> C ^ * ^ fmmbeb 1885 Copyright 1964 Tha Daily Ptnnayfvaniasi I'llll \l)l I I'HI \. Wednesday. November 12. IMi Vol. (II, No. 107 Council to study proposals Arts center planned for river bank Sexual harassment changes on agenda By MARYANN BORRF.LLO Imagine transforming the west bank of the Schuylkill River into a cultural center that will rival New York's Lincoln Center and Milan's La Scala. Imagine being able to walk six blocks from campus to see world-famous orchestras and ballet companies. Such plans aren't too good to be true. In fact, developers Leonard Fruchter and Gerald Hines are putting the plan into motion. The area for the proposed project includes 30th Street Station and a 64-acre plot on the By EDWARD SI SSMAN i niversit) < ouncil will examine the controversial suggested changes In harassment grievance procedures at its meeting this afternoon Council voted last month to discuss section In section each ol IOC 1 1 pans ol the sexual harassment proposal and the six parts ol the racial harassment proposal 1 lie first sections ol the sexual harassment report slated fot examina lion include a statement Ol principles, City Limits Schuylki'.l River's west bank. The bleak landscape is the hottest transportation center on the east coast at the moment, even though the property is currently occupied by rail yards and an aging power plant. Despite the fact that the project's designs are not yet finalized, $60 million worth of remodeling will begin this year on the 52-year-old train station. The overhaul will include the renovation of the main concourse and 248,000 square feet of mostly vacant office space on the upper stories. The land surrounding the station is considered a lucrative commodity not only because of its central location along Amtrak's Northeast routes, but also because it also allows easy access to the Philadelphia International Airport. In print Magazine will focus on College By ABBF. KLEBANOFF The College of Arts and Sciences will soon grab more headlines than ever before. Starting next semester, four students will manage a 32-page magazine focusing on the College of Arts and Sciences, currently the only undergraduate school at the University without its own publication. College junior Chris Sprigman, executive editor of the Penn Collegian, said Monday that the quarterly will fill a void not met by other papers currently circulating on camr_us. "There are a lot of issues and concerns that are not being touched by other publications," Sprigman explained. "They don't provide the kind of in-depth coverage we'd like to sec." In addition, Sprigman feels the magazine will enhance the administration's efforts to improve the reputation of CAS. "Most students at the University are from the College, and the administration is making its move to improve the department and its image," he said. "I think what we are doing goes hand in hand with the administration's goals." The first Penn Collegian will focus on the value of a liberal arts education, and subsequent issues will each present a different theme. "The usual response when I tell people I'm a history major is, 'Well what are you going to do with a history degree?,' " he said. "I wanted to find out if their skepticism was founded." The spring issue will also feature an interview stressing what employers are looking for in a CAS graduate and an overview of the Political Science Department. "The Political Science Department was very disillusioned with the Daily Pennsylvanian article last month which criticized the department's reputation," he said. "They felt there were extenuating circumstances, and the Collegian plans a long in-depth story on their plight." The magazine's layout production manager, Barbara Yorke, said she believes the publication will stimulate students' interest despite the other campus journals. "1 think this magazine can provide [College] students with information they cannot get anywhere else and can be a unifying force." she said. However, a lack of funding almost kept the presses from rolling. (Continued on page 8) Plans for I he proposed cultural center on the propert> currently occupied b> ,30th Street Station "It's a natural expansion of the city," said Fruchter, the Philadelphia-based general partner of AtlantiXenter, the company chosen by Amtrak, along with Gerald D. Hines Interests of Houston, to develop the property. A major development adjacent to 30th Street Station will be marketable to New York corporations who want to avoid the high rents and costs associated with conduc- Inside The Other Half Mayor Wilson Goode proclaimed this week "Women Veteran Week" in a ceremony last Friday. Goode said that women's role in battle is often forgotten. Page 5. Class Time Administrators reacted favorably to a proposal calling for the creation of informal seminars to provide freshmen with a unifying experience. Page 9. Resolved The Undergraduate Assembly passed a resolution calling on the University to maintain its current admissions policy. Page 9. ting business in New York ( ity. "It's an important effort to take advui tagc of 30th Street as the focal point of the northeast area," Fruchter said. "It's a regional center." Regional Science Associate ProfOMOl Stephen Gale, a member of the Busch Center research team, has maintained an interest in the area's development lor the last several years. "We see it as .in extension of the borderi of Center City .ill the way up to <(>th Street and beyond." he said this week According to dale, the city's proximit) to New York caused corporations to dismiss ideas of moving to nearby Philadelphia in the past. "Philadelphia is only an liout from New (( OHtlnutd mi page '> Wall St. recruiters bound by rules Salomon Bros, returns after complaint By EDWARD BUSSMAN Every year Wall Street banking firms conduct hundreds of on-campus interviews looking to lure the best and weed out the rest. Often interviews with top firms are characterized by high-strung, pressure filled questioning — with tens of millions of dollars at stake companies want to be sure individuals will be able to handle the tension of Wall Street. But there are boundaries beyond which an interview should not go. Ten months ago a recruitei lor the Wall Street investment banking firm Salomon Brothers repeatedly asked a student questions relating to his religious background during an onCUnpus interview. "You don't look Jewish, you look WASPish — why do you suppose that is?" the student reported being asked in a complaint filed with the Career Planning and Placement Office The questions violated federal and state laws prohibiting inquiry into a job applicant's religious denomination. After the incident was brought to light last April, the firm immediately apologized to the University and barred the interviewer from returning for the '86 '81 leason. Tonight. Salomon Brothers will renew its annual quest loi graduating seniors with a presentation on COI porate finance. Although the pilch will probably be similiar to that ol previous years, the preparation uiulei taken by the recruiters has been different Since last year, Salomon Brothers has instituted a training program outlining iust what son ol questions can and cannot be lawfull) asked ot a potential employee Among illegal questions are an) (Continued on page II) .1 proposed definition ol harassment and methods ol reporting complaints. I he portion! dealing with the reporting ol complaints recommend that the ombudsman keep central records ol harassment incidents. I hat proposal has ahead) drawn heav) tire from critics who charge that complaints can he anonymously levied against individuals. Although the ombudsman would know who filed a complaint, the accused harastet would not be informed ol the com plainant's identity Proponents ol the measures assert that a method ol collecting and acting on informal complaints is needed to address the majority ol harassment incidents, usually not reported due to tear ol icpnsals I lie present ombudsman MU\ two forma ombudsmen have recentl) spoken against the central record keeping proposals, arguing that the measures would compromise the impartial nature ol the office University officials laid this week that the) expect deliberations on the two harassment proposal! to occup) most ot t oiiiicii s time for the rest ol the academic year. After * ouncil makes us recommendations, the administration will decide what, il am. action 10 lake I'o date however. ti>p administrators have not revealed their feeling! on the proposals Provost Ihomas I hrlich explained tin- week that the administration first wants to give the I niversity community an Opportunity to comment lulu on the proposals, "Unless we do it carefully and deliberately, people will feel in HUM way their views have been shortchanged." Ehrlich said. I( ontinueil on page 9) Construction is first for vice pres. Tommy Laonardi/Daity Pennsylvania!! My Hero mm KIDS COLLECT FOOTBALL CARDS. Flynn .* the Mkjta "f '»•"•>ou"f J ■«J* But this young admirer iikes to get the real thing autographs from his heroes. Quaker tailback Chris Hynn is second in the Ivy League .a rushmg behind teammate Rich < omirio. RRRRI By LAURIE GOLDBERG Approximated $310 million will flow out of the University's pocketbook in the next two years to fund academically oriented construction and deferred maintenance projects In order to "face the challenge," Senior Vice President Helen O'Bannon has reorganized her management staff. Former Physical Plant Director Arthur Gravina was promoted last month to associate vice president for operations and maintenance, and he now reports directly to O'Bannon. The senior vice president said last night that the move is intended to allow Vice President for Facilities Management John Anderson, to whom Gravina previously reported, to concentrate on the massive building effort. "I've taken away a lot of the environmental calls |from Anderson), people complaining about the heat or the toilets being backed up," O'Bannon said. "Those kinds of calls divert anybody in senior management from what their real objectives are. You start running after those, and you forget you've got a $50 million construction project going on outside your window." Anderson said yesterday that in the year since he came to the University, he has been able to spend "about 80 percent" of his time concentrating on his facilities planning responsibilities. He added that the portion of the University's building effort that had been sidetracked by the summer of 1985 demanded an organizational overhaul within the department. "When I first came aboard last year, I don't think either (O'Bannon or myself) understood the magnitude of the backlogged construction projects," Anderson said. "There was a JOHN ANDERSON 'Looking at big dollars' need to get a belter handle on where the money was spent, quality control and project completion times." He explained thai before he came into the facilities management position, no internal quality assurance department existed, and one director supervised all the University's construction projects — a task he called "impossible." Anderson has since hired six project managers and four quality control specialists in an effort to better monitor individual building efforts. The project managers oversee all design and construction on a job, collecting bids and making recommendations to the vice president on hiring general contractors. "Under the project management system, one person is ultimately accountable and responsible for the project's success, and that success is measured by how well the project meets the school's goals," Anderson said. r( ontinued on page II) PAGE 2 THK DAILY PKNNSYLVANIAN — Wednesday. November 12. 1986 Off the Wire Today's news compiled from Associated Press dispatches Shiite kidnappers free 2 Frenchmen Two moderates are elected by bishops for national offices WASHINGTON — America's Roman Catholic bishops, beating back a challenge by conservative prelates, elected two Midwestern moderates yesterday to lead their national organization for the next three years. The group's new president. Archbishop John May of St. Louis, spoke almost immediately of "a great need for healing" among Catholics who are chafing under church rules (hat some sec as too rigid in the 20th century. However, May's comments made it clear that he and others in the National Conference of Catholic Bishops weren't about to push for any revolt against Vatican authority. "We arc members of the universal Catholic Church," he said at a brief news conference. "We are pledged as bishops to work in unity with the visible symbol of unity who is the Holy Lather, the pope. "And we will do it. our healing, in that way. There's no other way we can." he said. Still, election of May and of Cincinnati Archbishop Daniel Pilarc/yk as vice president suggested a continuation of the activist bent of the bishops conference — a stance that has been unpopular with some high Vatican officials who see all church authority as emanating from Rome. Conservative bishops made a strong push for Boston Cardinal Bernard Law. However, a majority of the bishops, many of whom are upset over this year's Vatican disciplining of liberal Seattle Archbishop Raymond Hunthausen, defeated Law, who has been outspoken in defense of the Vatican's action in that and other cases. Many of the nearly 300 bishops attending the conference met behind closed doors all yesterday afternoon, thrashing out the Hunthausen case and trying to decide what, if any, public response to make. Hunthausen was ordered by the Vatican to turn over much of his authority to a Vatican-appointed auxiliary bishop after being judged too liberal in such matters as ministry to homosexuals and divorced Catholics and the dispensing of absolution for sins to large groups. The bishops were expected to make at least a bare-bones statement late in the day about what they had or hadn't been able to decide in the private meeting. Instead, after nearly four hours, they began trickling out side doors of the hotel meeting room, making no comment when approached except that (he closed session would resume in the morning. Mascot Forget the groundhog- Around here, squirrels are much more a sign of the season than those burrowing creatures. This bushy-tailed specimen is obviously well into the foraging season. PARIS — Two Frenchmen freed by Shiite Muslim kidnappers after months of captivity in Lebanon came home yesterday and were greeted by Premier Jacques Chirac, who thanked Syria for helping arrange the release. Camille Sontag, 85, and Marcel Coudari, 54, were released in west Beirut Monday night and turned over to French envoys in Damascus, Syria, less than 12 hours later. When they arrived at Orly airport outside Paris, Chirac thanked Syria, Saudia Arabia and Algeria for helping arrange the release of the aptives. Coudari, when asked if he had new s of other French hostages, replied: "No. But I can tell you that things will happen soon." Asked if be wai certain. Coudari said: "Well, yes, more or less, more or less." He told reporters, citing "a pretty official source," that French hostage Michel Seurat apparently had died of natural causes. The pro-Iranian Shiite Moslem group Islamic Jihad announced March 5 that he had been killed. Sontag came down the steps of the French jet into the arms of his 84-year-old wife, and they hugged and kissed as Chirac beamed. Blanche Sontag then fumbled in her handbag and handed a small object tojier husband — apparently a replacement for the hearing aid broken during his abduction. Earlier in Damascus, both men looked well after their ordeal, but the white-haired Sontag appeared frail and nervous. He was supported by two burly Syrian officials when he walked into a chandeliered room in the Syrian Foreign Ministry for yesterday's handover formalities. Coudari, a businessman, chainsmoked American cigarettes as he and Sontag, a retired auto dealer, waited for more than an hour in an anteroom, sipping thick Arabic coffee from small blue cups. He said Sontag was held in an underground prison in south Beirut with five other Western captives. Spuking for Sontag, Coudari said one of the prisoners was an Irishman. Brian Keenan, an Irish teacher, was kidnapped in west Beirut April 11 and has not been heard from since. He is the only Irishman among 17 foreigners still missing in Lebanon. No group has claimed Keenan's kidnapping or made any demands tor his release. The identities and nationalities of the other four men were not known. Coudari said Sontag saw them but was not allowed to talk to them. Sontag conveyed, however, that one prisoner slipped him a scrap of paper Monday on which was written: "I am Irish. Please tell my family." According to Coudari, Sontag did not know whether Americans were among the other prisoners. Six Americans are among the missing. Negotiator calls Geneva arms talks best so far Summit set ground for progress, though differences remain National Wealth gap related more to education, not race WASHINGTON — The rich are becoming richer, but the growing gap in distribution of America's wealth is related more to education and age than to race and household makeup, a new report says. The report acknowledged an increase in income inequality but Mid it has been greatly exaggerated by the media. "There has been a remarkable rush to judgment, to the conclusion that the Reagan administration is responsible for increasing inequality," said the report presented Monday at a seminar sponsored by the American Enterprise Institute. Authors John Weicher of AEI and Susan Wachter of the University of Pennsylvania looked at Federal Reserve Board surveys between 1977 and 1983 and concluded that "inequality increased because of changes in the relationships between education and wealth and between age and wealth. The elderly and the well-educated have gained; the middle-aged and the uneducated have lost." Lava IJtes shine again for college generation CHICAGO — The Lava lite, that undulating curiosity many associate with the psychedelic '60s, is oozing back into popularity, the manufacturer says. Actually, Lava Lites never went out of style among the middle Americans who buy most of them, according to Lava-Simplex Internationale. But sales have increased sharply in recent years, a boom that LavaSimplex President John Mundy attributes to the same generation that has made The Monkees and paisleyprint clothes vogue again. "I have heard that the college kids are very interested in the product now," Mundy said at the company's Chicago headquarters. "They're 18 and 19 and have never seen a Lava Lite." For those who missed them the first time around. Lava Lites are electric lamps that somewhat resemble clear, 17-inch-tall beer bottles. City Rizzo will resign from job and run for mayor PHILADELPHIA — Former Mayor Frank Rizzo will resign from a security job at the city-owned gas works, quit the Democratic Parly and oppose Mayor Wilson Goode as a Republican, a source close to Rizzo said yesterday. Rizzo, 66, mayor from 1972 to 1980, already has rented a downtown office that will be staffed by (wo of his closesl political friends — Martin Wcinberg, former campaign manager and attorney, and Anthony Zecca, who was his press secretary and speech writer during Rizzo's City Hall days. Weather Skies will be partly sunny today, with highs in the lower to middle 50s. Tonight will be mostly cloudy, windy and much colder. Lows will be in the upper 20s to the middle 30s. GENEVA — The chief American negotiator said the round of nuclear arms talks that ends today has been the most productive so far, partly because of "phenomenal agreements" reached at the United States-Soviet summit in Iceland. Max Kampelman said the basis for the Reykjavik agreements between President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev was laid in previous sessions of the Geneva talks, which began March 12, 1985. Kampelman said American and Soviet negotiators made progress at the sixth round in all three fields covered in Geneva: medium-range missiles; long-range, or strategic, nuclear weapons and space and defense systems. 