U. bans alcohol during Hey Day - Penn Libraries

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Vol. (IV. No. I.'H
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I'llll Mill I'HIA. I'urMlay. January 24. 1*19
Ivy schools
experience
application
decrease
University
Administrators cite new state law
She added lhal ihe <|iialily ol the
applicant pool did nol dcctcasc. wuh
|uM over 20 percent ol ihe incoming
, law admitted through I hi- early deci
ion program.
I omell also experienced a pro
d leven perceni decrease in
minonly applications I his year,
Meislahn said.
Across the coast, Stanford Univei
MI\ artmlitimis officers alao reported
an applicant decrease ol abOUl six
perceni
Duke University Admissions Due,
tot Harold Wiogoodestimated yeatet
day lhai Duke applicants dropped ap
pioxmialelv S.2 percent, after declui
Please see ADMISSIONS, page 7
After more than one year ol COB
sidei.ilion. the Whaiion (iiaduatc
Advisory Board is set tomorrow to
approve a revised code ol ethics l,n
business gi.iduatc students which
stresses honesty outside the
classroom.
A draft revision of the code which
the advisory board accepted
unanimously last semester won 64
percent approval in a student referendum in December, according to
, ii.ulu.il,- I thkS Committee chairman
Jaye Gamble. Only »6 percent of the
graduate students cast ballots.
Regulations foi amending the code
oblige the advisory board to cast a second vote, which must endorse the
changes by a two-thirds majority in
order to finali/c them. Ihe advisory
board will meet tomorrow night.
The revision grew out of a general
desire to bring ethics off the "back
burner." and to increase ethical
awareness in Wharton. graduate student Charlie Moore, a member of the
ethics committee, said last week.
In contrast to the old code, which
covered solely academic mallets.
Ethics Committee members said this
Student Activities Direcioi I i in
Walkei said lasl night that she does
lo state
and
Unjvertit)
alcohol IO conform to the i Iniversity's
new alcohol policy
I he policy, which
Into effect tomorrow, forbids
hoi at outdooi events
Moore said thai he will establish |
committes ol adrninistrators and
students to recommend other changes
DaSy Pnnntytvilnmn lib, nil,,,,,
I'hree juniors party during Hey Day I986. Scenes like this prohahly will not lake place this spring
because of change* in Ibe University's alcohol polii \.
in the event next month He added
thai the group's report will be given to
the new class officers when they are
elected in April to plan the event
"Ultimately, what I would like to
have is I tentative game plan, and I
hope lhal the senior class hoard which
is elected in the beginning ol April will
either hi- ahle to use or adapt thai
plan lor Ihe event." Moon
-aid
"As long as Ihcv ,an plan those
event1
them out within Ihe
and University guidelines, I am
perfectly thrilled 10 have Ihem plan
the whole thing," he added
, wuaanu haw mar-
to i pod
i on College Oreen. After
Hackney's speech, the class would
►Mthci on Ihe Junior Halcony in the
Quad where the new senior class
hoard provided music and
in past
(rears
lerewdriveri
* The University does
not want to take on the
liability of serving
alcohol to minors. . .,
hut I do not think that
the drunken nature will
change because people
will drink before they go
out to the balcony.1
Ilcnjy Karsch
UA member
not Intend to alter Ihe Hey Day tradiiion except for Ihe serving of alcohol.
" I he piece [of Hev Day) once they
leave the Quad is no problem,"
Walker said "Ihe violation of both
commonwealth laws and University
pohev is the providing of alcohol by
niinois to minors outdoors in residential living public space."
Wharton junior Renjy Karsch. an
member of the Undergraduate
Assembly and the University Council
committee which evaluated the
alcohol policy, said last night that he
does not believe a ban on alcohol will
*** MV^f OAT. pas* "I
Changes in law school test prompt student concern
Its SlrArN OCH8
that the Issues and Facts section ol Ihe lest will
Beginning In lune, students vying foi •> spol
in the more than 240 North American I IW
schools will take a slmrrcr ycrsron ol the I aw
School Vhnissions lest, omitting one ol the
exam's aaaieal sections
A law School Admissions Services report
Mates lhal ahhough one ol Ihe test's snnplci set
nons will be removed, the changes will not al
feet ihe overall difficult) ,,i the i SA1
Hut itudents preparing for the icsi expressed
concern last week that the revised i ,.iin will be
loughei and hurl their scores.
In response, many University Itudents said
this week (hey will lake the test lehinais 11, the
l.isl dale lhal ihe cuiicnl lesl will In- oil, ie,l
I SAS official Kencc Kcnmsh said lasl week
Wharton set to revise
graduate ethics code
in IAMUKL BNGU
Spring Fling to two days and move all
i Ighttlme i, ii\nlei 11on the
Quadrangle. Despite changes In the
regulations
Hey Day. an all day celebration
held on 'he lasl day of spring classes,
has annually featured alcohol provld
ad by the senior class hoard
Assistant Student Activities Diret
lor Albert Moore, who BCtl as ihe
MOjoi dan advisor, said yesterday
thai lies Day must be held withoin
.iii,l III.il Harvard lias already .idinil
ceal drop I" applications this yaai
ched down I ocusl Walk to Picsidenl
Sheldon Hackney's office, and
escorted him under traditional canes
adhering
Dean Hill Pltzalmmoni cited an
etpedaD] imall pool ,,i IK yeai oldi
iiom New England and Hie
metropolitan New r*ort area u ihe
ni.noi oanie i,,T the Khool'i decrease
in application!
which he estimated
,ii mri live percerM
urn unlike ihr i Inivertity, Harvard
alao aitneued an estlmateid five pei
vein decrease in earl) action applies
lions, Its first such decline in sboul
five years, Pitzsimmons said
yesterday.
ii,- stressed, however, thai ihe
qualit) oi the pool did not decrease,
changes deeply affected Irer in-.nr,i
lion. causing .1 protected seven |>ei
By BRKNI MIICIII I I
In response lo the new slal, alcohol
law, the University will eliminate
alcohol from tins spring's Hey Day,
ihe iiadiiion.il, sremooy which marks
iln beginning Of the senior year foi
lunlofi
TIN announcement comes on the
hecll ol lasl week's decision lo , m
Iwo events, admiriislialors say they
an- trying to preserve tradition while
Admissions
led 657 itudents, approximatct) 10
perceni ol its < lass ,,i 1993
ill,- Harvard dean predicted lhal
the dnwnward trend in applications
will moit likely continue until \W4.
Princeton Associate Dean ,,1 \,i
missions Spencei Reynolds said
yesterda) thai the New Jerac) school
also sufferred from ihe downward
trend, asthnating thai ihe number of
Princeton applicants dropped appro*
Imatel) five to seven perceni
1 omen 1 inlversil) 1 Indergraduatc
AdmiHuus. Dteactor Nancy Meislahn
laid yeaterday thai demographi,
Copyright 1969 rha IMHty Pannaytvaman
U. bans alcohol
during Hey Day
By I AUKIN BHAHAM
AdmiMiom officials al pen schools
reported yesterday, ■< marked drop in
applications, attributing the decline to
.1 imnlla .111,1 in,in- selective pool ,>i
llOOl scmois
i in- i Iniversit) projected Uui week
ih.ii appllcationi decreased i<> i«> 14
I'II,,iu iiiiv (rear, with ■ in,- perceni
TIM- in the IMIIMIHI ol minority ap
plicanu. But although largei than al
us pears, ttdi trend was apparently,
nol exclusive to the Universky, with
othei Ivy i rague schools reporting
decreasing applications
Harvard
fcnmbeb 1885
week they hope the new cinle will
govern any action by a Whaiion
graduate student within the
communit)
"Basically, we thought lhat the old
code was probably not respected like
wc believed ii should be," Committee
mcmhci Brian Burnett said yesterdaj
"We wanted a code ol ethics to i.nei
basic student life in general
Ihe preamble of the code states
that "while repicscuting lumsell m
herself as a member of the Whaiion
community, the Wharton student will
maintain the highest stand.iids ol
lesl lo predict first year law school per I or ma nee
will be stable |l aw schools| need not adjust
Illicit | admissions index lormula based solely on
these i h.infes
kennish, who heads I SAS' lesl dcvelopnienl
be omitted, while the Logical Reasoning,
Reading I omprehension and Analytical
Reasoning sections will he expanded.
Also, only one MCtlon ol the lesl will be
unacored foi statistical purposes, Kennish said
Overall, ihe exam will be u> minutes shorter,
College senior I ilhan Wiley said lhat she
,leaded to lake Ihe lest m February because she
tbought lhat the Kaplan instructors, who have
not seen copies of Ihe new test, could not help
her prepare as well for Ihe new version of the
l v\l
and research division, noted thai the omitted
i MI was costly lor the testing service to
develop According lo i report issued by Ken
nish's office, the Issues ,KH\ Pacts Section has
liistorically been the easiest portion ol the test,
lending little to the exam's predictive quality.
Stanley Kaplan lest Preparation Service In
■tractor I red Kaiishei said lasl week that all ol
the questions In ihe issues and i acts section
could be solved with one simple algorithm.
"I think il was easier lo pick up an effective
sliategy for that section.'' Kausher said "Mosi
Ihe I SAS report states that the resiseil leal
will nol K- more difficult, and predicts lhal the
mean ICON on I lit- lesl will nol , h.inge. I he
report also points out thai the ten will be, urved
baaed on scores earned both before and after the
lune 19*9 led
"Even though Ihe easiest section ol Ihe lesl
will in- eliminated, the overall lesl spot Iflcationi
lor difficulty level have nol ,hanged." the
upon slates "Weexpecl that the ability ol the
11 —J
ol the students that I taught did extremely well
on that section Ii was extremely easy to get
everything right "
1
1
I,m.ilhan I'crkel. John Marshall Pre I aw
Honor Soviet >, president, said Sunday that he
feels Ihe changes will make ihe test more
difficult, because the eliminated section was
"the most straightforward." He added lhal il
Please see I.SAT, page 5
Til VCRs alter
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honesty and integrity."
i i ins s Committee Chairman Oam
ble explained yesterday thai lie
wanted the Code 10 concent behavior
(hat is detrimental to the community.
"The result of surveying hundieds
ol WhartOO graduate students was
that 10 inisiepicscnl oncscll while a
Wharton student, to engage in some
unfair behavior to the detriment of
another Wharton student and 10
violate the property or individual
rights of a fellow Wharton student
were reprehensible." the second-year
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WBJT
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( nllcgc sophomore Jim (.corgiou, left, 1 .ngineering sophomore Anid Gangul, center, and Wharlo 1
sophomore Ramone V usque/ shop yesterday al Ihe Video Library.
collegiate
social life
By AMY SII \ i KM AN
Ihe options are simple — action.
adventure and suspense on the streets
of West Philadelphia, or action,
adventure and suspense amid the
. .unions of home.
More and more University students
are choosing the second option.
courtesy of the four video rental
stoics on or near campus and the
growing number of students whose
back-to school baggage this year included their own VCR
"With three or four roommates.
the odds that somebody has a VCR
are pretty big," said University
graduate Howard Oensler, owner of
1 be Movie Ticket, a video rental store
in Houston Hall.
Gentler suggested that the University's new alcohol policy has forced
more and more students to spend their
nights at home.
'
Please see VIDEOS, page 7
Please sec CODS, page 4
Past
Present
Future
In a speech lasl night, a Temple professor
stressed the need for black Greek organizations to remember their African past. Page
2.
Five University students, who allegedly stole
a tree from a golf course last month, face
charges in a suburban court today. Page 4.
At midseason, the Penn mens' basketball
team has set some records, but still has to
face the music in the Ivy League. Back Page.
...
Page 2
The Daily Prnnsylvanian
liiesdav. January 24, I VX4
Prof discusses black Greek groups
By LYNN WESTWATKR
Al a well-allended forum last nighl,
leniple University Professor Maurice
Henderson stressed the need for black
Greek organizations to know their
African past and Tight more effective
ly for black causes.
The creative writing professor told
a group of approximately 80 students
"Without them, ihe civil rights
struggle would have been in trouble."
he said.
He
added,
however,
Greek organizations
activism
that
have
lost
black
ihis
DuBois College House
He said that black fraternities and
sororities must go beyond step shows
and parties, and take a stronger stand
against issues such as apartheid.
in
Citing the numerous black leaders,
He
including Martin Luther King Jr. and
Jesse Jackson, who have been affiliated with black fraternities and
sororities, Henderson said that black
Greek organizations have a history of
excellence.
FREE
stressed
that
although
•
•
way home resembles an African rile
Ol passage and lhal much ol the
consume resembles what black slaves
ate.
blasted
siudenl
black
tuna
Williams
11 aier nines
and
soionties as "Europeanized cops cai
organizations" and "anti-social cliques" which bickei and compete
among themselves.
She
disputed
Henderson's
stale
Ferguson,
black
"We do no) exclude an) individual
who would promote the iiplifmicni ol
the
Temple
I ranklin
fraternities and sororities have been
integrated since 1945. He added thai
currently the University's Alpha Phi
Alpha chapter has one while mcmhci
bl.uk
community,"
Ferguson
said
i ollege junior Gai Spann, an Alpha
Kapps Mpha lorority member, emphasized the difference between white
and black Greek organizations. She
said that the black Cireek organi/a
He called the black Greek pledging
tions are notable for then commit
ment 10 social and political projects,
and disputed ihe Temple Student's
program a "crash course in life" and
said that many of the rituals date bat k
not required to be ol African descent.
According to Alpha I'ln
Mpha
assertion
that the
black
organizations are factional.
SCHOLARSHIP INFORMATION FOR
Icmple Professor Maurice Henderson discusses black (.reek groups.
Student breaks nose
in fight Sunday night
A5SI5TAMT TRAIMIMQ PROGRAM
Two Arts and Sciences graduate students will be hired to plan and
implement a series of workshops for the pre semester training
program for new teaching assistants to be held on August 51 st
and September 1st. 1989. Each coordinator will receive a stipend
of $2,000
Applications should include your department
affiliation, teaching experience, teaching honors, other relevant
experience, 2 references (with telephone numbers) and a briel
discussion of your reasons for applying
Send applications before February 1, 1989, to:
Dr. Barbara Freed
Department of Romance Languages
502 Williams Hall/6305
For A Free Brochure
J800]_3_46-6401
CAREERS 15. MARKETING
Experts in
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wilt describe career opportunities
£
Student Health Advisory Board
is now accepting applications for
£
Board Membership.
%
* * * * *
E
C
C
«
The: Board serves as the official
liason between Student Health
Service and the Student Body.
* * * * *
fc
Applications are due January 27
and are available at Student Health
Service. Health Kducation Office,
Penn Tower. Interviews will be
held January 31. and Feb. I 1989.
Wednesday, January 25
7-9 p.m.
Ben Franklin Room, Houston Hall
Eric Cohen/Daily Pennsylvania!!
Greek
COORDINATORS WAMTED FOR THE TEACHIMG
STUDENTS WHO NEED
Wo have a data bank ol ovor 200,000 listings ot scholarships, followships, grants, and loan;, roprosonting ovor SI0 billion in priv.itn -motor
funding
Many scholarships a>c .|ivon lo students basod on Ihoir aendomic
interests, caroor plans, nmily Iwinl.igo and placo ol msidonco
There's monay avaJnbfc i tor students who have been newspaper
carriers, grocery ctoriv.. .hoerleaders, non smokers
otc
Results GUARANTEED.
CALL
ANYTIME
unknown surroundings to find their
hiothei
ment that the black Greek system is
Afro-centric, because members are
Every Student Is Eligible tor Some Type ot Financial Aid
Regardless of Grades or Parental Income.
•
the
organizations arc termed Greek, their
roots lie in Afro-American traditions
MONEY FOR COLLEGE
•
He pointed out IIi.it the
ol
leaving pledges in
"crazy Muff" ihai the pledges have to
" They have gone so far from where
they began — they're on the Othei tide
of the pendulum." he said
that black fraternities and sororities
often lack knowledge of their origins
gathered
centuries.
tradition
III H ISABETH I r\l
When Universit) undents fight at
Smoke) loo's tavern, manager Paul
Ryan normal!) makes than ihake
hands and make up. Unfortunately,
there was not enough hand-shaking
outside >>i the bai Sunday night.
Instead, an Engineering tenioi end
od up in the Hospital ol the Universit)
nnsylvania with a broken nose
after one student punched him in the
Face
I in- dispute began aftei an argu
ment broke out between two groups
of students in the bar, according to
Smoke's managei Paul Ryan Ryan
s.iiii thai .i guard asked one of the
groups to leave because of the
rowdincss. He added thai apparently,
instead ol leaving, ihe students waited
across the street 'torn the bar until the
second group departed ■ few minutes
latei
11K- two groups ol students began
to exchange blows Ryan said iliai the
guard called Philadelphia Police, who
escorted the Injured student to the
HUP emergenc) room and notified
Public Safety,
Rubin Safet) spokesperson Sylvia
Canada said yesterda) that ii
peered thai two students came to the
aid ol the iliird who »,rs injured. I he
victim, Mho ii-irii ni-d home due to his
All Welcome!
