(5
Q-ZvinJJ
fmmiVi. 1885
Vat. CV, N... 21
run
MII
i miv Meada?, Pebraar) 27, !<**■»
I <i>viiglH iimu II. D.Uy fm.mtf*m,<,m,
Dorm security straddles line between protection, oppression
i<>riiiuxm<.ii
I 111 I"." II.IIS
SgO, 'I■■il."-. 10
doi
hi,I,nl .I,"in,i,„„-. did
ll.l\ e to
i here were no panli button. nl resident .-•.'
ii^iii desks, .in .I no professional dormilor) guardi
I III <-«'
"•''
ll
|l ,,In.II,
M-.IIS
llldenl ss.is ,,,,,, I
"" 1
i.i.i.u, rowei dorm room
""" Vl"' Provost
nlverslt) i lie lami ■ Bishop
ii ii>.-1.,.,. .
1 vv
"'i'
■
build
k,u
io, ■ remali Unlverilt) nudenl tvai
'aped leveral I lino in her I
\'% Quadrangli
i,...in
Vl
1
ili-i.-n.ioi ..impii-. ■!■■■ I1MI..I v tccurliy
III
ca|||nfl
,,
Focus
"prett) iplendid," hul added thai set mm ma) need to he
ned in light ol the Incident
1
""
here awe no card readeri, no turmilli
no video . amerai, and ".• lot ki on Individual Qua I
H
w PuWIi '...I. n I'.... lot lohn i ogan - ilk d
" u'ii) ovet ii.. break "100 percenl bet lei ihan H
been." bul added thai tecurit) nut) need la tx n
evaluated In light ol ihe
lenl
Since Iheic iwo iragrdti
■ urit) oi lhe ovet Hum
■in.I. in-, living in ih. Unlverslty'i IJ dormiiorl
'
I»I nni "I Hi,- holiest Issues on i ampus
During in. pail ihn ■
itaged i",.
|".I -.,. upied Prestdcnl Sheldon I la. in. y'« . • i r ■..
ilemandlng belli • proiei ll ", In Iheli n Id
i hi ad
niiiii-.il.HI,.ii hired .i ipei lal i nmutlani Io rei ommend wnvi
White student group
hopes to form at U.
Hv HHI N MM,
.sin, i> ,-.
ii '\ .in indication of the
new mindset, bigotry,
and racism that's turn
\ng around the idea of
reverse discrimination.
,,II.,
White Student Union Prcsidenl
Michael Spletiet said that the group
h.is received at least ihree lo foui let
ins from i Iniveriii)
itudenii in
te»r«lr»l in t.rtvlnjt „ l», ..... 1. ....
i.ills ,,-, ogni/ed b) I .'in
ti» i i IS\IU ill LBVI
An unidentified mala i allct
threatened lo blow up I ncorc Books
last i n,i,is it ii
mtlnues to
, II opiei oi Salman Rushdie*i
ratal novel, file s,;/„«„ t eras*,
ii
ling lo I'ni.ii. Safet)
I ii. i. r Hooks ..I I,, i.i Is, on I, I not
store, located on 38th Street, will keep
1
Illng 'in i
i. deaptu the dei kaon
veral majm retailers, Int hidiiig
Waldenbaoka, B i lahon and Bai
in.I Nobkt, lo pull Ihr Looks ol the
ibelvei
i,
reaction ihortl) aftei iprlng break i's
distributing informational nieri and
SC-I„IIIIK memberi io campus, in- mid
quested two t>> three doatn times aai i.
day M. Namara '..n.i hli store w,nii,i
, onllniie 10 sell the novel as soon us he
i oniii i. si.i. v ihi gum
s.;/»»//. Venn, perceived by manv
Muslimi i. blaapnemoui, has been ai
Victim of pipe attack
readmitted to HUP
S Vl\ .1111.1 SMlll ., ll.Ulllll'.l skllll
In addition. Public s.iins released
several details about the Incident, in
win.h ., i s,.II old youth wag it
rested tin allegadl) striking \skew,
and .inoiiu-i man reportadl) iwung a
baseball bill ,il ,i I'III'II. S.ilris offkei
ratponding io ihe Incident
\sk.-w vs.is admitted lo m P earl)
i.isi s.iim.i.is in."
,• MI,i received
.ippii.siiii.il, is 20stitches, but doctori
latci discovered thai ii<- had mffered ..
fractured ikull gad raadmittad him
during iin- wrck
HUP ipokeaperson Rebecca Hat
inon said laal nigbi thai \ikt* <•■
iisini in saiisfactor) condition
M.uk Hams, .1 IIKH.I ol I he victim
and .i iiMipi,' Univerait) studant said
thai the
IIKIH
ciuplcd
.is he an,I
'
I lu- assailant . I.iimol Ins Mil
had bron stolen, according io offlcen
.,i i in- scene Rlaoll said that ofnceri
lomiii '.i I.II ..I money" on the
.lisp.'. I
' I , .in onl) guess » here .
old kid got enough mone) io bu) >
Men edes," Kisnh added
knothei
man,
identified hv
wiinaatai .is i friaod ol iha luvemle
who was arrested, allegedly swung i
baseball bai si Offloei Mar) rerr)
I he offlcet ihen attempted lo -■!>
prehend the man, bul in eat aped
Hums said iii.ii friends ol the
juvenib) drove ..n in iha Marcedei
aftei the fight, adding thai ill it) m
solse.l in ill,- Fracas
none I nivi i si
is siiuienis
had attended tin part)
kecording io Harris, no wcurii)
is were present >i the pans lie
added that ihe aiaallam found the
group ol liiinils li-H •' part) held b>
Ihe Alpha Phi Alpha liatcimlv In |iipc on the limn ol Ihe Houston Mall
lioilt'k I.UIMKC
According to Harris, lb* fight
started a.% an aiKiiiiicni bclwcrn Ihe
victim and a it tend ol the assailant.
but quickl) ess.ilated into a iistHghi
ending when the youth hil Ikskewovei
the head with ■ pipe
Mams said tli.H he qufckl) iMie.s.i,
ed iii the fight, but iii.ii he did not
know ihe reason lot the vgument
"The nexl thing i knew n was .,
g||
•
Harris said
fiec t„,
•Bverybod) wai hghnng."
Harris was noi Injured in the
Inridtmi
Public Safetj ~>KI
loaaph RhoU
said Thursday night thai officers
responded to a sail about a light Ml
Ihe ii-nlei ol vsoi lilwnlr lolllioveisv
nuts broke out in proteel ol the
book
lobb)
\lpli.i I'lii Mpli.,
I'i, , i, lent ( in I is
Ms,is said last night that Alpha Phi
Mpli., polic) ,.iiis fot partial io be
open, adding thai aecurily U left up to
Houston Hallofriciab According to
Ms v
"
"" ,'-"""«" *">uU only pre
venl people ln.in entering il lh« pie
stnl
a receajBiiabki threat, such as be
'»• "stumblingdrunk "
Myc» -'dded that thii is the rini
inch incident la racaw yean
"I "un*,,'ni •Mncemed." Myers
'"'Kl
"""l ' ,l""'1 k"',w '"•» "•
alleviate n [thelecsirfi) probstm). Ihe
hanli realm is that we live In West
Please sec Ht.lll. page 2
several
Iranian
.onnliirs
leadei
• ailici tins month
•IfcO'll.Mlv I'.•.,'i'.ylv.trII.in
I in- firs) Bignificanl mow storm ol the aemettei hit the I Iniveraity yesterday, dropping i lose
io .in inch in some areas >>i the « It)
K hoinemi and mi
11.mi.in l.iismessinan ate alsii offering
a iniilli million tlollai . .i-.li lew,ml lo,
Ihe Cut nlion
I in,ill- had .lose to Ml iHMlks (III
oidei with its wholesaler last week.
I'leasesee r N< ORE, page 5
La Salle encountering cultural difficulties
Student attack prompts
review ol''relationship
with urban neighbors
Its \M>KI\\ HOWI I I
A recent -iolenl <"-n t on i I ■>
Salle I niversit) student has i.ns.,1
sen,.us debate about the northwest
Philadelphia school'i probknni with
us communit) relationi .md racial
nns, on, eplions
I wo weeks ago, I iioiip ol I •'
leenageri verball) harassed two
siiidenis as ihey lefl the school
cafeteria and threatened ihern with
physical violence One ol Ihe youths
ihen attacked one ,,i the iiudenti, ul
ting his neck with a broken bottle and
bare!) missing .■ vital arter)
AJtbOUgh I a ~>alle olluials 1st m.-.l
Ihe ass.mil an isolal.-d iiisidenl." ihe
.mask lias i,used seiious dehale osei
the often volatile relationship between
the -MHXI student univerait) and lu ut
ban environmeni
According to La Salle Sacuril)
Dnesioi
lohn
II.ISIIS.
ihe
youths,
loin ol whom wetc attested last week.
PleaK see l.A SALLE, page 5
Fric Cohan/Dasy Pannaytosman
l.a Salle University students walk outside Ihe cafeteria where a student was attacked two weeks ago.
Stuffed
The administration announced its support for
a sci of principles assuring rights for Univa
Page 2.
Snhsr
AyaioUah
Hnholla Khoinei
nlie.ile.l Mnslini',
woililwnle lo II,MI,lei ihe anlhoi
Supported
sity employees with AIDS.
in
quently,
sulr Houston Hall, bUI upon .iiiiiin,.
,,t i iii- scene, found the victim lying in
a pool of Mood in the lobb) outside ol
iio.i.k
new
,l.iv .Mid .i.l,le,I ll,.,I the l.iM.k i. n
Please s,-.- UNION, p
By ELUAM in LBVI
Richard \sk,w. win. was attacked
with., land pipe ,II i part) Ian weak In
Houston Hall, wai readmitted to the
Hospital ,'i iii>' Universk) ,.i Penn
whrn
Mi Nain.ua s.nil last ss.rk lli ,
i opies ol Serena i ,''•.,•, sold m our
Mill
I.,..,1,i iia) 1" .i non-threatening
place
off-campus, ..II i ins
planet," t loodwin said
Spiel/ei denied allegation! ihm ihe
si,1.1.in
i,-.,1 ,,,rl, ilr. )^,i,,, .mil « .11 , .,,.
