a trackan or rore than the scoreboard lights soeone else we didn't know fro going to an NCAA Chapionship. It wasn't uch of a decision at all. "Most of the tea realizes Yale has a lot of character for what they did," Bilsky said. Still, he does not second guess the choice he ade during the suer. "If I had known (at the tie) that we would have becoe ineligible, I wouldn't have played in the Maccabian Gaes." Instead, the Long Island native played basketball at an overnight cap this suer but it was "a different type of ball. One is representing your country, the other is recreation." "It's not that Bilsky is all anti-ncaa. "It has soe good points," he claied, "like preventing gabling and die ability to punish." "But the Maccabian thing doesn't ake any sense. They shouldn't have that uch power," the Roslyn native declared. U was in high school that Bilsky learned to draw fouls, and his act is now as polished as the Hall of Mirrors at the Palace of Versailles. "It was done to e a lot in high school. I picked it up there," he explained. "Soeties the act upsets the referees. You're putting the in an awkward position. They don't want to call it (the foul), but they have to." While at Roslyn High, Bilsky led his tea to the seifinals of the Long Island chapionships as a junior and was tabbed as a All-North Shore perforer. The next year his club ade the playoff finals, and Bilsky ade the second tea All-Nassau County unit. He gives Penn's five-an coaching tea credit for developing his defense. "When I cae here, I knew very little about defense," however, the 155 pounder noted. "We thought we were playing defense, but we weren't." He knew how to shoot foul shots, though, canning 39 in a row as a freshan. Bilsky delights Quaker fans with his dribbling, too, although he passes it off as a necessity for a little an, "I don't think you'll find any 5-10playerwho can't dribble." Bilsky's dribbling has received soe tough tests already this winter. Against Princeton at Jadwin Gy, the Quakers shifted into their slowdown offense where Bilsky's job was to control the ball, with eight inutes to go, holding a lead. Meren open hoe capaign today Reider reaches for goals By JAY RABINOVIITZ Hoping to capture their fourth consecutive victory without a loss, the Quaker varsity swiing tea will ake their hoe debut today at Scheer Pool in Gibel Gy, hosting the Explorers of LaSalle. The eren should reain undefeated as LaSalle has suffered heavy losses to graduation last spring. Explorer coach, Joe Kirk, aditted in a preseason reark that "this could be our first losing season in 26 years." One of his specific predictions was a loss to the Quakers. Penn coach, GeorgeBreen, agrees with Kirk that the Red and Blue should eerge victorious. "I have not yet set up any line-up and I' not sure who I'll place in the various events," explained Breen yesterday. "However this eet will serve as an excellent conditioner 'Super' recruiting: Penn keeps pace bob savett by (Part III of a Series) As the ost recruited Ivy freshan, Harvard's Jaes "Brown did one heckuva lot of traveling. He et his Dartouth-bound naesake at Maryland, and he ade the acquaintance of current rooate, Floyd Lewis, inallentown. At Duke he ran into another Ivy "super": Penn's Craig Littlepage. "We rooed together there," recalls the soft-spoken six-foot-six inch Wharton freshan. "It was in early October, when we each had visited only a few schools. I thought he was going to go to Duke or North Carolina. I saw hi again in March at the Dapper Dan (a Pittsburgh postseason all-star gae), and he had narrowed it down to North Carolina or Harvard. I was surprised; you don't norally connect Harvard with basketball." True enough, ost Philadelphians wouldn't ever associate Harvard with Aerica's favorite winter sport; they would, however, coraiectthenae"littlepage"withb-ball alost autoatically. As a junior, the slcder center.ed suburban Cheltenha High to theclass A State Finals; by the tie he graduated, Littlepage was entioned in the sae breath with the school's other exceptional athlete of the sixties -- Reggie Jackson, who clobbered quite a few hoe runs for the Oakland A's last year. The result was exactly what you'd expect: exceedingly intense recruiting pressure. Craig hiself adits he isn't quite sure how he survived it. "I don't know how I didn't have a nervous breakdown," he pointedly proclaied one night this suer, following a ore-or-less typical Littlepage