*****
Sign up with Amy in CPPS
For info.-please call Susan Villari,
Health Kducator at 662-7126
: *********************£
injury. refused to comment
I .in.ida added thai victim and one
ot ins assailants arc .'i yean old. rhe
othei assailant is .i minor.
According to Canada, the incident
has been referred to the ludicial In
quit s ()ttiii-
Ryan nid yesterday, however, that
the incident is far from typical of his
experience with I nivenit) itudenu
"Penn students ire the greatest in
ihe world with a few drawbacks."
Ryan said. "And that's just part of
growing up. I here's no such thing as
a bad Penn student."
Ks.ui
explained that
lie
must be
* Penn students are the
greatest in the world
with a few drawbacks.9
Paul Ryan
Smokcy Joe's Manager
Careful handling fights outside of the
II legal reasons.
"We throw them out and then [hey
start
to
fight
outside,"
the
bar
managei laid "We told them to go
home, but some people don't want
10.
I hat's not the situation I like lo
Me. We've got all types of people here
accountant!, administrators' ind
students.
If I've got I student here
"ho can't get along with all types of
people,
then
I don't
want
him in
here."
"It's ,i diverse universit) which
makes it a great university." Ryan
continued, "If people are going 10
fighl n spoils everything."
Quotation of the Day
'I ihink it is unfortunate that
Illinois ire going to mis- oul on
the lull experience ol Hey Day.
although the measures are not js
The muslim Students Hssoctatton.
University ut Pennsylvania.
Presents
Communities (.gainst
I i
I got more out of my four years on
the business staff of the Daily Pen-
DRUGS
H public lBcture by
extreme as they could be. I would
guest that juniors will find
around il
Senior (lass President Mike
Kara on the University's elimination of alcohol Irom Ihe Hey Day
eelcbratrM
Assistant Editors
I llll E BRINK)
I.YNN WISPYWATr'.R
\iWif Editors
NIGEL I.HSHMAN
.//Mr
JEOCYL N. HYDE
Photo Nifihl Iditor
nsylvanian than I did from the
Dal.
Tim*
PI*.-.
Wharton School in
January %%, 19IT9 I Wednesdny)
7 30 9J0pm
University nl Pennsylvania
Mryennn Hall. Km II I
(34U. a Walnut Straau)
>een in m,
rorarroni or mams reports on community net ions egi
drugs imam Siraj will aescr-oe now 15 crec« nous*-,
successfully ana permanently cioaeo by me actions ot tm
Muslim community The lacturt win a, f0n0w,0 0u an 00tn
discussion w.tn ma audianca
terms of every
day, practical business experience.
Miujid Al- Tarjwu. Hronklyn. V Y
III. DAVE
■\n Nighl BoVron
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Wharton '52
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I uesday, January 24, !989
The M, Pennsylvania
Pag, J
Ivory Towers
'Dartmouth Review'
editor, staffers reinstated
By STKVKN OCHS
their political beliefs, only citing bias against
Apparcnily nothing; can make the staff of The Dart
professor.
mouth Review and the administration of Dartmouth
"The court finds no persuasive evidence that DartCollege see eye-to-eye — not even the Superior Court of
mouth College has retaliated against or otherwise pursued
the State of New Hampshire.
disciplinary action against the plaintiffs on account of
In the latest round of exchanges between the Review
IIKII association with The Dartmouth Review," Mohl
and the Dartmouth administration, the high court istued
wrote I Ins month.
an injunction earlier this month reinstating former Review
But the ruling has not put the issue to rest, according to
Editor Christopher Baldwin and two other former Review
Harmect Dhillon, the current editor of the Review.
staffers who were suspended last spring.
Dhillon said last week that Review staffers arc happy to
have the students back but plan to sue Dartmouth lor
The battle began last February when the conservative
publication printed two articles head- ^^^^^^^^_
lined "Dartmouth's Dynamic Duo of
"We intend to use this to get
Mediocrity," about a couple of pro' Underneath the thin
damages from the college based on
the college's history of harassment
fessors which the newspaper's staff
scum of legal formalities against the Review." Dhillon said.
had deemed incompetent. One of the
"They dclibrately try to supress free
articles criticized Professor of Music lies the hatred the admispeech."
William Cole. After the article apBaldwin, now back in school,
peared, Baldwin and three other Re- nistration has for the
9
called the I ommittec on Conduct
view staffers confronted Cole outside
paper
and
its
staff
"Orwcllian" and charged that Presiof his classroom — a meeting which
Christopher Baldwin dent Freedman holds biases against
led the professor to press harassment
Former editor of the Review.
charges against the students. The
I he Dartmouth Review
"Underneath the thin scum of legal
Dartmouth Committee on Conduct
formalities lies the hatred the admilater suspended the students
——^^—^^—
nistration has for the paper and it's
The students then sued the college for reinstatement,
staff," Baldwin said. "He [Freedman] told the Boston
charging Committee members with bias against their
Ciolbc that we were 'obviously racist.' For him to come
newspaper. Since its inception eight years ago, the journal
out and say something so lerloui and damning as that is
has repeatedly criticized the administration.
reprehensible."
In his injunction order. New Hampshire Superior ( ourt
Bui Dartmouth College spokeswoman Cathy Wolff
Justice Bruce Mohl explained that Committee member
denied any allegations ot censorship. She said that all the
and Dartmouth Professor Al l.aValley had sen) Darl
proceedings against the Review staffers were based only
mouth President James Freedman a letter which "demonon their actions in violation of the college's rules for
strated substantial bias and prejudice on his part against
.indent conduct.
the students who write for The Dartmouth Review." The
"The college has never made any moves to supress or
letter, which was dated four months prior to l.aVallcy's
cantOI the Review," V/olfl said last week. "The suspenstint on the Committee, called the Review "racist, KXist,
sions were on violations of the student code of conduct."
and homophobic."
Dartmouth English Professor William Spcngemann
But Mohl maintained that the college administration
said last week that Dartmouth's situation was not unique.
did not try to persecute the staffers of the paper because of
, ' ■"'MIM'-. tfr»» '. n -T^>
Graphic By John P«yton/D«ity Penntyfvanian
He said that the disagreements between the paper and (he
administration are merely part of the intellectual tension
that goes on at all colleges and universities.
But Spengemann said that the Review may have gone
too far in this instance. He claimed that Baldwin and the
others purposely intimidated Professor Cole by confronting him the day after the article criticizing Cole appeared.
More Stanford frosh to pursue advanced degrees
I), of Florida sets forth student code of morals
It's official. University of I lorida
students shouldn't drink and drive.
They shouldn't take drugs and they
shouldn't cheat on exams.
UF's Task Force on Morals gave
its definition of ethical conduct
Thursday and if state officials agree
with them, students would have to
obey or be dealt with "severly".
The four-page statement includes
sections on cheating, alcohol and
student relationships.
The Board of Regents, the thir-
"If a bunch of those guys walked into my office with a
camera and tape recorder, I could construe that as an
imposition and a threat," Spengemann said. "The people
who confronted Professor Cole knew exactly what was
going to happen. They wanted a confrontation not
information for the Dartmouth Review, but they wouldn't
say that."
teen memberpanel that oversees the
nine state universities, asked
university last spring to create a
moral values code. UF Provost
Robert Bryan said the Regents were
concerned about a series ot alcohol
and drug-related tragedies at the
schools.
In the code, members decided that
students should drink within the
law. If they don't, they will have to
answer to the university in addition
to the police.
The code also advises against
showing disrespect to an individual
or a group. Anyone that "adversely
upsets the delicate balance of communal living wi" be subject to
disciplinary action by the
university."
( ommittee members said much of
their report isn't new information.
but students sometimes need to be
reminded of ethics and values.
—The
University
of
Florida
Alligator
Is Stanford really becoming more
intellectual? In a recent national
survey conducted by the American
Council on Education and UCLA,
Stanford's class of 1992 cited more
academic reasons than previous incoming classes for attending
Stanford.
An all-time high for Stanford's
results, the survey, released last
Monday, found that more than a
third of the freshman class
respondents said they planned to
earn a doctorate - a 10 percent rise
over the past five years.
"The survey shows us a prospective of the students that we don't ask
and can never know from applications," she said.
Of this year's freshman class, onefourth of the respondents cited the
University's social life as a factor for
choosing Stanford, as opposed to
one-third of the respondents questioned five years ago.
— The Stanford Daily
OPEN MEETING
PEN* at Penn
ON THE CONCERNS OF
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
and
The School of Arts and Sciences
TUESDAY,
JANUARY 24,
1989
present
4-6
PM
"A Reading by Larry Heinemann'
BODEK LOUNGE
HOUSTON HALL
Topics
for
discussion
will
include
Mr. Heinemann is the author of PacoS Story, (winner o. the Nat.onal Book^Awa«rtor £ct on
andtheChicagoCarlSaridbumP^
Society of Midland Authors). He is recognized as one of the best water.of ct on or.the
Vietnam War. and Close Quarters was called "the best book by anyone who fought there by
novelist C.D.B. Bryan.
Services for foreign students
Security on and around campus
Student Health and Insurance
Housing (both on and off-campus)
Wednesday, January 25,1989
4:00 pm, room 17, Logan Hall
The open
meeting is sponsored
Committee
and
the
International
of the University
Council, the
Programs and the Graduate
Student Assembly
by the Student Affairs
Programs
Committee
Office of International
And Professional
(GAPSA)
Admission free
Public invited
•PEN American Center, New York
i
•"■t* «
Tke Dmily Peousylvanian
Tuesday. January 24, 1989
On Campus
In Brief
U.S., Soviet educators meet at Drexel
Events
TODAY
CAMPUS EVENTS we usted daily
as * pod pufjfec service ol the
Unwemly ol Pennsylvania, and are
■tmamd tor the UnrverMy by
The OeVv Pmtntyivtnan There rs
no charge to auOxxued University
affaaaed groups tar kebngs ol FREE
events tastings may be mailed or
placed m person a The Oaty PmneyfVenan Buenees Ottlce, 4015
Walnul Street. Irom9am to5pm
Monday through Friday Campus
Events wtl not be accepted by
phone 25 word emit Deadline 3
p.m. two business days m advance The Qetfy PemsyrVaniari
reeervee the nght to eoM Campus
Events according to space
ACELA. Asociacion Cultural de
Estudiantes Latinos Americanos
invites you to attend our general
mealing Tuesday January 24 al
7:00 p m Q.I C 37M Chestnut
En la union esta la fuerzal
ADULT BAH MITZVAH For any
woman who desires a better
understanding ol Judaismpractice, language, literature and
thought Tuesdays at 5 00 pm
beginning January 24 Barrie florae Goldberg
AIKIDO" SELF —DEFENSE
coordinating mind & body Im
prove concentration Learn relaxation Meats Tuesdays, Wednes
days. Thursdays 6-7 30pm. basement Hutchinson Gym All
Welcome! Wear sweats, bring
Mends! 243-7682
AN INTRODUCTION TO Israel
Slides, pictures, stories, politics
and more Join Esther on a "tour"
of Israel Tuesday 5 pm beginning
Jan 24 Call 898-7391 McClel
land Room 5
ATTENTION ALL SAC REPS
Mandatory meeting Tuesday. January 24 Be there! 6pm Law
School 100 It will be a real party
COMPLETE YOUR EDUCATION!1 Protect Chaver combines
practical experience with personal
growth through service to the Jewish Community For information on
volunteering, cat Barbara Hirsh.
89e-fl?f.',
GRADUATE AND PROFESSIONAL Women's Organization
will meet at 8 15pm. Tuesday.
January 24th in room 304 Houston
Had New members are welcome
For information call Kate.
898-8611
LAST WEEK' 2 lor 1 photographic
prints in the photo/electronic department ol The Book Siore
1/23-1/28
N6W MEMBERS WELCOME to
Event Honron Science Friction
Out) meeting al 9pm in Bishop
Whne Room Houston Hall Squid
business al 830, refreshments
and astonishing video footage to
MM
PENNY LOAFERS NEEDS MEN
•as. tenors, baritones Co-ed, A
Cappalla
Tuesday. 7-9 HRE
Rathskeller
Bring a song
387-0214 for mfo
TOMORROW
OFFICIAL
LAST WEEK1 2 tor 1 photographic
prints in Ihe photo/electronic department of The Book Steve
1/23-1/28
SOPHOMORE AND JUNIOR
EDUCATION majors Get involved
with the Undergraduate Education
Society First meeting 9pm HRS
upper lobby
MCNEIL PHARMACEUTICALS
representative will be speaking at
McClelland Hall 4 pm on job
opportunities and summer internship programs Sponsored by
BBB Undergrad Society All are
welcome
STUDENT HEALTH ADVISORY
Board is now accepting applications lor new members Applications due January 27th and are
available in SHS. Health Education Office. Penn Tower
SUMMER 1989 PENN-INWARSAW information meeting
Tuesday, January 24 4 00pm
Penmman Library 2nd floor Bennett Hall
PENNSYLVANIA INVESTMENT
ALLIANCE Get hands on investment experience with Penn's oldest club Come to PIA's introductory meeting January 25th, 8pm
SH/OH350
THE ARMERNIAN CLUB is on
Locust Walk to raise money for Ihe
earthquake victims Please contribute! For more information and/or
contribution call Ratti Balian
243-8729
PROGRESSIVE STUDENT AL
LIANCE Intro meeting Wed . Jan
25 8:00pm Bishop White Houston
Hall Plans for the new semester
All welcome
UNDERGRADUATE EDUCATION
Society meeting 9pm HRS upper
lobby All education majors are
invited to attend
THE STRUGGLES FOR JUSTICE
and Reconciliation in Honduras
and Central America. Tomorrow.
4-6pm the Chnstian Assooalton
3601 Locust Walk Speaker The
Rev Fred Bronkema
UTV'S NEWSREEL will be holding meetings 7 30pm Tuesday and
9pm Thursday at the station Reporters, cameramen, and editors
are asked to come and participate
UNIVERSITY OF MONTREAL'S
Professor Gregor von Buchmann
opens the 1989 Seminar Series ol
the Center for Communications
and Information Science and Policy Wednesday. January 25. 336
Towns.
VOLUNTEERING? II you're interested m volunteering come to an
orientation session Tues January
24th 3-4 p m room 301 Houston
Hall
omoAL
TOMOHHuW
ATTENTION NORTH CAROLINA
residents Institute of Government, Chapel Hill offers summer
internships for sophs . |rs . srs
Application deadline 1/27/89 Details CPPS internship binder
under government
1989 ANNUAL STUDY ABROAD
Fair Wednesday, January 25
11am-3pm Bodek Lounge. Houston Hall
Free international
snacks
AIESEC WELCOMES YOU to its
spring introductory meeting Wed
nesday, January 25th al 8pmVance Hall Room B-11 Find out
what we're all about Hei Skol'
CAMPUS MARKETING ASSOCI
ATES will hire marketing representative for spring term Must
submit resume to employer by
1/27/89 See CPPS internship binder under "marketing "
BIBLE SURVEY AN opportunity
to explore the Bible through histor
ical. thematic, legal and religious
views Wednesday 5 30 pm beginning January 25 Rabbi Bonnie
Goldberg 89*7391
CHASE MANHATTAN BANK will
be on campus to interview junior
minority students for summer internship program Must drop off
resume and cover letter to Suite
90. McNeil Jan 24-26. 9am-3pm
BORED? GET INVOLOVED
Come to Ihe atrium by the Whar
ton mailfolcters to see what dubs
interest you Clubs day - Wednesday - 3 30-5 30 refreshments
provided
EMORY UNIVERSITY FAMILY
Planning Program. Atlanta, will
select students (undergrade and
above) to participate in research,
service and educational summer
program Details CPPS binders
Medical"
COME HEAR STEPHANIE JUTT
Flutist Free performance courtesy
ol G F Foundation Affiliate Artists
Program, Wednesday 7 30 pm..
Van Pell College House. 40th and
Spruce Refreshments loo!
I NEVER CALLED IT RAPE "
Discussion and survivor's support
groups organizing at Penn Women's Center All groups and
phone can's are confidential Call
898-9593
COMIC COLLECTORS at
are having a meeting on Wednes
day al 930 p.m in Houston Hall
Room 310
CONNAISSANCE ELECTIONS
Monday. January 23 al 9 00 p.m.
in the Ben Franklin room. Houston
Hall All members come1
LEEVY REDCROSS AND CO.