Imiir lo sell the hook
shipinrnls , onie in
"I i in nl, 11,,n 11,.- general population
.1
i emplc i Iniversit). i.i.,, k ..n.i
while, feel iii.H ii" organiMtion is an
.1,1 ...l.liis Ll .I. -in. "'Ol • 11 • I S
IH-
reai hed i
immenl laal mahi Ihn
i in.or
itooks
Managet
Peiet
M, Num.II., said lail wrrk llull Ins
i.mpi,.
|i,,s Mr ...i.i.-.i ih.,, ih.- siudenti are
hcattani i.. .I.III ., chaptet ,in iheli
own bacauac ,*i possible negativi
ir.l, II,"I
iii. white- t.i.i, in group, which
currently boaati ovei is" members at
pi. ,-. .. FOCUS, i
Encore
receives
bomb
threat
Let It Snow
■ l in.in WOUld I">I '.is "lielln i hi
nsi President
usiiiiK
•
Hi. Unlverilt) began .. majoi overhaul ,.i in. raaldcn
II aflei ii,.- 1986 ,.,|>.' Prompted I
.1,-1,1 ,l,iii.in,i. .,,„i 11„- ■
it Hackney'i offici ihe ad
believed othet universities will accepi
. ampui i hapteri, ndding onl) thai the
:■ ins iii.- potential lo ipread
i ernple'i NAAl P < haptet Preal
deni
Vaugl
idwln
n.i thai
although iii.' i
p
perpetual)
ideolog) ii..H is harmful lo minorit)
aiimpa," ,i ,« ,uii u puwarful lorn* on
Mt'lisSH M.Hills
begin
11
■
Perhapi lbs moil Importanl uep, howi
Ihe ad
minliirailon'i pk dgi Io hire at
I
I
uiiani
11,.- . omultani, Pennsylvania Stall i Inlvi i
IMrecioi David Si
-. i Issuad i report the followlni
ummer, detailing 3) ways to Improve residential m urll)
i in report hi
I i ihi main guide foi the
IK in..,,ii, overhaul ..i residential ici urliy, and ill bul ill
oi ihe recommendations havi been Impl
nled
Vmong ihe re
imendation the n port i ailed fot ihe
immediate hiring ol professional tecurli) |uards to repli i
i'ir. has generated heated . nntroveri)
iu,i i.-, eh, «i ii. ii,.. n.i i ......
us m. epllon in n.-. .n.i.. i
\|.|.,..s
mi.mis '•, percenl ol remple'i mi
dent bod) is made up ..i minorit)
iiudenti,
rding lo studeni got ern
mem representative lunaihan i Ibb)
remple'i \cting IMrecioi ..i Stu
.1,-ni i ii. William Slack man, who acti
.,s ii,,- advisot in. ih.- group, said thai
ibr univerilt' doei not
lupoort ...
endorse" ii»- While simian Union
i.ui recognizes n bei IUSC the) have
'ih,- rlghi i,. ii.." own Ideol
i
will
id.in i
Mm
mlnii
Ion agreed in laki ■ eral manures, Including
beefing up Quad iccurll) and dramail ill)
iilng th<
in ...I.inn.ii. Spkt/ei '..n.1 ih.- group
.s.ii tend I,-, ruiieri lo i tread i Inl
is in.I mi high •, honls nisi month
i.. em mirage iiudenti lo establish ■
. haptet
i ii.- ihree month old organization
temple University'! While Student
Union in organiralion designed i".>
mote white i ullure and oppose rai ism
agalnsi whiles, plam lo form -i brnm i.
.II ii,.- Unlversit) wriihln ii»- next yeai
.,,, ording i" ii.. group's president
Mm level .ii , ampui minot It)
leaden said ihii week lhai ihe
possiblllt) ,.i .i . haptet rorming on
. ampui Ii unlike!) adding thai the)
will oppose ihe establishment ,>i Mich
.i group 'in an) meant nei i
temple,
7
io Improve Mcurfty, and ipeni ovei >t J mill
n
plcmenllni iho
,n and nth
1
'. iplh 'll ii"■■■• cfforti, question! about Ihc qualit) ..i
Identlal -.. i urll) remain i allurei In ihe nea
IH. in.in,)- broken lurmtlk . malfum Honing panli bul
' '"
md ...nun guardi with ci
.ii background!
leave doubli about In effei livt m
Yei M HI.
HI" lime, otheri have , rltli I red. ihi
-.,-. in II \ mraiurei a* loo -.in, i rhej. i.
thai the I
■ us ii.is gone loo far, making dorms more ■•!••- prison*
Members of the black art community stressed
the need for business sense in the art world at
a forum Saturday. Page 4.
Cornell beat men's basketball at the Palestra
Saturday, effectively ending Penn's hopes of
an Ivy title. Back Page.
»*•«* : Ha ii.ii. rmiir nlm
N|«»n»l.i\
I'JS'J
I | hi ti.ti \
U. adopts principles ensuring
rights of employees with AIDS
H, <.K\, , MIIITI \s
in i movi limed 10 ...m. i.t. wiih v11>v> *«*arcne*>
Vuiitani 10ih< Prwudent Nh. V t i«ti»tan announced
thai ih, I'imristtN i\ cndoi*inj .1 Ki ''i i*1 principle*
. .1 to ,iiMI11 iii.- right* ol MDS infected etnplovte*
I In-10principle*, 'Ketpondlnato Ml'". Principle* foi
iii. Workplace, tin* call foi wnploven to oomph wild
'..i.i.ii. vi-ii. .in.i i,.,.ii l««
lirvi dl*IIIIIIII.III.'II
n-.iuiM , -mplovei v \% In.
II.II.
. ,<iui .i. i.-.l
*,|OS
Mini.In.I.
.'i emplovrn throughout ih« nation ahead) rndorai the
guideline*
...
II.II.
ill, •.,
pun, Ipll >
in «atd la*l ".. k
No*t »• haw prim Ipht foi deal
Ih ihii (AIDS and Hl> In ihi workplace! that art
iiiiiii.in.
\,,,M.iini i,., ntplovi.' Ihi principle* were followed at
iivrrno i-.i.'i. iii.'. ".i. rormalh adopted
Student Health Dimtot Mai leant* i ollln* called ••'•■r
lion of the principle* a poMtlvi ilep hecatio ll will aid In
puhllcirinf Ihe ract* about MDS iran*mi«*lon
"Hi.- main i"". Ii keeping In mind ihi router .'i
irantiniuion." I ollina und la»i week 'The linivertltt l«
!-. i peopli ..HI u*ualh 'i.'i pa** \li*s in the
workplace I olleaguen In lh< workplace po»i ".' Ihreal
ii..i- Shoenherg, a**l«tam dlrectoi .'i Student I Ifi Pro
d ai a in.ii.'i force In bunging aboul Ihe adop
lion ol the principle* He *aid that ihe> repreiew i
..1,1.-,i iii.II ihet were not fai iea< hmj
u-. principle* an lOttnd and important, Shoeti
taid las) weel
'Bui on iii. itthei hand, ihev're quite
Conscious Irvine Party
i-.i.i. i here Is .i I>*I more lhal wc net d lo do i.*' emplow i who an HI* potltlvt oi whohaw MDS I'd like lo
HI,.i, coordinated effort and •■ kn more mone* pui Into
Ml''
. .In. in.ni. Ml«i.' •■
""I poli<.
i.i. i ohurn, program cootdinatoi ol the National
Coalition on \ii'lial adoption of th< principle*
i^ onh iii.- iuM ilep HI Imptoving ihe quality ol llfi foi
vins and m\ infected emplovee* hj preventini
dim iimlnation
i in, . ,.iii|.,.n. HI r. whether iht company i highei
ihip promote* MMI'IIIH .'i dedication lo Ihi prin
clple* lhe> *upport." I ohurn *aid la*t weel "That mean*
'."in. i-\ '.'"i.■••in who dot i hat. iii.
X 11 UN
l-iuplovee* ol lh< ' imer*llt an not pre*enth *creeoed
i,'i ih, MDS virtu and are ".'i required lo ilati whethei
id., in., ii
i in 10 principle* will .i. il iok*h with facull) and *tafl
Sludenl Health Social Workei > hrii I yman aaid lhal Ihe
new p.'ii. •
|..,.|'i.
mil n."i i.-i:ii«
...HI.
(•• •m.i.-iiis I-.
\,»IIIII-
down with MDS related *vndiome» whth "
ih.- i'in\.-i\n\
i
v u. .,i\ meaningful foi itafl and facnllt
i ihe nature of ihi MDS epldemli wewlll«et
ni,.I, peopli MIII,mil- .MI iii. i.i.niu .in.i uafl lhan In Ihi
iiudeni hodv," I vman laid laai weel "Slnei II lake*
.ii'.'in eight vear* to develop lymptomi, a ftlend will i ill lo
ihow "p '.•' one ol f!*<- reunions, and ".' one mil know
••in I., iduale* ii. HIM .in.i itafl will he In i potltion lo
know more peopli direvth Impacted
.IH.I.-IIII,
ROOM SELECTION
1989-90
INFORMATION SESSIONS
MONDAY. FEBRUARY 27,
5:00 P.M. TO 6:30 P.M.
HILL Dinina HALL
Ann
1920 COMMOPiS MAIL
LEARN ABOUT RETENTION, THE
COMMUNITY LIVING PROGRAM AND
GRAND ARENA
ll«vl,l rtaiNtt I ' i.lv I',..,.,
(ii.mum \ x\ .it il ssiiinci /\yy\
\mill<>i mm I i ul.is IIH-III
PICTURES !