'The agreements in Reykjavik as translated here have narrowed the gap between us," the U.S. delegation chief said in an interview with The Associated Press. "We still have a gap to narrow further, and we still have serious significant differences of opinion and differences of interest." "But when I look at the round and see all that has been accomplished here, I have to say this is the most productive round we've had." The United States feels an arms control agreement could be reached in the next year if each side makes a serious effort, he said. Both Washington and Moscow have brought new proposals to Geneva since the summit October 11-12. Agreement is nearest on medium-range missiles, Kampelman said, noting that Reagan and Gorbachev agreed to eliminate them in Europe and retain 100 warheads each on U.S. and Soviet territory. "This means in effect a 100 percent reduction in Soviet SS-20s in Europe and an 80 percent reduction of Soviet SS-20s in Asia," he said, calling that a "very significant agreement." One hindrance to an accord is the Soviet insistence that agreements be reached simultaneously in all three areas, Kampelman said. He said they dropped that condition before Reykjavik, saying a separate intermediate-range agreement was possible, but Gorbachev introduced it again at the summit. Inherent in the Soviet position is a demand that research for the American space-based defense project commonly called "Star Wars" be confined to the laboratory for the same length of time. The Soviets contend that research beyond that would violate the treaty, which the United States denies. The Kremlin has not specifically defined laboratory research, according to Kampelman. Soviet officials have hinted publicly that the term could be interpreted loosely, not necessarily meaning all research must occur indoors. Turning them loose Conservatives surest alternatives to prison WASHINGTON — Confronted with spiraling costs and crowding in United States prisons, a group of conservative scholars and politicians is advocating alternatives to prison like restitution, community service and even beatings. f Several of the 29 contributors to a new book published here yesterday, which departs from conservative dogma on incarceration, are eyeing the Republican presidential nomination in 1988. There was wide agreement on reserving expensive prison space for violent criminals and putting those who commit non violent property crimes to work, often outside prison, to repay their victims. "The traditional conservative view is: 'Lock 'em up and throw away the key,' " Patrick McGuigan, co-editor of the book. Crime and Punishment s »6 an***" in Modern America, said in an interview. "Leftists have talked for years about opening up the jails. Here are some conservatives who say: 'Don't just let them go, but here are some possible paths out of increasing crowding and an increasing burden on the taxpayers' " McGuigan added. McGuigan is director of the Institute for Government and Politics of the Free Congress Research and Education Foundation, an influential conservative thinktank here. Another institute compendium in 1983, "Criminal Justice Reform: A Blueprint," contained 10 chapters (hat ultimately paralleled 10 of the 16 sections of the sweeping Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984. Like that book, this one is studded with prominent contributors from a broad range of conservatism, in- cluding Attorney General Edwin Meese. The new book has chapters on prison policy by former Delaware Gov. Pete du Pont, a declared candidate for the 1988 GOP nomination, and by Sen. William Armstrong of Colorado, whose chance for that nomination was the subject of a recent Conservative Digest cover story. Rep. Jack Kemp, the former professional football quarterback from Buffalo, N.Y., who has made no secret of his presidential ambitions, also addressed the subject, as did Herbert Titus, dean of the School of Public Policy at CBN University, founded by the Rev. Pat Robertson, also now weighing a bid for the GOP nomination. Armstrong and Sen. Sam Nunn, the conservative Democrat from Georgia, described their bill to limit prison to federal convicts who threatened or used force, endangered national security, lived solely off crime, were paid for crime, dealt drugs, violated gun or explosive laws, or misused public office. Other convicts would be given very short prison time or probation, both coupled with restitution to their victims and community service. "Penal imprisonment is not always an appropriate punishment for certain types of criminal offenses," they wrote, adding that their proposal "reflects dissatisfaction with American prisons, which are critically overcrowded, waste millions of tax dollars, and do little to rehabilitate the hunderds of thousands of prisoners currently incarcerated." They noted the U.S. prison population grew 10 times faster than the general population between 1975 and 1985. . g8r fifing t>ta #&** •>p. LOVE fiFFUfilR Shei-aton UnivereityCity SHERATON MOTELS INNS 4 RE SORTS WORLDWIDE 36TM ANOCHESTNUT STREETS PHILADELPHIA PA 19104 <21S> 367-4000 ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIAL PACKAGES Men's Cut/ $17.00 discount BlOWdn/ S25.00 regular Women's Cut/ Blowdry $22.00 discount HAIR STUDIoC_-^/\| 2016 Sansom St. Tue. Sat $30.00 regular X 5615737 THK DAILY PENNSYI.VANIAN — WrdnrMlii>. Novrmhtr 12. MM |-\(.l i 30th Street area to become cultural center (Continued from page I) York," he explained. "As the prices in New York rise, however, more companies are moving to Southern New Jersey and the Philadelphia area." "The project will extend up to Franklin Field." Gale added. "It will do great things for the University." The potential development of the area above the station's rail yards has been debated for more than 20 years. The land was considered as a possible site for Veteran's Stadium and the 1976 Bicentennial celebration. The present 30th Street plan aims to create an entirely new section of the city stretching north from the station to Spring Garden Street. The multibillion dollar project will begin with a performing arts center and two office towers, and it could eventually include as many as 12 office buildings, condominiums, highrise apartments, hotels and a science research center. Conceptual designs for the office complex and cultural center have been done by Dan Peter Kopple and Associates of Philadelphia in association with architect Charles Moore. The proposed arts center will include a concert hall, a 5000 seat hall for opera and ballet, and a theater complex for the dramatic arts. Furthermore, the renovation process will not neglect the banks of the Schuylkill River. In fact, a bridge connecting the river's east and west banks is also part of the conceptual model. Philadelphia's cultural facelift has been long awaited. A report by the Mayor's Cultural Advisory Council last year said that the city lacks performing space for arts groups "of all sizes." Al Simpkins, artistic director of the Bushfirc Theatre of Performing Arts, coordinated the report issued by the Mayor's Council last year. "There aren't enough facilities right now," Simpkins said. "The more you have, the better it is." "There are three main spaces in Center City right now: the Walnut Street Theater, the Shubert Theater and the Academy of Music," he added. "You only have to travel for half a block in New York and you find more than three [performing] spaces — it's a statement on the part of the city." The Philadelphia International Center for the Performing Arts is a non-profit group responsible for garnering support from local theater groups and for developing an economic plan for the proposed center. Gale, the group's executive what aoes up there doesn't take away from < enter City," Bartlett said. I he iv.o .mil ,i hall >eai Mudy also recommends thai Market Sireci be converted to one wni cist bound in the SOtii Street vicinlt) and thai JFK Boulevard be converted to one-way westbound from 2oih Street to the station \ ordlni to the developer, the city was iware ol ins plans and incorporated them into the stud) "The dtj understands that what wen- doing increases the importance ot the city," l ruchtei said "It complements what's going on In the rest ni the dt) Othei imminent plans on the pro pert) include a parking garage and a landscaped square around winch the proposed cultural centei and ihe first five office towers will be built. "The first dieces ol ihe cultural 'People hear about the project and think of it as some sort of flashy Donald Trump venture.' — Assoc. Professor Stephen dale comer will siari going in soon as part of the lirsi phase of the project," said (rale. PICPA executive director. l he developers' plan also involves the use ol an iijilils above Ihe Schuylkill Expresswaj Building over theexpresswa) will allow ihe center to overlook the river Ihe enure project is designed to maintain I view of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Although some rerouting of traffic patterns will be necessary. Ciale explained llial the changes will proceed gradual!) In order to poet the lout possible inconvenience. "People heat BDOUl the project and think ol n as some sort of flashy Donald hump veniure." Gale said. " [htt's IkOl the vase here at all." Frldtjol H Lorentien D.i.i 30th Street Station and a 64-acre plot on the Schuylkill River's west bank will be transformed into a business and cultural center director, said that the project's funding will come from bond issuances and commercial spinoffs. Among the groups negotiating with PICPA are the Philadelphia Festival Theatre for New Plays and the Pennsylvania Ballet. A proposition by developers to build a new concert hall for the Philadelphia Orchestra in the center has been rejected by the orchestra board's site committee. The orchestra may leave the Academy of Music because the hall's acoustics are not considered appropriate for the ensemble's repertoire. If the orchestra decides not to build on a site al Broad and Spruce Streets, Academy renova- tions will make the concert hall unsuitable for ballet and operatic performances and may force these perform ing arts groups to move to the new center. "The area will go for a different market rather than trying to do something like relocate (he Philadelphia Orchestra." explained COUPON PENN PLAYERS PRESENTS RUNAWAYS Book, music and Lyrics by Elizabeth Swados Directed by Terry Guerin Open Night Thursday, November 13 8 p.m. Parents' Weekend Performances: November 14 8:30 pm November 15 8 pm. Future Performances: November 20, 21, 22 8 pm. Harold Prince Theatre Annenberg Center Tickets $4.00 Call 898-6791 NOMINATIONS FOR THE UNDBACK AWARDS for DISTINGUISHED TEACHING will be accepted through December 5, 1986 "It'sa net addition," to continued. Steve Bartlett, the dty'i Chiel Transportation Planner. According to ;i * n> Plannini t <>m mission study issued in September, the commission wants to be sure that the 30th Sued development "compknuots rathei than competes" with Philadelphia's existing facilities "We want to make ver> certain thai TWO DINNERS FOR THE PRICE OF ONE. fLowesi price Item la compUments of the house 3 pm ttl closing) "Nothing's being taken away from ( enter City." However. Philadelphia's cultural renaissance WOO'I happen overnight. It is estimated that (he project will near COmpletioa in It) to 20 years. "We don't have a crystal ball on [his," Bartlett said "The plan isn't predicated on any sei time limit." l • LUNCH TIME SPECIAL! * Vi Potion Lasagna and Salad Bar ONLY $4,951 jood Mon S.H II JO-4 K -S\l Roosrvrlls Pub. 2222 Walnut St. 636-9722 Saladalleij 4040 l<« UU M'l-rl Ci'iil trtuumnt. *«l B* Information Available: Office of the Vice Provost 112 College Hall/6303 Ticketson sale at The Annenberg Center Box Office and on Locust Walk funded by SAC The Campus Tradition Lives On! REFLECTIONS OF BRILLIANCE The Peon, Tea Party Tonight and Every Wednesday Copies on Astrobrite Papers "1 WASImluinl w'wh guilt, bin I justinuldii'i nop.WorM of all, there was nobod) I could turn to...until 1 found ■mi about |effersons I Ml* Vim. bulimia Program. Al PhiUVIphu r\ MMK )fct I'll .« M nil mi .i Itii- com "I last 1 fed human again Solar Yellow, Orbit Orange, Gamma Green. Lunar Blue, Terra Green, Re-F.ntry Red UJIIIIII t mint OuorWm.... *«>r St4 AUme kinko's Bulimia is a serious medical condition. If you think you have it, call 1-800-JEFF-NOW, or use this coupon. Great copies. Great people. 3923 Walnut St. 386-5679 EATING RULED MY LIFE. 226 S. 40th St. 386-3100 "vHT wuiklvi i in Mill 7TT I CALLED JEFFERSON. 39TH & CHESTNUT STREETS / 349-9000 mtm J FACE 4 THE DAILY PKNNSYLVANIAN — Wednesday. November 12. 19t6 Campus Events Campus Briefs A listing of University news and events A summary of University news NOTICE TODAY FUTURE CAMPUS EVENTS are Mad daily as a pad pubfcc service o< the Urnvaraily o* Pennsylvania, and are adrrenoMrrt tor the Umversrfy by The Dmty Ptnmytvanan There is no charge to amhorued UnrvenMy afMiated groups tor listings of FREE events Listings may be mailed or placed in person at The Dmfy P*m$ytv*ruan Business Office. 4015 Walnut Street, from 9 a m to 5pm Monday through Friday Campus Events will not be accepted by phone 25 word limit Ttm Omfy P»nn$y*mnian r—ana* the right to edit Campus Events accordng to apace limitations KOSHER CHINESE FOOD BOOTH Wed 11/12 from 1130 until 2 00 Egg rolls, soup, and more 38th and Locust Sponsored by Lubavitch House 4032 Spruce St Info 382-1247 AFTER REYKJAVIK Where do we stand in arms control?" Hear Ambassador Ralph Earle. II Nov 17th. 4p m . Christian Association Auditorium Sponsored by the Slrangelove Society LIBERTARIAN MEGA MEETIf>G tonite! We'll cast our debaters prep bills, strategic lor victory n PPU Parliament next week Food dnnk. the works. 7pm. Houston Hall 303 ARTISTS' PENN REVIEW is took ing for artwork for its fall issue See your work in a creative-arts magazine Call 222-3529 or 243-5728 for information today A CONCERT FEATURING Diane Bish on the Curtis Organ will be held Wednesday. November 12. 8:00 p m in Irvine Auditorium 896-2848 Tickets available in Annenberg AMERICANS FOR DEMOCRATIC Action will have a speaker al College Democrats/PPU Liberal Party meeting discussing the fall election Wednesday. 7 30. 167 McNeil All are welcome ANOTHER CLASSIC "Kiss ol the Spiderwoman" tonite, 7 30 p m at Penn Newman. 3720 Chestnut Street Discussion to follow All welcome ATTENTION1 Penn Israel Alliance meeting 7pm. Front Lounge. Hillel BORED AFTER MIDTERMS? Join the many committee representatives on new committees, including search lor Director of Student Life Applications UA/NEC office. 11/11-11/13. 11-4 pm Call 898-8906 CHESS CLUB 7 30 3rd floor Hous ton Hall AM Welcome Amateurs and experts No tee COMIC COLLECTORS ol U of P meelmg. with staff member from Comico! Wednesday November 12, 8 30 p m . Houston Hall room 309. For info, call Steve. 243-7894 CONTRACEPTIVE INFORMATION PROGRAMS coed or women only. 75 mm am or p m . call for appt. 662-2874 Student Health 1 ENTERTAINERS NEEDED Volunteer performers (jugglers, musicians, mimes) to entertain children at Center tor Autistic Children For more info, contact Penn Extension. 115 Houston Hall EXTERMINATE your boredom, come to the Event Horizon Science Fiction Club meting Tues day November 12 at 9 p m in Houston Hall room 301 FREE MICROCOMPUTER TRAINING1 Bits and Pieces noon time seminar Mac Terminal Wednesday. Nov 12, 12-1 pm. 1st floor Van Pelt Library All Welcome! For into, call Computing Resource Center 898-1 780 HELP' HELP' HELP! HELP' Volunteers desperately needed to work in Kensington Soup Kitchen Every Wednesday 4pm Leave from Newman Center Questions? Kathleen 222-3477 IEEE MEETING Wednesday November 12. High Rise North. Fourth Floor Lounge. 8 p m Includes information on Professional Engineer Examination and Student Papers New members welcome PENN WOMEN'S ALLIANCE Important general meeting. Wednesday November 12. 5-7 pm, rm 305 Houston Hall New members welcome SCHOLARSHIPS AND LOANS available tor graduate study in preparation for executive careers in Jewish Communal Service For information call Barbara Nussbaum. 898-8265 ^^^^__ TURKCE KONUSMA SAATI Turkish conversation hour All Turcophones welcome 8th floor lounge Williams Hall Wednesday. 5 November 1 OOp m BRIDGE PLAYERS Play Duplicate Bridge Every Wednesday night at 7pm. Houston Hall. above Wendy's cafalena For info call Dan at 243-7802 COME CELEBRATE PARENTS Weekend with Hillel Bring your parents to services & dinner Friday, 11/14 with special speaker & Kiddush following services Sal 11/15 x7391 CHEMICAL BANK Information session on operation Nov 13 4 30-6 30p m . HSP room. Hous ton Hall CPPS CHOATE ROSEMARY HALL Summer School. Wallingford, Ct will hire leaching interns to assist master teachers and supervise dorms and sports For details. CPPS books under "Education" GRADUATE STUDENTS in Arts and Sciences. Annenberg and Fine Arts "Get Ready to Find a Job" workshops. November 12 & 13. 12-1 pm . Bishop White Rm Call x7530 to sign up CPPS INTERNATIONAL INTERNSHIPS Students speak and answer questions about their summer internship experiences November 13. 7 p m . Ben Franklin Room, Houston Hall All welcome' Refreshments CPPS FRIDAY NIGHT SHABBAT dinner 6pm Guest speaker about how to bridge the generation gap following dinner A discussion will follow Lubavitch House. 4032 Spruce KIDDER PEABO0Y Information session Corporate Finance. Financial Analyst Program Nov 13. 7-9p m Bodek Lounge. Houston Hall CPPS HAPPY 100TH BIRTHDAY BEN GURION' Shabbaton- celebrating Zionism Nov 21-22 Join us for a full weekend of workshops, discussions. Iriends. and fun' Please call Esther 898-8265 lor more info KYW TV WILL PRESENT a seminar on Internship Opportunities at KYW" Wednesday, Nov. 12th. 3-5 p m Room 111, Annenberg Center Randy Covington. News Director, and Ray Murray of Evening Magazine, speaker WHAT MOVIES WOULD YOU LIKE to see next semester? Come to PUC's movie selection meeting and let us know' Wed Nov 12, 5 00 Romm 301 Houston Hall OPEN HOUSE Chinese dinner Sunday 11/16 at 5 pm followed by "The Frisco Kid" at 6 p m Suggested donation if possible Lubavitch House. 