(CPA Firm) will be holding an open
information session on Tues . Jan
24. 4 3043 30pm in 103 SH/DH
DO YOU LIKE KIDS > Do you want
a break? Be a volunteer Lots of
opportunities More info? Penn
Extension 115 Houston Halt
MOBIL OIL CORPORTATrON will
hire 400 summer interns nationally Students in business technical, and science fields should
apply by mid February See CPPS
binders "Frnanaal Services "
EAT IN LUXURY Awesome organ
recital Wed . January 25th Noon
Irvine Aud Free Informal For
more info 898-2848 Reot/rtst
TBA
NABISCO BRAN0S. EAST HANOVER. NJ will interview junior
finance or accounting majors lor
summer accounting internships
Drop off resume. Suite 90. McNeil
Jan 24-26, 9anv3pm Details
CPPS Internships
O CONNOR ASSOCIATES. CHI-I
CAGO. NY and Philadelphia, will
interview students on campus lor
summer trading assistantships
Drop off resume Suite 20 McNeil
Jan 24-26. 9am-3pm Details
CPPS Internships On Campus
Binder
PENN STUDENT AGENCIES/
Weiss Memorial Award, open to
seniors with minimum GPA of 3 7
and outstanding campus leader
ship Forms and info in Student
Lite. 110 Houston Hall Sell
nominations welcome
SENIORS HONOR AWARDS
nominations now open All seniors
in good academic standing with
signilicanl campus leadership are
eligible Forms and into in Student
Lile Office, 110 Houston Hall Self
nominations welcome
SOL FEINSTONE AWARDS for
sophomores, junnrs and seniors
who have contributed to social or
educational change. Forms and
into in Student Ule. 110HH Sellnominations welcome
STUDENTS INTERVIEWING Citi
bank North American Finance
Group are invited to attend a reception on Thurs Jan 26 7-9pm in
217 SH/DH
TEACHING INTERVIEWS Solebury School (New Hope. PA) win
interview students on 2/6 You
must see Carol, CPPS, between
1/23-2/1 to sign up Specifically
needs Spanish teachers
TEACHING INTERVIEWS St
Paul's School (Concord. NH) will
interview students for one-year internship on 2/to You must see
Carol, CPPS, between 1/23-2/t to
sign up Prescreened candidates
sign up 1/19. 1/20
TEACHING INTERVIEWS Phillips Academy (Andover. MA) representative will interview students
for their one year internship on
Wednesday. 2/8 You must see
Carol. CPPS. between 1/23-2/1 to
sign up
TEACHING INTERVIEWS Brooks
School (North Andover. MA) will
interview students on 2/9. You
must see Carol. CPPS between
1/23-2/1 to sign up
TEACHING INTERVIEWS PhU
lips Academy (Andover. MA) rep
resentatrve will interview students
for their one year internship and
math and science positions on
Wednesday. 2/8/89 You must see
Carol. CPPS, between 1/23-2/1 to
signup
TEACHING INTERVIEWS Brooks
School. North Andover. MA will
interview students tor Math. Studio An and Classics/Ancient History positions on 2/9/89 You must
see Carol. CPPS. between
1/23-2/1 to sign up
THOMAS H LEE. CO-lnvestmenl
w* be holding an open information session regarding a financial
analyst position on Tuesday January 4 30-7 30 p m at the Sheraton
1THE GOLD STANDARD
\50tOFF"\
-^■ri
.
rwv v~' •"-— ii---/VICIVV^"•■
■!►
Greeks to discuss alcohol compliance
Representatives from the Intrafralernity Council,
Panhellenic Association, Black Intergreek Council, and
two Greek alumni will meet with Office of Fraternity
and Sorority Affairs Acting director Tricia Phaup today
to determine guidelines for compliance with the new
alcohol policy.
"We want to come up with some sort of a standard
form or procedure for filing," IFC president Garrctt
Reisman said yesterday
— Tina Goldbert
Students charged in tree theft
By TINA GOLDBERG
A Haverford Township court is scheduled today lo hear
charges against five University students accused of culling
down and stealing a tree from a local golf course in
December.
The students, three of whom arc Alpha Tao Omega
fraternity members, arc charged with theft, criminal
mischief, defiant trespass, underage drinking and
disorderly conduct.
The Judicial Inquiry Office is also investigating lo determine if ATO instigated the incident, according lo Intrafralernity Council president and ATO member Garretl
Reisman.
According to police reports, officers responded to a
complaint on December 9 that a tree at the l.lanerck
Country Club was being cut down. Police found an occupied car with a "very large" conifer tree on top and a second tree left on the golf course.
According to Ihe report, the students said that they
wanted to use the tree for a Christmas party. One stated
"we just made a mistake like some people."
College freshman Steven Stender, Wharton sophomore
Kenneth Elefant. College sophomore Lawrence Cofsky,
Wharton sophomore Christopher Redd, and Wharton
junior Kevin Horn are charged in the incident. Coffky,
Redd and Horn are ATO brothers.
Each of the five students charged cither declined to
comment on the proceedings or could not be reached for
comment.
Sgl. Chajfes Brooks of the Haverford Township police
department said that conspiracy charges may be filed
against the studenls in addition to the individual charges.
According to the incident report, several of the students
claimed that "they were just there and did nothing to prevent it."
Judicial Inquiry Officer Constance Goodman declined
comment yesterday.
IFC President Reisman said lasl night that if the incident is found to be connected to the fraternity, the JIO
could prosecute ATO. According lo the Universily"s
Policies and Procedures manual, chapters can be held
responsible for "conduct of members and conduct of
guests of members which is knowingly tolerated by the
members of the fraternity and is in violation of the University's Code of Conduct."
"The JIO has lo decide if it was a house-sponsored
event, or decided in a [fraternityl meeting." Reisman said,
in relation to the recent incident. "If it has no relation to
the house, then the fraternity is not collectively
responsible."
Although Reisman would not comment on whether the
ATO was collectively involved with Ihe incident, he explained that "whenever you're in public, you're representing not only yourself but your house."
"Members of fraternities are told this over and over,"
he said. "When you have a brotherhood, it's a duty."
The Alpha Chi Rho fraternity received a year-long
suspension last spring for cutting down a Norwegian pine
tree from the Hollenback Center and for hiring a stripper
to perform al the house.
Wharton board to review ethics code
CODE, from page I
MBA student said
The new Code calls for honesty in
job applications, respect for University and personal property, including
library bonks, and scrupulous
academic 4jptk.
The committee members stressed
thai a key component of the new code
is thai its provisions are enforced by
fellow students on an ethics review
group. Elections to the committee will
be held in early January and nominations are open to all Wharton
graduate students.
Acting Legal Studies Department
Chairman Arnold Rosoff said yesterday he thinks student control makes
the code more effective.
said.
"Ultimate penalties that arc
issued are done from the vice dean's
office," he added.
Another goal of the revision was to
make the Code more readable.
"One of the criticisms of the old
code is (hat it's written like a legal
document." Gamble said. "It's a set
of procedures — it's not a code. It's
not a slatement of what Wharton
students think is appropriate or
inappropriate."
f»5fc^
Brian Burnett
Ethics Committee Member
"I think the students will take tt
more seriously and involve themselves
more, given thai they have a bigger
hand in choosing the representatives
|to the review board)," Rosoff said.
Nonetheless, Burnett explained that
any final sanctions still require administrative approval.
"It isn't really workable unless the
administration supports it," Burned
"They tried very hard to make the
new code understandable to the lay
person — less sounding like a legal
document," Rosoff said.
"That's
sort of cosmetic. It's very important
cosmetic since people are often put
off by legalese."
But some expressed concern that
the new code is not comprehensive
enough.
TIP*
I
fWfiM»«>k0/M|
UNIVERSITY
fptmti
FKANK AIIK.KA
Wesaft Jan 25. 6:30 7:30 pm
Man.. Jan. 30.7:30-8:30 pm
Tues . Jan. 31.3:30-4:30 pm '
LUNCH II**— SPINNER
3601 LOCUST WALK
was valueless because ethics are personal and difficult to regulate.
"Sure it's a very important issue,
but I didn't see how administratively,
ethics could be upgraded," Wharton
graduate student Floyd Pitts said
yesterday.
"I don'l think you can legislate
ethics," MBA student Ru«s Brunner
said yesterday.
SHAPIR STUDIOS
"Some Easential DO's and DONTs for the MCATs"
HAVE RZEOH rj. • MCviABAAADE:nAOTKit?,-p!ANCAKE^ • £&OS • &RANOU -CRENCW TOAST
Rosoff said that "there was some
very impassioned observation that the
code stopped short of touching some
very important things like sexual
harassment or racial harassment."
But Rosoff stressed that because
these issues are dealt with elsewhere in
the University community Ethics
Committee members felt it was
neither necessary nor strategic lo include them in the Wharton Code.
Some studenls fell that the Code
t&asically, we thought that the old code was probably not respected like we believed it should be.'
MCAT
E.
WITH A0-? PURCHASE Of
m^
Educational leaders from Ihe United Slates and the
Soviet IJfr'ii met al Drexel University last month 10
rJUcuH wurldviide trends in education and technology.
According lo Joan Weiner, an assistant professor of
Management and Organizational Science at Drexel, the
Soviets showed a "great interest in exchanging information and technology".
During Ihe summit, Soviet educational leaders focused on educational policy and the unique microcomputer
program at Drexel.
Weiner explained thai the Soviets also showed a great
interest in Drexel's Macintosh computer system and expressed ejfajesire lo develop similar "user friendly"
technology in their own country. The Soviet rcprcscil
tatives also became interested in Drexel's "co-op" program in which students participate in three six-month
cycles of on-the-job training.
At the summit. Drexel President Richard Breslin offered an unprecedented three-year scholarship for one
Soviet graduate student to study at Drexel.
— Daniel Kassan
Thv Chrisli.in ASSIK. Bids.
li.lh I I."list Wk. Km 20
MCAT course starts week of Feb. 6th
Instant Photos
• PASSPORT
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3907 Walnut St.
222-7888
next to Baskin Robbtns
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA • ENGLISH LANGUAGE PROGRAMS
Spring'89
Courses
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UNIVERSITY DINING SERVICE
3401 Walnut St., Roan 323-A
898-7585
Tuesday, January 24, 1989
Student volunteers abound at U. i—
By GRACE SHIPPKNS
The average undergraduate's afier-hours activity of
choice probably would not surprise most observers — even
though the University has adopted a stricter alcohol
policy.
But when they consider the second most popular extracurricular activity, most would probably be surprised to
discover the amount of students that volunteer for the
many charitable organizations on campus.
Approximately 1500 students are working on community service projects — ranging from helping the homeless to
counseling rape victims — according to several students in
Penn Extension, an umbrella organization for many campus volunteer groups.
"Volunteering is definitely on the increase," Linda
Camba, a member of Penn Volunteer Network, said last
month. "There are more people volunteering now and it's
very recent."
University City Housing Coalition Facilitator Tim
Dunn, agreed with Camba, adding that some of the increased interest stems from a higher level of awareness of
social problems.
"This year there is a lot more student involvement,"
Dunn added. "They seem to get excited about it. Even
though a lot of people are interested in UCHC simply as a
viable non-profit group, some students just see people in
the street and want to do something about it."
In addition to the larger numbers of volunteers, the
"new activism" is similar in some ways to the activism of
the 1960s, one student volunteer said last week.
"There is a re-emergence of people doing things for
other people to make the world a better place," said College senior Paul Smith, a co-facilitator for the Student
Volunteer Network and Community Outreach program.
"We're seeing what happened in the '60s coming back
again, only maybe a little more organized this time."
cent of the entering class cited "being well-off financially"
as their top personal goal. That figure was the highest
reported in 20 years.
"A lot of times, as soon as mid-terms or a big paper
comes around some volunteers feel that they can't spare
that one and one half hour per week." Shufro added. "So
while there is a resurgence of activity, I question the commitment of some of the volunteers
Shufro contended that this lack of commitment strains
the relationships between the volunteers in his group and
the children they arc trying to help.
Community Kids is a group of approximately 25
students who organize activities for retarded children Utd
young adults. The volunteers become "Big Buddies" to
the children, Shufro said.
"The kids depend on their Big Buddies and they need to
rely on them," he said. "It's different for the volunteers
because it's only one of the things they do during their
busy week, and a lot of times they don't understand how
important that one and one half hours is to the people they
spend it with."
Despite the questions about students' commitment,
campus volunteer organization leaders maintained that
students often donate time for purely altruistic reasons
"It seems like there is a movement to help others
because the students here are are getting this incredible
education but they want to do more," said College senior
Phil Wider, the coordinator for Kite and Key's Step 1
tutoring program. "It's just satisfying working and knowing that you're helping someone."
This trend of increased activism will continue, according to Rachel Greenberger. a volunteer for Women
Organized Against Rape. Greenberger explained that activism breeds activism, adding that that many of the
volunteers see their work as a way of expanding their
educations beyond the classroom.
"I think there's more awareness of the problems and
people are encouraging other people to help."
Greenberger said. "The people I know aren't in it for their
resumes, they're in it for the experience. They want more
from their education then they can get from classes "
The search for supplements to classwork is highlighted
by the situation that existed on High Rise North Field during October. The field was filled with shanties manned by
members of the University City Hospitality Coalition.
Today, the shacks are gone and the field has returned to
normal. Although they have left the spotlight, UCHC
members say they are still hard at work trying to improve
conditions for the area's homeless.
"Students are very involved in writing proposals, planning meals, and generally working as advocate! I'" 'he
homeless," UCHC Dunn said last November. "We're
working on building community."
But the level of organization may not be the only difference between the student volunteer work of the 1960s
and the student activism of today, according to other student volunteers. Instead of dedicating themselves to a
cause, the students said, many students treat volunteering
as an extra-curricular activity and actually devote less to it
than they do to other projects.
"People here are spoiled," College sophomore (ireg
Shufro, who heads the volunteer group Community Kids,
said last month. "They volunteer when they think they
have time. Part of the reason that they do it is that they
have so many things that they can do that they don't get
too attached to any one thing."
National statistics support Shufro's contention. In a nationwide survey of college freshmen this fall. University of
California at l.os Angeles researchers found that 76 per-
LSAT will change format
LSAT, from page I
may be too late for students to prepare for the February exam.
"The most competitive students are
on top of things and know the test will
be changed," Perkel said. "In that
case you might be belter off preparing
early and taking it in June than trying
to rush and take it in February."
But some students said last week
that they intend to take advantage of
both versions of the test, hoping to
score well on at least one.
College Junior Darren Gelb said
that he was going to take the current
exam in February and the new version
in June in an effort to get a higher
score.
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Th« I>»ily Prnnsylviaian
Page 6
III, Hails lYiinsvlsannin
I ucsd.i>. January 2-4, 1989
In The Beginning
The Indepemlcnt Newspaper of the University of Pennsylvania
104th Year of Publication
UttMUM CHAJKJVSKr.BDmmiM
In the i%o's, my mother's friends
waned on sireelcorners lor strangers
to lead idem to back-alley aborlionists. 1 ike so many American
women, then slate's restrictive legisla
lion forced lliem 10 risk injury and
KotihRi PASNAI . iAM i nvi Borroa
CHARLES COHEfi \w«un EXBCimvi BorrM
JA) BEGUN, MANAUINI. IIUIOK
EVOBNl SCAVOLA BUSUUBS MANAOBB
PACN Eonot
GREGSTONl MvssioiroK
ILAN WIIKOK IINSM | MANAOO
ROBIN FIELDS, MIIIMKII I I-OMOK
DAVIDLASKO, Assot IAT1 El
K
X/M//t//.r.CmrEniioK
il RSI TTON PHOTOOBAim HUMP,,
I'M I HERMAN, COTl DISMOIIOK
MAUREEN HI IAS) MSOCIATI Sink is l-m HIH
STACYASHER. Assoc BUSINKSSMANAU K
c IMHUit.iSKRt.MtR. SAI Kx MANAGES
JOHN PEYTON. Am DRKTM
JOS HIIM-K SKoKishPlloK
SUSAN GUNPI RSI \ PHOTWMAPm I OttO*
ANPRhM RUSS Al>MKIISIV.I>IKI-< ll)K
KtNSCHH-R. ASSOCIAII Sixxusln
liMUAMIGNONr. MAKMIINC.IIIKHIOK
MARCOI KAIIS CM nil MANAGI K
KRIslI S , -ONAHAN. PKOIMC noNMANAOER
imprisonment,
Anonymous men and women of
unknown qualifications per formed
the
Illegal procedures
BETHREINHARD.SnOAi FKUB tsBDITOf
DALL MAZER, UIIISIKII I IIAII KI I OIIOK
r\iRH it wmem, PRODUCTION MANMJI a
Oltl) have 48 hours It is also unsettling to imagine
the level ol security necessary to enforce the University's ambitious restrictions.
Ami while last year's Fling was rainy and cold at
night, Irvine Auditorium and the ice rink lack the
ambience of the lower Quad field. Sure, the ice rink
has ;i snack bar, but can it compare to Monroe's
libs'
< Iranted, a dry Fling will be a sate I ling, but the
"Suil 'n Satan" theme just won't cut it. If nothing
else, the organizers should center the abridged
celebration around the 20th anniversary of
Woodstock With some theme music provided by
the Byrds (who organizers opted against last year),
students could at least celebrate the spirit of an
uninhibited, three das party — even if they can't
have one.
Drop Your Meal Plan — Now
Do you have, or plan to have, .1
University Dining Service 111e.1l
contract?
Have you ever really considered
why you eat M St.iulter. II Mill
House, or al any of the other
University-sponsored
cafeterias'
glorified
The math is simple and undeniable.
Bui having recently explained tins
greater value 10 many students (some
of whom have since canceled ihen
around campus than ai a dining hall.
Third, take a close look II the
calork content of the vegetable dishes
offered by Dining Service It 1 grilled
skin Meak has Mrs calories, whs do
the "veggie puffs" and "veggie
links'' have 'io and '<o calories
respectively ' Obviously, the "puffs"
and "links" add lubStantial c.iloncs
to (he dishes - and fat loyout body
Fourth, what it you're dieting? Do
sou realty ssarir to pas (12 das lor a
salad bar?