Philadelphia
oil itic- MI.-I i
i
<
Mavbc iii.v hrnufhl il
I in parti «.i^ n,.i Hi,-
. >UH ,>l Ih.
in, i.l.-nl
ii.iniv
Ian
s.n.i
«i.k
iii.ii
Safrt) .'iii. .-is .ii i n.-.i ,.n iii,
iniiiiilrv
.illri
lllllllll.v .Hi,,
Hi,-
lilhl
Puhlii
.,, n,
IT,-.in
\a,-« «....
M,„,
-.
III
k «nl,
.MIII
,1, in, ,1
il„
, ii.n ,,
I'ul-li,
s.ii.n
s, i
11,1,
M,
,,i,.||i
«iatin| iii.II ..iii.., i irrrvi .1 dm 11 .
rtghl in.i I.,mi.i ih,- *uipn i II.-I.IIII,.
iii, i'i|., Mm Harrla and nthei olTio i
maintain lhal ihe nfllnn arrived
.ill.-i
\sk, « w.is |y|n| ,,,, ii,, ,.
„|
Tha Mavatoataa*
i» »*•
f UMMOTrty
IWarxN ■»
** ol
al P*Wtni|li>»*B*a»
Pa—■»■—aa
T>»»
H» Teg* o*
* • *>*»' V
'It'* iik,-
• .111.1,1.1 Mid i.isi wttV ih.ii ih,
II,'I
!>• ih,-
,i, i..,1.
IIII-M
in I In- po||| , ,,-|,,,i i
arc
II
i in
what
happened
I mil, i
k in,
with
I ,,
II
though people nhuted him tnd
Ins supporter*, ihei »tood up rot
III,
II
.nil, ulii .
VVl
K
I.'in,' ll"
.mi, ihina
we're white i Ivll
i ii-in . I. Hviaia
lriii|ilr I iiix-iMlt \\lillr sin
I'ui'ii. Saleh Spoke*prr«on Sylvia
,>i ihr in, i,inn prioi
llir pip
|U|
ilrnl
I iilun
I'trMilrnl
M>. hi,l
Spletter, who hoaaa la ^t up *
• hapii-i ol ihr uiiiiip il Ihr
i aivrrailr
Assistant Edttors
111,'
t.HI t. / HI sit
MM II> i.oi inn m.
\i.-'ii ftJuon
IS
K \< III I 11 SON
tt II. / ifidN
Phototypes*?!
Offsd Printed
and done by
profeMioneli .ii
« Mtll H III I IIIIMI
JKn SINMKII
Photo Night i ./i/.'is
t mi
ihi (•i/rror*
I»\\II»
« \m it t \i /in *iu
KKISII \ I MS Ml \\
\SIII i\ in ri \
CYNTHIA I Mtk \->
*.' '"'.s/ii, nun iMuuariM
ItKIS
s
/*""» V'V'I' I .lll.'i
LOOKING FOR V
^1 MMI K SI III | | •
I ''K' Ship Copy Shop
07W»lnul
186-6114 ;v. MIO
■
■
■ you tin,hi:
me
■ illltU
* » llw .MH.., ill Ilia Holy I'^wnylvii
"Mil H-.I .1. ,m*m ..i.-H I.. Inu »«l
QOnWI in HMk> IIMSNUI II vim IMIVP A
oonvnanl.« quatton BteU "H. tmmmi,«
•ocuracy ,< ;, .i.-v
.« MaWnn '•«
^'""lll' I <!*« II
:*«•», -I
t> ni
md '* pm
-Uimtav'* UI,.»,II)'I
rnuaaaa
The
We are looking for
HEALTHY MALE AND
FEMALE VOLUNTEERS
COMPENSATION OF $88.00
is offered for screening
OTHER AMOUNTS ARE AVAILARLE
depending on the nature of the study
T
liwnr
M
li.-m |..,,-,
over Uiti atfo ol IH Lo piu-lU'ipato in
DRUG RI8IARCH STUDIES
The Dally Pennsylvanlan.
mil Clt)wd III
Mt.lll
Ultinuto Resume
for the DP's 1989 Spring
! .ishlon Guide We need
interested student volunteer'.
to model the latest fashions
for advertisements and
articles
that will appear In the
upcoming
Spring Fashion Guide —
and
NO EXPERIENCE IS
NECESSARY...
So come fill out an
application
at the Dally Pennsylvanlan
Business Office between 9am
and 5pm, Feb. 24 - March 3.
Please Include a full-length,
non-returnable photograph.
Questions -- contact Kevin at
898-6585. 3-6pm.
M'II
Quotation of tho Day
Mill
A FASHION MODEL
performs in limit nl ,i
Victim readmitted to HUP
1
YOU OUGHTA BE IN
M.nlis
We are conveniently located In Cento" City
Call (1216) 790 8040 for Information
CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY UNIT
WYETH—AYERST RESEARCH
DaHy
Pennsylvanlan
"» IMI> Pwin^tvanlvi • «■ ««k>
|a»kHil
<li«ta<ii niim.ii .,,-! iliHhMil
HMIMyMl inn. !.1*M».I l, llw
Itatfy l>i»,avl»ai>wi k« ka to Ikumaity
Ol I'lMNWyMMMa URINIHKIilV
11». I .« mnw lhauil ,' ll- mwy l'«».
ivIvwiMii IM> »» mia»*v k» ll» ,.»*»il
■ H«. '•«*•«> N.i ,0m imittmm mm Hi
•ly w«y iWKitfli *> Do inn,.. <
<i*nwil .uMJ nfl HviunM ,w nmpbnto
,..»~i™iy lli.il . i.itoiil -J..*l |. ,|ial«l
ki tw I ■•• tltlva IkMlll M Urn illlllim
IM»
Il» IW, l'«>vylv«iMiii m |UIMMI
MI»UV lluxxut. I rlilay "' <t«Ul«*j*l«i.
I'A kmiy n», lot .u.l ai.uiu «i»l».
anil
I.ly ikMing numnia> *a«Min* o.
(-apt ,lunny MUVIWUMIIMI .u.l V,K MIRMI ,HM
..ki Nupwl Itmraiil may tin in|.,.hi.p.l .i
any limn in nl.n, ,M HI |.ut wittmul Nat
•"Ban lunaanl ol »»• I ... ,/l~., I .Mix
Ofllca 4 MaHiitf Atkkaaa 4018 Wakujl
SMM I1ula,lnl|4iu I'A 111104
BuamaM/AxtrnxUalng i.'l'.| HUH468I
Nawa/tdHonal i.'i',) WMfloBb
Waplay and Cliaimiil AaVOTlWng
v
in* iitaoad al Itw aljova addraaa Olflin
hourm Mm.Uy I ittlay. Dimftpm
Subacriptlona may l» inhnnil lo %*; \—
,K mtanac yna I ho,I itaan pnaiaga IWMI al
in«u«M|tfua I'A
l»a» Tha Oaay Pannayhwnlan, Inc.
■aBaS
Mondai
Irbruan
'. \'w>
»■'
ih, IUII, F*aeart*ealee
Focus
i .iu will i. |.i.it. tit. iurn .1.1.
a "ii mon rtTaclh
\.i
mlnUli Hoi
II.i ih.it i
■.. iiv
I ' ltl\ . I Ml \
f. .Ml.
it M
"" I Ii nit
ill-
M
ptohlt ni'. i
\
.'I lit.
•■HI.i
•"I
I I'" » 1
ill'
I 'lltV . I .It \
in
..I
t I , I
11ll)
I III.
|| ..
i.l.
I I.Mil
I
iii.
wort mi'
"Nt»«
i
"I"
II.IM,
I"' i ' I.l' i
. I
■ ii* i.iii.ii
1
n*
111
pint ■
II
miiir.l i .id
I
.1
i"
Il .\ ill l>.
< I
111 l\
I" " I
tin.
.MI
vnltimi
I
"
..HI,.
Ill"
..ml
ill .
«*.
.
|1|irIII nl
,,1
I" '
,
II
.iris
i
,
HI,-
..
i
MI
III,
i..
mill.II
Ml.
ni|.i. ,i
mil
iii.
'I 11
III
inn,.
i|i ndboll
in
ll.Mlllll.M \
i.
,1. MM
. i>ti, "1
III
il
,(
■ I"'
addition
I'lll'll.
l»llV ra„„aylva„lan M>
" III nil null
•.<, lllilV li I
. Ii Hli'l il
ill llll'llli llll
I,.
slni r 1'IHII
id.
Questions linger on
residential security
MM IS
ill.
I,.MM ,..,,..
Hull nl
I
hi* nr. with Mi l •inn It ft VI
tii.mil.M
rhrrl
ft
Iltlll\
li ntlflt Ulou
il
diti m
■< - in US
pi'" I.Im.'
. n
in
I
i
ill
sin
i.
.'I
ill.
i.
month*
• . I,
1.1, in ,
IRI«
ii""< »« i
III |l,l
I" 'in
iii' |
in
''" \
III.
n' ni
I, , |MII|' .Ml I III
il'iMil tin
M. < .inn' %
IM
,.|
might ml"
IMMI
i
mi'
'
M, i
III. I
ill. I
I
i'l
|||
tit nl
II
-li.
\,. .Miitnr in Rpttldfnllal
i in., t.M i .II..i Konloi « .'in ti
i
■ I
i
uli
'I
II,I
II lining
||
I
..
II
I
pi ii'i.
, .1 11. . ilmii
ll ;l.l. "II .'
ll'lil.llll
ld<l
'
lohn I ng in
\ .MI'I.
tl.ll
Mill
■.nn you'll
iln I-
IM
M. 11 .
t. i pi
M
1.. I ■ . . n
in
iiil ili.it i li,
.
M
■.
lit
|.| . .1. . I
,II
VIMIIMI
ifOI ■
II
lt.|Mit. il
I >lll
I III
hi• i
I II- ■
||
lli II, •
if I
played
the pi«'i aw
\n.i ..ih i >i
i\ i i.iiiii ha* •
111,1
ill.
;ll Dili
IM .1. .|
lllll
m Integral ton
. . Ill ll .