4032 Spruce. 382 1247 MACY'S INFORMATION session Nov 13. 4:30-630pm, Bodek Lounge. Houston Hall CPPS TOMORROW" PARENTS WEEKEND Shabbat dinner We welcome all guests with good food stories and singing with L'chaims Open to all 6 p m Lubavitch House. 4032 Spruce. 382-1247. VSE, KTO XOCET GOVORIT Po-Russki I Interesuets'a russkoj kulturoi! Prixodite Na Russkij Caj (Modern Languages College House 3940 Locust Walk) Kazdu|u Sredu V 4 Casa WHAT ARE THE NATIONAL political trends? An Americans for Democratic Action representative will speak to PPU Liberal Party and College Democrats Wednesday. 7 30. 167 McNeil ARE HUMAN RIGHTS intellectually defensible'' U of P Students of Objectivism meeting. Objectivist radio/TV commentator Raymond Newman speaking Thursday November 13. 7 30 p m . Houston Hall room 301 BEIT CAFE' Beginner, intermediate, and advanced Hebrew speakers welcome! Come practice your Hebrew in an informal environment every Thursday 4 30-6 p m at Hillel front lounge Music' Food' BLOOD DRIVE Thurs from 2 00 to 7 00 al Hillel SHABBAT LUNCH open house for Parents Weekend Good home cooking Come and join in the singing, stories and L'chaims, 12 30pm Lubavitch House. 4032 Spruce. 382-1247 SPEND WINTER BREAK on the beach in Eilat!' Student tours to Israel Dec 21 10 Jan 6th Don't miss out' You'll have the time of your life! For more info call Esther 898-8265 COME TO THE JERUSALEM Experience Speaker. Phillip Yakar Religious Realities in Isreal Today", short film, live music, food. Bodine Lounge from 9 00-11 00p.m. UTV WANTS YOU' We are electing new members to our Board ol Directors Interested in a Leadership Position' Call Jay lor more information: 243-7642 DR FORREST MCDONALD ol the University ol Alabama speaking on "Interpreting the Constitution Ihe Judges vs History", Thursday November 13, 8 p m. in room 103 McNeil WHY SHOULD JEWS GIVE MONEY TO ISRAEL? What kind of Zionism does Israel need? A two part series on Zionism Tues Nov 11 and Nov 18 sponsored by Telem 617 S 42nd St call Liz 222-7627 OBJECTIVISTS WILL SPONSOR a discussion by talkshow host and author Raymond Newman on "The Destruction ot Individual Rightrs Across the Political Spectrum" Thursday 7 30 p m . Houston Hall-301 SELF DEFENSE WORKSHOP Nov 13. 7pm lo 8 30pm McClelland Hall So Lounge Study, work and walk safely To register call 8-4481 or 8-8611 Limited enrollment TRADITIONAL THEMES Irom Myth and Epic an Iranian Example" Dr Wm Hanaway, Oriental Studies, 4 OOp m . University Museum. Classroom I (Phila Alliance tor Teaching Humanities in the Schools) VSE. KTO XOCET GOVORIT Po-Russki I Interesuets'a russkoi kulturoi1 Prixodite Na Russki| Ca| (Modern Languages College House 3940 Locust Walk) Kazduju Sredu V 4 Casa WOHS PRESENTS DJ TRAINING on 11/14 at 11 am and 11/15 at 10 am Also 11/16 at 10 a m Sign up at 3905 Spruce St WEEKEND WOHS PRESENTS DJ TRAINING, on 11/14 at 11 am and 11/15 at 10 a m Also 11/16 at 10 a m Sign up at 3905 Spruce St OFFICIAL BUYERS UP. University City group buying cooperative for home energy needs seeks administrative assistants to manage business Computer and communications skills desirable CPPS Books "Management" DREXEL BURNHAM LAMBERT Information session Accounting Position discussed Nov 13, 7-9p m . Bishop White room. Houston Hall CPPS NORHTWESTERN UNIVERSITY Medill School of Journalism will be recruiting on campus on Thursday, November 13lh Please sign up in CPPS with Jan PEACE CORPS INFORMATION session Nov 12, -100 6 00pm. Bishop While Room, Houston Hall CPPS PENNIES FROM HEAVEN" Penn Alumni speak about careers in non-profit and social change organizations November l2.7-9pm., BF room. H H. Sign up with Kathleen in CPPS. HUP health fair offers free testing, services The second annual health fair, sponsored by the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, will take place today at the Philadelphia Hilton Hotel. HUP departments and community agencies, including the American Red Cross, the American Cancer Society and Alcoholics Anonymous will offer a variety of free health services at more than 40 different booths. Screenings are available to test for health problems including breast cancer, diabetes, hearing and blood DEN.SE, f?fc wc nu46 (jut. *k cvat a pfocuwie twrfiuty <vit& you.. HEUN AN<J RJTA Rita. Hope Vaughn recovers quickly. Vou need some fl & R...and I'm not talking Big Bird. Sleep soon! Alison PEPPERDINE UNIVERSITY Graduate School ol Business will be recruiting on campus on Wednesday. November 12th Please sign up in CPPS with Jan PHILADELPHIA ZOO sponsors zoo-wide full-time internships lor four-monlh periods including summer Participate in management area including children's education program For details. see CPPS books. Environmental " SALOMON BROTHERS Info session Sales and Trading. Financial Positions discussed Nov 12. 7-9 p.m. , HRN Rooftop Lounge CPPS STUDY ABROAD Interstudy. Information meeting on semestei and year-long academic programs in the United Kingdom Wednesday. November 12. from 11:00-12 00. 133 Bennett Hall BOB PASNAU Nighl I iliiui LAURA SHAW Wire EfMtor NOBODY Photo Nighl Kdilor LITTLE MOW Sports Night Kditor LISA LEYIN JENN DOMIM I / Ad Layout Editors FRANCES GOLD DON CHOE Ad Copy Editors PAULA MICHAELIM DANIELLE DINENNA Production Day Managers 5PEG I A L 5 MARGARITA MADNESS WEDNESDAY AT 7 PM TACOS & MARGARITAS! O/y^i/tV/*) DINING 3925 WALNUT UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA STUDENTS OF OBJECTIVISM and PHILADELPHIA OBJECTIVISTS ASSOCIATION present: Our unique and intensive training program combines classroom settings with hands-on experience to help you develop the business and merchandising skills needed to be a successful manager. THURSDAY, NOV. 13 7:30 PM HOUSTON HALL ROOM 301 Come to our Seminar, Thursday, November 13,4:30-6:30PM. Bodek Lounge, Houston Hall www SftKffl^ If you'd rather set trends than follow them, if you thrive in fast-paced environments and crave a career with plenty of opportunity for advancement, consider Macy's, New Jersey DtfOfWW Celebrate her Annivctsatv chesira formation nV student^ ES»-** EV2 Are you looking for a career that will offer these attributes'? Then look into Macy's, New Jersey (formerly Bamberger's). If you've got the ability to learn quickly, entrepreneurial curiosity and the desire to succeed. Macy's, New Jersey will teach you the business from the ground floor up. a talk by RA YMOND NEWMAN, NYC radio/TV commentator and object ivist writer FREE TO ALL SALOON STREET RESPONSIBILITY OPPORTUNITY CHALLENGE "...when the secret police come, when the torturers violate the innocent, there is nothing to be said to them. " Richard Rorty, The fate of philosophy, 1982 ARE HUMAN RIGHTS INTELLECTUALLY DEFENSIBLE? pressure. In addiiion. there will be a special computer available to determine an individual's health risks. The mayor will make a brief appearance at I p.m. Karen Weidner. a HUP client services coordinator, said yesterday that she hopes this year's turnout will be as good as last year's fair, which drew over 800 people. "The purpose of the fair is to educate the public about health information and prevention of disease," Weidner said. "We also want to make the public aware of our services at the hospital." The health fair will take place on the ballroom level of the Hilton, located at 34th Street and Civic Center Boulevard. Activities are scheduled from II a.m. to 7 p.m. — t.ileen Chang srsss*■■An unsurpassed leader, Macy's, New Jersey sells over a billion dollars yearly, with 24 stores in five states New York, New Jersey. Pennsylvania, Delaware and Maryland In the near future, we'll be expanding our success to new stores in the Baltimore and Washington, DC areas Learn more about careers with Macy's, M New Jersey at our Seminar on November 13. Or if you are unable to attend our presentation, please send your resume and cover letter to: Manager, College Relations, Macy's, New Jersey, Dept.UP15,131 Market St., Newark, NJ 07102. We are an equal opportunity employer, m/f. bamberger's takes the family name 5I95 THE DAILY PKNNSVLVANIAN - Wednnda). November 12, IVJM. Women in War Mayor Goode dedicates week to female veterans By EVAN GAHR Mayor Goode recently focused attention on an often forgotten group of veterans — women. During a City Hall ceremony last Friday, Goode proclaimed this week, November 10th to 14th, "Women Veterans Week." Citizens should fly "their American flags in salute to those women who have dedicated their lives to maintaining the freedom and independence we enjoy today," the mayor said. The mayor was urged to issue the proclamation by the Greater Philadelphia Womens Marine Association — one of 75 nationwide chapters of a group of nearly 4000 women stationed with the Marines during both world wars and the Korean War. Randi Brooks, the Philadelphia chapter president, spearheaded the lobbying effort for the the proclamation. She said Monday that attention to women veterans is long overdue. "We kind of get forgotten," said Brooks, who was an aircraft radio mechanic during the second World War. According to Brooks, the women Marines did "just about everything the men did" and deserve recognition. "I wanted to honor all women veterans who served the United Stater, government," she said. Philadelphia Veterans Administration Unit Supervisor Margaret Manning also praised the mayor's proclamation for acknowledging the female contribution to the armed forces. "[Women) veterans have not been adequately recognized," she said this week. "They deserve all the attention they can recieve." Washington D.C. Veterans Administration Spokesman Donna St. John said Monday that most Americans do not realize that women made a significant contribution to past war efforts. "People tend to believe that veterans are only men," she said. "(Women) also." should be recognized According to St. John, Goode's proclamation coincides with an effort PA«F. 5 HISTORY 27. Ancient Some and HISTORY 25. Ancient Near East cue now listed under ANCIENT HISTORY (Not History) in the Course Roster. HITS AND PIECES by President Reagan to honor women veterans. Reagan recently declared this week "National Women Veterans Recognition Week" in order to "focus on women's contributions to the armed forces." she added Noontime Computer Training Seminars MacTerminal :::::::::::::j»8» 'ig-iviaBB ^-jjjH^ife /"""Amy / -X*?, It's just amazing how much campus news there is to get in the DP every Y N\ Wednesday, November 12 x -"i Pell Libran 1st Moor Conference Room ,2 Noon — 1:00 pm Follow the Blue Balloons ALL AH!-, WTXCQMl,;: day! Sponsored by the Computing Resource Center 898-1780 . Plan Your Holiday Parties Now At Indian Restaurant 110 South 40th Street, Phila. (215) 222-2245 $20 Off For Parties of Six or More Adults Offer not good Saturday evenings Br«ateSaST 13 3«.rv»e<± Monday -Friday 7-3o-|o:30, ScrN Son 9:oo- ir.Ooa*"»(3uhcJi»y By-vie.1! i|-3p*0At:co*n*,od<vtlo*s Jjor br«A^Qi-r m^i^s a< UL> TO JO people. Tafca-oJ* * Ccfttrina also tffcUfeC* SALOMON BROTHERS INC cordially invites University of Pennsylvania Seniors to attend a PRESENT A TION WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12 WH1TE DOG CAFE Breok^Qst' Lutnch -Dinner- BQV * Grill 34SLO Sar\som ST-'B8^-qJ3H-op€^7dqys at 7:00 p.m. Rooftop Lounge High Rise North to discuss Sales, Trading & Finance opportunities at the Firm. And now for something completely different.. The Curtis Organ Restoration Society presents DIANE BISH The First Lady of the Organ" You loved Phantom of the Opera; now enjoy stellar classical works by Bach. Vierne, Widor, and more... Wednesday, November 12, 1986 at 8:00 pm Irvine Auditorium - 34th & Spruce Streets Tickets $6. $8. and $10 at the Annenberg Center Box Office Student discount $2 with valid identification. 898-6791 Salomon Brothers Inc KEATS AND YEATS ON YOUR SIDE GElje Jlailtj f emxsxAxvcmmn The Independent NewspapeVffl n\e L'nhersitx of Pennsylvania Hi 1st Year of I'tiMictrtion *i ■* P\(.v 6 Wednesday. November 12. 1986 Gosh! I just hale lo see human rights violations... MUEVETE Minority Attrition Ne»\ thai a dose friend ma) toon be transferring oui ol Perm has rekindled m> infuriation with the in adequ.io ><i efforts to improve the quality of life for minorit) itudenti al the University. rwo sens ago, the Office foi University Life released .i report on the retention rate of students al Penn riii- minorit) attrii ion statistics ihocked the 1 niversti) communit) One-third oi .ill blacks and Hispanic: i }5 percent and '2 pel cent respectively) thai matriculate at • Penn leave before Pedro completing then degrees VI hftes, Ramos on ihe other hand. have a retention rate of S*i percent. The report also indicated that less than two percent of the minorities mentS cliche Main have returned to their loeal college or university. Mi hough loeal schools usually don't enjoy "the prestige of the Ivy I eague," students don't have to feel like outsiders in their own college. In addition, even if the school lacks adequate support -en ices and facilities foi minorities, the support mechanisms of the community are more familiar and accessible. Relatives, high school teachers. friends and local role models are near when you need I hem Institutions like Penn are entirely different worlds. There arc very few minorit) faculty members, making ii ver) haul to find role models thai wc can identify wish. (There is not one Hispanic American on the Penn faculty). Course! that deal with our heritagi are scarce if the) exist at all. Moreover, the contributions of minorities throughout history are ignored in the curriculum. To many minorities. Penn can be One-third of all blacks and Hispanics (35 percent and 32 percent respectively) that matriculate at Penn leave before completing their degrees. that left were forced 10 lease because of academic problems. Upon these discoveries, the l nited Minorities Council asked thai the University direct special attention to this serious problem. The administration responded thai because minorities did not have a "monopoly" on attrition, they would conduct a study of the attrition of all students They did not see an unexplained minority attrition rale thai w;is more than twice as high as thai of whiles at something meriting individual alien tion. James Bishop, ihe Vice Provost for University Life, was charged with the responsibility of a follow-up in vestigation of the attrition problem among all students at the Universit) Nothing has been heard since. In the meantime, minority students continue to silently disappear al alarming rales While there is no research on why minorities leave Penn, there are the sentiments of those who have left. Friends and acquaintances of mine have given different reasons for leaving. But all had one thing in common: they hated Penn. "Well," you say, "then they did the right thing by leaving. And if you don't like it. you can leave too." Unfortunately, too many have taken the advice of the numerous arrogant Penn students who have made such com- lociall) and culturall) devastating. If one is not accustomed to dealing with wealthy, suburban while kids who believe stereotypes they don'i like challenged (or even admit that the) possess). Penn can be a bewildering experience. A high degree of social segregation has tended to create many loners who don't fit into — or are Br- and socio-economic self-segregation that they are generally based upon. While it will be a long time before the University develops any policies to combat minority attrition, some existing policies merit attention. Minority attrition statistics that are twice as high as those of whites indicate that the experiences of blacks and Hispanic-Americans cannot be compared or confused with that of whites. The administration must examine separately the experiences of blacks and Hispanics on campus. An unofficial policy that deserves treat scrutiny and may be seen as the solution could be in the Admissions Office's new approach to minority recruitment. Rather than recruit culturally diverse sthdents who may not 111 in, they recruit a statistically different but culturally homogeneous student body. The ideal minority is one that looks different but shares the same socio-economic and cultural backgrounds as everyone else at Penn. An alternative to Porter and Stetson's anti-attrition policy is best exemplified by the PennCap, Act-101 program. This program provides its participants with a broad range of seri ices to make the adjustment to life at Penn easier. While initially intended as a support mechanism for lowerincome, first generation college students from Pennsylvania, it has been expanded to include people from other areas. PennCap has enjoyed wonderful success. Although it is not old enough to compile much aggregate data, it seems as if the retention rale for participating students approximates that of the white mainstream community at Penn Obviously, PennCap is doing something right. The administration should take a look at what it is doing and incorporate its strategies into While there is no research on why minorities leave Penn, there are the sentiments of those who have left. Friends and acquaintances of mine have given different reasons for leaving. But all had one thing in common: they hated Penn. eluded from — any of the existing social structures. When minorities do begin to interact with people like themselves in an environment in winch they are com foi table, the white community reacts displeasurably to their segregation. Such institutions are not encouraged. On the other hand, white fraternities enjoy the respect and the encouragemnt of the campus, despite the blatant religious University-wide programs for minorities and socio-economic disadvantaged students. Otherwise, it should step aside and let people who have a grasp of the needs of all students run the University. Pedro Ramos, a College senior, is a columnist for The Daily Pennsylvanian. Muevete appears alternate Wednesdays. Jesse jackson Race relations at the University have allegedly sunk to new lows, and the Black Student League has taken a lot of blame for riling things up. But this interpretation of events is far too one-sided; some recent vile conduct by myself and two of my newspaper colleagues justifies any bad impressions the BSL may have of the white ■Penn community. The matter concerns the scandalous appearance of three of your friends at the DP, covering Jesse Jackson's speech on Sunday, November 2. Collectively, photo Ross editor Tommy Leonardi. reporter Kerber "^^^^™""^^" Robert Pasnau and myself lowered the standards of dress at the event by about 30 percent. Some background: thinking I would drift over to Jackson later, I began the day sitting in the newsroom trying to come up with some more synonyms for "nifty" so I could complete my record review. But