Open
Your
Eyes
Tommy
Leonardi
meal contracts), I have heard
numerous excuses for remaining on
meal plan Perhaps you recognizi
some of these
"Penn's meal plan iv heller than
other school) '
And on an exam. .1 grade ol 2(1 is
better than a 10 — hul you siill tail
Get the picture?
"It's tociabk "
As I first-semester freshman 01
transfet student, you found dining
halls sociable for about two weeks,
after which time you continued 10 eat
and leave with the same group of 2 to
5 friends. As an upperclassnian, ol
course, you've continued this trend.
"When else em 1 car.'"
In no particulai order: rroy's,
White Doc Cafe, McDonald's,
Skolnik's, Beijing, Wendy's,
Everything Yogurt, Cosimo's,
Allcgio Pizza (both ol them),
smoke's. Burgei King, Saladalley,
Boccie. I ee's. India Palace, Billybob,
Taco Don's, Cinnabon. The Roost,
Poor Richard's. Wawa, Nikko's,
Smart Alex. Margarita's. Muffins n'
More, kos Rogers, Obara's (both ol
(hem). High RfaM Pizza, Palladium.
Oold Standard, Audrey's Pit
Barbecue. Caesar's, Chestnut Street
Hai and drill. Olivieri Steaks, Ham's
Deh. Big Al's, Powettoii Pizza,
Abnci's. Fiesta Pizza, Chili's, Won,
Domino'-. I den. ticiin. Hillary's,
Italian Bistro, kciis \ ( ohen, 1 e Bus.
New Dehli. Pop's, a- mans food
trucks as the above named
"/ don V have to carry around a loi
0/ cash "
If you can't trust yourself wiih a
$10 bill. I can'i help you
"I can gel a balanced meal. "
Pint, is this your perception, or
your parents'?
Second, any das vou like, you can
get a far greatn assertion of foods
you arrive here in September.
Granted, sou mas have to wrestle
with youi conscience on this one. . .
•
As a iiinioi in the Quad in
Itss l9Xft, I did not waste my time
and money on a Dining Service con
tract. And I never once used any of
the Quad's kitchens
Instead, 1 ate out daily and spent
BbOUl nine doll.us pel das although I
possess a i.uiiei large appetite.
If you presently have .1 Dining Set
vice 10- or 15-meal contract, you pay
about $12 per day 10 the Universit)
even it sou miss meals (And n's 1101
unusual lor a siudcnl 10 miss al least
one thud Ol Ins meals.) Now think
Just say the magic words: 'Folks, I don't want to
waste your money. »j
reateuranta, and an)
establishment! 1 forgot
01 he 1
"At) partita won'1 la me drop my
You don't cat when you want to
eat. You eat when Dining Servia
allows you to eat. Are you hungry at 3
p.m.? Forget it! At 9 p.m.? Il sou
missed a meal thai da>. sou can BO to
Met lelland Hall and indulge in $2 Ml
worth of soda, hot dogs, and prepackaged sandwiches Yumms
•
Jusi go to '401 Walnut — the home
of Penn's Dining Services
and drop
your meal plan 1 he bursai will credit
to your account a prorated refund —
less your $100 deposit. If you present
is owe nothing to the University, the
bursai will issue sou a refund check In
VIIUI name, and no notice of this Iran
taction will arrive al youi parents' ad
dress. If you drop a 10- or I' meal
plan today, sou will receive a
$700-$~"-n check wulun one week
II soui parents .online you to a
meal plan again ncxi year, sen can
receive a $!7<x)-$inoo refund check by
dropping soui meal plan as soon as
4
"It's convenient "
Are you serious'
Plan B Don't talk 10 sour parents
mtal plan "
Youi parent! want the best foi sou,
so dies think that a Dunne Service
contract will ensure balanced,
nutritious meals And Dining Service
exploits iius parental concern by prin
ling pretty full-coloi brochures and by
serving atypicall) well prepared
seafood dinners lust before Parents
Weekend
Vou know soui parent! better than
anyom else does So -Moose Plan A or
Plan B - or both:
Plan A: talk 10 soui parent!
Just say the niagK wont. "I oiks, I
don't want to waste sour mones
Ihen explain, as I have, all soui
reasons to Ma) away from Penn's
meal plans
about how much additional mones
you spend on all other food and
beverages Irom Monday 10 Friday
Since it ii reasonable 10 assume that a
student on meal plan ipsndi an
average Of three to lour dollars pel
das Monday to Friday purchasing
food Bl Wawa. food trucks,
restaurants, etc, you could easily eat
and eat well — on this same
$I5-$I6 das
that
you're
already
spending.
01 course, there probably ate tome
very good reasons to remain on meal
plan Perhaps you really enjoy the
food. Perhaps you have an elephant's
appetite Maybe sou can't find seggic
putts anywhere else.
Tommy leonardi is ■; ( ollege senior
and a lormcr pholovraphi edilor oj
I he Daily Pcnnxs Is .1111.111 Open Your
Is.- will appear alternate Tuesdays
Policy on Submissions
The Daily Pennsylvania!! welcomes comments tiom the liniscrsity community in the form of
columns and letters to the editor. Unsigned editorials on this page represent the opinion of The
Daily Pennsylvania!!
All other columns, letters and artwork represent the opinions of their
authors and are completely independent of this newspaper's position
Submissions should be typed or written legibly and must be double-spaced. All material should
include the author's name, address, telephone number and a description of University affiliation.
The Daily Pennsytvanian reserves the right to condense all letters and columns. Send submissions
to Bret Parker, Editorial Page Editor-elect, I he DauTt Peruuy/vaniao, 4015 Walnut Street,
Philadelphia Pa. 19104.
Bloom County/Berke Breathed
were
And Not
To Yield
Spring Sting
We thought it might conic to ilnv
Afler ihe adoption of the new alcohol policy and
l.isi SC,H\ impromptu renovation of a Quadrangle
bathroom by a group of moronic drunks, no one expected Fling 1989 to escape reform.
Looking on the bright side, Vice Provost foi
University 1 ife Kim Morrisson elected to keep the
annual party in the familiar confines ol the Quad
She also thought enough of the University's paying
eustomcrs to ask their opinion of how to change the
event — a refreshing idea in light of the administra
lion's handling of the alcohol policy
Most importantly. Fling will be held and at least
one University tradition has survived.
However, it is hard to believe that cutting the
event by one day will eliminate the rowdinesi present
at last year's Fling. If anything, students will pro
bably be tempted to "party harder" because (hey
lew
Sara
Needleman
physicians: many were inept. Auto
mechanics, hair dressers, and oihei
amateurs operated in unsierilc condi
tions and without anesthesia
Desperate women risked bacterial in
lection, embolism, and hemorrhage.
Many dud
An estimated 5,000-10,000 abortion
related deaths occurred each year. Attempted self-induced abortions added
to the carnage of the underground
clinics 1 housands of women, unable
lo afford hack alley services, resorted
10 horrifying home remedies: they
■wallowed dangerous chemicals.
douched with detergent and kerosene,
and inserted coat hangers into (heir
wombs. Already supporting more
children than they could afford, they
feared the consequences of another
pregnancy. Many died, leaving their
families motherless
It is estimated that one million
abortions were performed annually.
And only 8,000 occurred in hospitals.
under safe and legal condition! These
"therapeutic" abortions were
available to affluent women willing to
forfeit their privacy and to pay exorbitant fees. Approval of the hospital's
abortion committee was required and
contingent upon evidence of a health
risk posed hs the pregnancy. Women
unable to prove physical endanger
ment frequently feigned mental illness
to appease the committees. But. these
women paid an especially high price
for terminating their pregnancies —
due to their psychiatric evaluations
many were sterilized without their
prior knowledge or consent.
•
Sunday marked the anniversary of
the Supreme Court's Roc v. Wade
decision. On January 22, 197.'. the
high court reaffirmed women's con
Stitutlonal rights of privacy and personal freedom and established the
legality of early-stage abortions. Just
sixteen years ago, women were given
the legal right to control their lives
and bodies.
The ruling has been under attack hs
anti-abortionists from the moment 11
was handed down. The most recent
threat came earlier this month; on
January 9. 1989, the Supreme Court
llluslralion By Dtvc Hong/Daily Pennsytvanian
agreed to decide the constitutionality
of a Missouri law restricting abortion
While hearing this case does not
necessitate modification of Roe v.
Wade, many are calling for its recxammalion and revocation.
These opponents to the freedom of
choice are self-proclaimed champions
of morality and the "sanctity of life."
Bui history has shown lhat the pro
hibition of abortion will not preclude
Us practice And making abortion il-
more personal than planning one's
family.
If successful, the campaign against
abortion will intensify the inequality
of the sexes. Without the ability to
control their reproduction, women
can control no other aspect of their
lives. Social and economic equality
are impossible when unplanned
pregnancies force women to interrupt
their careers. And the sexual freedoms
enjoyed by men cannot be shared
' . . .they swallowed dangerous chemicals, douched
with detergent and kerosene, and inserted coat
hangers into their wombs.'
legal will only result in illegal abor
11011s Rather than preserving the unborn, outlawing abortion will kill the
living.
Within this nation that was founded upon the personal liberty of its
Citizens, and that heralds itself as a
beacon to oppressed peoples
worldwide, there is a powerful movement at work to suspend the freedom
ol in entire gender.
The United Slates Constitution ensuies the privacy and personal
freedom of the American people —
and there is nothing more private thai
what is within one's self, nothing
while no Infallible method of contraception yel cxisis
Six million American women
become pregnant each year; fifty-four
percent are unplanned. These six
million American citizens exercise the
Constitutional right Of choice which
they are presently in danger of losing.
Twenty-five percent choose abortion.
My mother's friends wailed on
sireelcorners. I fear thai one day my
friends will.
Sara Needleman Is a college unktr.
And Not To Yield will appear alternate Tuesdays.
GAPSA And GSAC Statement on Phaahla
We, the members of the Executive Committees of the
Graduate and Professional Student Assembly (GAP
SA) and thl (iradualc Student Association Council
((ISA! 1 arc shocked and outraged by the prosecution
of our colleague Vincent Phaahla.
We believe the charges against him arc trivial in their
content. Par worse, however, they are politically and
ideologically motivated, and evidence of a campaign of
harassment and intimidation. Mr. Phaahla is being
persecuted because certain parties dislike his views and
his 'polities " His crime is nothing more than vocal
dissent
Prolessoi SeymOUf Mandclbaum is the chairman of
the graduate group in city planning, and the person
dOSM to the disputed admissions prOCBSS. He has signed a statement saying he is satisfied lhat no intentional
violation occurred, and has withdrawn his complaint.
Why ihen does Dean lee C'opelan, who has no direct
or first-hand knowledge of the situation, insist upon
reviving the complaint (unless, of course, il was
C'opleand who asked Mandclbaum to lodge the corn
plain in the first place)? Dean Copcland seems
desperate to "gel" Vincent any way he can. To us, this
suggels nothing less than a vendetta.
This campaign of harassment against Mr. Phaahla is
.1 disgraceful .mack on (he right of free expression and
dissent of all students, regardless of their race and national origin.
We are convinced that Mr. Phaahla is innocent of
any wrong-doing. Any omissions or technical irregularities in his application (dug up from some three
years ago) are Insignificant. They are simply being used
as a clumsy excuse for persecuting an outspoken dissident whose criticisms make conservatives
uncomfortable.
Jusi as we would condemn the harassment and
persecution of student rHesVfcnnli Bl universities in
Mississippi or Alabama in the 1960's. or in the Soviet
Union, Latin America and South Africa today, so 100
we condemn il right here on our own supposedly free
campus
in defending Vincent, we defend the right 10 dissent
without fear of official and institutional reprisal and
intimidation Mr. Phaahla continues 10 enjoy our full
Confidence and support.
GAPSA ANDGSAC
Kxeculive Committees
Fling Chairpersons Statement
Kim Morrisson has just released
the University policy regarding the
ground rules for Spring Fling '89.
While we had hoped the University
would have made the decision
earlier, we arc quite pleased with
the final results.
The panel appointed to make
recommendations on this year's IIing formal discussed a number of
problems lhat had occurred in the
past, including the large amount of
damage that had been done to the
Quad. There was also much debate
about how the University could
prevent the illegal drinking lhal occurs during the Fling weekend.
Many people were opposed to
allowing Fling lo continue in the
same format it had in the past.
Some people even proposed that
the event be cancelled altogether.
Kim Morrisson and the rest of
the administration had a difficult
decision to make. The had 10
decide whether to impose only a
lew added restrictions, cancel the
event or make major changes.
Most students wanted to choose
the first option, but a number of
members of Ihc University nun
muniiy favored the second In the
end ihey decided to give the
students what they wanted. There
are, however, certain guidelines of
which students should be aware:
• Spring Fling '89 will be a dry
event. The University and the stale
have rules for alcohol consumption, and those rules will remain m
force during the Fling weekend.
Both public drinking and underage
drinking will not be tolerated and
appropriate measures will be taken
to ensure thai those violating
receive the appropriate sanctions
• Vandalism, likewise, has no
place during Spring Fling. Those
who choose to damage University
or personal property will be dealt
with in the striclcsl possible
manner.
This is a very important year for
Spring Fling. A number of
members of the University will be
oberving to determine both the
good and the bad aspects of the
event. They will take this information and use il 10 shape Fling for
the coming years. If the event runs
smoothly this year we can look forward to enjoying it in the future.
The administration chose lo
have faith in the students. We hope
lhat our fellow students choose to
prove the administration right.
slll-.KI (.1 I I IN
GLENN KAUFMAN
JEFF SHANKMAN
Spring Fling '89 Chairpersons
Tuesday, January 24, 1989
University eliminates alcohol from Hey Day festivities
HKY DAY. from page I
change ihc event substantially.
"I guess ii jusl mean- ihal people
will drink before the University
sponsored function," K.us^li ..ml
••It is annoying, bul il is obviously
necessary."
"The Univctsits .Iocs noi want to
take on the liability of serving alcohol
to minors . . .. but I do not think thai
the drunken nature will change
because people will drink before they
go out to the balcony," he added.
Current Senior Class Board Presi
dent Michael Kar/ echoed Kanh'l
sentiments, saying that the alcohol
ban is necessary and that students will
adapt to il.
"I don't see it as a deliberate attempt to remove traditions, bul more
as a calculated approach to implement
new University guidelines." kai/
said. "I think it is unfortunate that
juniors are going to miss out on the
full experience of Hey Day. although
the measures are not as extreme as
they could be. I would guess that
juniors will find ways around it."
Moore said that he hopes students
will realize that University traditions
have been altered continuously over
lime, and the current celebration of
Hey Day was not what was originally
planned.
"What people remember as the immediate past experience of Hey Day II
not exactly what Hey Day was
originally meant to be," Moore said
"What I mean is people walk around
with two or three years experience and
■ay, 'This is the way it has always
bean. Why are they changing it this
year?" "
The Dally Pennsylvania!!
Page 7
Help Wanted: Part-time Restaurant workers.
Mice Atmosphere. We want people who lihe
people! Please call the Gold Standard 387-3463
ask for Lynn or Roger
The roots of Hey Day go back to
1X65 when it was called ( lass Day, according to Thi Practical Ptnn. Hey
Day took its current name in 1931 and
has evoked Into the First official event
of ■ senior vcar.
Courts refuse to grant Bundy stay of execution
MARK I, I la. - The highest
courts of the slate and the nation
refused lasl nighl to block today's execution of Ted Bundy, who during the
lasl three days confessed to 20
murders in Western stales
Bundy attended Temple University
in Philadelphia in 1969.
The 42-year-old law school dropout
was described as subdued and emo
tional as he met with psychiatrist
Dorothy I ewis, apparently as part Ol
his lawyers' preparations for a possl
ble last minute argument that Bundy
was mentally incompetent to be
executed.
(lov. Bob Marline/ told reporters
in Tallahassee, three psychiatrists
were standing by 10 examine Bundy if
necessary and certify his menial
competency.
After confessing during the
weekend to two Colorado murders. Intalked with Colorado investigators
again Monday, bul disclosed no information about three unsolved slaying!
in the state, officials said.
Bundy also met with James Dobson, host of a California Christian
radio show, during the afternoon. In
a one-hour interview, Dohson said,
Bundy tearfully expressed "great
remorse" but wanted to stress that he
believes hard-core pornography "was
the fuel for his fantasies" that spurred
him into violent crimes
Dobson, a psychologist whose show
I OCUI on (he Family" is heard daily
on aboul 1,300 radio stations, said
Bundy admitted he was a murderer
and said society had a right to protect
itself from people "with his
weakness."
Dobson said Bundy now is
"thankful that . . . again he is in
touch with his feelings and his guilt
and he feels great remorse for what
he's done."
Bundy was scheduled to die in
I lorida's electric chair at 7 a.m. today
for the 1978 kidnap-murder of
12-year-old Kimberly leach of I ake
( its. He also was convicted of killing
two sorority sisters in Tallahassee in
1978.