HI
Ifl " ■
' '* *
ih il
•»> I ll
ilodent* havi
Ml
Mill 111. Il\ I.l II 1 I
high
■
ih H nn Unlvai I
,r
imph mi ntad
I lai
i
ili''\
I '^ "'r
tiir in
'In
pri .l.lrnr III
i ..ni... < nhi
HI.I
.i\n|||
1
I.HIM K
< >l
|o*
nit/ \'>' in*III
ui
i" Mi'
I
MI
i in.ni
Hilling
I
KrM.iniii.il i ivlng offlii'I
h«vi
i.ii.ii thai
'iii
gh ii"'v MI.IV HIH
i. HVW tin i Iniveniti
onlrai i with
\|, * .inn AII. n ih. ii
KDtN I '" I"'"
■ "" " ummltii d
lo using i"'^ai« ■" wrili guardi
■'"
latl
v
". latC I »''-i" I '"
h.mm in "I
i
Safti).
n in nil
I.I.t
'in-
"i
ill
n,i
I
lll.lt
ii-
n I-"
naulianl
M
rt id< '
I
Bil
ni i
, .1. H M..Ii
lilt
i'l- '
Hi
in ti
• <»
"'
i ihai iii«* lurn
■ ii'*'
*UMK>
lively ill'»*mi' iny«•'•■ lo « ntai
| VM
iv
HM
'"
"<*
"in
"i
linn
ihe
TA'S EARN $4O0
I"
■
ni il v
wmilil
|i. I.l,
■. ..nlil hi
i m«
on
V in
Mri *'ii<;lri|ii
.HI
HI
Iiin
< nni'ii .
Ulmi
\ T>H7 n
Mil nln.l sr. nr il \
M
poll in niiiiiiriiilril
II.II
anaa/owy
'aniiiytviiMiaM
lie m.i .ill. il no nil
IM
III
i v i. ilir
i
In
ih-
^nlvr
Sntrty i»t
iwtgm 'i lo patrol *
try
10 'ha'
I|MV.
"l" v
i" i imlllai with "■■i",
M.I
tdOlOOOil'v,"
"IIIIO in! MM
illi
ll '
nfohlem*
ni.i
V*III
M. i V i
i"'i
IIVIIIK
Ml
M:.I<
t
i"
olve prohlame
, .11 M .1
■
iiii III .ni.i wot k alth 'i"
iin «nifl
ding in
W|||
lOOl
I
(llll
th.
imunity to
ii
MTJI
I
10 security, " mlnulea? " minutas li
n.ii tnough ' »m i ntIn orU nlal
I
ihraa daytt afiai wimh wr «uy 'Now
you're ready lo iivr in ,i city
■bout follow up iaaalomT"
knvui Hid that ihi 'Inlvareli
11 way i i""k Ing roi new im hnoli
tn iifi|>ii*^'- levurlty, bill added lhal
Funding I often i c< tn itralnl
V, .
I'M I
MI
' ||| Mill,
i i<i> <i
hi
.
II.I
I"
tn . impui how much lime li den
-'-'H
.ni did nol i"' t
I linvri(,il v i ..illllHllill v
M..i fully pi
•■■ ».i
ii.i ni'. ..I Kanu)g who'i grown upon i
linn hai ii" undarttandlng *ii-ii oi
nl
ma)oi
RIM
thr
i ci 'i" 'i'1 railed
11 Miii Involve i'"ii' -
•nil •
pvat yofia*4 li*'
• »iif lala i ild that Ihi '"
'
li nii.ii ... in n , i. hard lo i" i
hill Oir^r.l .iln, gtIon i
i "" gfi
tiling ' 'in" i "I dor mil or it
"All IH VMI nlil In '.Iiin.III from 'In
ni
T MM
mi.
Hill :I'M< 'I 111 H MM M r M
iiii[m
I.l. II
i lowevi r, i"
■ ■ "i H , in. .
-M
i iii.iiiiin. n.Mi'. I ara •
iii-. .in-
ihi
Min-
,
i" "j.
|itolIng io I
|
i .
ihr top i'ti moat Important Iwin
wnrl
"^'
ilii-ii
MIIM.nt'ii
progi 'in
li
I
iIm by in Ihi moat «m
' progi mi i
t ommunll. Mollt
to
mati i*
..iln '
ni
Merken«tel|n "II von n^ marnhei
I'll II d*
o»i raadert, afhlt '•
I'l NN. irdi '" lhi
ni
In
I
Htm
I^I
vnv tule «*■ a iiirtiopoluan urhaq
iMicii';. inn ||*i ■ .ii. in-1. Import ant
l.inn.IIV |9I . mil aranl iiiio l"H *""r
,i iha nva i"« in
■ '" '!"' middle
'",l
wccl i" balii vai thai ii"' i""
ii m ,i
*.
It ,
I M I I <:\ ' ' I
km.ii in.i i ..M.i. n ..mi ihai torn*
future i'i;in. nn im). iprefullng ill**
ii.l
'.in |o "lit' i .Im
in,I ii.'
Ii 'I lhal
Mi'
•
IIM . I
1 |.. iv.n.Uv ml' tl.lr
prohli in
M
I
'I'"!,
iina iii* "■ hi
inn...I.-
I
'• val "i
'
hr iald
' ''.
■ ii, ... i |
. n Dguri
"in.
I
llll.
in, i
mil, N.i.iiinti.
,>i
,,H
lhal
1 -nl I'ulli
i
■ i. ii iiii-ii
in.i
I
"I
■ - . I
III' I H I
I.*, iroi
null nr.
PI
now 'ii" me i" '" ''f••• '"'
ii..
hul "■ ■■ i"i di"•"
ll I
i"r
i»l
•
i in
■
hettei
|f HI
Ihi
iln im
i i
Idenllal i nrlly
I ..V il mil'.iii. i MIMIIMI .tialdH nrtlil
i . Ill H .
ihf nii.ii,r. it.
I. II ll. ,1
in rounding
■iii
11
| < Ill i'l' ' Ilia Ihf
I l.ll .I.M Milt. M M |
.
I'M HI
pfi day,
Ill IIMi llll
llil
II,
hul rejected tham lo pri
mil. MI 11.. dom
Id
t ogrtii
\v.
\|. 1 MUM
'"I
ii
i ii
ol
in||
i'l* nii.ii t h •"»'.
i
I'll.
iiii
■ .MMIIMIIIll
i
. -i
ll.MII .
wort
\\ • ha* • n
W .
II
i
HHIIIIH
ni' "I' "I •
ihlngi '" lool ing |
<
Mi.Mini
111'
\ in
I
I iinil would inn
. I ,.
ih.
Ml'
MI
M.I
than r^ PI
ln| with i<»
I.IM
w iiimi
I, M I ■ I
M, i
md ovei n ilrlt lion I* purel) iuh|i i
i i.iiiic id H
ii ■ i |udgi mi nl
111,1
tii "i
I HI t lllllH' I .'■ I
II I' 11 lit I M 'III ili>< M V
ii. dfnotfM
111
I n M. i
pledge* io •>"
1.1., e i" '-I-MIUIM I'lii'h-
llll llll I • ■ .M1MII. ii ||t
V
I.I'M. I
MMMlt III V
■
it
I
I..
.liinl'l
II.i
(i
I hart
I. M I III
"i" •v I Ing
""'
in,>iii. i ,>i ii
\S li.iil.ni \
M.i k . nl- i |rt
i■ ■ .Muni.
.mil
\^ in n ii i
i llll I-
MUM
Mii
■
il
Safety ' Mrai loi
I'MI'III
il>l i,
li.il I'. . II IMI|'I« MM III. il
I,
II
I" li o lin ol 'I"
onclud
,, 111,
nn In March ind official will
HI. rnpi
in
1.1.1mtii.
doa
ifi
I.I.I. Ill .11 . Ill ill, II il, M Mlllnl I. '. lllll
I ill || I"
itu-ni .il tin inn' bill -'i'l I i'-1
IIIH tin . i'ni|'.in\ i
rent I) "word
iha admlni in ill
Ll
llll ■
tf ll.ll
il "
Mllllllt! I
provr it-, i'l' * i'
'"I '"'«■,,<
i >win i I.M M, i .inn .ir. lined . "in
ii.ii
iii-l
I
I
in
"'
'i ■"
pi' 'i 'in I Inlvi • ill ■
ii. n Ifttionnhlp (frith
.,>ni|i,iit\
' nil* i
ll IM
I'I
■ .Mlilll. llllC
. i | , .1 li,lil
ii .
it \
It
I,I
I . .LI. Ill
"i
ii
IIM
i« Involved In tH*
it ill
. Mil
'In
III
(
. \ -.1. nr.
I" I'.lli
\ . .'i
■ | I ■ .
III.
ni.i I.. . < iluati
il\
III
II
In
\. . .Millll
■ i mi',
MM.I. I .l.lllll
ll
i|.|i|n <l I.M thru
i i.i. in . havi i
lo ■ <- . \ (in.ii.
. . ni i ih
I l > M .1. I|1l
li <l "lull "il iliH \ l"i
i" i ' "ii II \ lll|
Ill' i
.
\\ lirn
tin
I
I"
II
ir im
ipi'.ii. iilU Im- .1 II
iir'.Mit*
. .1
in
I ||
.ii., nvetfil '" have •■ <'
nal
ih, timpani
hiring nrai i" • ■
in
ii i im Matt) guard*
Mi i .inn
I linn
\
II>
. I I - . i i
I|II>
I I
I' n i
ii'i
ml
th.it
|,'l'
Il IV MM' ill. n |H1 I M lllll -Ml .Illl\ I |
, mi, . i ir.
IM. I M I
ii lining "i indO "i" il
wen
.
lii.lt
n.Mi
in.I. ill
i
i how
Wf II
ni II . I
I'IK
,i
M
.. .
ll ■>
i .
I". mi
■■* nloi
i
■■ ■ • i 'tin
||d 11*1
M. i V .
i h ii in. i
I ll,
III.
i
ild lhal ■ la \ r#h ihi
\ in
\ Oil in ' '•
i ivlng,
'.III.I. lit
i
'I' ill
. MM.' .'I
, nil i. •
K|l ' 'inn
U* hi
li i.l I'- - n
IM>
III.I
i >l
iii
i«<nr«
Ing t" gl* i up
iiiiiii-.r i H,.i . HI M . II
III IIIHM.