perforance in. Narberth Playground League tilt. "I was playing all-star gaes nearly every night, going to school and trying to do soe hoework. The way the phone just kept ringing!" A few inutes before, Littlepage had been on the court, playing with several St. Joe-bound stars. Right now the Hawks are rated the City's top frosh, but that night they were being pressed to distraction. Playaker Bobby Hass, 5-9, couldn't get the ball upcourt. So Littlepage,a good nine inches taller, cae to the rescue. He singlehandedly broke the press; at 6-6, he's that good a ballhandler. Frosh coach Dick Phelps wasn't all surprised to hear Littlepage cold play guard. "At the Dapper Dan, when his tea was trying to freeze the ball, Craig was one of the guys they went to," reebered the Digger. Like so any of Littlepage's talents, his ballhandling won't show up in a boxscore; he's a super-star without fancy scoring stats. He's already anaged to reind nuerous Palestra observers of the freshan Corky Calhoun: the tough defender and high-flying rebounder who would uch rather pass off than score. This suer at Narberth, the Cheltenha star, far ore ature-looking than his 18 years, bore ore of a reseblance to 76'er Billy Cunningha: going to the basket ore often, plus in the intense, deterined Cunningha anner--pretending to be a third referee on court. Either way, Littlepage sees destined toreainaphilly favorite. That's OK with hi. U - HAUL TRUCKS TRAILERS LOCAL AND ONE-WAY STUDENT DISCOUNT HO CRAIG LITTLEPAGE PHIL HANKINSON JEFF BRYER JEFF BRYER "City ball is a real good thing," he rearked late this fall. "With all the local talent and teas, there's a lot of interest. The papers give good coverage and all your gaes are on TV. It'll help you after you get out of school. "I wanted a school in the Ivy League and in the Big Five, and that's Penn all right," he grins, stating that his final three slections, like those of Ron Billingslea a year ago, were Penn, Princeton, and St. Joseph's. "Besides, I' pretty close to hoe." Littlepage's current rooate, whose reputation has oeen built on soe pretty fancy scoring stats, wasn't necessarily interested in an Ivy education. "I decided on Penn, not on an Ivy," flatly aintains big Phil Hankinson, a Great Neck North grad who stands soewhere in the vicinity of 6-6, 6-7 or 6-8, depending on your yardstick. "The only Ivy I would have gone to is Penn." When applying in the fall of his senior year, Hankinson had returned a for to Harvard, but when it cae down to the nitty-gritty, the Long Island "super" wasn't interested. In the early spring he called Cabridge and told the "Don't waste an acceptance on e." Harvard had originally been in the running because Hankinson had "drastically narrowed" his choices early. His goal was a top-notch educational institution soewhere in the East. "People are ore hip here," he explains. "I knew I didn't want the Midwest, the Coast is just too far, and you can forget the South. Maryland was as far South as I'd ever think of. I wasn't going to be the first." Like ost black ballplayers, Hankinson was far fro thrilled last year when Olypian Charlie Scott, who plays for Atlantic Coast Conference chapion North Carolina, was not selected as the league's MVP. The award, instead, went to a white sophoore guard on the second-place South Carolina tea, John Roche. "Scott definitely deserved it," asserts Hankinson,echoing ost of the nation's experts. "It could be an honest istake, but in those circustances, what could you think of but prejudice? Charley Davis of Wake Forest didn't receive a single vote -- tell e what that is?" Hankinson visited Duke during his senior year; his suspicions about life down South were only confired. "The tea's one black senior--i forget his nae--told e point-blank not to coe," reveals the shy but outspoken Wharton freshan, well aware of the present trend for "supers": the white stars like Roche, Kevin Joyce, To Riker go to South Carolina; the blacks - like Villanova's Howard Porter (Florida) and Sa Sis (Alabaa)--are looking North. Still, Hankinson in the end was considering the ACC conference and its quality ball ("I always desired that") in the person of Maryland; but Penn had ore to offer: the Palestra, the Big Five, and Wharton. "Sure I'd like to play pro," he adits. "Every player that's been good thinks of it. It's very nice, but you can't depend on it. There are a lot of good players in the world. In case it doesn't work