under the impression that Pasnau wasn't there, an editor asked me to get the story. How to explain the rush, this news addiction? There is no adrenaline kick to compare to hearing of something to be covered; GET THE STORY scream all your neurons. Everything, everything gets dropped as you grab phones and start barking. Nobody is going to stand in your way, for you are the almighty fourth estate. Protector of the public interest. And if Leonardi and that crumb-bum Pasnau couldn't shake themselves out of whosever bed(s) they were occupying from the night before, well, all the better, that's their story lo beat them on. Grab a notebook, charge down the stairs and push your way confidently past people who've been waiting, for an hour to hear Jackson speak. You are the press, dammit! "Out of my way!" Anyhow, Leonardi was looking his usual, the "I can't believe I'm not sleeping" look of the grungy T-shirt wiih the grungy real shirt over it and boxer shorts. (Although he denies the boxers, claiming they were only wellwashed fatigues since he needs the pockets.) Pasnau did better — long pants and a sweater — but his military-surplus overcoat defeated whatever effect he might have managed. And there's not much to say for my own journogrub — sweatshirt, cutoffs and shower thongs. NBWi WtLPINO A uw*. FAT HOMUY PKXON 15 fWCHW HMUPON / True, Tommy would have covered the Pope in the same shorts, and maybe Pasnau was just cold and maybe I was in a hurry. It was a disgusting spectacle, reminding me once again that journalism is the process of buying paper at two cents a pound and selling it at 10 cents. "The nattering nabobs of negativism," Spiro Agnew called the press. Yeah, I agree. Sorry. So with this explanation, will everybody please lay off the newspaper and whatever faction they believe is their enemy? My number is 243-5457. Call me if you want to bitch. • Dinginess aside, I was able to ask Jackson whether the African National Congress deserved U.S. support. I asked him this on his way out, having heard him speak of his trip to South Send Us Mail The Daily Pennsylvanian welcomes comment from the University community in the form of columns and letters to the editor. Signed columns, letters and cartoons appearing on this page represent the opinions of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the DP Board of Managers. Please limit letters to iwo typewritten pages. The DP reserves ihe right to condense all letters. Send all material to Craig Coopersmith. editorial page editor. The Daily Pennsylvanian, 4015 Walnut Street, Philadelphia. PA 19104. T-,, fc JIlMi, those who advocate burning suspected collaborators to death. Making our government realize that it must deal with the ANC in some capacity is one of the few remaining contributions the nation's campuses can make to the plight of South Africa. Two things happen the longer we don't — the more chaotic the situation gets as we increase the militants' credibility and the less likely the inevitable ANC-influenced government will be to regard the U.S. as an ally. 1 mention the ANC because the University has some prestige to regain, after the Trustees' refusal to help South Africa by not divesting. The divestment argument was effectively removed from the campus arena the moment GM and IBM announced they were pulling out last month. From now on, companies which withdraw from South Africa ZUA/MfOR ANeptm / 'They say that tying in sports is like kissing your sister. The fact that /Harvard/ celebrated /after a 29-29 tie with Yale in 1968] just proves something that I've always felt about Harvard people.' Yak running back Ross Kerber, a College sophomore, is a staff member of The Daily Pennsylvanian. Keats and Yeats On Your Side appears alternate Wednesdays. JEFFREY GOLDBERG. EXECUTIVE EDITOR FEUPE ALBUQUERQUE. MANAGING EDITOR JEFFREY METCALF. BUSINESS MANAGER CRAIG COOPERSMITH. EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR RUTH MASTERS ALISON FELDMAN NEWS EDITOR Assoc MANAGING EDITOR ROBERT CHASEN TOMMY LEONARDI FINANCIAL MANAGER ED GEFEN SPORTS EDITOR CHRISTOPHER DOWNEY 34TH STREET EDITOR SUE JUNG FEATURE EDITOR LESLIE BRA UN STEIN AD LAYOUT DIRECTOR Quotation of the Day will be following their corporate peers instead of their academic ones. By failing to add its voice to the drive to divest, Wharton lost a piece of whatever claim it can make on being the country's leading business school. They could not have divested stocks on their own, but the Wharton community made no attempt to influence University policy on the matter. If Wharton were as pragmatic as it claims, somebody (a student group, a faculty coalition, a band of graduate students) would have argued for divestment on the grounds that it was predictable their example would have been followed by IBM, GM, etc. Or, if the Wharton community thoughi that divestment was a flawed policy, they should have used their knowledge of the coming pullouts to buttress the moral arguments against divestment. But their never was a "Wharton" position. It was a nonissue. The University's failure means thai we owe the people of South Africa whatever extra weight we denied the divestment cause. 1 am not the person to demand this because I don't live in a shantytown patrolled by tanks, and I don't have to carry a passbook to visit my friends at Haverford. But Bishop Tutu asked us to divest, and he does know shantytowns and tanks and passbooks. I trust his judgment on the matter more than I trust the Trustees'. The Wharton school obviously doesn't control investments independently from the University, so they cannot be blamed for not divesting. But they had more to lose on the question than the College did. So did they lose something? Did the country's leading business school miss a question of university financial policy of such significance? Of course it didn't; Harvard partially divested. • Maybe Jackson didn't answer my question about the ANC because I was just another reporter in shower thongs on a gloomy Sunday in Philadelphia. But now that the University has lost on divestment, we should be thinking about how we can make it easier for our leaders to raise one more issue. One more issue before they all become academic. %\\t ^atlrj Pemtoglhrntimt MARKETING DIRECTOR — Former Calvin Hill. r,-" Africa and describe the need for solidarity with the struggling peoples of the region. 1 wanted to hear his thoughts on U.S. policy for the region. Jackson looked right through me and got into his car. Can we blame him? Taking a stand on such an issue poses impossible political calculations for the most popular and effective leader of the black community. South Philadelphia needs Jesse Jackson; how can he be expected to open himself to attacks by kooks like Ed Meesc and Pat Robertson by supporting the ANC? The ANC has always been a political as well as a military organization. Nelson Mandela is in jail because the South African government is afraid of the popular support he draws to the organization. His absence, and the refusal of western governments to recognize the group, has given credibility to more militant leaders of the ANC — those who arcwilling to attack civilian targets and DEBRA WARSHAWSKY mrr... NO. irs <A/ST THE siAff CARtootiisr urns mm* I mssep m peAPt-iNt FOR TOP/trS COMIC /HP tHSY RAN AN AP FOR A ^HOOVER VAC-Wti \MfT9rVKe.. Tommy Leonardl/Daily Pennsylvanian South Philadelphia needs Jesse Jackson; how can he be expected to open himself to attacks by kooks like Ed Meese and Pat Robertson by supporting the ANC? BLOOM COUNTY/Berke Breathed LaxMOi&FtArrHe and Beyond STACYASHER PRODUCTION MANAGER ABIGAIL ABRASH Assoc 34TH STREET EDITOR Copynghl 1966 The Dairy Pennsylvanian Inc No pan thereof may to reproduced m any lorm. in wtiota or m pan. without Ihe written consent ol the Business Manager The Board ol Managers ot The Daily Pennsylvanun has sole authority lor the content of the newspaper No other parlies are m any way responsible tor the content ol the newspaper and al inquiries concerning that content should to drtaed to the Board ol Managers at the address when follows PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR THOMAS HILL SPORTS EDITOR WENDYFREUND SALES MANAGER PATRICIA KIRUN CITY EDITOR ROBERT GORIN CREDIT MANAGER ROBBIE STEEL SPECIAL PROJECTS EDITOR ROBYN VOSHARDT PRODUCTION MANAGER CAROLYN WENNBLOM Assoc 34TH STREET EDITOR The Daily Pennsytvaman is published Monday through Fnday al Philadelphia. PA during the ral «nd ipnng semesters, and weekly during summer sessions, eicept during examination and vacation periods Third class postage paid at Philadelphia. PA 19104 Subscriptions may be ordered tor $40.00 per academic year at 401S Walnut Street. PhaedelPna. PA 19104 Display and classified advertising may to placed at Ihe same address Business (215) 8984581. News (215) 898-6565 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIA* — Wednesday November 12. 1986 PAGI 7 HAPPY HOUR Hey, boys and girls! Do you know what lime it is? It's prc-registration time! (Chorus, to the tune of "Howdy Doody•')//•$ pre-regisiralion time/It's pre-regisiralion lime/It's not just any time/It's preregistration time! Yes, it's that wonderful, fun-filled time of year when your current classes are beginning to get on your nerves, and you're thinking about all the mistakes you've made that you swear you won't make next semester. You sit down wi'h your course description book, your class roster and the supplemental roster, along with the notes you have from your Hey Kids — It's Pre-registration Time biggie. The last one. The last chance to take all those courses you've wanted to take for so long but were too busy trying to fulfill your requirements to do so. The last chance to take a course with the professor whom everyone told you that you must take before graduating. The last time you have to wait in line at 8 a.m. for a permit stamp for a class you'll probably end up dropping anyway. And for some of us seniors, it's the beginning of the last semester of classes, exams and homework before we go out into "the real world." So now you're saying, "Gosh, when you put it like that, this sounds like pretty serious stuff. I guess I'd better think about this prcregistration thing a little more. If this is my last chance, whatever shall I take?" Well, to help you out, I've done an extensive, expensive, statistically accurate market research survey of ti You've got to wake up early and wait in line forever just to get the stamp." "The person in line in front of you always gets the last spot.M "/ got my own rubber stamp made up: no more waiting in lines for me." last meeting with your academic advisor three years ago. "Let's see now. What do I need to take to graduate?" For seniors, this pre-registration period is extra special. This is the seniors past, present and future. One hundred (plus or minus 96) seniors surveyed, the question is: "What criteria are most important in choosing courses for senior year?" The survey says (with selected responses): •Don't take any Friday classes. "Friday is a weekend day." "Can't go to class with a hangover." "Friday classes? Out of the question." •Don't take any classes that meet be/ore a reasonable hour. "Noon's the cut-off. I can't think before noon." "10:30 is okay twice a week, if you don't have class on Friday, which really goes without saying." "Can't get out of bed if you party all night." "COS is the best way to start the day." •Always leave room in your schedule to meet friends for lunch. "There is nothing more important than sleep or food." "1 like to meet Marcy at Skolnik's on Wednesdays." •Don't take any class whose final exam is during the last few days of exam week, or two classes with final exams on the same day. "By the end of finals week, you want to be out partying in preparation for Senior Week." "My birthday's during finals. I won't take a class with a final on my birthday." •Take a class with a friend. "This is the last chance to see each other before we go off to live in different cities." "I'm taking Biochem 1044 just to take a class with my housemate." "We alternate class days and share our notes so that we only have to go to class half the time." •Don't take a course where you need a permit stamp. "You'vegotto wake up early and wait in line forever just to gel the stamp." "The person in line in front of you always gets the last spot." "I got my own rubber stamp made up: no more Adam Gordon/Daily Pennsytvanian waiting in lines for me." •Look for classes which meet only two hours per week. "It cuts down on your time in the classroom." "Upper level, but easier to deal with." •Don 1 take courses during good TV shows. "I had to drop a COS course because it conflicted with 'Moonlighting.' You can bet I'll never make that mistake again." "Partridge Family' at 9:30 a.m.. •Family Ties' at 10. Then, we'll talk about classes." Did not get the two votes necessary to make the survey results: •Take a class btCttUM you want to learn about that subject. One more note, all you preregistration aficionados. When planning your schedule, it often helps to see the schedule -maker's perspective. A few things to keep in mind: •If you've been waiting for three years to take a particular course, and this is your last chance, (hen it's not being offered this semester •If you must take a course 10 fulfill a requirement, then it's only offered at 9 a.m. Once you've planned your semoi \cai cIlSl schedule, it's lime to schedule the really important Mufl I el's see Mondav night, we'll go to I he l.iseni, luesd.iss at Smokes. Wednesday nighl is O'Piib, rhunda) is O'Mata's Saloon and then the weekend begins Remember, we have to keep our priorities straight. 1.aura Trtcl. u College senior, is a former associate business manager o/The Daily I'ennsyKanian. Happy Hour appears alternate H cdncsdavs. The Dean Responds By Robert Marshak 1 write to provide a point by point response to Dr. David Kronfeld's column headlined "Vet School Cover Up" (DP, 10/28/86). •The allegation that I knew that Veterinary faculty at New Bolton Center (NBC) were violating the school's ban on hunting is a misrepresentation. Dr. Kronfeld states that he had complained to me "for over 20 years about the vacillatory policy of declaring NBC a wildlife sanctuary then letting a few favorites go hunting." 1 deny this allegation. NBC's no hunting policy, the result of a resolution I drafted and presented to the faculty, has not been in effect for 20 years. I began to reside at NBC in 1966, exactly 20 years ago. I lived there for a number of years, probably no less than five, before my resolution to create a wildlife sanctuary was presented to the faculty. On only one occasion did Dr. Kronfeld say anything to me about an alleged hunting violation. It was a relatively recent story about a deer apparently shot just off campus that was alleged after flight to have fallen dead on New Bolton Center ground (see my letter to the DP published on October 8, 1985). Dr. Kronfeld admits that, "I, for one, have never seen a person shoot an animal at NBC, so I never really knew." Never really knowing, Dr. Kronfeld nevertheless alleges to have "complained many times to have complained to Dr. Marshak for over 20 years." This is not to say that violations may not have occurred. But no one came forward, even anonymously, to blow the whistle on offenders. Since 1973, my base of operations has been in Philadelphia, some 35 miles distant from the NBC campus; however, while still in residence at NBC, 1 reprimanded and chased off a faculty member when I thought that he and some friends were planning to hunt on campus property. On a few other occasions, I asked strangers in hunting gear and carrying rifles to leave the campus. •Dr. Kronfeld's anecdote about hunting in the vicinity of my former residence at NBC misrepresents the situation. Soon after NBC's no hunting policy had been adopted, hunters constructed a blind in a field adjacent to New Bolton Center property in sight of my house. When 1 came out to confront them, I was informed that our neighbor had given permission to hunt on his property. In effect, I was told to mind my own business. Since hunting in Pennsylvania is legal, nothing beyond a strong protest was possible. •Dr. Kronfeld's statement about NBC lacking the status of a "registered" wildlife sanctuary is misleading. Leaving aside the fact that the Commonwealth abandoned years ago the registration of privately-owned This is not to say that violations may not have occurred. But no one came forward, even anonymously, to blow the whistle on offenders. wildlife sanctuaries, the school's policy on hunting, no less than any other school policy, is binding on every member of the faculty. No university or school, including the Veterinary School, operates on any other premise. •Dr. Kronfeld's allegations that I approved and then disowned the NBC Wildlife Resources Committee misrepresents the facts. I had nothing to do with the appointment of the Wildlife Resources Committee. It is neither necessary or customary to consult the dean on the formation at NBC of committees which deal with local matters. Dr. Kronfeld in his column states that a tenured faculty member "originally proposed the concept of the com- mittee and its functions to the associate dean for NBC." But, if the Associate Dean for New Bolton Center had sought my approval to establish such committees, I would have given it gladly because at substantial cost to the school, geese in the many hundreds were destroying crops and inflicting serious environmental damage. I would not have agreed, however, to the list of members. There was insufficient representation (only one professor), and the committee was less than sufficiently representative of divergent points of view. In their wildlife management proposal, the committee recommended the trapping of fox, raccoons, opossums and musk iat s. and the hunting of geese, doves, squirrels and deer. In a phone conversation with the Associate Dean in late 1984, I agreed to a proposal to allow highly restrictive hunting of geese only, aimed at scaring off the huge flocks that were feeding voraciously on our cultivated fields. It was an unwise decision. Fortunately, 1 rescinded it before any hunting could begin. Dr. Kronfeld states that he warned me about "incongruities" at a monthly meeting of the department chairmen prior to the fall 1985 faculty and overseers meetings. In 1985 I attended one, at the most two, meetings of chairmen, and I have been assured by the chairmen that, while the hunting issue did come up at one of their sessions, I was not present. The chairmen are in unanimous agreement mat Dr. Kronfeld's claim to have "warned" me is false. •Dr. Kronfeld's comment on my response to a Since hunting in Pennsylvania is legal, nothing beyond a strong protest was possible. Wildlife Management Committee recommendation misses the point. At a meeting on October 16, 1985. the faculty authorized me to appoint a comprehensive committee to study the problems of wildlife management