%nil
11 ■' 'i' nn
ti.Mi
room
< in
v, -..I. mi .i
ill I \
Ml. I
W
,,.. , i
l'i i i Miir
tntsl
i" i"
l iii nl
I Mil I. Ml .
I\
I hi
i ii. heha* >• M ol Ihi i III ran*
I'l"
p.. pholi
IM
I. .11 || 11V .
ha*
II
111. I
M
iu IM nn ii
"
"II'I I'l.'i' \b\\ Ihi in..;i iitiffoii im
iii i ii ii rtooi
ill.I \i' •
id H
111. I
I I . . .1. Mil
"At you i« -.tii. i iln
do.in
MI
i mi
IH
in * In |.|
|I)I.III.
iii
i
I,...
Mon*, hul
Mh
nnliv nln.il
II
M
II.
I
I'H
|||0
|- III).
i.
II.I
• l.illll "Illil'W
, \
»n
ill
It. > .I.MIl
I.- .1 till
• i ■ Ing
[in
11.
I I |'.M I
IIIHM
K ,<\ il
""'
io ■ <"Hii'iii.
11111... it i .i 11
l|..\\
in.,
i iii iii.MI ..I
IM
ifi
"''I,
|
"|| |
\v-.li in
. ,HI- llll III!
'' *
Ii mil ''
i
. nn, i ring ll
■ i mini il
I II.
high
llentlary,
ild i nglni 11 ing
i >a*"i '>• '■ i who ii . i in tit
I....I ittg
III. \
I, >. .V
i..ii>)-
t ■
\\ i
tin II
ill,
I* • i thai ''" Unlvai
Ill\
I
I. Ill
.i.l. i in,* III.
,-M
il -l.iw II
I Mi. I
tin
\% nn
I'"
Ml,
Iiv. .nil ,
i
,.M
i", v■
.. \\ .
Mill. 11
'
.1 mil ni
III
Ill IMWt |M 0|»ll
IM-
Mil, i
w.M l
. . I, •■
\.i
" iii ii- -• 11 -v you've gol Ii
mil.
11
I ■
•l I
. I I. , llM
ni.I .ml ..I tin
It.u. ." Iii
p.
»II
.in.i
'ill'I
llHI (,, |, , Ml
in
w.
I
in
MM
Mm •'
ild
I. ., )| Ml}'
1,1 I I I >>M . I ill It III, I
\\ III. Il I
\
iII»in i 11
.
ioo
(ill I
iii<
hnuld '"
inn
Ml. ||< '
"'I" '
,
ii
ni. ii..
i
i, it
I..
f who t" WM ii vine
|'l"l. , t
ll i
IU
.1 it.i. ni
u.mi.i
.111.1 I
logi'i" i
. Mil. I
, ■( 11.1 ii.
MIL
, p ll III
in.i
"llll
\\|l:ll
ill.
h iiin""in
il \
I 'nn . I .ll \ III-
In
\\ ltd
ni in I
*ffl
.>! Ilir. I. , Iuin|.i|' \ in . impill 11
nil
(Ii.
inn, ||i ii. .1
Il || |>|..||
it
i in.
MI.
11VI
nl. oii.il l \\ ina I tii.,
1
ih. .,
I U II, M>|| I,.
in IM\
ruM i"
I' ■
..■■ i n.
lit
Ilowrvei
tii.H
MH
...I
i, it,
it rat Ion alto i»Un« w
i iitoi
i
irmp
ii. nt ril i • i'l NNi -I"''" JIII.W
irgufrrril itunlc nl llir 1'iiivrrcily lo
i
i HI
of vr.ii. M
M Ithoul having to !»*■
Koval fiMi ihai Ihi numhaa
hi i. ,i.. .i i net lei lyelam
im morntnring i
i ildeni r«
i ii< I- ii, MIOO giieati on 11
wrrbiiuv. 2000 mi g weekend
,i 1000 during football «f»mii
iid
iddlng lhal Ihi -. Man would '"
h. Ipful during evanti iifrr
i- ic m
\\., k - mi in.i i lorne* onirng
Mii|ilriilirt
nl residential iei iirily t rmld not N hn
i until Ih* mi wiirr* «*rrr m nml
i. Imph I"- ""••I
matlmai vm don'i raahia lha
magnltudi ol i dilammi until H WO
I
n ihr ryr«." hr iald
fir^l floor t>imd window*]
THE EMERGING SCHOLAR AND PROFESSIONAL:
A CONFERENCE FOR GRADUATE STUDENTS
Monday, February .'' I'lH'i
.i 18 io f 30 p m
I.' I «|ii,iimii .id In.K.hin,) Assistant.. in '.AS wanliKl lo load
workshop! foi noxl lii'i rA rrakiing Progrtm, B/31 urn 'i/t it
Mnii'iioii Hi IH
you ,in> i:iiiiimill(iil liMJMial I
hiM(|. i'i<l hawt idoas .iln.ul hOW
w
ii IMIIIIII |ii.,|iiim imw lAs, '..UKI .I letter sliiimo rout
ii,iinii, [ilioiin I lopailmoiil. liiacliiiM) IIX(MMII»I»;O and woiksh(i|i
ideas to
Welcome
. it
ii... i ...*...
The Art ol Pereueelon: How lo Negotiate Feee. ConlrecU, and
Salarlea
■MMHROM Meow Career eienewi eat eiaaaMaai tm
Nancy Berkhard, 218 College Hall
Deadline: March 3
4 30
I II
lto<i r,«n»lm Room
Fellowenlpa and Grania. How lo Wrlle Propoaala that Work
in
FASHION EYE WORLD
t), '.haiiaa ibwaniiaig l'"4aaao> Hwlory and 9oc>olu(|y •* Boami •
I'.iru... SnWt, AM1I„«,I,I„.« I .i.i.- umvarafty "' Pannaylvama Prat*
an 7 X
B*ahop Whtto Room
Till ULTIMATI IN CYt CARL A I YfWl />"
3935 CHESTNUT ST. 386-6200
All Rxs Filled • We Fit Problem Cases
Proleealonal Freelence Coneulllng: How lo Obtain and Work wllh
Cllenta
rtooa, Davia Ph U . Maiiiaiing (.onauilan,
Mi»« Rub-n. Ph D M«A/latima> 4 Bucl, Inc
R 30 '30
Ban Franklin Room
• 1000 F.nmoi • Ey# ti«m,n«lioni • Conlacl Iron.
0tt«i*l *-y»*t« ft
tonlKl Itnt c«r»tfi
lor John HMKOCI
m*mbfr* • i»0S tfrttownl
Dunibiii
opaque lenses
---«!
10% OFF !
IU0 ' .. .
ft CONIAC* LINM %
UNIVKaSITV CITY
|
|
iciNTanronava canci
il:
.
'
Th
THEWOHLOtTHINNIBT,
UCMTWIICMTLIMS
|
I
Piaaaa ,.aii »«• '430 l<» mlwrnaiion ami lo •ag^ia' l,« a tpaca
10%
OFF
•u...
I-:-
.!(>STENS
lialr. Monday Ihroi^ti I Im.uli)
I.m, in i
4 CONIACt irNttt
UNIVIHtlTV CITY
|CINTIR»ORIVt C»BI|
I
Allan. PralMK* nl t,x>nomlo«
I il
Ban r,an»lin Room
II.II.
Scholarly Publlehlrtg. How lo Preeent Work lo Journal* end Praaeea
UNIVIMITV CITY CCNTIN rOP IYI CARt
i
CAREER
Iii:
it t
end
DajMfl Kr,|imr,l |M N
Place; I IK B-N* Hen
Pt mH
• '•"
Page 4
Ihr i>ali) I'mnstitaniHii
Monday, Februan 27,1989
On Campus
In Brief
Finance (lonunlttee t«» hold ekvtions
Events
i in- Siudeni ^ctivitiei < 'oum ii vnii hold dectlom foi
nexi yen's Finance Committee at loniiht'i s v<
meetini al 6 p m in i .i« School room 101)
■tpproximatel) 10 •.tn.ii-nts m vyini f« tin- three
available wall on the committee, accordini i" SAI
Chairman Vdam Shift i«.- ol the candidate! are
incumbent!
During tin- meeting, each candidate «ill M-cik i"t two
minute* I inancc i ommittec memberi will then lubmii
theii recomnwndationi t.- the entire bod) Hie I ouncil
«ili then irote on iii<- new Committee memberi
i in- s \i Finance Committee is responsible fot
allocatini all imuis to itudeni groupi
Mnii added thai the < 'ommittec mutt also respond t"
••loups' request! foi contingenc) rundinjj during the
.otiiM- ni the ycai S \< I inance also nnoh tin- aroup's
mone) in inni' trim capital investments
i Mi n ZeMei
TODAY
CAKVUS I Vt NTS ,un trstail ihW>
* paid pubac aafwp of thr*
Unrvararty o* PratwisviVaras. and are
admnatorad lor tw Urwarsrly by
"•a Oaay Ptnntyttmnun Thara m
no charga to authonzrad Unrvaraffy
.itlaaM groups toe MUnprfHH I
avanla Laftng* may ha maas.1 a
placed m parann at Tht OarV PWKI
i)iw>ai Buamaaa OrSca 4916
Walnut Straat. from Sam to 5 p m
Mmday through Friday Campua
Evarrts i* nol ba acraplart by
iv>»». .". *wd trr* Oaaokn* .1
pm
two tmamaaa days
vanos
DV Oary flarm«yiVan>an
rvaa ma right to ada Campua
Evanli according to space
Mil 1
'N Iwhtml i'»«'
Rm 10. Ltmtv l«t>» Spons.
P«M DlOWUdM .M RMMTI 'i Soo
LAC hjndtxJ
n NN
IN
II UVI N
M.