U.S. Supreme Court justices voted
9 4 to reject an emergency request
aimed at keeping Bundy alive until a
formal appeal could be filed with the
nation's highest court. The justices
had four times previously rejected
formal appeals from Bundy.
Bundy's lawyers argued that jurors
in the leach case were misled about
the importance of their role in determining whether Bundy would receive
the death penally or life in prison for
his crime In Florida, juries in capital
cases recommend a punishment, bul
the presiding judge is free to accept or
reject the recommendation.
The justices rejected a related argument by a 6-3 vote, and they voted 7-2
to turn down a request to delay the execution until the high court could hear
an appeal claiming that Bundy's death
sentence was tainted because his
lawyers were not shown all the information considered in the sentencing.
The attorneys also Tiled an appeal
in state Supreme Court, claiming the
jury instructions were improper. The
state Supreme Court on Monday
night denied his request for a stay and
denied related requests for slays so
lhal higher courts could review il, said
Supreme Court deputy clerk Tanya
Carroll.
"We gave him nothing," she said.
Meanwhile, a forensic psychologist
in Portland, Ore., said he believes
Bundy started his killings in the Bast
long before the Seattle murder lhal is
the first publicly linked to the condemned killer. The Oregonian
newspaper reported in Today's
editions.
The psychologist, Art Norman,
spent 90 lo 100 hours interviewing
Bundy over 15 months in 1986 and
1987 while working on Bundy's first
appeal of his death sentences
It is the lourth time an execution
has been set for Bundy.
But this weekend, he began confess
ing to a string of murders. He li.is
been linked to as many as 36 killings
and disappearances of young women
in Washington. Colorado, Utah and
other Western states.
But Colorado Attorney General
Duane Woodard accused him of sti
inging along investigators to avoid or
delay execution.
Martinez said the execution would
go forward whether or not Bundy has
time to tell all he knows about killings
and locations of bodies.
"I think the way in which led
perhaps is using the confessioni to
bargain for time with the law enforce
ment people has been difficult for
some folks to deal with," the Rev,
David Ernsl, pastor of the Tacoma,
Wash., church where Bundy's family
worships weekly, said in an interview
Sunday.
1989 Penn in Warsaw (Poland)
June 18-July 30
Polish Society and Politics
Enterprise-Government Relations
East-West Economic Relations
Tour of Poland
INFORMATION MEETING
I 'iK-isdatj. January H4. 4:00 p.m.
Perxnlman Library. 2riciJloor
n<i>nett Mall
VCRs changing social life on campus
VIDEOS, from page I
"The fact that students can't drink
lias forced |them| to look at alternative toims of entertainment." he
said.
The newest store. Video Library at
4040 Locust Street, opened in
December and has enjoyed a large
response, according to Whit Schilling,
the store's owner.
"As video players become more
widely available, it's easier for
students to rent." Schilling laid
Saturday, adding that approximately
three-quarters of Video I ibrary's new
members are University students
But how has renting become such a
popular entertainment alternative that
the campus can support four video
Applications
ADMISSIONS, from page I
ing from 14,484 to 13.300 the year
before.
"So far as we know, it seems as
though the pool is stronger than las)
year, and that lasl year's pool was
stronger than ihe year before," the
Duke admissions officer said
yesterday.
He added that he has no indications
that potential applicants believe the
quality of education has declined in
either Ivy League or highly ranked
universities.
Happy year
and-a-half
Amy, and
Happy one
year Brent
Mores?
College sophomore Kate Menken
said yesterday that the growing cost of
movie tickets has driven many
students away from the cinemas.
"VCR's aren't as much of a novelty
as they used lo be," Menken said.
"It's cheaper lo get together and rent
a movie than to pay the Tivc dollars to
see one."
Another student explained that
VCR's are simply more convenient.
"Renting a movie is an alternative
to going outside," said Wharton
sophomore Dave Jacobs. "Of course,
one person has to go out into the cold
to get the movie "
But others criticized Ihe growing
video-culture, suggesting thai
students seek entertainment outside
their dormitories.
"I think it's just easier for people to
go out and rent a movie than it is for
them to look through the paper, find
something to do in Ihe city, and do
il," Wharton and Engineering
sophomore Dave Ranter said.
Most students acknowledged lhal
spending the evening with Jason,
Kreddy or Molly Ringwald isn't
necessarily a lasl resort, the cheapest
option, or the easiest way to avoid the
city streets. Rather, they maintain
lhal renting is oflen simply an en
joyable. trouble-free alternative.
"It's a good way to relax with your
friends," said College sophomore
Jamie Hayes.
What Makes Us So
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WETit FIGHTING FOR
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•*■«» 8
The Dail> Pennsylvania!!
Tuesday, January 24, 1989
Off the Wire
Compiled from Associated Press Dispatches
World
Kremlin official cites high abortion rate
MOSCOW — The highest-ranking woman in the
Kremlin decried the chronic shortage of contraceptives in
the Soviet Union yesterday, saying it contributes to an
estimated 6.5 million abortions a year.
"It is not normal when the number of abortions is about
equal to the number of births," Alexandra Biryukova told
a news conference.
"Our complaints from women are completely wellfounded concerning the number of abortions compared to
the use of contraceptives," she said.
The comments by Biryukova. a candidate member of
the ruling Communist Party Politburo and a deputy
premier, addressed an issue that until recently would not
be discussed by the official Soviet media, much less by a
top official.
But in the past two years as the society has begun to
discuss openly many of the social problems it kept hidden
for decades, women have protested the lack of contraceptives and sex education, and the humiliation they say they
face when they seek an abortion.
Abortion is used instead of contraceptives as the main
means of birth control in the Soviet Union, and Western
experts estimate that the average Soviet woman has nine
abortions during her child-bearing yean
Nation
Policeman charged with manslaughter
MIAMI — The policeman whose fatal shooting of a
black motorcyclist sparked last week's racial violence was
arrested yesterday and charged with manslaughter only
hours after the young man's funeral.
Meanwhile, the Justice Department's civil rights division began an investigation into the shooting, and a city
panel formed to review the incident complained it did not
have sufficient power.
Officer William Lozano. 29, was booked into Dade
County Jail on two counts of manslaughter and released
after posting $10,000 bond, said Sargent Arthur demons.
Lozano was charged in the killings of Clement Lloyd,
23, and Allen Blanchard, 24. The two were speeding on a
motorcycle January 16 in Overtown when Lozano allegedly shot Lloyd in the head. Lloyd died at the scene and
Blanchard. his passenger, died the next day from injuries
suffered in the ensuing crash.
Pro-life activists march on Washington
WASHINGTON — President Bush yesterday called
abortion "our American tragedy" as nearly 70,000 protesters marked the anniversary of the Supreme Court's
landmark decision legalizing abortion. The march
organizer said the new administration should "provide actions to carry out their words."
Bush, speaking by telephone hook-up to the activists,
said the Supreme Court's 1973 Roe vs. Wade decision
"was wrong and should be overturned."
"I wanted to share with you my deep personal concern
about our American tragedy — abortion on demand,"
Bush said over loudspeakers. "I think America needs a
human life amendment and I think when it comes to abor
tion, there's a better way — the way of adoption, the way
of life-
Court upholds law on secret sources
TRENTON. N. J. — The state Supreme Court upheld
New Jersey's shield law yesterday and ruled that a former
newspaper reporter should not have to testify in the
murder trial of a man he interviewed.
"The public perception conveyed by compelling Evan
Schuman to testify will hinder the free flow of information
from newspapers to the public." said a summary of the
unanimous opinion.
The ruling reversed an appellate court decision holding
that the reporter could be called to the witness stand
despite protections under New Jersey's shield law, which
prevents prosecutors from commandeering a reporter's
material.
Schuman. formerly of the New Jersey Herald of
Newton, had been subpoenaed by Sussex County Prosecutor Richard Honig in March of 1987 to testify in the
case of Gary Mayron, charged with the kidnapping and
murder of a 17-year-old girl.
The Newton newspaper had published accounts of
telephone interviews between Schuman and Mayron in
which the defendant denied intentions to kill the victim
and confessed to having sex with her prior to beating her
to death.
Weather
Today: Mostly sunny and mild with highs in the low to
mid 50s.
Tomorrow: Mostly clear, then becoming mostly cloudy,
with lows in the high 20s.
Salvador Dali, founder of Surrealism, dies at 84
FIGUERAS, Spain — Surrealist master
Salvador Dali, who was among the century's most important painters and cicated
a public image to match his art, died
yesterday in the town where he was born
84 years ago.
The melting clocks and barren landscape
ol his "Persistence of Memory" made an
indelible impression on contemporary
culture. It is probably the most celebrated
surrealist painting in the world.
Equally identified with "The Divine
Dali," as he liked to call himself, were the
pointed, waxed mustache curling up like a
bull's horns, long hair and a walking stick,
of which he owned more than 30.
Dali. a founder of the surrealist move-
Argentine
military
recaptures
army base
BUENOS AIRES. Argentina —
Soldiers backed by tanks and artillery
yesterday regained control ol most of
an infantry base that civilian commandos assaulted and held briefly.
Officials said the attackers were leftist
guerrillas.
At least 20 of the estimated 50 commandos were killed or wounded in the
fighting at the base 12 miles north ol
the capital, the independent news
agency Diarios y Noticias reported,
citing an unidentified military source.
Hospital officials said at least four
soldiers were killed and 28 wounded,
including soldiers, police and one
reporter.
"Militarily, the situation at the 3rd
infantry regiment at La Tablada is
under control," the secretary for state
intelligence, Facundo Suarez, told the
government news agency Telam.
He said, however, that some commandos remained on the base 10
hours after the morning attack.
"The army has the strength to
resolve the situation immediately, but
is trying to avoid unnecessary bloodshed," Suarez said.
By early evening, the commandos
were isolated in an officers' club,
chapel and armory, state-run and independent news agencies reported.
Some took positions in buildings and
trees outside the base and sniped at
soldiers and police. Diarios y Noticias
reported.
Forms
Padding
liiiuiiiig
Collating
Carbonless Paper
Labels
Pick-UpA Deliver]
Convenient Hour-
kinko's
the copy center
Open Early, Open Late
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He also said: "Life would be practical!)
Daily Pennsvlvanian tile pholo
A vendor sells assorted drug paraphernalia al Spring
Fling 1974. Times, like the University's alcohol policy,
have changed and ihe young entrepreneur will not be
welcome back into the Quadrangle again this year.
achievement would be lost in a mosaic ol shifting
preferences based on unmeasurablc claims of past
wrongs." O'Connor said.
But Justice Thurgood Marshall, in a stinging dissent.
said the ruling "sounds a full-scale retreat from the court's
longstanding solicitude to race-conscious remedial
efforts
"Today's decision marks a deliberate and giant step
backward in this court's affirmative action
jurisprudence," he said.
Marshall, the court's only black, also .ucuscd the majority of "armchair cynicism" in suggesting that the setaside was a product of local racial politics.
The ruling is expected to have far-reaching impact on
public works set-aside programs, and possibly other forms
of affirmative action as well.
I or ihe lirst nine, a majority ol justices said that when
public olluials ire accused of reverse discrimination
iiuot.is, the courts must analyze affirmative action plans
with "strict sautins " Such analysis generally dooms
onscious governmental actions.
3736 Walnut St I'hlidelphia PA ^151386-6114
3907 Walnut Si Philadelphia PA .2151386 6410
AN OPEN LETTER
To Professors and
Teaching Assistants
at the
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
impossible on the globe if there existed 20
or M Dalis Hut there is nothing to fear.
That can never happen."
Although few critics faulted Dali's
technical virtuosity, they did not hold his
work in the highest esteem. Most felt his
was a flawed talent, sometimes managing
to balance realistic technique and irrational content but too often caught up in
his own role as a poseur-painter.
Whatever the critics thought, the public
adored Dali, who also was a decorator,
fashion and jewelry designer and author.
A major retrospective in 1979-80 attracted more than a million visitors in
Paris and 250,000 in London.
Quake hits
Soviet Asia
killing 1000
Photo Archives: 1974
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court, in what three
justices called "a giant step backward" for racial equality,
drastically limited yesterday the power of states and cities
to earmark public works contracts for minority-owned
businesso
Voting6-3. the court said the Richmond. Virginia, ( It)
Council unconstitutionally discriminated against whites in
saying a contractor on any city building contract must give
at least 30 percent of the value of the project to linns al
least one-half minority owned.
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, writing for the court,
said the city that was once the seat of the old Confederacy
and now has a majority of blacks on its governing body
relied on "past societal discrimination" to justify the
quota.
"None of the evidence presented by the city points to
any identified discrimination in the Richmond construe
tion industry," she said.
Adoption of such nationwide would obliterate the goal
of a colorblind America, she said
"The dream of a nation of equal citizens in a matt)
where race is irrelevant to personal opportunity and
We can be your support staff!
226 s -tilth si
said Dali died "softly, without making any
special last statement."
King Juan Carlos, a personal friend,
MM Condolences. Culture Minister Jorge
Scmprun described Dali as the "last of a
generation of creators who revolutionized
art in our century."
What Dali called his "sublime
craziness." began early. He was expelled
from art school in 1926 for arrogance and
briefly jailed because of political activities
for Catalonian autonomy.
After becoming famous, Dali laid:
"The only difference between a crazy person ami me is the fact that I am not
Court limits minority contracts
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ment, was the lasi of an outstanding
generation of Spanish painters that included Pablo PlcaSSO and Joan Miro.
He died at 10:15 a.m. at Figueras
Hospital. His physician, Charles Ponsati,
said: "The cause of death was cardiac arrest brought on by his respiratory insulh
ciency and pneumonia."
Dali had heart problems and had been
confined 10 a wheckliaii lincc suffering
severe burns in a fire at his home in I9H-I.
He was taken to the hospital five days
before his death.
The painter was born May 11, 1904, to a
notary public in this small Catalonian
town. After a life of flamboyance and K
centricity, his lawyer Miguel Domencch
MOSCOW — A predawn earthquake in Soviet Central
Asia unleashed a 50-foot-high wall of dirt and mud that
buried a mountain village and swept through at least two
others yesterday, killing up to 1,000 people as they slept,
officials said.
The devastating earthquake in the republic of lad
zhikistan was the second to strike the Soviet Union in two
months.
"Almost everybody died," Zainiddin Nasreddinov,
editor-in-chief of Tadzhikistan's official news agency, said
by telephone after visiting the wrecked farming settlement
of Sharora. He estimated the number of dead there alone
at 600.
Sharora "had more than 150 peasant households before
that tragic moment," the Soviet news agency Tass
reported. "Now most of it is razed to the ground by the
ruthless force of the natural calamity."
Tass said the number of dead in the disaster zone 1,800
miles southeast of Moscow was estimated al 1,000, but
cautioned that was a preliminary figure.
"Rescue work is being continued and distant mountain
villages have not been checked yet," Tass said. Damaged
roads were hampering those efforts.
The quake struck the southwestern part of Tadjikistan, a Soviet republic of more than 4.8 million people that borders Afghanistan and China.
The 40-second tremor, at 5:02 a.m. [6:02 p.m. EST Sunday) was centered about 20 to 30 miles southwest of Tadzhikistan's capital of Dushanbe, a city of more than
460,000 people, in the fertile Ciissar district, a center of
grapegrowing and livestock-raising, Tass said.
An official at Dushanbe's seismic center said the quake
was strong enough to knock things off shelves in tall
apartment buildings in the city, but that it caused no
known damage or injuries there. He declined to give his
name.
The U.S. Geological Survey in Reston, Virginia,
estimated the quake at 5.4 on the Richter scale, which
measures ground motion as recorded on a seismograph.
The December 7 earthquake in northwestern Armenia,
1,300 miles west of Dushanbe, registered a 6.9 on the
Richter scale and killed 25,000 people.
The earthquake unhinged a wall of sodden dirt and mud
at least five miles wide that buried the village of OkuliBolo and much of Sharora, said Erkin Kasimov, an official of Tadzhikistan's Foreign Ministry.
"Almost all of the victims died asleep in their beds,"
Police Major Alexander Loparev, duty officer at Tadjikistan Interior Ministry headquarters in Dushanbe said
by telephone.
Residents of another village, Okuli-Poyen, apparently
roused in time, fled in panic before the mudslide, which
traveled 12 to 14 miles, could reach their homes, Kasimov
said from Dushanbe.
Officials and Soviet media said the devastation was
vast, and total in places.
In Okuli-Bolo and Okuli-Poyen, near the epicenter,
"everything is destroyed — all the homes, the schools, the
hospitals and clinics, the stores." Nasreddinov said.
Okuli-Bolo is a "heap of rubble" and the chairman of a
local economic cooperative, Hairrulo Yuldashev, said the
households of 70 peasant families were "completely
demolished and buried by the landslide," Tass said. More
than 70 villagers were buried by the landslide, it said.
In Sharora, "cries and wails can be heard everwhere,"
1 ass reported.
WHARTON WOMEN
isn't just tor Wharton anymore!
COLLEGE, ENGINEERING
& NURSING WOMEN
come to the Wharton Women General Meeting
Wed. Jan. 25th at 7:00 PM in Vance Hall B2
Subject - BULK TEACHING PACKETS
We would like to make you aware of the servicea we otter in
relation to teaching materials:
(11 Preparation of a matter set. either from books or from
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duplicate will be bound and delivered to you gratis.