at New Bolton Center. Thus, on November 18, I appointed a committee consisting of five professors and three staff personnel. Dr. Kronfeld reports accurately that I rejected the Committee's proposal to employ a consulting ecologist to study the whole ecosystem at New Bolton Center, but he neglects to mention that the proposed study had a price tag of $10,000. that the central problem is crop destruction due to geese overpopulation and that however interesting it would be to learn more about NBC's ecosystem, the proposed study was a broad and general one, unlikely to yield concrete recommendations for protecting the fields. In my judgment, the school can ill afford to spend $10,000 on a study that does not address the central problem. •Dr. Kronfeld's final allegation that there is a "most striking conflict" between the original Wildlife Resource Committee's story and the dean's story about "his involvement or noninvolvement" with the Committees is a misrepresentation. Unfortunately, I was not present at the NBC faculty/staff meeting in question, but it is hard to imagine that members of the Wildlife Resource Commitee could have claimed that the dean was in anyway "involved" with them. I did not appoint the Committee. I was not consulted about its membership, nor did I meet or speak with any committee member before or during their deliberations. Most likely, the Committee reported on my unfortunate approval to hunt geese, information they could only have gotten directly from the Associate Dean. A story on the latter issue has already appeared in The Daily Pennsytvanian. I haven't denied it, while pointing out that my decision to lift the ban was rescinded before any hunting took place. Robert Marshak is the dean of the Veterinary School. Letters to the Editor Reader Chides Coopersmith for Being Insecure To the Editor: Once again. The Daily Pennsytvanian has chosen to publish in its pages a column denouncing every other Ivy League school in Craig Coopersmith's "A Tale of Eight Bands" {DP. 11/7/86). Ironically, this embarrassing anthology of groundless accusations presented itself in the context of an argument decrying the use against Penn of the very same sorts of epithets (or maybe I should say "moronic statements about how another Ivy school doesn't count"). This time, the attack focused primarily on Princeton. Last year's target was Yale. Although last year I felt compelled to resist the temptation to respond (1 admit to a conflict of interest), I cannot allow this apparently perennial event again to pass without comment. It strikes me as very odd that every time a football rival says something negative about Penn, some DP columnist feels compelled to present a grand defense of this university, a defense amounting to little more than an exercise in name-calling. It appears that no football rival should be permitted to poke fun at Penn, although it is no breach of protocol for the DP to publish on its front page a photo of Penn students displaying a banner that reads "Yale was my safety school." Why is it that other Ivy schools do not react to similar jibes in the same way that Penn does? I write to pose one hypothesis: it seems that other Ivy schools are better able to place these antagonistic remarks in their proper context. Derogatory cheers, banners and buttons are part and parcel of college rivalry. It is unfortunate that Craig Coopersmith takes these college-rival "attacks" to heart. To do so is but a manifestation of Mr. Coopersmith's own insecurity about his school. The comments hurt only because he suspects, however irrationally, that they might be true. If Penn is a second-rate Ivy League school, it is so only because people like Mr. Coopersmith believe that it is so. When people like him have confidence enough to let all of the "safety school" jokes slide by, then this university will have attained the prominence that it richly deserves. paper," also last spring. Mr. O'Sullivan may not have seen your newspaper's regular reports on the progress the College has been making in connection with plans to revamp our distributional requirements. The judgment that we should consider revisions very seriously followed careful analyses of detailed data that prove his, our and SCUE's points about the present requirement's problematic qualities. And, with faculty endorsement, we will be on the way to the solution Mr O'Sullivan appears to endorse! We hope, precisely, to build ". . .a generalized foundation for the more specialized major." And the watchwords, right along, have been "diversity," "structure" and "coherence," terms echoed in Mr. O'Sullivan's helpful commentary. RICHARD L. GABRIEL Law School '87 IVAR BERG Associate Dean, College Toothsome Eggs and B.' Lauded by Associate Dean To the Editor: 1 much appreciated Mr. Michael O'Sullivan's critique of the College's present program (DP, 11/3/86); it squares perfectly with misgivings expressed last April by our School's Standing Committee on Undergraduate Education in its report to the faculty. His misapprehensions about the status quo also match those expressed very cogently, if more sympathetically, by Mr. O'Sullivan's fellow students in SCUE's "white Resources Here are several resources on campus and in the city for people who need advice, help or just someone to talk to: University Counseling — 898-7021 Student Health — 662-2860; after 5 p.m. and weekends — 662-2354 University Chaplain — 898-8456 Philadelphia Suicide Hotline — 686-4420 The Penn Women's Center — 898-8611 Gay and Lesbian Peer Counseling Service — 898-8888 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN — Wednesday. November 12. 1986 PAGE « National board to review unionization bid HAIR'S The News . . . A good i ut is everything when it comes to hassle-free hairstyUng. Hair we do the newest ways to wear your hair—whether it's long, short, or somewhere in-between. I $10 off* on Blow cuts TJiru // IfKfi 2208 Walnut St. 567-2640 iroipcii „ £fcvA** Wed., Thurs., Fri. 10 am - 7 pm Sal. 10 am - 5 pm 1 B> CHUCK COHEN University unwillingness to recognize an attempt by Faculty Club employees to unionize has stalled the process, pending the involvement of the National Labor Relations Board. "We have to see how it unfolds under the auspices of the National Labor Relations Board," Human Resources Director George Budd said. On Monday, approximately 20 club employees presented Faculty Club Manager David Cantor with a petition stating their intent to organize. Federal labor law states thai management is not required to recognize a union until a case is filed with the NLRB and the union can prove that a majority of the employees are in favor of organization. Patrick Coughlan, business agent for Local 274 of Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees International Union, said that the union plans to wait a few days before going to the NLRB. "We're going to put that on hold for a couple days," Coughlan said. "I think it's fair to give the University a couple days to respond rather than start with unfair labor practice charges." Coughlan said that the petition, which was signed by at least 30 of the 47 workers, demonstrates the union's employee support. "In my mind, a majority has already been proven to them," • Coughlan said. At this point, neither the union nor the administration anticipates a strike by club employees. Budd said that he had not yet seen the petition but was surprised by the employees' move to unionize. "We had heard a grumbling, but no specifics," he said. "But this came as a surprise." He added that the University must work carefully to ensure the employees' rights. "This is very serious in the sense that the rights of employees must be protected," Budd said. "Both management and labor have an obligation to protect those rights." "My job is to protect the employees' rights in the matter, to protect the University [and) to make sure the law is followed," he added. Should club employees succeed in their unionization drive, they will be the first group of University employees to organize in 15 years. The employees' complaints include low wages and unfair working conditions. They claim that the gratuity charge added to each club bill is not equitably distributed to employees and that some workers are given too much work. But Hospitality Services Director Don Jacobs yesterday denied charges that club employees are underpaid. "My belief is that we are paying competitive wages right now," Jacobs said. "We have University benefits. It's not only the dollar figure that enters into negotiations." "The important thing to us is that the employees know that we have their interests at heart." he added. "It concerns me as a manager that individuals feel they need a union." Students plan magazine to focus on the College (Continued from page I) Originally turned down last month by the Student Activities Council Finance committee, the Collegian won final approval on appeal at last week's SAC meeting. "The primary reason we turned down their proposal was funding." SAC Finance Committee member Steve Alloy said. "SAC has already used all but S4000 of its $40,000 contingency fund for the semester." The Collegian requested four issues at S2S16 per issue including S46S for color form — a highlighting process — and $200 for mechanical graphics. SAC could not provide all the monies requested since it does not fund technical production costs. After approval from SAC, a compromise deal for approximately $2000 with a $500 loan was struck for their spring trial issue. But Sprigman said in order for the Collegian to be a viable competitor, it I c&* An Extraordinary Opportunity Meet world-renowed anthropologist and author «8* L* must produce four issues per semester. "If we don't have at least four issues, we'll drop from the face of the earth." he said, adding that having four issues a year will also maintain the interest of their current writers and draw in new ones. PASSPORT PHOTOS I NOW 2 for only $6.50 | 111S. 40th St. 222-4145 wrth this coupon Exp. 12/31/86 N€W & US€D Rug Cleaning* Remnants* Wall to Wall All sizes, colors, ond patterns Louauja\i and delivery service available JANE GOODALL, PhD and other national child development experts at a day-long conference IN SEARCH OF MAN: Behavioral Development in Infancy and Adolescence in Chimpanzee and Man Friday, November 14, 1986 at the Dunfey City Line Hotel Save 20% on Cash & Carry Rug Cleaning Serving U of P students for over 50 years H. INJAIAN & SONS (Public Rug Cleaners) 42nd & Chestnut Sts. Daily 9-5 Sat. 10-5 386-4345 Open til 7 Wed. C$ S3 S Cttcfct AfC«pt*d Looking for something different to do? VOLUNTEER!!! Opportunities in law, medicine, counseling, tutoring, childcare, and many, many other fields! Plan now for next semester. Visit Penn Extension, the student volunteer center, at 115 Houston Hall. To register, or for more information, please contact Kathleen Rellstab, program coordinator, at 427-5159 or 5169. Fee: $100; $50 for students with valid ID Poor Richard's Record The Yearbook of the University of Pennsylvania, would like to announce Senior Portrait Sittings for Sponsored by St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Department of Pediatrics, Temple University School of Medicine and The William M. Clements Foundation. December 1986 Graduates during the week of November 17th. Call 898-8720 or stop by 3933 Walnut St. to sign up. Funded by SAC | PACT 9 THE DAILY PKNNSYLVANIAN - Uedn*<ula>. Wrmhcr 12. 19*6 Informal seminars for frosh approved By LISA S. SMITH Administrators reacted favorably to a Student Committee on Undergraduate Education proposal that calls for the creation of informal seminars to provide freshmen with a unifying experience. One hundred and fifty freshmen will participate next fall in the noncredit Provost Smith Seminars on Exploring Society. Each seminar will meet twice during New Student Week and then once weekly for the first four weeks of the semester, with each session lasting one hour. SCUE Chairman Lynn Parseghian said yesterday that this pilot program, if successful, will form the basis for a program designed for all freshmen. Parseghian met yesterday with President Sheldon Hackney and Assistant to the President Nicholas Constan to discuss the implementation of the seminars. Parseghian said they were "enthusiastic" about the proposal and agreed that the seminar program should be adopted if successful. administrators. "With the Penn traditions. IHackney) recommended ap"We had a look at implcmenta- *» proaching them from a critical tion," she said. "We will talk to perspective and not just accepting undergraduate deans and the Provost them at face value," she said. [Thomas Ehrlich], then we'll invite And Constan said last night that faculty members to be on a planning "we agreed that the object |of the committee." seminars] is to get everyone thinking, but not necessarily thinking a certain The planning committee will work way." out the specifics of the pilot program, such as recruiting this year's juniors He said (hat the sessions should not and setting up training sessions for just provide facts about the Universifuture seminar leaders. ty, such as collegiate traditions, but should also explain the "whys" The seminars will be based on six behind them. He added that certain topics, chosen because of their relevance to the freshman class and topics, especially those dealing with the University. The "discussion altered states, must be dealt with modules" include Altered States of "very carefully because we have people coming from different Perception, Media, Penn Traditions, backgrounds and having different Ethics, Why Are You Here? and Art. perceptions." Parseghian said that some "small problems with the topics," were Letters will be mailed to the Class discussed during her meeting with the of 1991 in early summer, inviting them to take part in the seminars. "I'm very optimistic." Parseghian said. "1 don't think there'll be much of a problem getting freshmen to participate because the first time it's gonatives to see if there are other ways it can be done," Bloom said. "It's not like this proposal is set in stone." Certain Traditions ing to be an exclusive kind of thing And it's not requiring a vast number of people to make it work." "But we realize that a-, a trial run, we'll have a lot to learn from the first time out," she added. Parseghian also said thai SCUI ll working on incentives to encourage juniors to apply for the non-salaried seminar leader positions. "We*W discussing the possibility of some kind of indication on their transcript under the 'action' column." she said. "And of course there's the obvious incentive of building your resume " According to University Council Steering Committee and Undergraduate Assembly member Wendy Bloom, there is some movement to form alternatives to certain aspects of the proposals. "People are looking for alter- are always Also on Council's agenda are the recommendations of the Ad Hoc Committee to Review Fall Break and a discussion of undergraduate admissons. in style For Kxamplc. Careers in Non-Profit and Social Change Organizations Penn Alumni will apeak .ibuut employment In: • Museums • Advw .K i/ organization* • Service organizations Wednesday. November 12 7-9 PM Ben Franklin Room Houston Hall All Welcome Sign up with Kathleen in Houston Hall DAEDALUS EDUCATION ! SERVICES Have YOU satisfied the FOREIGN LANGUAGE KKQU1KEMENT? Preregister now before it's too late. foA - REMEMBER - it is impossible to complete neglected language courses after the beginning of the senior year Accordingly it is incumbent upon YOU to build Sexual harassment changes (Continued from page I) Other administrators, such as Senior Vice President Helen O'Bannon, declined to comment on the proposals until University Council has entirely concluded its discussion. PENNIES FROM HEAVEN your unfulfilled language courses into your course schedule during preregistratlon It is obviously impossible to complete the language requirement when it is left until the end of your stay at Penn. *&' A 'lost » IIS Class Iti..I.! Everyday in The meeting, which is open to the University community, will be held in room 351 of Steinberg-Dietrich Hall at 4 p.m.. I lu- Bookstore, 10 am - 2 |»m BORCD ftFT€R MIDT€ftMS? HILL coLLecie House 7ke CMM§ ALUMNI seoes fititxti INFLU€NC€ P€NN'S FUTUR€ mi GiimmCc c w Q Join the many committee representatives and Let your opinions be heard by faculty and administrators _. i. .* ri*i u—IOM —J BM i ,,..'.*•. t~,-tU l*,J*,tu4^«n* cecruKf 6etiw%ftfoor iNTrteTkofc POSITIONS ON: HOIAI LieetAL AttS &RAl\iAie&. (AN> CTM&& 0*1 STAtnTt> IN Student Health Advisory Board "Vou are Here at Penn" LUharton Computing Search Committee for a new Director of Student Life Lippincott library Library VxreNoveMBetzi3THURSPAS Applications available starting Tues.. Nov. 11 Due Thurs.. Nov. 13 Interviews on Sun., Nov. 16 Come to the UA/NC-C Office 1st Floor Houston hall Hours: 11 am to 4 pm ptAceniu House 3333 WALNUT ST ALL STUD6NTS W€lCOM€ FOR MOR€ INFORMATION CALL 898-8908 » 3 nKidder, Peabody fir Co. Certain traditions are always in style. liII|ii.!i!"»wiiiliiiiiMii! IIMlM liiiiU Inrnrnoralpct Incorporated cordially invite* you to attend an ";|illll| <i|j||||!i Informational Meeting to discuss the two-year r i' See the full selection of Jostens rings i in dis] >l;iy in v< >ur college bookstore And see your Jostens representative at Corporate Finance Associate Intern Program Bookstore Jostens Ring Counter 3J — Payment plans available 0196 Ini JOSTENS AMERICAS Monday - Friday 10 am-2 pm Bookstore Jostens Ring Counter COLLEGE RING'" $20 deposit Thursday, November 13 7:00 p.m. Bodek Lounge in Houston Hall THE DAILY PKNNSYLVANIAN - Wednesday. November 12. 1986 This holiday season, get the'We Stuff' at the right price. Now you can get the competitive edge when classes begin in January With a Macintosh™ personal computer, and all the urite extras We call it the Macintosh "Write Stuff" bundle. You'll call it a great deal' Because when you buy a Macintosh "Write Stuff bundle before January 9, 198?, you II receive a bundle of extras—and save $250 Not only will you get your choice of a Macintosh S12K Enhanced or a Macintosh Plus, you'll also get an Image writer'1 II printer, the perfect solution for producing near letter-quality term papers or reports, complete with graphs, charts, and illustrations. Plus, you'll get Macl.ightning, the premier spelling checker containing an 80,000 word dictionary thesaurus, medical or legal dictionaries. Together with your favorite Macintosh word processing software, you can transform your notes into the clearest, most letter perfect papers you ever turned out. And turned in on time What's more, there's a Macintosh Support Kit tilled with valuable accessories and computer care products from 3M.