•cy ind MtdU Inten-naMon m—I
ing Mond.n I
'■
■
■
ASSEHIIVFNrSS
IRAININl,
PROGRAM aspwialiy gesie.1 tow
ards students will be o«vi"
day rebiu.ny
?7th at 7 30
pm Rooftop lounge Hrgi
Rouih BponaonM t-» QPWO AM
na ri-w ms H
mastM
ing Monday m the I aa
Room
100
Meeting starts
6 00pm Don! be i.r
starts al 5 30pm
Mil.h
I'l-ainMMri''
uml% D
>-*(» in Thy D*W»fc>l>m('nl
'
7pm
at
."" in
Nn»
m*mtot»r» wejhvmi.
Ion Apnl
*^nn ,'
9
Busus
l«MVf» from
g'oop to go
■'■
■ '
i 1*968611
TOMOftROW~
RABB
t'ONNil
001061 RG spaa* aHoul ma dii
' i M'I Tuesday
Ihe
I'l NN IN IIIAPAN
Boon
MI NI
'
Jouni I
Daa .
0424
■Jll MVII WINC with
lph.nn
on M.di Ii 1 i
aofl on I
:<■>•> SH/DH
I'OIIOQUIUM
•,-. k Unkn
Pheronxmes arid rfrj
Ragulatsgn
Tuesday Febiuiiry
SOllin SquM
Horiton
Vluut I'luh i,]im1
,Hl I ,
llouaarj
'.ublerranean nsutri..
I'NPI RCRAtlUATI
I NCI ISM
d HI* inaaUng Tuesday. February
;"8 at 8 00 I" KM Mill Me,
brary Organisational mfiwrnalion
will ba ptaaanaad
Aie< Hi
*-
West
■•"tei '
I'l NN IN I Ml inline. West Cei
Summer program Irtt
Iron mealing Tuesday February
••Itth .1 00 p m West I ounge 4lh
floor WiHama Hall
'
help the homeleea' Don.'
hour per week to help a kval sou
Oppe'-'
ner of Sprcer sr»d Oppenhemi will
be mni
•i V/ini-p Ma"
3601 Locust Walk
B-2 7 00 p m
I F ARNINC. PISAPI I P STII
PI Ni'
"you have a
learning disability and vou , I
sun a support group with othei
Itafe nn.vrrMt, Cpunaalna
TO ALL STUDENT
GROUPS INTERESTED
IN ACOTIRING OR
RETAINING OFFICE
Ovei 17000 in cash wai stolen from the office ol the
building administratoi ol Van Peh I ibrarj al 10 .i m
Sunda) mornini
| to Publii Safet) Sgl Dale
STUDINIS INK MVII WINl'. -ill.
M, I pint
O'Connor and Associates on Fob
■ to ,i rat rv
Mon
< ABROAOTampai
ally's Tyli" ■'., hool ot ^it ■
lion Meeting on semester m
long at
. mi', m Rorna
Tuev
see cI
Resume
i
I'hrtT break-ins tK-cnr ttvor wcokoiifl
I .-:
n Al-MINC, INI I II.
umbiii QnVnrrnai .ind I'rep iii NYC
will interview sluilenlv In .ill Mil'
on
■
aenls
ROOAII rm ss I MMAI
seeks KJnrors aox lurrirnrai
ism
'. avail
.ll'le in willing and reseiiuli loi
sevei.i
;•
Bring
iiiNr, INTERVKV
School III W.ntiinuton IV will ill
- A ninth hiil
and phys
3/18/89 You murst .
hrveer
Raaume'
• ' INm IMVOI vt
CHRISTIAN sen N<
Iron of f'mnn wer"'.
meeting tonight al fl 00 In Ihf
Chapel or The CfwasMan Assorra
Details
I '
Management
liona? i .
■.
MlKin nw»eling
:
■
lions
under
M Stanal '■
oam i ■
tsooo Daradkna Mi
Tiresday Fabrunry .'6th 4 00 p m
Wast lounge 4th '
N.lll
h\
MOIl.l
Oil
I'Oni'OIIATION
aponaors summei
|
I' '11 .>.".IV '.luJl'Ml.. (.1(1,1
si NCR ARTISTS
It ttee
S F I prasanls Or
CM
voung in i. > Pre Heettt
sneaking 1 p m al GreenfieM In
teu-uttural Center. Palm Room
vou HAVFA c I
HStel
Ml I riNOOl NAIIONAI II
Tuesday I ato
4p m . Bishop While Room I
ton Han Bponaorarl by 01
Wlil ami oic
Cat «■>!
N
Mondnv
nm-rvs IN w DtCIM
Swan*
men Ciul> »-' lidx'vf I'h i.
TO
I
HTXOQy
Outing Club Inps .
diving billing
Meeting Monday
2/27. 8 pm. Ben Franklin room
Houston Han
AITN All BA
days aj
liasernenl
Sue al .
R MUSICIANS
All RIQHTlSpringBrMka I
hara Anyiwr |
JUDAISM i I'll
IN 11 I I U.I NI
adults Join Rabtx Joaaf Hauler
tor a challenging discusthe weekly T,.i.iti Portton lues-
I I QAI CAM I R SI lilt S
i .iw s. hool i npranancrj 11
Vaar and Bey
tOprn
Bodal
i. ii.in
o.,
I't NN IN SAlPMANi. A
Sumrm"
|it.»gi.in»
Satom
ABA CAN I r AD TO MI COVI H \
OCaaaaad with rood, bolt
OompuMv^ Mnolrnfl staivaicj r>
purging'? 1 undarstand I I have
bulimararria
Houston N.n
IM;. ON rm
PHOT
uart J
Am t Boarad ol s
jaas
196061 I si n.-" tot'l >
i
Association
3001
I0.11SI
All
uma
TIAI'MINl', INK MVII 1\
fwkl
interview .yrt englc.'.
■n 3/17/89 Yo,
see Carol
CPPfl balwaan
Murnai
tin CAM I MS QROUP
TON —ii haa sumrnar aat
to sell advertising spare to
tnoni informs
-en 1'1'I'S bOOkl uniVr
Marketing/Adverti-.
RUGS
USID BUG SALE
out rmci pin
$1'lakU nctu'in out'.: >
I $!tT Wi'l.l
WW SUfPlTUSTS
11.INJA1AN& SONS
■
SPACE IN HOUSTON
HALL/ IRVINE
ACDITORirM.
lii .i separate Incident, Phi Oammi Delta fratemit)
memben said thai Intruder! broke into the fratemit)
house ihree m fout lima thbi weekend kecordini to
memberi, the burghu stole •■ a/atei cooler, food and
laundr) detergeni Fiji brother! estimated the Ion II
$450 last tusciit Fratemit) memben said that ihcy
believed the suspect entered the house through •■ barred
basemen) window
in ., third Incident, PI k.in'.i Mpha fratemit)
member! reported i" Publfc Safet) ovei tin- weekend
ih.it two coati «iiii keys .mil Identification were stolen at
,i part) on I rida) nighl
llisabelh Irvi
Grad Studenf robbed sit gunpoint
\ Universil) graduate itudeni wai IOI>IH-«I ofSMai
gunpoint Wednesda) nighl al In- oil campus residence
on s iitii si . according to Publii "sit<-t\ Spokesperson
SU\
I,I
( .in.i,1.1
I in- student -.nil las) nighl that the suspeel followed
him in to tin- lobb) oi in- apartment building al n 43
p in Wednesda) nioht
IK said thai ihe suspeel then held .i gun to the stu
dent's iic.nl Die tuspeci then stole the student's credit
. .mi
Publii Safet) referred the incident to Philadelphia
Police l in- suspeel has not been apprehended
I lisahclh lor
Black artists stress business sense
B» I )\\ WIMW MKK
i w<-hc- national black leaden in the em urged aspiring
black artists to learn about the business aspects ol theii
trade to avoid exploitation before an audience ol appro*
imatel) 100 students and communit) members Saturda) al
thr I Iniversit) Museum
During the foui houi panel discussion, sponsored b)
ihi Black Wharton Undergraduate Association, black ai
tivts. writers, musicians, producers, and media executives
emphasized the need to preserve blai >■ cuhure through ai t
but s.ii.t thai black artists are often exploited because tii<-\
I.I. k business sense
( liticidng the fact thai Mack artisls often disregard Ihe
importance ol contracts, royalties and copyrights, the
panelists added ihat artists leave themselves vulnerable to
exploitation
i iu"\ added that Mack artists have the responsiMHt) to
educate ihe publii about black art Because the publii i^
not familial with black arts, the panelists said, artists have
difficult) to receive funding foi project! thai arc nol con
sidered mainstream
Panel member! said that blacks arc at .i disadvantage
because the industries which produce art are dominated b)
whites
in ,i .onntIN that has exploited both .mists and blacks,
black .mists have had hard!) .i chance," i ns Records
Vice President and Executive Producei Oeorge Butlei
said
Hi- added thai the music industr) is "merciless" in Its
drive to make money, and said thai black artists and con
sumen need to oppose tins commercialism »nit .i political
and cultural struggle simllai t<> tiir one in tiic '60"s
■Vccording to |au trumpetei rerencc Blanchard, the
iiinsi. industry uses black .mists fot profits i»nt the musit
that is produced is not reflective ol the Mack cuhure
"Music is .i vital pan ol ihe black experience, but the
black communit) is alienated from Ihis music," Blam hard
said
i in- I.I.'.- musician decried ihe fact lhai fen Mack youths
know about the tradition of black music, adding that the
Mack music that is released presents pool role models
i awyei Osagie Imasogie, who sdvises on laws govern
ing artistii production, said thai artists' only protection
lor theii "intellectual property" is the law He added thai
it .mists are nol familial with the law, the) could "sign
contracts and give nwa) everything r« pnt.in.i\tio Nnii'ii, in an expert David Driskell said before the
panel discussion That those who produce and sell art,
innsn ami literature only conaidei Mack culture when the)
are sure It is marketable to the mainstream audience,
lie encouraged Macks to rail) support for then srtisti to
prevent ■ loss ,-t tradition, and said that before Mack at
usts considei the financial aspects ol thcrii career, they
need to make ■ commitment lo preserving the Mack
culture
Wharton senioi rherese Bechet, forum chairwoman,
said yesterda) thai the event pointed out i tic historical im
..i Macks i" ihe arts and ihowed sin,inns thai
the) need to be proud ol theii cuhure and continue to
develop ii iiuouuii patronage
I tic forum was pan ol i lull da) event sponsored b)
ni.uk Wharton Prioi to the panel discussion, ihe group
awarded the annua, Howard Mitchell Scholarship m
iionoi ol a Wharton profesaot who was the first huvek to
br given in endowed chaii i reshmen Shannon Fiddiman
and Winston Neafield, senioi Brma rolllvei and junior
Mnin-al Persaud received tin- award
YOU MUST SUBMIT
AN APPLICATION
BY FRIDAY, MARCH 17.