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duplicator, will make single tided or if desired, you can have
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(61 At no time will it be necessary for the Profettor or
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Tuesday, January 24. 1989
Tfce Daly PeHiylvaniaa
Pag* 9
After starting season 4-7, Penn hopes its arrow is pointing up the Ivy charts
MUSIC, from page 12
Duncombe's presence changes Penn's
makeup. He gives the Quakers a
legitimate inside force, who has the
ability to outplay Notre Dame's super
freshman 6-10 LaPhonso Ellis.
In the Irish's 60-55 win in early
January, Duncombe played 36
minutes and scored 16 points compared to Ellis' II points and 6-11
center Keith Robinson's seven. Duncombe's 14 points on seven-for-nine
shooting was also a pivitol reason why
the Quakers beat Washington.
But Duncombe has a proclivity for
disappearing in games. Against Drexel, Penn was without then-injured
Tyrone Gilliams (12.2 points per
game) and Jerry Simon (13.2 ppg),
but Duncombe took just seven shots
against a Dragons' team that didn't
have strong inside defense. In a 77-61
loss to La Salic, Duncombe played
only 16 minutes and was held
scoreless, and against St. Joe's, Duncombe scored just nine points in 22
minutes in a 64-56 Quakers' defeat.
Duncombe's foul trouble can be
traced to three sources: first, his
energy is unprecedented. While
there's nothing apparently evil in this,
he sometimes tries for a rebound he
has no chance of getting. Second, it's
difficult to play against Villanova's
7-3 Tom Greis or the Irish's twin
towers. But in the Ivy League the only
center above seven feet is Dartmouth's Walter Palmer, who Duncombe scored 16 points against last
season at the Palestra.
Third, many of Duncombe's fouls
stem from his inability to move his
feet on defense; instead, using his
body to get to the defensive spot. It
IVY STANDINGS
Ivy Overall
Dartmouth
3-0
10-5
Yale
2-0
7-9
PENN
0-0
4-7
Princeton
0-0
8-4
Harvard
2-1
6-8
Columbia
1-2
5-10
Brown
0-2
5-9
Cornell
0-3
3-10
Last Night's Games
PRINCETON 74. Muhlenberg 61
LEHIGH 93, Columbia 81
Lafayette 64, CORNELL 46
Central Conn. 72, DARTMOUTH 70
Friday's Games
YALE 64, Brown 55
Saturday's Games
COLUMBIA 60, Cornell 55
Last Tuesday's Games
ST. JOSEPH'S 64. Penn 56
MANHATTAN 77. Yale 61
DARTMOUTH 81. Vermount 68
Home learn in CAPs
happens rarely, but the defensive
lapses have been deadly for Duncombe. And when Duncombe's in
trouble, so is Penn.
you hit me with your best shot. Just
fire away. — The Three Bombadeers.
Penn's three top scorers, senior
guard Walt Frazier (I6.3 ppg). Simon
and Gilliams, spend most of the time
on the perimeter but they are at their
most effective penetrating. All three
have had their problems.
Frazier, a quintessential point
guard who was willingly thrown into
the shooting spot, has struggled for
quality shots, shooting just 36.4 percent from the field and 33.3 percent
from three-point land.
Gilliams, a sclf-procalimcd — und
acurately, too — "born penetrator,"
is streaky from the field, shooting
45.7 percent. Simon started the season
strong but has tailed off, shooting
45.3 from the field and 33.3 percent
from three-point range.
While Frazier, Gilliams and Simon
form a deadly threesome against the
man-to-man, it's no secret that the
Quakers are vulnerable against the
zone.
Penn's zone offense is simply to
pass the ball around the perimeter,
waiting for a seam that never comes,
while Duncombe runs a triangle in the
key — from block to block to the foul
line.
Playing in the Ivy League means
facing zone defenses. And one can be
sure that the majority of Ivy teams
who can't handle Penn in a fast-paced
game will taunt the Quakers to shoot
from the outside.
Frazier and Gilliams, by their ability to create, still makeup what is
W. Squash splits on road
SPLIT, from page 12
Despite the two losses, Penn
pointed to many bright spots of the
trip, starting with its top-seeded
player, junior Mary McGowan.
Against Dartmouth, McGowan
registered the Quakers' only win,
defeating Jessica Berg in four games,
8-15, 15-13. 15-12. 15-7.
•
"That's the best squash I've ever
seen her play," Penn assistant coach
Julie Harris said.
Hit me with your best shot. C'mon
hit me with your best shot. Why don't
Wetzel had no criticism for the
Quakers over these losses, as she said
Penn was simply overmatched by the
more powerful Dartmouth squad.
The other problem Penn faced is
one inherent in all road trips — namely, all squash courts are not created
equal.
Most courts are hotter than Penn's
Ringe courts, which increases the
elasticity of the ball. The adjustment
to the higher bounces can be difficult
for players, but coach Wetzel says
that she has "no excuses" for it. as it
is just part of the sport.
That's just the way the ball
bounces.
arguably the class backcourt in the
league, and Simon's presence will be
indispensable in guarding Harvard's
Ralph James, Princeton's Bob
Scrabis, and Dartmouth's Jim Barton. But the Quakers will need more
offensive production from the
threesome.
If any of them continue to struggle.
LIMPS, from page 12
Where Penn was really hurt was in
the field events, where nagging
weaknesses proved especially damaging. The Quakers failed to score in the
pole vault, long jump and high jump.
"If you're a 4:20 miler and you're
sick, maybe you run 4:25," Powell
said. "But if you're a vaulter and
you're not 100 percent, you'll
no—height."
Other highlights were few and far
between. Rob Kipness placed second
in the 55-meter dash in a fast 6.60
seconds, and Craig Wiley garnered
third in the 55-meter hurdles in 7.92
seconds, an event which he would be
expected to win if healthy.
Freshman Cecil Smart continued to
show why he's considered a phenom
with a second-place 50.45 in the 400
meters, and mile relay teammate Rich
Over!iolt glided to second in the 500m
in 1:05.62. In the 1,000-m Mike
Guastella took second in 2:34.39, and
Bill Harrington matched him with a
PRESENTS
fun & (ErtmE-taij mettt
101st Annual Production
STUDENT SHOWS AT THE
MASK AND WIG CLUBHOUSE
310 S. QUINCE ST.
(Between 11th and 12th, Spruce and Pine Sts.)
Friday
Saturday
Thursday
Thursday
Jan. 27
Jan. 28
Feb. 2
Feb. 16
Saturday Feb. 18
Thursday Mar. 30
Thursday Apr. 6
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE ANNENBERG BOX OFFICE 898-6791
Partially Funded by S A C
•
Whoaaaaa, you take away the biggest
Please see MUSIC, page 11
M. Track loses tri-meet
THE MASK AND WIG CLUB
Curtain at 8:00 pm
Thursday $7.00
Friday/
Saturday $9.00
freshman John Pettibone, Penn's
purest shooter, will see his role continue to grow. Pettibone scored 16
points against Drexel's zone and shot
four-for-five against St. Joe's.
4:22.76 clocking for second in the
mile. The mile relay team also ran
well, as the quartet of Mike Prowell,
Dave Horrocks, Smart, and Overholt
managed 3:25.42 on a tight, slow
(rack for second (they ran 3:22 in their
victory at Syracuse two weeks ago).
In the field events, Chris Gubeno
and Rob Weikel placed 2—3 in the
shot put with throws of 48' 11 Vt" and
48'10", respectively. Weikel's effort
was a personal best. Finally, George
Vrabec saved the Quakers from being
shut out in the jumps, soaring to third
in the triple jump with a personal best
leap of 45'7'/i".
Penn's next meet is at Navy on Friday, and Powell is planning to send a
small contingent to the prestigious
Princeton Relays Sunday.
"It's been a strange year se far,"
Powell said. "We have to weather this
storm of injuries and sickness. . . .
It's a weird time of year."
Then he added with a sarcastic
smile: "Welcome back to school."
Pagr 10
The Daily Pennsylvania!!
I ucsday. January 24, 1989
898-1111
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ffl aat
INDEX
FOR RENT
FOR SALE
HELP WANTED
INSTRUCTION
PERSONALS
RIDES OFFERED
ROOMMATES
SUBLET
TRAVEL
TYPIST
TERMS
There are no refunds for
cancelled classified ads
Check your ad on the first
day it runs The Daily Pennsylvanian will only
assume responsibility for
the first day.
FOR RENT
FOR RENT
O'DONNELL REALTY
222-2600
ONE BEDROOM 40th and Pine
2,4,46 BEDROOM APTS and
houses newly renovated, large
price range, extras 626-9390 or
387 9523
42ND AND BALTIMORE Large
one bedroom, price negotiable
High ceilings 483-6563
43RO AND PINE 2 bedroom $450
plus t bedroom $400 plus 42nd
and Sansom 2 bedroom $410
387-4137
APARTMENT FOR RENT Effi
ciency located at 39th Pine One
year lease available now Call
Barb at 222 2675
APT EFFIC. Desirable block ol
4200 Pine St $275/mo and utriities Selh. 3866090
ATTRACTIVE, MODERN 1 bed
room apartment dose to Umver
sity, recently renovated, tile bath,
secure, quiet burtckng 9am-9pm
5354)043
DREXEL/PENN - APTS. All sizes
Unfurnished Monthly leases Call
349-9429
UNIVERSITY AREA
graduate apartments
All sizes available- some
for immediate occupancy
Special lease after 1st
year allows early release
for graduation Free
shuttle service from
campus Alan H. Klein
Apartments. Contact Mrs
Carr 748-3339 or Mr
Martin at 222-4449
FOUR BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE
38th Lancaster
Renovated,
washer/dryer, dishwasher Available now 680 energy efficient
349-8981
HOUSE 6 bedroom $1000 plus 2
bedrooms starting $410 to $610
Available immediately 367-4137
LARGE EFFICIENCY, separate
kitchen section, modern bath.
hardwood floor, track lighting,
quiet apt house with grad students, safe street 4800 Spring
field 667 1068 after 3
ONE BEDROOM, rear storage
room
Reasonable 47th and
Spruce
686-8466 (w). Peter
March 1 si occupancy
Furnished and
Unfurnished
Apartments
39th to 44th
Chestnut to taMmons
EXCITING. EXPANDING organi
zatnn on campus needs people lo
assist many aspects ol growing
business now Sales, database
management and marketing, flyering Call TakeNote 440-9870
SERVICES
BEAUTIFUL BI-LEVEL 3 bed
room at 46xx Spruce available
Feb lor $1000 including all utili
lies 6 rooms ? baths plus basement
New paint
Mandy
747-4949
40TH AND SPRUCE
dBASE III PROGRAMMER
wanted p/i. tor business/LAN
apps Call Kay. 8964933
RIDES WANTED
WANTED
$425 one bedroom 40th and Bain
more, $375. two bedroom 45th
and Cheater. $575. three bedroom
43rd and Sansom. $425 Call lor
other listings
ONE BEDROOM APT. 3960 Pine
Available now Beautiful, clean,
spacious Full kitchen Must see
Bargain on rent Call evenings
387 1558
PRIVATE ONE BEDROOM heal
included, coin-op washer/dryer
Private entrance 521 South 42nd
Street, between Chester and Balti
more $400 386-7475
THREE ROOMS FOR RENT in
five bedroom Victorian in Unrver
sity City Modem kitchen, wither,
dryei
Non-smokers prelerred
Available immediately until May
only Call Kathy at 747-6934 in
evening or Mike al 896-6716 during day
TWO BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE
Security system, washer/dryer,
skylights $595 386-8628
UNIVERSITY CITY efficiency includes heat. $250 Well maintained building 566 7734
THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA undergraduate accounting society and Cooper and
Lybrand invite you to a seminar on
summer internships in public accounting January 25 1969 Irom
6 30 lo 8 30 al the Penn Tower
Hotel Assembly Room
DISC JOCKEYS AN0 VIDEO
photographers Part lime, must
have car. Purple Haze will train
and provide equipment 667-6263
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR RENT
4000 BLOCK PINE and Baltimore
Renovated 2BR. 3BR. 48R span
menu Available June 222-6126
El TOWNHOUSES S
11
fl APARTMENTS I1
LOST a FOUND
100S S. 4STH ST. - Newly refin
ished efficiencies and 1BRS
Sunny apis quiet neighborhood,
hdwd Iks . Ig closets, ample park
ing. public transportation 1/2 block
•way From $320 00 to $410 00
plus electric All include heal Call
7264608 or 1 935-2480
CEDAR AVENUE: Restored Vic
torian house 4615-19 Cedar Avenue - Renovated Victorian house
2 BR apts New kitchens, large
closets, built in shelves, hardwood
Doors, full attics, large backyard
$49S/mo through August.normally
$69S/mo 1-935-2481
COOPERS &LYBRAND
Finest selection of houses
ond apartments.
Eff., one,two,three,and up
to fourteen bedrooms.
"Beige Block" and other
locations near campus.
Some available now,
most available
June/September.
Penn Consumer Board
Approved Leases
Open
Monday - Friday
9:00 am - 7:00 pm
Saturday - Sunday
1QOO am - 400 pm
EXPERIENCED BABYSITTER
needed lor inlanl in faculty apart
menl in quad Flexible hours
Please call 243-5101
FILMS/CONCERTS. The Arts
Center al International House
seeks work study assistants lor
eclectic film/video series and
world music and \azz concerts
Flexible night/weekend or daytime
ticket sales/office help Call
895*542/6537 afternoons 3701
Chestnut Slreel
GRADUATE STUDENTSTAKENOTE Opportunity lo earn $$$ in
your field and provide a valuable
service lo students at the same
lime Work with TakeNote this
semester
Call 440-9870 for
information.
KADIMA ADVISOR - Center City
group needs person experienced
working with pre-teens 2 events/
mo
Good parent support
735-5148
MALES. 21 YEARS or older and
m good health, wanted lo participate in clinical pharmacological
studies Please call 662-8766 lor
details
MODELS/ACTORS WANTED.
DuPont Model Management,
Phila's top agency is searching for
new laces lor TV commercials,
films, and catalogue work No experience or training required
$100-5507hour No, we are not a
phoney school or workshop
agency We just need good new
faces Call for an appointment
568-4340
PART-TIME HANDY PERSON
wanted, male or female, flexible
hours, must be reliable, strong,
hardworking, and ready and will
ing to befriend seventy children
Job includes not much lifting,
cleaning, minor repairs, etc Call
Susan at The Parent Infant Center. 898-4180
PART TIME CLERICAL position
available at busy University City
office Data entry and clerical
(unctions College student preferred 3498784
ATTENTION- GOVERNMENT
eeand veracies from $100 Fords.
Msiteass
Corvettes. Chevys
Surplus buyers guide
I -602-838-8885 Ext A4239
PT SALESPERSON specialty
sports store looking for two athletic, outgoing individuals 10-20
hours per week. Apply in person
only Finish Line Sports 1915 Walnut Street
Efficiencies, One and
Two bedrooms
S256 to SoOO
Newly Renovated
Three Bedrooms
$975
AVAILABLE NOW
OR SUMMER 89
FOAM SLEEP SOFA. Almost
new Best offer Call Molly
222-2650
RIGHT NOW - people needed to
flyer and lo sell tor TakeNote Call
440-9670
FOR SALE: King-sue Futon double thick with Moral cover Nice lor
stretching outtt"1 Walnut veneer
large desk with typewriter table
spacious drawers Set ot book
shelves, portable, all hold lots ol
books Call 732-2713. please
415 South 42nd St
342-7167
382-5558
IBM COMPATIBLE KAVPRO PC
30MB hard disk, monitor, printer
$2000 new. sacrifice for $1000
6621028
SECRETARY Fulltime for nonprofit agency Must possess
strong office skills and working
knowledge ol Word Perfect Full
range of secretarial duties included in position Unique, inter
listing environment Send resume
with salary requirements to Office
Manager. 125 South 9th Street.
Suite 603. Phila 19107
SPRING BREAK Nassau/
Paradise Island from $299 00
Package includes roundtrip air.
transfers. 7 nights hotel, beach
parties, tree lunch, cruise, tree
admission to nxjhtclubs. taxes
and more!!' Cancun packages
also available" Organize small
group, earn Iree trip'
1-800-231-0113 or (203) 967-3330
IBM XT CLONE basic system
$550 352-1695
Houses And Apts.
40th and Spruce
Newly Renovated
Clean, Quiet, Extras
Call anytime
626-9390 or 387-9523
IS IT TRUE You Can Buy Jeeps
lor $44 through the U S government? Get the lacts today1 Can
1-31? 742-1142 Eat 3602
LEADING EDGE (AT) ncompuler
IBM compatible, warranty intact.