* Complete with all the things you need to keep your Macintosh running long after you've graduated. PACT 10 UA backs admissions diversity Will bring resolution before U. Council By DENA GITTF.LMAN The Undergraduate Assembly passed a resolution calling for the University to maintain and further build upon its admissions policy, which currently sanctions many acceptances on the basis of diversity factors. The UA representatives on University Council will present the statement at this week's council meeting. The council Committee for Undergraduate Admissions and Financial Aid is expected to recommend that the University deemphasize diversity and further stress academic standards. Current standards are based upon the McGill report, a University statement issued in 1967 that outlines percentages of admissions to be based on non-academic standards. UA Chairman Eric Lang explained this week that the council committee feels that by basing admissions on diversity, the University is ignoring academic standards. But the UA statement calls for the University to continue consideration of diversity in its admissions policy. "he committee] is saying that the University, in order to achieve geographic diversity, is ignoring traditional standards of excellence." Lang said. "Basically, what this statement is saying is this is what the undergraduates think of admissions." The UA also discussed sexual harassment at the University, focusing on specific proposals made in the report issued by the ad hoc Universin Council Committee on Sexual Harassment. The report calls for the ombudsman to keep centralized records of sexual harassment reports. UA meniKtdebated using the ombudsman for this purpose in light of his position as a neutral party. In other business, the UA passed a resolution recommending that the University make fall break a permanent occurrence and approved a motion commending President Sheldon Hackney's South African Educational Initiatives proposal. The president's proposal calls for student and faculty exchange programs between the University and South African institutions. Public Safety Committee Cochairman Aram Nadcll announced that he has made arrangements with Ed Ryals, a policeman with Philadelphia's 18th precinct, to go to off-campus houses and offer students security advice. Interested students should call Ryals at 686-3180. ***¥¥¥¥*?*¥*******¥**¥¥¥¥*¥*¥*♦♦************************* It's just amazing how much campus news there is to get in the DP every Let us show you how to get through college better, faster, and smarter Stop in and see us for more information. day! *********************************************************J same day printing Ef overnight typesetting available & OFFSET PRINTING 3" XEROX 9900 B TYPESETTING B RESUMES 9 BUSINESS CARDS 3 BINDING [•* FILM PROCESSING B PASSPORT PHOTOS S STATIONERY state-of-the-art self service & full service xeroxing 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS OPEN MONDAY - FRIDAY 8 AM - 6 PM SATURDAY 10 AM - 4 PM 1 WE HAVE IT ALL !!! 512K Enhanced $1,075 Macintosh Plus $1,450 Imagewriter II $ 474 The Computer Connection 386-6114 3736 WALNUT ST (UNIVERSITY PLAZA) 386-6410 3907 WALNUT ST (NEXT TO BASKIN ROBBlNSl at The Book Store For more information, call 898-3282 "Vffer (««*/ *hit \uff>lia IM I 1996 Kifie I bmpuki />i, Sfpk and Uf VfU logo an rtfftUrtii iruikmurk' <v Kfplt i am/mm. ft* tUKmtab Jtui Inuitetfiler are tnutKfuirk' fAffk Com/mUr h* W.. . . ",,<r» f tuffi W/inin- '"• Learn, „ and tarn Become a Sales Representative for The Daily Pennsylvanian. Experience. If you have an interest in sales, advertising or business in general, we might just have a part time job for you as a member of our advertising Sales Staff. We offer you something you can't get from any classroom — experience. You want it. Employers look for it. And this can be a great way to get it. We're The Daily Pennsylvanian. Penn's 102-year-old student-run daily newspaper, consistently judged one of the top college papers in the United States. Our experience, knowledge, and resources can provide you with professional background and training you'll find invaluable no matter what field you plan to go into. Money. As a member of our Sales Staif, you have the chance to earn substantial income on a commission basis. You can expect to eventually earn several hundred dollars a month. But make no mistake: this is a job, and it requires a commitment of time and effort. And the more of youself you put in. the more experience and earnings you'll get out of it. Act Now. Think about it: who else is offering you the opportunity to meet new people, earn good money, develop valuable new skills — and have a good time doing it? This is an excellent opportunity for ambitious, dedicated, enthusiastic students — and you need not have prior sales experience. We have a limited number of positions available. Introductory Meeting, Wednesday, November 19, at 4:00 on the second floor of The Daily Pennsylvanian Offices, 4015 Walnut Street. Interviews will be held Wednesday, November 19, Thursday, November 20 and Friday. November 21. If unable to attend, call Wendy Freund at 898-6581. Unlock your full potential. A job at The Daily Pennsylvanian can open doors for you. The Daily Pennsylvanian THE DAILY PKNNSY1.VANIAN - Wednesday Notembrr 12. IMJM, Wall Street recruiting (( onlinued from page 1/ "We're probably the broadest nrn relating to an applicant's race, marital ol talent and divert backgrounds and status and national origin. In .ill the hungriest to find talent of any some 22 categories — ranging from firm that you'll find," he said. plans to have children io church Still, Thompson said recruiters arc membership — are forbidden. The often recent college graduates statutes were enacted in an attempt to themselves and are operating under insure thai hiring practices would be the specter of the free-wheeling based only on an individual's abilities. business world. And frequently the Last year's violation of interview glib talk of business luncheons does mg standards by Salomon Brothers not translate well at a university. was considered an isolated incident, "We send people to our college and the student took no legal action campuses who by in large are not proagainst the firm. Salomon Brothers' fessional interviewers," he said. representatives stress that the "They're used to conducting very offunlawful questioning was only the the-record conversations. . .What result of an overzealous interviewer I'm trying to do is raise people's and is not company policy. awareness of the fact thai when they "I think it's unrealistic to think any go to a campus they're speaking to major American company would people that are in an entirely different deny someone employment based on situation than in business." any of those questions that are ilCareer Planning and Placement legal," said Salomon Brothers lalei Associate Director Beverly Hamiltonadministrator John Thompson, who Chandler, who supervises recruiting supervises recruitment and for- ai the Wharton School, said yesterday mulated the new guidelines for the that the University has a clear policy firm. of making students aware of illegal Largely gone, he said yesterday, are quetioning practices. In addition to a the days of "blue-blooded" com- review at general information sespanies seeking a man of the right sions, CPPS makes available a combackground. Salomon Brothers par prehensive list of all unlawful areas of ticularly has a history of recruiting in- questioning. An average of 10 formal Jiwduals capable of turning their raw complaints are filed at CPPS every talent into profits, Thompson said. year. Anderson and construction (Continued from page I) He added that since the new program's implementation, every acedemic building project has been completed on schedule, and Ihe University has saved hundreds of thousands of dollars. Anderson called this cost- and time-efficient approach critical lo the mulli-million dollar building and maintenance campaign the University now faces. "The impact of overrunning on that amount of money would be to affect the quality of life for the University," he said. "Even a 10 percent overrun, which is nol at all unusual in the construction business, would mean an extra $30 million. You're looking at big dollars." "It's easy for us to run the projects by the seat of our pants," he continued. "It's another thing to put it down on paper and lake the responsibility for it, and that's what we're committing to." Since Anderson's arrival, the University has economized through the use of several new contracting strategies. These include fast-track construction, in which time is saved by proceeding with each phase of work before the entire design is complete, as well as the use of construction managers who continually look for ways to save money on a particular construction project. Construction managers, experts in value engineering and constructibilily review, are hired on an individual project basis. Value engineering shaves cost from a facility by replacing "luxury" materials with less costly ones, while constructibility review cuts costs by using fewer man hours than were originally estimated. In addition, Anderson has introduced the use of a computer program which maps out, in a logical sequence, those construction activities that would be affected by project delays or cost overruns. The computer can provide a picture of all future cost and scheduling setbacks to be expected from any problems and the gains io be made through several possible contingency measures. O'Bannon said she feels the managerial rearrangement is the best way to exploit individual abilities. "The University is blessed. . .with two incredibly talented people in John Anderson and Art Gravina, and what I'm trying lo do with this organizational shift is to tap their individual fueling geniuses," O'Bannon said. "I'm trying to play to two huge needs." DIVE INTO THE DP Monday - Friday at 50 campus locations DO-IT-YOURSELF ONLINE LITERATURE SEARCHING IS NOW A VAILABLE DURING THE DA Y ■$4 for 30 minutes ■Penn students only ■Instruction session required flsk at VflN PELT REFERENCE (898-7555) for details. JTl PAGE II nut AREER come to GRADUATE STUDENTS IN ARTS AND SCIENCES, ANNENBERG. AND FINE ARTS McClelland Hall "GET READY TO FIND A JOB" WORKSHOPS • NOV. 12 Job Hunting • NOV. 13 Interviewing skills Coffee Hour every Wednesday night 8:00 to 10:00 retreshments served All 12-1 PM Bishop White Room, Houston Hall Bring Lunch Call X-7530 to sign up II II SELF DEFENSE CLINIC MC CLELLAND HALL, SOUTH LOUNGE QUAD 3700 Spruce Street PONT MISS rilK |KKI SALEM BXKMENCE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1986 7 - 8:30 PM BODINK LOUNGE (Quad) 9:00-11:00 Thursday, November 13th SELF-DEFENSE IS . . . SELF-CONFIDENCE SELF-RESPECT STUDY. WORK & WALK SAFELY Featuring Speaker: Phillip Yakar "Religious Realities in Israel Today" Short Pilm:)erusalem Sights and Sounds SELF-LOVE SPONSORED BY DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY RESIDENTIAL LIVING PENN WOMEN'S CtNTFR PENN WOMEN'S ALLIANI I Live Music and Food Co-Sponsors. Lubavitcfa House and Yavneh Olami | ii t.■.■.«.-.! h LIMITED ENROLLMENT TO RFGISTER CALL 8-4481 or 8-8611 a MI SCHEDULE CHANGE! SCHEDULE CHANGE! for Spring Semester, 1987 ANTHROPOLOGY 103: HUMAN BIOLOGY HAIRCUT 8c BLOW DRY SPECIAL will now be given New Tanning Bed Coming Soon $10.00* TUES.-THURS. 1:30-3:0( JLQQI University Museum. • You mull mention this aa ATTENTION BUSINESS MAJORS! ir-anr sfcmcilta 104 S 21St St 561 7248 INTERNATIONAL INTERNSHIPS Students speak and answer questions about their summer internship experiences On Thursday, November 13th at 7:00 p.m., DREXEL BURNHAM LAMBERT Inc. will be in the Bishop White Room of Houston Hall to make a presentation of their company and employment opportunities in the Internal Audit and Controller's Division. DBL is a leading Investment Bank with more than 9300 employees worldwide. THURSDAY NOVEMBER 13, 1986 Ben Franklin Room - Houston Hall 7:00 PM * Everyone Welcome * * Refreshments Served * Make your reservations,01 Parents Weekend in Philadelphia's newest all-suite hotel. WELCOME PENN PARENTS! WHAT MOVIES WOULD YOU LIKE TO SEE NEXT SEMESTER? Come to PUC's in Philadelphia For reservations call 215-922-1730 or toll free MOVIE SELECTION MEETING QUALITY INN Downtown Suites 800-228-5151 and CHIN MOWN let us know! Wednesday, Nov. 12 at 5:00 Room 301 Houston Hall QUALITY INN Downtown Suites 111(1 MMII nill-nl-l<i\Ml "IK'sts I" llU- 1010 Race Street Philadelphia. PA 19107 si. II hiUn.iliiv place In >la> i" Philadelphia. Qualih Inn Downtown siiiu-s. Windowntown near most "I Phil. nliiaN historic sites. Our iu*« all-suites Quality Inn v DllollU'" . ITS lllilll S i iiisiht. America's Great Lodging Value THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN - We*M «li>. November 12. I9B6 PAGE 12 ARE YOU USING YOUR FULL POTENTIAL? Transcendental Meditation Program Free Introductory Lecture Hs Holiness Mananshi Mahesn Yog Founder of the Transcendental Meditation and TM Sdhi Program Wednesday, Nov. 12 7:30 P.M. Room 305 Houston Hall Success Without Stress in just breakfast! We're more than X WTHMTIOMl HOISi ....... Ouakcrs on offense this year. Tailback Rich Comizio broke Adolph Belli/eare's school record for career rushing yards last Saturday against Lafayette, and both he and Flynn have the opportunity to break Gerry Santini's single-season mark. With two games remaining, Comizio and I I win need 7| and 115 yards, respectively, to break the standard of 880 set in 1968. As a team, Penn needs just 333 more rushing yards to break the school record of 2504 set in 1977. "For the most part, the only times that you get recognition is when something major happens, as in the case of Rich getting his major yards," Huonato said. "The other time you're gonna recognize us is when you make a mistake — the quarterback gets sacked or the back gets nailed behind the line of scrimmage. That's when you gel noticed." That hasn't happened very much INTCRNRTIONRL HOUS6 OF PRNCflK€S (Continued from back page) first-round opponent in the NCAA Tournament. Interestingly, the Harvard team, which faces Penn Friday (7 p.m. on Franklin Field), is composed mostly of foreigners, two of whom — Derick Mills and Stephen Hall — served suspensions when it was learned thai they played a number of professional gaines for an English national team. 1720 Walnut Off RiNenhousc Square Sun til Midnight OP€N 24 HOURS ON W€€K€NDS After some investigation the NCAA rules committee decided to let them play, citing insufficient evidence and reuoninj that the pair had served a sufficient penally. The upcoming match-up may be a good indication of the real state of American soccer, and an Eli victory would be, as Griggs stated, tremendously satisfying to many coaches. "I think the whole thing is disap- UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA/THE PRESIDENT S FORUM 1986 87 ATTENTION GRADUATE AND PROFESSIONAL STUDENTS: THE ANSWER TO YOUR DREAMS "Jit fci^WUA^ ^i^P^jU^^Ct of faU The President s Forum and The Christian Association Sponsor: RESIDENT GRADUATE FELLOWSHIP IN STOUFFER COLLEGE HOUSE SPRING TERM, 1987 RACE, RELIGION AND SOCIAL JUSTICE **^;J** 2nd Floor Auditorium, Christian Association. 3601 Locust Walk I. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 13 4 30 - 5 30pm Dr. Samuel Proctor, Pastor, Abyssinian Baptist Church. New York RELIGION, RACE AND SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY1 THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 20 7 30 - 8 30 p m Dr. James Cone, Charles A Bnggs Protessor of Theology. Union Theological Seminary. New York MARTIN LUTHER KING. JR. AMERICA AS A DREAM?" An Opportunity to Thrive in an Intellectual. Social, Cultural Environment with Penn Faculty, Graduate Students and Undergraduates Free Board Free Room INFORMATION AND APPLICATIONS ARE AVAILABLE FROM: COLLEGE HOUSE PROGRAMS OFFICE High Rise North Upper Lobby 3901 Locust Walk 898-5551 or Ill FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 21 Dr. James Cone •MALCOLM X: AMERICA AS A NIGHTMARE!" 200-300pm STOUFFER COLLEGE HOUSE Reception Desk 3700 Spruce Street (adjacent to the Quadrangle) 898-6827 or 243-6572 This series ol lectures and discussions will locus on the black religious community s important contribution to the struggle against racial preiudice and discrimination and its endeavors to bring about social justice tor all groups in American society DEADLINE: NOVEMBER 30, 1986 Deloitte Haskins Sells ■■ill KESTAURAMT USA MOW Tw/d€ TMe 5FAT5/ In my mind there is no doubt. If I had it to do all over again, I'd make the same decision. Andrew G McMaster, Jr Partner. DH&S Hew York MBA. University ol Pennsylvania. 