APPLICATIONS ARE AVAILABLE IN THE
OFFICE OF STUDENT LIFE,
110 HOUSTON HALL.
GAY MEN & LESBIAN WOMEN
IN THE
WORKPLACE
No one Knows how to create a pizza like
Domino's Pizza* We use only the finest, freshest
ingredients in every custom-made pizza And we
guarantee you'll love the taste If not we'll bring
you another pizza or a full refund We also
guarantee to deliver your hot. delicious pizza in
30 minutes or less If we're late, you get S3 00 off
your order
So what are you waiting for Call Domino's
Pizza today!
Call us.
$1.00 off
Present this coupon to receive $1.00
off any one-item or more pizza
One coupon per pizza Not good
with any other offer Includes rebate
of sales tax if applicable Good at
participating locations only
Expires 3/19/89
Unlvaraity City
FEB 28- Chonqinq Times, Chonqinq
Aiiitudes: Coming Out At Work
386-2600
Safe, Friendly, Free
Delivery
3801-17 Chaslnut St
Open tor lunch
PWSENTED BT.
CAREER PLANNING <V PLACEMENT
OFFICE OF
" . &TUDEMT
STUDEK LIFE PROGRAMS
UNIVERSI" rY OF PENNSYLVANIA
Brnjomn Frwiklin IU, Houston Hall
C\RKKR
----■■■■
.'.'..y -•■
f3O-(V00PM
11 AM-2 AM Sun Thurs
11 AM3AMFn 4 Sat
Our drlvara carry lass
than $20 00
l imitad delivery araa
I
1989 Domino's Pizza. Inc
J^
•
!<
Monday, lebtiury 27. I'MW
Ikr l>.ll>
Pf*
'Avodah' Dance Ensemble combines black, Jewish heritage
H» KI IIK ( \ t.ni DSTEIN
Sometimes wordi lust aren'i enough
rtiursday night, the N<-« York-baaed tvodah Dance
BmemMa danced, cried, wailed, moonwalked and beat i
drum in .1 program attempting 10 ralue (be black and
lewish struggles fa freedom
kvodah'i energetic performance, entitled Lei My fVo
pit <•". accomplished ill goal knd more
I lu- dance troupe based us slum ,m .. tames Weldnn
lohnion poem ol tin uune same which comparei ii»- bon
in.I oppreaaion »f the ilavei ,-i Ancient i iypt with
the black ilavei In the \merican MMith
Before iiu- ihow, the Univenit) Ooapel Choii tang two
•ongs to .i" enthusiaitk audience .>i approximatel) ISO
Univenit) studenti and community memben Kudiencc
clapping and toe lapping KM the stDfe i"t the powerful
dance routine!
i eaping In the air, dapping the flooi with Iheii handi
and dancing lo emotional frenzy, ii»- dancer* ikillfull)
melded the Iwo Moriae
I he Interpretive dance program combined acting,
Hebrew tongt, black spirituals, direct Bible quotations
and varioui musical Inatrumenti.
Pollowiog the rhythmk beating oi ■< drum, iiir five
danceri pet formed barefoot In ilmple cotton himpsulls In
an effort IO transcend thcii own religious and racial
differences
loAnne rucker, foundet and diractot oi the Dance
Ensemble, said last night that the show was rtaslgnetl to
respond lo growing tension between the Mack and lemsh
WSU hopes to form at U.
I'NION. from pane I
union is "racist" and "white
supremacist," saying the organization
"supports the preservation ol the
»hiie culture .in«l an end lo sffli
in.itne action and quotai "
Spiei/ci said itiai ins organization
protects white students' rights and has
charged the university »iih prai li
radsl poh.ies sued .is minorit)
quotas
"We want to educate people end let
not Hunk the White Student Union
»ill st.ni ,i in.ni.h ,n iiu- University,
the existence of the organization at
remote reflects ■ national trend
toward it i eptance ol rai ism
"It's an Indication oi the new
mindset, bigotry, and racism that's
turning around the Idea ol reverse
(HM rimlnation," Mood) said
United Minorities Council Chali
man rravls Richardson said that he
»ill vehemently protest itie formation
* Wc want to educate people and let people know
what's going on in the country. The American people
arc waking up to find that their rights arc being walk
cd on hy minorities.'
Michael Spirt/rr
i empic's White Student Union President
people know what's going on in ihe
country,"
Spletzei
said
"The
\meiuan |>eople BTC waking up 10
find that then rights are being walked
on by minorities
Hm t Iniversity minority leaden said
last
week
thai
Students
will
nol
tolerate the establishment ol ■ i haptei
,m campus
Hiiiek Student i eague President
Melissa Mood) said ili.H ihe I1SI will
oppose the establishment ol the
chapter "b) art) means necessary'1 it
one is proposed, adding that all
minority groups should join the
protest
"if it's sanctioned by the Universi
tv. n sends i mrsiagr lo blacks, lo all
i>eople of color, to ail people who
ahdoi racism," Moody said "Ii just
won't happen
MIXHIV said thai ahhOUgh she does
..t ■ haptei
Read my lips
should ihe While
Student Union ol lemple Univenit)
attempt to establish ■ branch >i the
University of Pennsylvania while
rravls Richardson is In office, the)
will regret n loi ihe rest Ol their life,"
Richardson said
Despite Ihe protest, While Sliulenl
Counter, but they have l>een moved t.'
the "new releases' mction, he added
i ampul leaelion to the hook on
campus has varied. While many
Muslim students and t.unity objected
to ihe content! ol the hook, terming it
"blasphemous" and "sacreilgious,"
Ihey said lhat tdev disagree wild Kho
ineim's threats
found lo hack up their claims, 1'i.iveis
said.
I a Salle sophotnoie Doug Rauhe,
one of the students who was .ma, ke,l.
said yesterday that he did not heai .ni\
remarks shouted from the building.
"it doesn't make any sense,"
Rauhe said "We were pisl walking
down the sidewalk past tins group ol
kids, and one ol idem ran into |thc
assaulted student| lor no reason. It
was like they wanted lo Start
something."
Raymond Heath, sice president ol
student attain at I ■ Salle, would not
say whether the attack was i.ui.illy
motivated but added that la Salic has
experienced racial lensions si its campus, which has less idan a live percent
black enrollment.
"There's always a polcntial loi
conflict m any uihaii community, but
violence of this son is very, very
rare," Heath said. "Its probably the
worst personal injury I have witness
ed
. but we're working, perhaps
with more frequency, to make sure
this doesn't happen again."
The university has felt tensions with
ihe primarily black, working class
neighborhood ever since it relocated
lo northwest Philadelphia from
Center City SO years ago. Heath said.
The university official attributed part
of the problem to the cultural and
racial misconceptions about the
neighborhood held hy many in the
university's primarily white student
body.
Heath said that hostilities usually
arise when students frequent the
residential areas or residents complain
about noise from campus,
"It's a tough world out there,"
Heath said. "There are built-in
animosities between college students
who have — on the surface — a more
promising future, and the community. In such an urban setting, cultural
differences have always been a
catalyst for disputes among young
people."
The recent increase in drug abuse
and crime has also contributed to
deteriorating community relations
and safety, he added. Heath said that
llie tree "
pressed deie loni^lit
s.llil
i in- performance «.is part ol Blad History month and
eight student groups and departments
i he K""I tonight a>ai lo celebrate Black History
Monih and lake us one step rurthei in npeninK up the
future lo more black lewish progiamming," Ki>«nian
•aid "We hope lo continue lo expend on the id
ROOM SELECTION
ensv.
1989-90
CH€AP.
UPPERCLASS RETENTION in
WEST CAMPUS
Daily P onnsy I vnnian
clnsslliorl ads are the fastest
way to sublet your apartment,
sell your computer, or find a
roommate
Thoy'ro easy
you can
place your classified ad by
phono using a Mastercard or
Viva or hy coming lo the DP
OfnOg at 40ir> Walnut Si
And thoy'ro cheap
10
words lor 3 days costs only
$7.50
So use them today and overy
day.
When?
Monday, February 27, 9—5
Tuesday, February 28, 9—5
Where?
High Rise North, Upper Lobby
Refer to your Room Selection Booklet for details.
The Dally Pennsylvania!!
Union president Spletzei predicted
thai chapters will begin to start up na
tlonwide, adding that be has received
main leltets from students a, toss the
country who support
the group's
ideology
"It's hke what happened »itd Mat
lin I Ulhei King, Ii . " Splel/ei said
"Even though people abused him and
Ins suppoilers. they stood up lot ihen
civil lights We'ie doing ihe
;hing
we're while civil ngliis
JFK
one student said that while he op
posnl Ihe book, he believed Him bun
ning it would only increase
underground sales \ nol her student
said thai lie liehevrs the book should
be sold as a piece of literature and as a
subject of intellectual debate, while a
third commented that such liberal
Mews go against the beliefs of prai lit
ing Muslims
'i don't even thmk lacrcJigious
..Hies close to defining the book,"
one student said "It's immoral."