out, I'll have soething to fall back on." (Tcbe continued PART TIME WORK _ THREE EVENINGS PER WEEK 3:00 P.M. TO 10:00 P.M. $70 PER WEEK Call Mr. Morris Kl BEFORE 3:00 P.M. for our iportant eet Saturday against Ary. I do know, though, that I'll try to get as any boys in events as I can." LaSalle will be led by 6-3 senior, Don Strunk. Strunk presently holds the MAC 200 yd. freestyle record of 1:45.3. Frosh Geoff Meyer should also be very strong inthebackstroke. Today's eet, which will get underway at 4:00 o'clock, will be the first to be held under the newly installed lights at Gibel. The lights are ten ties stronger than last year's. A big factor in Penn's successful start this year is sophoore sensation, Larry Reider. The 6-0, 169 cheical engineering ajor started his swiing career when he was in 6th grade in Long Island. "I was dead last in y first race -- by a i lei" rearked Reider. "I wanted to iprove. So I joined a counity tea which took anyone-- even e." The breaststroker evidently iproved quite a bit as he becae an All-Aerican during his senior year at Long Beach High School in Long Island. Reider finds it hard to say why he selected Penn (his other ain choice was West Point), but he is now quite sure that he ade the right decision. Last year he finished 10th in the AAU's. This year he will be shooting for the national finals. STEVE HEINZ LARRY RIEDER Notice The varsity spring sports edical exainations will be given today and toorrow at the Student Health Service, beginning at 5 P.M. Lacrosse candidates should report this afternoon and baseball candidates are scheduled for toorrow. Contact your particular coach for ore inforation. Frosh iler excels despite his injuries By RICK FURLONG Depending on your source, freshan iler Bob Childs is "too fat," "too weak," "a hypocondriac," and has "bad running for." At tonight's Middle* Atlantic AAU chapionships " in the Civic Center Childs hopes to ove his "fat," "weak," "injured," body through about a 4:15 ile. If all this sounds incongruous its probably because it is. When one hears the word "iddle distance runner" he usually envisions either a husky, well-use led powerful type, a la Peter Snell, or a sleek, sli (soe would say eaciated) sooth-striding Ji Ryun sort. Childs, a graduate of Parkville Senior H. in Baltiore, ay not be a picture runner but he gets results. The studious-looking College a*vif't* JEFF BRYER BOB CHILDS freshan began this fall's crosscountry season as only the fourth an on the squad. He ended it with 5 straight wins, the Big 5 individual chapionship, and a beautifully run fourth place in the IC4A's. Childs has a ready answer for this success. "I started the season 14 pounds overweight with enough upper body strength to do about 10 pushups and in addition, 1 held y ars too high while running. But the coaches worked on y running style and put e on a weight lifting progra that really helped." Between injuries in high school Childs ran a 4:17 ile and a 1:57 half. "But I probably would have done better if I had ore work. Copared to what I do now y workouts in high school were nothing." Coach Ji Tuppeny jokingly called his yearling star a "hypocondrine" and added that ''he gets injuries on top of injuries; I' afraid if he was ever healthy he would break every record we have." Tonight's eet, which draws over 20 colleges and any open copetitors, will cobine varsity and freshan perforers. Childs feels this is to his advantage. "Although I' also running in the two-ile relay there will be enough tie between events to go all out in each. If I' placed in a good heat I think I can run around a 4:15." Outdoors, Childs is looking to run "between a 4:06 and 4:10 ile." This ay be a lofty goal but probably not an unattainable one. For as his high school coach once said, "Bob Childs gets injuries that you've never even heard of before but when it coes tie to run no one pushes harder and gives ore of hiself then he does." Foreign Stu.cLy ^Progras of Syracuse University FALL SEMESTER-1970 FRANCE ITALY NETHERLANDS'COLOMBIA *>BE&r SUMMER SESSIONS School of Music Switzerland School of Art Florence School of Education London College of Law Asterda* Departent of Photography Munich Italian Language & Literature Florence** 'Graduate Credit Only Write for brochure: "Undergraduate Credit Only Foreign Study Progras of Syracuse University 335 Costock Avenue, Syracuse, New York 13210

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