40 megabyte, hard and floppy
drives, color monitor, retails
$2400 asking $1700. negotiable
387-1645
STUDENT RESEARCH ASSISTANTS needed knowledge ol
health services research, statistical package and medical terminology Work study/non-work sludy
CaH 8962445. ask lor Lisa G
MAC S12K external disk drive
Imagewnter
Good condition
$1000 2434592
SUMMER EMPLOYMENTNJ
beach resort Wildwood amusement game positions including
managerial Good pay Free company housing Write Martin Shapiro 1233 Commerce Avenue. Union New Jersey 07063
MTTENHOUSE SQUARE Fitness
Club membership lor sale al reasonable price 243-5062
! TO TAKENOTE the
supplemental lecture note service
that has helped students al Cornell lor years Now helping stu
dents to get more out of lecture al
UPenn
TAKENOTE: ARE YOUR TA Ing
one ol Penn's large lecture
courses this semester? If so we
have a job which pays good $$$
and helps your students Be a
TakeNote noletaker
Call
44O-9870 lor mlormalion
UNIV OF PA GRADUATE SCho
larship lor sale Reasonable Can
13 month least- I'm 12 months' rent
(.AKDI N COURT APARTMENTS
TECHNICAL POSITION in
molecular heart physiology lab tor
recant graduate in biological/
physical sciences Minimum two
years, lull-lime. eiceeent opportunity lo gain research experience
before entering graduate or medical school CaH Anne. 806-7939
HELP WANTS)
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT
TELEVISION RESEARCH PRO
JECT needs coders and key
punchers tor part-time employ
menl during the spring semester
beginning late January Will tram
Coders must work 9 a ml p m
Mon-Fn $S/hr Call 896-7036 to
schedule interview EOE/AA
IMMEDIATELY OPENING lor administrative assistant in University
City Word processing Skala in
Display Write III Speed 60 WPM
Able to work independently and
uuneatiate protects lor 2 directors
Buaieea school grad or college
ptepataa Can lor appointment
3498764
DIVE ISTO I.LXl R\
SPACIOUS LUXURY
From 1 to 4 HMOOM APARTMENTS
Starling al $895 00
Wiifcin and Dryer*
available In moat units
Healed inciftor pool
•cenre
elerstor buildings
landscaped
courtyards with fountain.
alt until includt
• Heat and hot water
• Prime location • Convenient
to all areas of Philadelphia
CALL 476-6250
Krntsl OfTke Open Monda) thru Friday
S AM to 5 PM
4643 Pine St.
ARE YOU INTERESTED m education? do you have a business mmd
which thinks m terms of service? If
so. TakeNote s looking lor you
Sea other claasiheds this section
BABYSITTER wanted tor
day evenings and weekend* Canter City 2 children 5466353 alter
700pm
BARTENDER: Pan-lime, experienced Can alter 6pm 725-2176
COMMUNICATIONS
OPPORTUNITY
INTERNAL COMMUNICATIONS
coordinator Mellon Bank Temporary (for Ian weeks) part-time (24
hours per week), flexible scheduling available Prepare weekly and
B. monthly employee newsletter
$15 per hour Contact Becky
Brinks. 553-4664
Call-382-1300
CAMPUS APARTMENTS
4043 WALNUT STREET
THE WISTAR INSTITUTE has
several pad-lime. 10-20 hours per
weak, flexibly scheduled positions
available lo work as lab assistants
The salary is $5 00 psr hour Interested applicants may sand resume or far out an application
between 9 a m 5 p m al 3601
Spruce Street
TWO GREAT JOfsSI Research
assistants Choose outpatient pay
chiatry or history of controversial
diseases Work-study only'
896-4312
UNIX/C PROGRAMMER lo help
develop new port strategy DOS to
Unix
Awk. sed. curses, xwindows. Pascal desirable
664-1207
WANTED BICYCLE MESSENGERS and drivers with own vehicle Decent pay Kangaroo Couriers 2012 Sansom Slreel
561-5132
898-1111
WHAT ARE YOU doing lor spring
break? Would you like to earn
extra money while working lor and
with top executives in the Securities Industry Institute? II the answer is yes then consider being a
seminsr aide during the spring
recess Call 898-5507. lo set up an
interview Ask lor Sharon Mistier
or Anne Allen Interviews are being held even/Tuesday Irom 10 00
am-1200 noon
WORK STUDY Part lime poai
lions, physics labs, contact H
Stogott3N11 DRL
WORK-STUOY POSITION: responsible, dependable student
needed for part-lime general office
work lor Phila Festival Theatre for
New Plays. 3900 Chestnut Street
Flexible schedule, exciting work
environment Call Grace Grillel.
222 5000
4ITH AN0 HA7EI t.'SO plus
utilities Cal Dae Ssnan days
587-6771 evarsnga 477 3033
FURNISHED HOUSE AVAILABLE lo sublet mid February to
mid July. Convenient lo U of PA
and public irans 2 bdrm 1 1/2 balh
lanced backyard $550 month plus
Call 474-1282
SPRING SUBLET. 45lh and
Spruce Room in 6 bedroom
house Available January through
June or September W/D. large
kitchen. $175 plus utilities CaH
387*995
SPRING/SUMMER SUBLET 41
and Pine Great room in large
house Private livingroom and
bath Fully carpeted. W/D Women
only, please 222-5530
SUBLET IN GRAD A
FOR SPRING SEMESTER. Only
male. Irom February
Call
NSTRUCTION
GUITAR LESSON: Lean lu play
folk, rock or blues in a personally
stylized lesson S8 00/hour First
lesson free 386-7715
PIANO AND HARPSICHORO les
sons All levels 222-2129
THE BEST AND MOST expensive
self-defense dass on campus
HRE Monday Friday 67 60 Philadelphia's number
IN.ASK A and P K L promoter
Call Andrew Lyn 215662-5261
PERSONALS
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
Lonely? Want to meal prolessional. educated sophisticated
singles? Cross Cultural Couples is
an introduction service offering
socials, newsletter, and worldtraveled singles who want to meet
you Join us for skinng, dinners,
ttanfej. or quiet conversation
Call (215)922-1191 lor information
or wnle lo CCC PO Box 40122
Philadelphia. PA 19106 All ages
and races welcome
ROOMMATES
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted lo
share modem 2 bedroom apt Mf
Airy at Iramslation Laundry, parking, d/w $290 utilities included
8498839
HOUSEMATE WANTED
SHARE BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom
apartment near 40lh and Powellon
with 2 recent grads w/rt. d/w.
woodstove. furnishings and more
S?00/monih plus a third of utilities
flexible terms 386-3569
SERVICES
RESUME SERVICE - fast personal, professional UCR Grafiks
3601 Locust Walk. Christian Association. Office 6 Call 222-2846
TRAVEL
SAIL TO THE Bahamas lor Spring
Break for $435 John. 386-9535
SUN AND FUNi SPRING Break to
Bahamas (Nassau. Freeport). Jamaica (Montego Bay, Negril),
Mexico (Cancun. Acaputoo). Florida (Daytona. Ft Lauderdale) For
more information, and reservations, call Amssa. 243-5165
TICKET one roundtrip PHL lo Chi
cago $120 or B O Call 222-6047
Oamello
TYPIST
ATTENTION: PRESTIGE
TYPING 878-7160 Student discount Desk top publishing, word
processing Dissertations, etc
Pick up available 8787160
ATTENTION! WHAT'S YOUR
Type? Professional word processing Free pickup and delivery
Bob. 5450725
DIANE'S EXPERT, professional
typing sen/ice Word processing
References 8986-6776
TYPING - LETTERS, resumes,
dissertations, manuscripts, etc
No |Ob loo big or small CaH
Jackie. 898-2210. 977-9323
MOOFIS NFFDFD
Free cut,
color, perm and Sryfcng of contemporary hairstyles lor the city hair
beauty show it the Mont Serai
Theater Fed ?6th. by the renowned Richard Nicholas styling
team Musi attend models cad
Feb 25 al the Richard Nicholas
Salon For lurther info 9am-4pm at
1 800-832-3347
NEED PARKING SPOT in 38th
and Spruce lot. or rent a garage in
38th lo 43rd area. Baltimore lo
Locust Call Gregory 386-2082
SPEAK ENGLISH? Then you can
help a refugee family in Phila.
Project LEIF will train volunteer
English tutors beginning Feb 3rd.
Call Nora al 787-3212 In register
LIVE A LIFE
OF EXCITEMENT,
MYSTERY AND
LITTLE SLEEP.
Join The Daily Pcnnsylvanian.
Incsday, January 24, 1989
I hr Daily Pennsylvauaa
pa|( n
SportsWire
Compiled from Associated Press Dispatches
McEnroe versus Lendl down under
Scoreboard
■NHL
INBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
WALES CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W
26
21
18
15
13
10
New York
Philadelphia
Boston
New Jersey
Washington
Charlotte
L
14
18
20
23
23
29
Central Division
W
L
Cleveland
30
7
Detroit
25 12
Milwaukee
23 13
Atlanta
24 14
Chicago
22 15
Indiana
10 28
Pet
650
538
474
395
361
256
GB
—
A'/i
7
10
11
15Vj
Pet
811
676
639
632
595
263
GB
—
5
6V»
6V4
8
20'/i
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Utah
Houston
Dallas
Denver
San Antonio
Miami
L
15
16
17
19
27
33
Pacific Division
W
L
LA. Lakers
27 12
Phoenix
23 14
Seattle
23 14
Golden State
20 17
Portland
20 17
Sacramento
11 25
LA Clippers
10 28
GF
199
218
178
196
170
148
GA
171
199
162
172
204
191
GF
196
174
163
171
170
GA
150
184
164
168
224
CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
W
23
22
19
20
11
4
Patrick Division
W L T Pts
NY Rangers
?7 15 7 61
Pittsburgh
26 17 4 56
Washington
24 18 7 55
Philadelphia
25 22 3 53
New Jersey
18 24 7 43
NY Islanders
15 29 2 32
Adams Division
W L T Pta
Montreal
33 13 6 72
Buffalo
21 21 6 48
Boston
18 21 10 46
Hartford
20 24 3 43
QuetMM
16 28 6 38
Pet
.605
579
528
513
289
108
GB
—
1
3
3'/2
12
l8Vi
Pet
692
622
622
541
541
306
263
GB
—
3
3
6
6
14'/?
16V4
Norris Division
W L T Pta
Detroit
22 18 8 52
Si Louis
17 22 7 41
Minnesota
15 ?3 10 40
Toronto
16 28 4 36
Chicago
1328 7 33
Smythe Division
W L T Pts
Calgary
31 11
Los Angeles
27 18
Edmonton
24 20
17 19
Winnipeg
Vancouver
18 24
GF
184
156
160
149
176
GA
183
168
179
200
214
GF
208
246
213
180
152
GA
137
201
185
195
156
the Big I ist. never trailed in taking
oves firs! place in the conference with
Tonight's Games
Los Angeles at Washington. 7 35 p m
New Jersey at NY Islanders. 8 OS p m
Chicago al Vancouver 10 35 p m
Tonight's Games
Denver at New Jersey. 7 30 p m
Cleveland at Atlanta. / 30 p m
Dallas at Chicago. 7 30 p m
Seattle at Portland. 8pm
Miami al Houston. 8 30 p m
Charlotte at Phoenm. 9 30 p.m
New York at L A Lakers. 10 30 p m
Milwaukee at Sacramento. 10 30 p m
Tomorrow Night's Game
Boston at Toronto, 7 35pm
Si LOUIS at Hartford. 7 35 p m
Buffalo al Detroit. 7 J5 p.m
Winnipeg al Pittsburgh. 7 35 p m
Chicago al Edmonton. 9 35pm
Tomorrow Night's Games
Chicago at Philadelphia. 7 30pm
Golden Stale al Detroit, 7 30 p m
Boston al Indiana. 7 30 p m
L A Clippers al Dallas. 8 30 p m
Utah al San Antonio. 8 30 p m
1988-89 PENN MEN'S BASKETBALL STATISTICS
W. Frazter
J. Simon
T Gilliams
H Duncombe
S Schewe
J. Pettibone
S. Dineen
J Tavatez
R. Marshall
P. McMahon
K Graf
D Watts
P. Chambers
V. Curran
B. Helm
G
11
10
10
11
11
6
4
11
11
3
4
11
2
8
4
PENN
Opponents
11
11
MN
36.5
33.6
31.3
24 8
23 7
108
143
13.7
124
4.3
3.0
14.7
7.5
5.6
2.5
R
FG% FT%
364 69.2
4.0
45.3 71 9 5.6
45.7 85 7
3.3
5 1
528 82.1
49.10 576 4 1
40.7 60.0
1.5
60.0 778 2.8
52.0 42.9 2.2
2.1
65.2 0.00
1.0
50.0 0.00
100 0 100.0 000
23.8 000 2.6
100.0 0.00 0.5
100 33.3 09
00.0 000 0.00
44.0
44 8
I ANIX1VIK. M.I).
Dikcmbc
Mutombo sei a school record with 12
blocked shots and Dwayne Hryant
scored 18 points last night as secondranked Georgetown beat St. John's,
75-64, in I scutfle interrupted Big
I he Hoyas, 15 i overall and J i in
Last Night's Games
A
42
17
29
0
11
3
2
10
5
0
1
12
3
0
0
B S
0 11
1 11
0 12
4
1
3
1
0
0 2
3
0
1
6
0 0
0 0
4
0
0
1
0 2
0 0
PPG
163
13?
12 2
108
65
53
33
29
2.7
1 3
1 3
1 2
10
0.4
00
68.7 36.0 135 25 60 68 8
70.0 36.9 166 35 68 72 6
serves in, while i-.dberg made nisi ri» iinlnrccd errors the entire match.
I endl, seeking his first title here, rallied from 3-5
down to win the first sei and then sci/ed control
with his attacking groundstrokes.
Mansdorf, the No. 16 seed, pushed Lendl to five
■Ml last year before losing their opening-round
match at the U.S. Open.
It appeared he might give lendl another tough
battle Tuesday after breaking him for the second
time in the opening set. But Lendl broke back in the
10th game, easily won the tiebreaker and carried the
momentum into the final two sets
"In the first set, I did not time the ball as well as
I'd like 10," he said. "It's never perfect, bin as long
as you can come through, that's fine."
Mansdoil was upset by his Mrs! set collapse.
"I'm really angry at myself." he said. "If I had
won thai set, it would have been ■ different
their sixth straight victory.
The light occurred with just less
than 14 minutes left in the game.
(ieorgetown forward John Turner,
playing defense, went chest to chest
with St. John's leading scorer, for-
ball tame."
I ulier, hard-hitting Thomas Muster of Austria
overpowered Magnus Custafsson of Sweden 6-3,
6-2. 7-3 to reach his tirs! Grand Slam quarterfinal.
"I'll be in fairly respectable company in the
semifinals, but I'm playing well and I deserve to be
there," said Cordwell, who didn't make the
semifinals of any tournament last year.
Muster, a daycourt specialist who is seeded 1 Ith.
took just under two hours to eliminate Gustafsson.
"He started serving badly and he missed a lot of
hots." said Muster, whose world ranking has
risen from No. 56 to No. 15 in the past year.
"He never changed tactics except in the third set
and by then it was loo late."
Gustafsson, ranked 49th, said he waited too long
to change his baseline strategy.
"I or the first two sets I played his game and that
didn't suit me," he said. "In the third set I tried to
serve and volley, but I should have done that a lot
earlier."
ward Jayson Williams. After
Williams pushed Turner away. Turner
look a swing at him Williams swung
back, and the two were quickly
separated and each was ejected.
I he Rcdmen trailed b> 14 points at
the time, but eventually worked the
deficit down tu so 42. Georgetown
responded with an 11-6 run to make il
61-48 with 8:12 left and St. John's
never cut the gap below sot points the
red of the way.
Mutombo, a 6-foot-11 soplioinote.
had averaged two blocks pet game in
limited action behind standout
freshman Alonzo Mourning. But
Mourning got two quick fouls against
St. John's and Mutombo got his
chance.
Matt Brust scored 23 of his 26
points in ihe second half to lead the
Kedmen St. John's, which had won
five Of us six previous games at the
i apiial Centre, had a five-game winning Kraal snapped and fell to 12-5
and 4 '
i harles Smith had 16 points lot the
Hoyas, who have won 16 straight at
home.
Georgetown scored 12 of the
game's opening 15 points, then used
an 8-0 burst to take a 27-10 lead with
6:37 left in the first half. A free throw
by Turner made it 32-16 with 3:26 remaining, but the Redmen used a layup
from Billy Singleton, a 3-point field
goal by Brust and a three-point play
by Malik Scaly to close within 32-24 at
halftime.
St. John's made only eight-of-34
field goal attempts in the opening
half. Mutombo blocked nine of those
shots.
Williams had only four points at
halftime on l-for-7 shooting from the
field and finished with nine.
Wrestling gains some measure of revenge in weekend
PUNISHKD. from page 12
shall'S Jim Uuque. Along with Dabbs'
v ictOT). sophomore Matt Moyer's
tnaior decision at 158 and freshman
Josh I lorcll's 7 4 win al 177 were the
key* to the American match.
Senior Steve Hroilv. ranked 18th
nationally, grappled to a 4-4 tie with
American's Nick Hruno at 190, but
look a backseat 10 Smith against
Franklin and Marshall. Smith proceeded to pin Mike Delaney in less
than two minutes
"We needed a pin, so coach Reina
put me in at 190.'" Smith laid
"Brody is a control wrestler; I have a
more iggrCSlivC style, and I go for the
quick pms "
Slender (142) lost to Dave Pagliughi
of American, but came back 10 defeat
I ranklin and Marshall's Keith Cnbel,
7 2. Slender. Keina said, was atypical
of the Penn team because he regained
Ins concentration between matches.