1976 Coming to work for DH&S was a decision I felt good about, right from the start. The growth opportunities, exposure to a lot of different business environments: all outstanding, better than my original expectations. At DH&S we have always been strong on the quality of our people. And because good people expect your best, you look for every opportunity to give it. On top of that, DH&S has always been in the forefront of technical changes within the profession - this year — 32 times in 574 plays — but there is more than just the actual training aspect that has improved the offensive line. Many other things contribute to the improvement in not only the offensive line, bui also the entire team. "One of the things that I think the Athletic Department and the football coaching staff wanted when they brought Coach Packman in was somebody who was going to bring in a good attitude into the weightroom," Buonato said, "to make people lift weights and work hard. And by the same token, they're going to get somebody in here to make us more athletic, make us more agile and to prevent injury. "The mental approach [to training) has increased 100 percent. The guys want to come in; they want to work; they're not afraid of getting tired while they're working out. That's one aspect. The other aspect is the size, the increase in strength of the players as they've been working." The process hasn't stopped since the season started, though. With practice, there isn't as much time to devote to training as there was in the offseason, but it has continued nevertheless. "That group has stayed with their lifting throughout the season," Zubrow said. "You lose strength if you don't lift during the season. So it's important if you keep working at it, and they have. They work in the weightroom; they work on the field, and they study film. That's all part of what goes into Saturday." "I give Packman credit," Buonato said. "He's been in here; he's been kicking a lot of people's asses and getting them in here and to lift. Whatever it's been to get them in here, they've been in here." Foreign-born soccer players invade U.S. campuses RISUIIUM 7 om - 10 pen Mon -Thur Quakers' offensive line beefs up, speeds up (Continued from back page) Other notable size differences are found when you compare tackle Peterson's numbers. The Sporting News preseason Division l-AA allAmerica now tips the scales at 274. He has added 19 pounds to his 255-pound frame of a year ago. The numbers just keep getting big ger: guard O'Bara has gone from 215 to 242; tight end Scungio has gone from 212 to 233; tight end Novoselsky has gone from 224 to 238. Perhaps the greatest change. Packman noted, was that in sophomore center Tom Gizzi, who came to Penn at a slim 198 pounds. One winter with Packman and Gizzi was up to 238 — and his waist didn't get any bigger. The things that did increase were his speed and his jump. All of those numbers have come together to help produce some other numbers — big numbers — for the sampling techniques, new computer modeling But most important, we've recognized that the whole accounting profession is a changing environment. It's not a numbers game; it's a people profession. It's people, working within a total business environment We're always working as a team directly with clients to help them solve their problems We provide input and advice on tax matters, operations systems, accounting questions - things that really impact the bottom line. There's no question. Ifs an outstanding business career. g^^-rti *•♦»*< I Hcz totnofAMM*. *r«t€T pointing," Griggs said. "After a short time, the good American kids lose interest in the schools that arc going foreign. Many of the coaches that are just going for the foreign players are also involved in coaching in our youth programs. It's hypocriteal; we should only take coaches who are for American kids." Are American coaches, like Harvard's Jonathan Shattuck, betraying their country in favor of personal recognition? On the surface it may seem like they are, but perhaps they are making themselves more qualified to coach American players by trying to work with the best players they can find. "From our standpoint," David Siroty, associate sports information director at seventh-ranked Seton Hall said, "it seems that our American players blend well with our five Irish players. They play such a different game compared to our kids; both sides adapt to the other." "The Americans are very, very skillful and compare favorably to players in Ireland," said Seton Hall's Ian Hennessy, recently voted the Big East's most outstanding player. "The Irish soccer system is a bit more structured and belter organized. Here, we only play a couple times a week for three months. In Ireland, we play one or two times a week all year around. I find that interest in American soccer is very high in college, but not on the professional level. "What would 1 say to a fellow foreign player about playing in America? It's a great place, so come and have a look." Apparently, though, some college soccer coaches are not yet willing to welcome foreign players with completely open arms. Simmons joins Explorers (Continued from back page) other with the same intensity," said new La Salle head coach Bill "Speedy" Morris. "[The Big Five in the Palestra] was a unique and terrific thing, but I'm glad we're still playing." Morris should be glad. Thanks to Dave "Lefty" Ervin's resignation at the end of last season in order to go into business, Morris finally has a chance to be a part of the Big Five after coaching in Philadelphia for 17 years on the high school level (IS at Roman Catholic, two at Penn Charter), and two more as head coach of the women Explorers. "To be a coach in the Big Five is something I'm proud to say I am," Morris said. "I've always been a Big Five fan. At one time or another, I've rooted for each team." There's no question about whom he'll be rooting for this year and in the future, however — and that's La Salle. Though the Explorers finished at 14-14 (1-3 Big Five) last year and lost leading scorer Chip Grecnberg to graduation, they are being labeled as the choice to win their own Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. This is due in no small part to the presence of a second new face beside Morris — 6-6 Lionel Simmons out of Southern HS. Simmons's joining the Big Five being another reason why Big Five fans shouldn't despair, he blitzed Philadelphia high school basketball last year, averaging 32 points and 12 rebounds per game. Widely regarded as the best high school player in the city, Simmons chose not to follow the trail blazed out of town by former Philadelphia high school greats like Gene Banks and Dallas Comegys, remaining in the city instead. "I wanted to stay in the Big Five," Simmons said. "I've been going to the Palestra since I was 10 or II to watch the games, and La Salle just seemed like the place for me to come and play from the start." And start he will if he continues to play the way he has for Morris in practice sessions. "There's no question Lionel is a good player," Morris said. "He's very versatile, can play almost any position on the floor, and if he gets the ball inside, he can score." Morris's only hope is that people don't expect too much from Simmons after hearing so much about him. "He'll start and probably be one of our better players," Morris explained. "Bui people shouldn't expect him to be a franchise, like a Ewing. They have to remember that he's 6-6, not seven feet. "He is going to make some mistakes, learn and improve. But I know his best basketball is ahead of him. He is a very hard worker — great work habits." Part of those work habits have come as a result of Simmons's transition from high school to college basketball. "There's definitely more discipline here," Simmons admitted. "But I want to work hard and earn a spot. All in all (the discipline] is beneficial to the team." For Morris, just having Simmons in an Explorer uniform is beneficial — as it will be for any Big Five fan who hasn't gone hunting in hopes of at least having turkey for Thanksgiving. Smokey Joe's The Pennstitution Since 1933 Entertainment Extravaganza!!! Singer, Composer, Actor, Comedian, Recording Artists PAT GODWIN With His Special Guest America's Fastest Rising Young Comic TODD GLASS All In The Upstairs Cabaret - 1.00 Admission. Plus In The Downstairs Cafe' The Dynamic Dental Duo D.J.'s For Your Dancing Pleasure Plus Peach Fuzzes $1.00 - 10 till 12 Shows Start At 10:00 40th & Walnut 222-0770 IHK DAILY PKNNSYI.VANIAN - MedneMlay. November 12. 1*86 SCOREBOARD NHL WALES CONFERENCE CAMPBELL CONFERENCE Patrick Division W PhilKtotphia 10 PittsOurgh 9 N.Y. Islanders 8 Washington 7 N«w Jersey 6 N.Y. Rangers 3 Quebec Montreal Hartford Boston Buffalo Nornj Division T P GF G* 1 21 59 32 2 20 M 53 1 17 59 46 2 16 55 64 1 13 66 4 10 62 Adams Division w T P 7 4 18 7 3 17 5 3 13 6 1 13 4 9 W 7 7 4 5 4 Toronto Detroit St Louts Minnesota Chicago L T P GF GA 4 3 17 46 44 6 1 15 39 38 5 4 12 42 43 8 2 12 57 60 9 3 11 52 69 Smythe Division W GF 65 58 41 48 GA 54 54 47 51 2 10 55 55 Edmonton Calgary Winnipeg Los Angeles Vancouver L I 10 6 9 7 8 6 5 10 4 10 1 0 1 1 2 P GF GA 21 18 17 11 10 74 58 60 59 45 58 58 50 72 64 Tonight's Games Boston at Pittsburgh Buffalo at N Y Rangers Quebec at Montreal Detroit at New Jersey Washington at Chicago Toronto at St Louis Hartlord at Vancouver Last Night's Games Edmonton 3, N V Islanders 2. OT Washington 2. Minnesota 2 Calgary 5, Vancouver 3 Los Angeles 4, Winnipeg 3 PAGi 13 Mike Scott wins NL Cy Young Award LOS ANGELES (AP) — Right hander Mike Scott of the Houston Astros, who went from mediocrity to brilliance once he learned how to throw the split-fingered fastball, was named ihc National League's Cy Young Award winner yesterday. Scott, whose no-hitter on Sept 25 clinched Houston's first NL West Division title since 1980, had six more first-place votes than runner-up Fernando Valcn/uela of (he Los Angeles Dodgers. In voting conducted by the Baseball Writers Association of America, Scon received 98 points, 10 more than Valen/uela. who won the award as a rookie in 1981. Scon had 15 firstplace votes from the panel of 24 writers, while Valen/uela picked up the other nine. Balloting was completed before the post-season games. Scott, 31, was 18-10 with a majorIcague-lcading 306 strikeouts and 2.22 earned run average in becoming the first Houston player lo win the Cy Young twwd, which goes to the league's best pitcher. Viknzutta *.i21-11 with 10 complete games, lops in the majors Scon, who returned from an exhibition lour ol Japan only lasl Saturday. looked wavy as he met with reporters at a hotel near I os Angeles Inicrna tional Airport Bui his joy came through. It s something I'm going to cherish." Scolt said of the award "It's nice to be on the list with SOUK of the pitchen who are on there. 'Right now. it kind of means intend of the season. After a couple of weeks ii will probably mean mote.'' Scon, who grew up in Ihc Los Angeles area and attended I'eppcrdine University in nearby Malibu. w.is the second pick of the New York Met! in the June. 1976 free agent draft. He was traded by the Mets lo the Astros on Dec. 10, 1982, in exchange for outfielder Dannv Heap. Scott first appeared in the major leagues with curveball" he said "Things just turned around when I started throwing the spin fingered fast hall." Scotl capped his season by hurling two brilliant complete games against ihc Mets in the NL Championship Serial, but ihose were Houston's only IWO wins New Yorfc wen! on to win the Mets in 1979, but he did not play his first lull season until 1981 when he went 5-1(1. He was 7-13 wnh I 5 14 l-.RA for the Mets m 1982 befOK he was iraded. His record wnh New York was 14 2" SCOII was 10 6 with .. ! 7J IRA lor the Aslros in 1983 bin slipped lo 5-11 with a 4 61 I RA in 1984. It was following the I9K4 Mason that Scotl learned his split-fingered pitch from ROM Craig, now the in.iii.igei ol the San l randsco Qianti but then a scoul for the Detroit Tigers the World Serial Scotl selected the Most slup Serial despite the fact that his team lost Mike Kiukow of the San Francisco (Hants, who had I 20-9 maik and a I 03 BRA, was thud with 15 points. I lnee Ol the IfctXl fOUl pitchers on the list were I torn the Mets — Bob Ojeda Of the Mets was fourth wnh nine Along with the new pilch CSUDC charges that he made a practice ol scuffing the ball, charges he hat denied w.is Valuable Playei in the Nl < bampiotv And along with the new pitch points, followed by leammie Ron came .t different pitcher. ai hue and Rick Rhoden ol Pittsburgh tied with two points, and New York's Dwighl Gooden with one. Scotl is the lust non 2d game winnet 10 beat out at least one pitcher who won 20 games lince lorn Seaver did it m 1973 Scotl w.is 18-8 wild .i t 29 I R\ in 1985 with iwo shutouts .Mid foui com plete games m <5 si.uts. lhat wai .i sum of what w.is to COfM, "l had tried everything, ever) wa) to throw ■slider, ever) wa) to throw ,i NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE WESTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division Midwest Division W L Philadelphia Boston New Jersey Washington New York Pet W GB 714 600 333 167 250 1 1Vt 3'/* 3'A Central Division W L Pet Atlanta 5 1 833 Chicago 5 1 833 Milwaukee 5 2 .714 Cleveland 3 3 500 3 Indiana 3 500 Detroit 2 3 400 GB 1 V4 2 2 2'ri Last Night's Games New Jersey 114. Boston 110 New York 11l.Phoeni» 105 Chicago 112. Atlanta 110 Milwaukee '02. Indiana 94 Houston 116. San Anton* 95 War. 104, Dallas 103 LA Clippers 115, Denver 112 Sacramento 119. Cleveland 114 Portland 126, Golden Slate 108 Phrladetphia 121. Seattle 114 Houston Utah Dallas Denver Sacramento San Antonio L 1 2 3 3 4 5 Pet .800 600 500 500 333 .286 Pacific Division W L A Lakers 3 Golden Slate 3 L.A. Clippers 3 Seattle 3 Phoenix 2 Portland 2 Pet 750 500 500 500 .333 286 GB 1 1V» IVj 2V4 3 GB 1 1 1 2 2VS Tonight's Games Milwaukee at Boston Chicago at Washington Phoenix at Detroit Houston at Dallas Sacramento al Denver Seattle al L A Lakers Marinaro dominated Ivy football like nobody else (Continued from back page) On Saturday, Marinaro was in lihaca, N.Y., along with his former teammates, celebrating lhal anniversary. "I had a great lime, but I wasn't there long enough," Marinaro said of his visit. "It was good to see the guys and be up in Ithaca again. I hadn't been (here for five years." Although Marinaro doesn't get back to his alma mater often — the Milford, N.J. naiive now lives in Los Angeles — he enjoys looking back on his fabulous career. "It was a very exciting time in my life, not just the tool ball part, but my whole college lifestyle," Marinaro said. "I allow myself to reflect on it; it's not hard to do. When I left football (o start another career, it was difficult lo look back al lhat lime. You wonder if the best years are behind you in terms of excitement. Football Harvard-Yale '68: Best Ivy game ever (Continued from back page) suspended in time for one long, drawn-out moment, Champi hit Gatto from the eight, and Harvard had miraculously pulled lo within two, 29-27. In a way, the two-point conversion attempt was anticlimactic. The mere fact that they had come back from a 29-13 deficit in 2:40 seemed lo bring the Crimson back from beyond the point of complete exhaustion and give them the extra speed, extra strength and extra energy that they so desperately needed. Champi took the snap and scrambled lo the right. He spotted Varney in the corner of the end zone, all by himself. Then there was "the catch" to end "The Game". Jubilation swept over the Harvard players, for they had seemingly won; total dejection overwhelmed the Elis, for they had apparently lost. "There was no doubt of who had won when we walked off the field," Gatlo said. "Calvin Hill even came into our lockerroom after the game and congratulated us on winning the title." "I really thought we'd lost," Hill said. "In fact, I didn't realize until two days later that we had lied. I thought we lost by a point." "For us it was a loss, and for them it was a victory," Cozza said. "Harvard had a very good team, but we were belter. We outplayed them for the whole game except for the lasl 2:40. Everything that could have happened did." "They say that tying in sports is like kissing your sister," Hill said. "The fact thai they celebrated just proves something lhat I've always felt about Harvard people." The players were not alone in their belief that Harvard had won the tie. On Monday morning. The Crimson beamed the headline: Harvard beats Yale. 29-29. "For its efforts. Harvard can lay claim to more than a draw," The Crimson read. "All save the most fearless of its gambling partisans won their bets, and all save the most underhanded of the nation's newspapers (one thinks of the The Yale Daily News) will surely see fit to play Cambridge over New Haven in the headlines. "A draw in name only, then. By every other reckoning, a magnificent victory." Yet the true measure of the greatness of an event is how long it withstands the test of time, and "The Game" remains vivid in the minds of ihe players and fans. "I'm an intuitive guy," Champi said afterwards, "and when I woke up this morning, I was son of in a dream. It felt like something great was going to happen to me. Then when 1 got to the stadium, I still felt strange. Ii didn't feel like I was here but someplace else. I still don't feel like I'm here. It's all very strange." "It was just in ihe hands of destiny," Cozza said. "A lot of unbelievable things happened lhat are hard to comprehend from a coach's standpoint. Every once in a while people talk about it. I was even on The Way It Was with Curt Gowdy and some of the players." "It was a great achievement," Gatto said. "The circumstances that went our way strained reality. It was just remarkable. As the years go by, the score doesn't get any wider. But I look back on it with a happy memory." So does just about everyone associated with "The Game". Classified Ads APARTMENTS 3BOR. HOUSE new Kitchen, new w/w carpets, refndg. washer $350 plus util Days (215) 597-0591 eves/wkrvds (609) 461-3161. 40TH AND CHESTNUT Large efficiency, unlurnished. sate bldg. laundry, elevator Available January 222-7827, evenings. 4112 SPRUCE: Bright studio apartment wilh loft bedroom Quiet building. 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November17lh at 7:00p.m Anyone interested in attending should call Marlyn at 565-7770" We will be here to answer questions regarding how lo gel you license and where you can go in the Real Estate field! FORD ESCORT 19S6 2400 Miles Bronze. Stick. As new Rust proofed $5500 Call David 898-6501 HELP WANTED: clerical assistants, non-work study available, $4 50/hour Call 622-2819 NEUROBIOLOGY LABAssistant position available immediately, minimum 20 hours/week mil March 1987. pay $5/hr Duties include printing EM Micrographs, and data analysis Hours flexible. Call 898-3159. RESPONSIBLE STUDENT for Airline Ticket Delivery Flexible hours Call Dona University City Travel 898-6901 is great, bin it ends too soon. The rest of your life you could end up looking back. But now, everything in my life is going well, so I can look back easily." Bui when he was a high school player, Marinaro never dreamed thai football would provide him with so many good memories. "I decided lo go to Cornell because I thought the campus was beautiful, and I was really interested in the hotel administration program there," Marinaro said. "I was offered some full scholarships at a lot of eastern schools like Penn Slate and Rutgers, but I never thought about football beyond college. I was just looking for a good education. I was a pretty good player in high school, but I had never done anything to think I'd be an allAmerican." It didn'i take long for everyone to realize that Marinaro was much better than he thought. After playing for the freshman learn in 1968 — Ivy rules prohibit freshmen from playing vaisi ty football — he was ready to explode onto the national spotlight. "It all started my sophomore year." Marinaro said. "During the prc-season I was battling for the starting tailback position, but 1 burst out pretty quick. My first game, against Colgate, I gained 162 yards. The second game I ran for 245 yards to break the Cornell record. I had only run for 200 yards once in high school, so I really didn'i know what it was like. Then in the fourth game I gained 281 yards (on 40 carries), and I was Sports lllustrated's and Ihe Associated Press Player of the Week. It was then I said, 'Hey, I'm pretty good.' Preily good indeed. Marinaro was named to the third-team all-America squad in 1969 after rushing for 1409 yards. And then he got better. In 1970 and 1971 he was named to the allAmerica first-team after compiling 1425 and 1881 yards, respectively. "It was a real shock to me," Marinaro said. "All of a sudden I was leading Ihe nation in rushing. 1 wasn't even an all county playei in high lered Ins loot injury '» 1977. he tried to prolong his careei wnh ihc axpaa sion Seattle Seahaw ks, but n was tuns to call it quits. "If I wasn't doing whai I'm doing now (acting), I'd be more frustrated thai m\ caieei ended after only six seals.'' Marinaro said "Football helped me get into acting, and I really enjoy what I do " What Marinaro had been doing Ihc last five seals was playing his role on ///// Street. And he earned himself an important role for himself despite having very little experience in acting. "I just auditioned loi a part, and the) liked my work and made me a regular." Marinaro said. "I was studying hard lo make il in Ihc business. I had to be reads when the opporiuni- school." And how did he handle this new lound MJCCeSS? "A lot ol people would probahlv tell you lhat I was a jcr k.'' Marinaro said. "But I was only 19 yean old, I'm sine I was cocks, and I said some things that any 19-year-old would M) I wasn't what you would call I hum ble jock. Bui I was under a lot ol pressure. I was the key lo Cornell's success lo a large exlcnl I earned the ball 40 limes a game, so all the attention was on me." Bui despite all of his SUCOSM, Marin.no was unable to lead his team toan Ivy championship, al least until 1971 lhat year the Big Red shared ihc crown with the dominant Ivy League team of the eta, Dartmouth. t\ came, and I was Bul acting success was nol easiK "We went from 4-5 to 6-3 to I I when I was there." Maiin.no said. "So we got better each season. I'm glad we won the championship my senior year, that's benei than winning it as a sophomore and not doing it again. Senior year was a culmination of my entire career." After leaving lihaca with his college career behind him, Marinaro was ready lo make his mark in ihe National Football league. He was drafted highly by ihc Minnesota Vikings, bul things did not turn out as well as Marinaro had hoped. achieved. " There's always resistance to athletes; no one expects ihem lo be am good," Marinaro said. "As far as serious roses, DO one is going to give them to an 'ex-athlete'; it's like a title. Bin gelling to work on Hdl Street gave me instant credibility. And 1 got to work with some really talented people." But aliei live seats on the show, Mannaio decided it was tune to move on. He was gelling Kited wilh his character and wanted a change of pace. "Some people say that I had a piet ty mediocre pro career, bul I neve] really had the opportunity to excel," Marinaro explained. "In Minnesota we had Fran Tarkenion. so thai made us a passing learn. And they used me as a pass receiver and a blocking back. Iwo things I didn't do in college. I didn't get a chance to establish myself. So after four years I left Minnesota and went to the |Ncw York) Jels. There I had a chance to run Ihc ball. During my first six games wilh them, I twice ran for over 100 yards. But I got hurt in the seventh game, and lhal preily much ended my career." It was 1976 when Marinaro siil "I've recently worked on three different projects with three completely different roles," he said. "Fortunately I made enough money on Hdl Street so lhal I can hold back for a while and pick my projects. That's a luxury for any actor." Marinaro's recent work includes lead roles in a feature film. "The Sophia Conspiracy," an after-school special lor CBS, and an ABC-TV movie lhal is currently being made. So his success in show business continues. And now ii is his acting that will give him Ihe most recognition. But some also recognize him as one of ihe best Ivy football players ever. Sunday, 11 a.m. - SPORTS (-13lM vs. News Place your classifieds at the DP office - 4015 Walnut Street, 2r»a floor Cost: 250 per wora, per aay. Deadline: 3 p.m.. two aays Pefore puPlication. HELP WANTED RECEPTIONIST for C.C Law Firm, mornings, some afternoons Can study al desk Split lime with friend! Linda 546-6661. SCHOOL REPRESENTATIVE wanted for collegiate sporting company Great pay Call collect 1-(813)346-2009 Work Sludy Positions: The Center for Cognitive Therapy under the direction of Aaron T. Beck. 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SAVE $$$ onAIRLINE TICKETS "Best Deals" Get Continental Airlines Discount Pass FREE with ticket purchase International Travel Exchange 332-2444 You the one who answered my Personals ad in the DP? "Take a Fantasy Break'* Call (215) 976-6969 $2 00 anywhere within (215) Toll Othi 24 Hour Service SPORTS Page 14 The Daily Pennsylvanian Wednesday, November 12, 1986 Questions arise about foreign-born soccer players By WILLIAM BKOWN "Where are we going?" Penn head soccer coach Bob Seddon asked in reference lo ihe receni increase in the number of foreign-born soccer players competing ai American colleges. In 1978 there were approximately four million soccer players in America; today that figure is nearer to eight million. Soccer, once hailed as the future sport of America, may be faltering at perhaps its most crucial stage of development — trie collegiate level, the stage a( which high school hotshots are molded into potential national team players Although the sheer numbers may convey a sense of security, the number of American players on college rosters is dwindling, prompting many coaches to wonder if that levee of talent is in need of replenishment. "In my [coaching] years, and that's 28, we as coaches have been struggling to bring soccer to the forefront — so it can take its place along the side of sports like football and baseball," Seddon said. "As long as coaches continue to beef up their teams with so many foreign players — except for a few as a training mechanism — soccer will remain a secondary sport to most Americans. I'm against a coach who actively goes overseas to stock their team; it's a total copout. I will never do it." Many of those involved in college soccer, including Seddon, support the notion that if the foreign invasion of players continues at its present rate, there soon will not be enough spots left for upcoming American talent. The reasoning is that with fewer college roster spots going to home-grown talent, the ad- vancement of American soccer may stagnate. In the eyes of others, however, like those of Arnold Ramirez, head coach of the thirdranked Long Island University soccer team, foreign players enhance and are a neccessary part of college soccer. "I understand their point of view," Ramirez said. "If I had a beautiful campus, like Virginia or U.C.L.A.. and a larger budget, then I could compete for the best American players. But I'm in the middle of Brooklyn, with an urban campus, and when prospective American players come through, they just aren't interested; I've tried. Yet, even if I did have a beautiful campus, I still would recruit foreign players. "American soccer is as good up to about age 16, then we can't compete. Our teams are limited by [National Collegiate Athletic Association) rules to a 22-game schedule; they play at least 50-60 games a year in other countries. We need top competition at the college level, and the foreign players can give us better competition and help the state of soccer." Ramirez' Blackbirds, aside from being nationally ranked, are thoroughly foreign with all 17 players being either foreign-born or residents of foreign countries. His players hail from several countries, including Bolivia, Peru, Spain and Liberia, and three different continents. In marked contrast to L.I.U. are teams like U.C.L.A., the second-ranked team in the country, and Yale, a recent recipient of an NCAA Tournament bid. The Bruins have no foreigners whatsoever, and almost all their players are Californian. Coach Sigi Schmid is committed to running his program without Big Five survives transplant 1986 marks the 30th anniversary of official competition of the Ivy League in football. Today and tomorrow, the DP looks at some of the highlights of the past 30 years. Actor Marinaro remembers career as Ivy League star By RICK KKNMt k Millions of American ret ignize Ed Marinaro as the actor who portrayed Officer Joe Coffey on NBC's drama. Hill Street Hluc Some people know huii ai •> former college and pro football playci. Unfortunately, only a few remember that he was the most dominant running back in the history of Ivy League football. Marinaro played at Cornell from 1969 1971. and dining that time, he launched a full-fledged assault on the Ivj and NCAA record books. In a threc-yeai col legc career, Marinaro ran for 4715 yauis liiui thousand, seven hundred fifteen yards i hat's an average of 174.6 yards per game. In 1971 alone, he rushed lor a then NCAA record 1881 yards. To put that in perspective, Perm's all-time career mark is currently only 304 yards more than Marinaro's 1971 figure. And despite playing only 27 games, he is still number seven on the NCAA all-time rushing list. In other words, this guy was awesome. Arguably, Marinaro is the one player who has made the biggest impact on the Ivy League in the modern era. And as the Ivies celebrate their 30th anniversary of official competition in football, it was last weekend that Marinaro look the time to celebrate another anniversary. It has been 15 years since that 1971 season, when Marinaro ran the Big Red to their last Ivy championship. (Continued on page 13) Simmons gives La Salle spark Big Five Notebook Daily Pennsylvanian tile photo Ed Marinaro gets tackled by two Penn players in a 1971 (tame at Franklin Field Climactic 29-29 tie stands as Ivy highlight B> ION WILNER Vic Oatto was the captain of the 1968 Harvard football team. L;ven though 18 years have passed. Oatto still gels six or eight inquiring calls every year. In 1983, the 15th anniversary of "The Came", he was besieged with requests for appearances and interviews (iatto's popularity is but one indicator of the overwhelming effect of what is generally cited as the greatest football game in Ivy League history — Harvard against Yale. It ended in a tie, 29-29, Perhaps it would have been unfair it the gods had determined a victor on the field, for the true winners were undoubtedly the 40,280 spectators who had the privilege of seeing it live, When the two teams emerged from the lockerrooms on Nov. 22, 1968. both undefeated (8-0-0), the Ivj league championship at stake, the thriller to end all thrillers in the making, they were destined to participate in an event that would transcend time. In 1968 the upper echelon of Ivy League football was markedly different from its current status. Then, Ivy powerhouse teams such as Harvard and Yale were considered to be on equal footing with traditional bigtime programs like Penn State and Army. True to form, when that infamous day began, the His had blitzkrieged 16 straight opponents, while the Crimson boasted of a string of eight consecutive wins. lickets sold at $125 apiece; students with no musical inclination whatsoever dressed as band members in order to see the classic showdown that Sports Illustrated later voted one of the 10 most exciting games in college football history. "The biggest thing about that game was that both teams were undefeated," Crimson end Pete Varney said. "People still remember the climactic finish and the outstanding athletes, such as [Yale running back] Calvin Hill and [Elis' quarterback] Brian Dowling, but as I said, the fact that we were both undefeated was the key." Even the oddsmakers, who had made Yale a seven-point favorite by kickoff time, were astonished to see the chain of events of the opening half. Dowling moved the Yale offense as if the Harvard team were vacationing on Cape Cod. He ran for one touchdown and had scoring strikes to Hill and end Del Marting to give Yale a seem- the help of foreign players. Similarly, Steve Griggs' Elis were built mostly on the strength of local talent, having only one foreign player. Schmid and Griggs are two good examples of coaches who have shown that they can win with American players. Are they doing it with mirrors, or are the Americans getting better? "Coaches now are going after players on European national teams," Griggs said. "The average foreign player just can't cut it anymore; only the older, more experienced ones can compete with the best American players. [The influx of foreign players] is a great source of concern, but at the same time is a source of tremendous satisfaction." Yale presently is in a tight race with Harvard for the Ivy League championship and, in addition, have drawn the Crimson as their (Continued on page 12) ingly safe 22-0 lead. With his Crimson offense sputtering, head coach John Yovicsin decided to try second-string quarterback Frank Champi.' Although the Harvard players doubted the move, it proved to be a fortuitous one; Champi connected with sophomore split end Bruce Freeman for a 15-yard touchdown as the half came to a close. "At (he half, no one was so absurd as to say 'okay, let's go out and win this one," " Catto said. "You play the game long enough, and you realize what you can and cannot do." Although Harvard did not realize it at the time, this was a day when the can'ts were cans, the irrationals were rational, and the impossibles were possible. "It's still hard to believe what happened," Yale head coach Carmen Cozza said. "1 look at it like the game was played up in heaven and dropped down on us." The first time the Elis touched the ball in the second half, a fumbled punt, was surely an evil omen. Harvard recovered on the Yale 25-yard line and scored in three plays. The game seesawed for the remainder of the quarter. Then Dowling got the Yale of- fensive machine in gear and marched 45 yards to score and increase the lead to 29-13 with 10:44 remaining in the game. Champi's Houdini act did not begin right away. Instead, he waited . . . and waited . . . and waited. Finally, the improbable set of circumstances began. First, Yale, on the verge of a score, fumbled the ball away at the Crimson 14-yard line. Second, a holding penalty on the Elis kept the last-gasp Harvard drive alive. Third, with only 42 seconds left. Champi connected with Freeman for a 15-yard touchdown. Fourth, a Yale pass interference penalty on the two-point conversion gave Harvard a second try, on which they were successful. Need a moment to catch your breath? It's understandable. Next, the Crimson recovered their onside kick and took possession with 42 seconds on the Yale 49-yard line. A face-masking penalty on Yale aided the Harvard drive, and with three seconds left, Champi had the Crimson on the Elis' doorstep. "The Game" was reduced to a single play. On a pass that appeared to stay (Continued on page 13) By ANDRKW BF.RESIN When the presidents of the Big Five schools met last June to determine the fate of the nation's oldest city-series collegiate basketball tradition. Big Five fans around Philadelphia covered their ears and awaited the dreaded result. For those who haven't yet removed their earplugs, the Big Five survived — barely. In order to save it however. La Salle, St. Joseph's and Penn conceded to Villanova and Temple. Under the new agreement. Big Five play will continue, but the Wildcats and the Owls will be allowed to play their two home Big Five games at their own arenas. In all, four of the 10 scheduled Big Five contests will be moved out of the Palestra. But what Big Five addicts really have to face up to is this: there will be no Big Five doubleheaders during the course of the upcoming 1986-87 season. That's none, as in zero and zilch. Ever wonder what Thanksgiving would be like without turkey? Bleak as it may seem, though, there are still good reasons to get excited about the Big Five season which will start Dec. 2 when La Salle hosts Temple at the Palestra. The school presidents may have changed the scenery a bit, but that's all they changed. They didn't say anything about the Owls' Tim Perry and the Hawks' Rodney Blake not being able to mix it up underneath, or about Temple's Nate Blackwell and Howard Evans and the Explorers' Tim Legler not being allowed to launch their long-distance rainbows. And they didn't say anything about Villanova's Kenny Wilson or Penn's Perry Bromwell being prohibited from running defenses ragged on the fast break. No, the excitement will still be there. When Perry delivers his first blocked shot via express mail service into the eighth row, the fans won't be checking to see if they are in the Palestra or not before they become rabid; it'll just happen. The competitiveness and intensity on the floor as well as in the stands will continue in typical Big Five tradition. "The players will still go at each • (Continued on page 12) Bulking Up Offensive line gets a boost Tommy L«on«rdi/Daily Pennsylvanian Tailback Jim Bruni finds a hole opened by guards Chris Wilkins (75) and Jim Panzini against Princeton By ED GEFEN There has been a big change in the Penn football team's offensive line this season as compared to last. The names have pretty much stayed the same — Steve Buonato, Jim Pai.zini, Chris Wilkins, Scott Ernst, Marty Peterson, Tim O'Bara, Jeff Sheftic, Brent Novoselsky, Scott Scungio, Jim Miklos. Only Jeff Goyette was not returning to the Ivy League championship front six. So what could change? Size. This year's Penn offensive linemen are, on average, 15.6 pounds heavier than they were a year ago. That's 15.6 pounds per player. That means 15.6 more pounds for opposing defensive linemen to muscle out of the way when they attempt to tackle a Quaker ballcarrier. But where did all of this size come from? Did the Penn offensive linemen spend the better part of last off-season fattening up on Mom's cooking? No. They spent more time in the weightroom. And they weren't just bodybuilding; they were strength training. Strength training is different from bodybuilding in the sense that strength training is based on the quality of each exercise, not the quantity of repetitions. When he arrived at Penn in January, varsity strength coach Charles Packman initiated a high-intensity program for members of the football team that builds up stamina and endurance as well as strength. The results have been incredible. "It pays off through the whole game, but particularly in our ability to still play at a tempo in the second half," said Penn head coach Ed Zubrow. "Basically, that as much as anything contributes to the game becoming a rout rather than just a win. The margin between winning and losing is always a thin one, and so is the margin between winning a close one and a rout. "Those kids kept the pressure on Lafayette, and Lafayette wasn't able to stand up to it. You could really see the Lafayette defense dragging its feet a little." Last year Panzini was a typical, 235-pound, Ivy League offensive guard. Now, Panzini wouldn't be out of place in the Big Ten, checking in at an intimidating 275. But he's not just bigger, he's more mobile. He is a walking advertisement, almost literally, for the benefits of strength training. "It allows us to do a lot of things that we wouldn't be able to do without the size and strength," Panzini said. "We're stronger and bigger for the most part than most of the teams that we play. I don't think we rely on that solely. It helps; it's a great advantage in coming off the ball and getting into people and blocking them." "You have a lot of things going on [with the offensive line]," said center and co-Captain Buonato, "especially with our team. A lot of pulling; we do some things that require a lot of athletic ability. Our guards and tackles are doing things that most teams won't do with their guards and tackles." (Continued on page 12)
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