"I had a good workout before the
Penn enters second half
MI si< . 11,mi paga 9
pan ol me i tooob, baby please don 'I
< oooh, I want vim to slaw
Injured I ransfrrs
I he
When Hen Spiva transferred to
Memphis Male last •iiinnicr, the
Quakers, fell thai they could compensate tor ins loss with frontline depth.
But one bv one. Perm's inside playeis
have been iniuicd.
Kent Milholland, a i> 11 junior, left
the leant with a chronic hip problem.
Sean Dineen. i 6 ; sophomore, is out
for the veai with two herniated discs
in his back. Dineen, who started three
games in December, had a bruising
style thai complemented Duncombe.
Vince Curran, also a 6-7
sophomore, is sidelined until nexl
week with an Injured foot, *.nd Duncombe has been bothered bj nagging
injuries.
Whethei the Quakers win the lv) .1
lie has a lot to do with the continued
improvement ol junkM Scon Schewe
and sophomore Ra) Marshall
Schewe has proved thai he's more
than ■ football playet playing basketball. With Dun-en s injuiv. Marshall
will be counted OH at both powei lor
ward and center.
If Duncombe continues 10 he able
to play only 25 minutes a game. Marshall must produce it I'enn is going to
win enough games to go platniiini
Because in the lv> 1 eague, gold in
March means golf.
The DP introduces the New York Times
crossword puzzle, edited by Eugene T.
Maieska. Look for it starting Monday the
30th in the Classifieds section.
•4 Scan the whole puzzle in search of spots where
'" you are absolutely sure of the answer. After making
inroads in those places, work on the crossing words.
After a while, those patches of filled-in areas
become larger and larger, and eventually they
fit into one another, (incidentally, I use the same
technique when putting a jigsaw puzzle together.)
2. Never let pride get in the way. The puzzlemakers and
their editors use reference books; as a solver you
have the same right. Since I was an
adolescent when I started, I often brought
the puzzle to the public library. There
had access to unabridged dictionaries,
encyclopedias and other tomes.
The Daily Pennsylvania!!
Penn also showed a maturity in its
plaj
"I think we have an improved
maiureness in how to compete in ■
match." Quakers Irishman Rudy
Rodriguez said " I he team is calmer
going into a match. We are not as
anxious as we were in the Yale scrimmage (last November) The shot decision ol tht leant has improved also "
Zero also holds the distinction of
being the Ursl whole number. Il was
appropriate,
therefore,
that
this
weekend provided many lusts lor the
Quakers beyond Pcnn's first win.
Biazzos1 match against the I pits'
Seth I'udda was Ins lust competition
ol th( new yew. BiStzaOS, who resides
111 Greece, did not return te school in
lime to compete with the Quakers last
weekend at the USSRA in Boston.
But BiazzOS was not affected from the
long layoff, handily beating Pudda,
1 0(15-11. 15-12. 15-8).
Rodriguez and fellow freshman
John dimming won their first intercollegiate matches. Cumming
defeated Pat McKinnon. 3-1 (15-4,
15-10, 9-15 15-5) and Rodriguez, the
(.makers' number one seed, waxed
Bruce Hopper .1-0(15-6. 15-5. 15-5).
"It was a good feeling winning this
weekend." Rodriguez, said. "|Even
better), I was winning for the team;
contributing to the team."
lor the Quakers Saturday, the
number zero proved they have a shot
10 become the number one team in the
nation.
-1—
CROSSWORD PUZZLE FANS:
This week, we'll be printing two puzzle-solving
tips daily— from Eugene himself. Here are
today's hints:
matches but the emotion wasn't there
against American," Slender said. "I
was motivated by my loss to get aggressive against Franklin and
Marshall."
M. Squash blanks Ephs
SHUTOUT, from page 12
T
4015 Walnut Street
In women's play, unseeded Belinda Cordwell ot
New Zealand beat Catarina Lindqvist of Sweden
6-2, 2-6, 6-1 to move into the semifinals. Il was the
biggest victory for a New Zealand player since Chris
Lewis reached the Wimbledon final in 1983.
Georgetown downs rival St. John's, 75-64
i asi game
Hartford 5. Quebec 0
Calgary 3. Montreal I
Minnesota 7. New Jersey 2
NY Rangers 3 Edmonton 2
Latt Night's Games
Cleveland 14?. Golden State 109
Indiana 117. Denver 102
San Antonio 119. Miami 101
Ml I HOI KM. Australia
longtime rival!
Ivan I endl and John McEnroe set up aquarlerfinal
showdown with straight-set victoria .it the
Australian Open today.
Lendl overcame J slow Mart to beat Israeli Amos
Mansdorf 7 6. (7 2), 6 4. 6-2, while McBnrOC CTIlis
ed to a 7-6 (7-4), 6-2, 6-3 victory oser fellow
American Aaron Krickslein on a sweltering day al
the National Tennis Center.
I m 1 time champion Stefan l-dbcrg, playing
almosl Faultlessly, capitalized on Pat Cash's erratic
serve to trounce the hometown hero 6-4, 6-0, 6 2 in
another lourth round match.
Bdberg hurt his back while serving an ace to go
up 30-13 in the final game. After taking a timeout to
itretch ins Iowa back ind act il iprayed with a
painkiller, the Swede quickl) served another ace
and Cash then hit an errant forehand to end the
match.
( ash, beaten by Klbeig in the 1987 Australian
Open final, lost I I straight games after leading 4-3
in the lust sei I lu- brash Australian served II
double faults and got only 38 percent of his first
PENN STUDENT AGENCIES
HAS JOBS AVAILABLE
FOR
WORK-STUDY & NON-WORK-STUDY
STUDENTS!
Administrative Assistant, Cashiers
for commissaries and gourmet
shop, messengers, and sales
people.
UNIVERSITY CITY TRAVEL
SPRING BREAK
It's Better
On A
Vacation
Call Nowl
3730 Walnut St.
898-6901
382-2928
Now Open Sat. 10-2
Sports
Pag* 12
The Dally Pannsytvanlan
Tuesday, January 24, 1989
M. Track
limps home
with losses
W. Track
find Invit.
a breeze
Penn drops to Yale,
Brown, winter cold
Penn nearly triples
second-place score
By GLEN DICKSON
I( was a limping, coughing. wai
weary Penn men's (rack leam lhat
ventured into New Haven's (!(HM
Cage this past Sunday for a tri—meet
with Yale and Brown. The Quaker!
soon found that hopping off their
crutches and blowing iheit noses
wasn't enough to win a track meet, as
they were soundly beaten by both
teams with a score of Brown 75. Yale
53. Penn 42.
So far this seison the Quakers (0-2)
have relied on talent instead of experience. Third place proved to be a
reality check for the young Penn
squad.
"We looked like a group of
freshmen who were icry tired,"
Quakers assistant coach Nathan
Taylor said.
Penn was outscored in almost every
event, with the team's only firsts coming in the 3,000 meters, which senior
Jim Park captured in 8 minutes, 37
seconds, and the 35—pound weight
throw, which Max Crome dominated
with a personal—best toss of 58''/;".
"We had a lot of seconds, a lot of
thirds," Quakers head coach Charlie
Powell said. "You need firsts to win a
meet. We had some guys do personal
bests, but as an entire team we didn't
[perform at top level]. We need some
race experience to be competitive."
And some health.
I ike many other teams, Penn tin
been plagued by sickness and injury as
winter's cold breeds germs and muscle
pulls. But the Quakers have been dealt
more than their fair share of
misfortune.
In just the past few days, Penn lost
freshman vaulter R.W. Henson and
freshman middle distance runner
Chris Hamilton for several weeks.
Henson suffered a sprained ankle and
Hamilton a pulled hamstring, while
senior middle distance runner Chris
Blume fell sick Saturday night and
was unable to run Sunday.
Other Quakers have been competing a! less lhan full sircngth, like
Craig Wiley, who has been recovering
slowly from a broken kneecap, and
Chris (iuheno, who has been having
problems with the it '
'cet.
"We looked more like we should be
going lo an infirmary than a track
meet." Powell said. "It was unique. I
found myself looking around and ask
ing, 'So who's healthy enough to
run?' It goes on and on. . . . It was
just unbelievable."
Tommy Laonardl/Daily Pennsylvanian
Penn's double-sided disc — side A — a 71-70 victory over V illanova — side B
Vince C'urran (00) is one of many injured Quakers.
IfPenn's record is to top Ivy charts,
it needles a little bit of consistency
B> HOWARD 7.AI.KOWITZ
Put the needle on the record. Put the needle on
Ihe record Put the needle on the record
The Penn m
[ball team enters ns |vj
) night against Yale with a
4-7 o.
tout a ns have
Drexel. The Quakers, in beating Lchigh and losing their last two games to Lafayette and St.
Joseph's, were far from the team that defeated
Villanova and Washington.
Still, Penn has the talent to win the Ivies and
included .i stunni
power Villannva. and an impressive 70-6° win
against Washington in the consolation game of
the West Palm Beach CUttti
But Penn's season has been marred l>s incOD
sisicncy. Injuries and suhpar play contributed to
an embarrassing 102-69 loss to Miami (Fla.) and
lackluster efforts in succumbing to Navy and
MkteMSon Report
gain the automatic NCAA bid. But whether the
Quakers become I compact disc or a dispensable
4S depends on how a few songs are lived out.
Sorry, but melody and music are not included.
Oh. won 'l you slay-aay, just a little hit lon-ger
— Hassan Duncomhr and the Miracles.
To put it simply, when Duncombe, Penn's 6-7
sophomore center, is in the game, he dominates.
When Duncombe is limited to 20 minutes a
game, he and the Quakcis struggle
Duncombe's Hats appeal modal HOM points
pei game. 5.1 rebounds per game), yet the only
on they aren't five points and three boards
higher is that he's played more than 25 minutes
in onlv four ol Penn's II games
No, those aren't the four Quakers wins. But
Please sec Ml 'SIC . page 9
Please sec I.IMPS, page •»
Wrestling grapples with one win, one loss
By MARK l>RO/.IM)WSM
Penn wrestling head coach Roger Reina was
not pleased with his team's performance at lasi
Saturday's tn-meet againsl American and
Franklin and Marshall, in Lancaster, Pa., and
he let the Quakers know it.
Three times this season Penn had faced ciihci
the Lagles oi Ihe Diplomats Three times the
Quakers had finished one place behind And
after Penn spin its matches Saiurday. beating
American. 21-18. and losing to Franklin and
Marshall. 24 13, Keiru wanted more
"We didn't wrestle well the whole day."
Reina said. "We just squeaked h\ American
ami didn't show out capabilities against eitbei
team. We had a lack ol intensity and I'm
disappointed
"We achieved one goal by beating American,
but we did not Wrestle in lop form, We picked
up Ihe intensity a bit against Franklin and Marshall, bui not 10 the point where we were able to
challenge them
Reina showed his concern with Penn's (4 <|
poor performance by conducting a practice MM
-ion for about two hours late Saturday night
after the meet.
"Ii was a good thing for us," freshman Steve
Stendei said of the extra session. "None of us
said too much, but we knew why [Reina] had us
there. He wanted to end the day on a positive
note."
I ushman Steve Smith echoed Stender's appraisal of Reina's tactics
"We had a lapse of concent rat ion and we
knew it." Smith said. "Coach Reina was just
trying to establish what's expected of us."
Reina's dampened spirits did not preclude
him from praising the achievements of certain
wrestlers, especially with the performance of
freshman Rick Dabbs. Dabbs. wrestling at 134
pounds, pinned American's Steve Stanicc and
won a major decision over Franklin and MarPlease see PUNISHKD. page 9
By Mill \t.\KW M
It seemed like a great idea when the
Penn women's indoor track team's
schedule was made out. An opportunity to participate at a local college
or University against all the local
competition. Little travel. Little hassle. Some needed experience.
On second thought, the Quakers
found out that Saturday's Greater
Philadelphia Invitational at Lchigh
University in Lancaster, Pa., was not
so great.
Penn (1-0) manhandled its opponents, finishing with a total of 233
points. Its nearest competitor,
Lafayette, finished with a total of
85 '/2.
"There was no competition," Penn
head coach Betty Costanza said of the
nine school field. "We trained
through the meet, but there was less
competition than last year. We
dominated the meet. It was like we
were running against ourselves, so it
did not really help the girls."
Penn senior tri-captain Christelle
Williams captured a near trifecta. The
defending champion in the 55-meter
hurdles in both the indoor and outdoor Eastern Regionals once again
displayed her superior athletic ability.
Williams won the 220-yard dash in
26.3 seconds, the 60-yard high hurdles
in 8.3, and finished second in the
60-yd dash in 7.3 — one-tenth of a second behind Delaware St.'s Dorothy
Vereen.
Williams was one of five Quakers in
all to place first. Freshman Meg Barbour captured the one mile open with
a time of 5:19. Junior tri-captain Jeria
Wilds sprinted her way to a win in (he
440, breaking one minute mark by
one-tenth of a second. Junior tri
captain Sharon Roberts panned the
half mile with a time of 2:17. Junior
Jenny Vickers won the three mile,
with a time of 17:47.
Several Penn runners prospered
despite not winning their races.
Freshmen Lola Ogundare and Chris
l.undy finished second and third,
respectively in the 600. Sophomore
Deidra Johnson finished right behind
Williams in the 220-yd sprint.
"Despite the competition, these
performances were very good,
especially considering that the girls
were competing mainly against
themselves," Costanza said. "Now
we will have competition, and I hope
their success continues.
The sprinters were not the only
Quakers in the spotlight, as many
field athletes excelled in their events.
Sophomore Kelli Fay. bested her
previous high by jumping 5'4" and
finishing second in the high jump.
Junior Mica Giant; and sophomore
Chris Zambito placed third and
fourth, respectively, in the 20-pound
weight toss, with throws of 40'6" and
37'7'/i".
"This was a very low-key meet, but
everyone performed well." Vickers
said. "This meet came at the perfect
time.
Said Costanza: "Now the fun
begins. We are four meets away from
the | Heptagonal championships], and
we are only getting betler. There is only room for improvement."
W. Squash dismayed with split
By JK.RKMY SEI.WYN
The score was, 7-2, but it was much closer.
After emerging from its weekend in New Lngland wilh
two wins and two losses, the Penn women's squash team
felt that its 7-2 loss to Williams on Friday should have
gone the other way.
In other action. Penn defeated Middlebury Friday and
Tufts Saturday, by identical 7-2 scores. The Quakers SJM
lost to Dartmouth. 8-1, Saturday.
Againsl Williams. Penn (6-2 Overall. II Ivy league)
started strong, winning the first game in six out of ihe nine
matches. Six of the matches went (he full five games, and
each game came down to the final points.
Bui Ihe Fphs captured most of those final points, winning five of the six close matches to oust Penn
"It was a lack of intensity (that losi the final games!."
Quakers head coach Ann Wet/el said.
But PHtn'S effort was just not there at the end.
Quakers' senior captain Heidi Braverman said thai the
difference between the wins and losses was not an absence
in skill, but I lack ol "willpower to keep working."
I he Quakers' depth showed itself once again, as matCbtl were close thioughout the lineup — including wins
From the seventh seed, lenioi Lynn Grant and eight seed,
junioi Nancy Bell.
I In- win ova Middlebury included three matches —
Bell's, fifth seed senior Jenny Olio's, and ninth seed
junior Rebecca Baxt's — won in the minimum three
panics
"We should have won 9-0 [againsl
Middlebury],"
Wcl/el said
Please see SPLIT, page 9
M. Squash zeroes in on Williams, 9-0
By JOHN Dl PAOLO
The number zero, or "oh," as it's commonly pronounc
ed. holds a special distinction in the world of sports. No
team wants to face the humiliation of being held scoreless,
but every team hopes to have the dominance to inflict such
* The entire team played at a level 1
think it can.'
Al Molloy
Penn men's squash head coach
an unwanted result upon an opponent
The Penn men's squash team (1-0) displayed such control Saturday in Williamstown, Ma., as they made short
work of Williams, 9-0.
The domination was also present in the Quakers' individual matches, as six of Penn's top nine seeds shut out
their competition, winning their matches three sets (o
none
What made (he match an even greater accomplishment
was that Ihe Quakers were without second seed Stewart
Ballard, who look a make-up exam.
"Wc looked very good this weekend," Penn head
COMa Al Molloy add "We started to play better at the
beginning of the match. . . . The entire team played at a
level I think it can
In ihe two preseason tournaments, the Quakers fell
behind before rallying back But against Williams, Penn
took the early advantage and didn't look back.
"We -tancd off slowly (in earlier tournamentsl,"
Quakers junior Panos Biazzos said. "However, wc got
early jpoints Saturday!"Most opponents arc on the same talent level. When
you go out on (he court you have to have a killer instinct.
A game comes down to mental toughness. If you have
that, you have the edge."
Please see SHUTOUT, page II
Zaolt Bcaako/Daily Pennsylvanian
Mary McGowan's win against Dartmouth could not compensate for W. Squash's disappointing weekend.