I
V«{ )nrklll\
mdrtp
'i tultTlfi
i hi, |
La Salle debates relationship
I,A SALLE, from page t
claimed that racial insults shouted
from I I i Salle dormitory incited
theii attack. No evidence has been
College Freshman Heathei KOSMH.HI. one ol the pro
gram's coordinators, said last Bight thai she *«>
"ecstatic" about the turnout and the audience's reception
Another coordinator, College freshman Deborah
Oillman said last night that sin- «.is pleased with die
program
"it wai -ill we could have dreamed sbout," Oillrnan
FAST.
Encore gets bomb threat
ENCORE, from page I
ICGOrding to McNamara Originally
Ide hooks weie on display behind Ihe
communities
"I'm no) .i sociologist, I'm an artist," i m in ■..ml "A
friend lent me the poem ih,n the) had rand at thaii
|Passover| Sedet iii<- point i knew I was going to do the
piece ».is when i heard ii»- overia) ol the Negro spirituals
and the Hebrew i naming "
During .i question and answei leeslon aflei the perfot
in.in. i tvodah ntembei I ii I ontains iald that ti»' ihow Is
aimed .ii emphasizing similarities, rathei than diffi i
between the black and lewish communities
"it si MI strikes me as strange that people concentrate on
the differences In the structure ol Ihingi Instead ol on ii»IIIIIIKS the) have in common," i ontaine said "We arc •>
I.IIIIIK .mil everyone is ■< branch No one Is separate from
i'it/tri/i
iiiillri/i
li"\lntl
$<)<)muilt//ri/i
community difflcuhiei will always ex
ist when a school is located in a
primarily urban environment.
Oerome Williams, president of the
Hellfield Area Neighbor hood Asso, la
tion. said lhat community relations
have not improved more because
many residents feel threatened by Ihe
school's recent development In the
past lew ve.us. I a Salle has purchased
new land to construct buildings such
as a library and dormitonrs
Some people don't feel that they
have a say m the cxpansise activities
..I I a Salle." Williams said. "We'd
all like 10 see more interaction lhat
would give the community a bigger
part in the decision making pro,.
i ampus Boulevard Corporation
president William Miller, who heads ■
local organization designed IO improve neighborhood relations, said
that residents feel they may have to
move since some residents were forced
to relocate following lemple University's expansion
"Most of the tension that has
developed over the last five years is
because la Salle is growing, and people arc afraid of being displaced,"
Miller said
But Miller added that I a Salle has
made efforts to improve community
life such as running programs for day
care, family counseling, tutoring and
real-estate development.
( arol Davidson, an area resident,
denied yesterday that tension exists
between the students and the
neighbors although parking and noise
problems bother some residents.
"Frankly, I didn't know there was
any problem until I heard about this
(the assaultl." Davidson said. "I
don't have trouble with the students,
even if they do get kind of noisy in the
springtime. They're jusl kids."
La Salle sophomore Brian Shanom
said that he has nol noticed any
hostility between the two groups, adding that many students usually do
not have contact with their
community.
"I think this thing has gotten blown
all out of proportion," Shanom said.
"It's too bad it happened, but this is a
city — what do you expect? The community's nol going to love the
students when they take all the parking places and blast music loo loud."
FLL
\,lll htl'h JM"
hirlliiiulertlaW
u ndfrp
tWroundlrtp
tiu/tri/i
$99 roundtrip airfares on Northwest Airlines.
A special offer for students,
only for American Express Cardmembers.
II you want in go places, il s lime for the American
Express* Card
Because HIM you can take advantage ol new n wd
privileges on Norttiwoi Airilnes on/) forfull-time
studmts u bo carry the American /• fprms i ard
Travel privileges that offer
^»
Jim (99 roundtrip tickets fly to an) «t
ajQpTijsjyrzcT the more than 180 dues served b) North
d >UI, S
AIRIINES
"esl
"'t,K'conUmav
8uous
-,K' nil,'SIX
'
|K
IH UMI1
LOOK TO us
' " on* i**et
'
P*
month period
SpeaalQuarlerfyNortt ■
motion Discounts
throughout 889 up to 25* ofl thelowestavailabl
5 000 bonus miles in Northwest i WORLDPERKS*
free travel rwogram- white oru) 20,000 mile
. roundtrip ticket to anywhere Northwest flies
in the conUguous 48 Unitd States w Canada
\ml of course, you II enjo) .ill the exceptional
Its and personal sa
tfrom
American Express
The on!) requirements for privileged travel you
rnustbeaCardmernber you must bt a full timestu
lent and you must charge your hforthwest Airlines
tickets with the Card'
I letting ihe i lard la easier than ever because m«
mapprybyphone lust call I
MEX
Wfc li take your application and IH-KUI to process II
right awa) What's more, with our uitomaiic
Approval offers,
an qualify now
while you re still in
school
topi) now Ft) later
HJ
for less
Apply Now: 1-800-942-AMEX
TKAVEL
RELATtD
V-RVK (S
-SmmMOtrnmim R»c«it**.to*t*ia.r.<
CBWAmm. ■
.i*dB«i*lmii»t«-ass««*i««wi-»'-atoBihtn^
»•»«*»
iht-i>aii« ivnns)i«iaian
Monday, Pebruarj 17, \w)
Pornography or Silence
W^t J0aihi |Imtsyhimtum
/7K-
Independent Newapapei ol the University ot PenmylvaniM
lOSth Yew oi Publication
Exucvnvi Bonos
tiffit
M VNM.IS,. I OTTOS
Ml MM SS St \S\LI k
HIlWIM
PAOI I I'M""
HKH I'iKMK I i
K«\/M// I <\l
tNDKI I'
St I MlliiM ) NEWJEIXTO*
HOOOQAIUKEGENI SALES MANAOBB
SAMttlUMAh PINANCI MANAOBP
DAVID LASKO Un IATI MMM0MO BDtTOS
PAMELA WONONl
Vss.s ■> > Bl HNBSMANAOn
\unwiHniiA USOCIATE Burros
WKEJOHNSi* PMmxMAnn Burros
. \/w nn EnntM
H1KK1 />( «/>I'H Sruanl pin*
DAVID UtNlHJ) MTHSTRB I Bonoa
\IARt ) Ki'M \HI Vi. PaoWK nONMANAOM
i\/Vi7H n IGU VPVIKIISIM. AB1 DBW i""
KOMI I;,I/J>»(<\ <Ki pii MANAOI k
/'II/ W/l//1//
C| v (\ W/s/ PHOnXMAPm I DCTO»
GAJti Ki >/// IV HUN IHKIi n>K
I
'HQH1
//(iM <«;'/.<; A('»;;.• sroars Bonoa
> MniSrunrrMANAUiNoBonat
A AMII
RHt<\IH I HI HI MVKM UN,. Until II IK
HANOI UICHB. Assoi i MI SALES MAN AOM
/.</ wtlAZAKVS I'I iwin in IK. 11 Mm-, MANAOI K
Kl I /.\ A 4.\'.\<>IMr Sni HI I'm in, I-. I inn it
\«ISHMl'»i'l-li lli'SMvMMU
Just Like the Real World
rhc Graduate and Professional Studcni Assembl)
ma) be too late foi Vinceni Phaahla i an week, the
group called foi a critical review ol Ihe University's
judicial system, claiming thai the University has
mishandled the graduate studcni leadei 'i case rheii
demand is warranted
Phaahla'a case, and othei incidents handled bj the
ludlcial Inquir) Offlcei ovei the pasi Few years,
have often cast the campus spotllghi on the Univei
shy's iuiiui.il process rathei than the ipecifii
issue ii hand fhis increased scrutin) has revealed
Flaws in the system, regardless ol the outcome ol
Phaahla's case
Similarly, when Zeta Beta rau Fraternit) was
Found guilt) bj the IIO last spring, some students
rallied around the case and called foi a revamping ol
iiu- judicial code Yei no changes were made aflei
the no handed down in 18 month suspension
•associate Law ProFessoi Gar) Prancione, who
defended ZBTand is representing Phaahla, lasi yeai
claimed the fraternit) was denied propa represents
don and thai witnesses were unfairl) pressured b)
Judicial Inquir) Officei Constance Goodman ITiis
semester, Prancione has said thai the panel members
hearing Phaahla's case are biased and should be
removed
Although in both cases it would appeal thai the
i sit) has Followed its procedure, the code itsell
is unfali
Reagardless, the University's academic Freedom
gives II the powei to institute an) judicial polic) ii
deems in I -I-.I year, U.S Dtstrici ludge loseph
McGlynn refused to interfere with the /HI case and
the University's judicial system 'We as lawyers
maj no) agree with it, tins Is the law ol the academic
community
iiu. the Universh) is accountable to no one
\s long .iv n acts within the guidelines ol its own
policy, II i.i" ii<' no wrong Fhis is not to saj that
/HI and Phaahla an cornel to assume thai the)
were treated unjustl)
both ol them had somewhai
selfish motivations to attact the no.
However, ■ unlversit) which preaches finines'.
should be concerned when its judicial process conies
undei such fur Whan we come to the University,
should we check oui legal rights si the from
There is m reason Foi the i Iniversity to disregard the
right ot line process simpU because legall) ii is
allowed to ignore this Hbert)
The Universit) should lake nine to thoroughl) ex
■mine its judicial process One method, which the
Universh) usuall) Finds acceptable, is to establish a
Universit) Council subcommittee which would in
vestigate possible changes to the judicial process
Such committees usuall) move slowly, bul al leas)
needed changes could be made before the nexl
challenging case ai ises
Leaving On A Jet Plane
Some Universit) students will spend the spring
vacation vacationing In the sun oi on the slopes
Others will sta) a) home, completel) thrilled b) the
prospect i'i i.nine m bed Foi hours al -i time
Km one group ol wiuiion graduate students will
visit South Africa ova spring break In response.
some have questioned the trip's appropriateness
The Graduate and Professional Student Assembl)
(GAPSA) Issued .i statement last week warning the
students thai theu scheduled trip ma) "lend
legitimacy" to the Pretoria regime and the system ol
aoaithcid.
We .ne alSO .ili.nil thai then Sta) i" South Africa
ma) give credence to an unacceptable form ol rule,
but the light to travel belongs entlrel) to those on the
trip Wharton Vice Dean rot Oraduatc Studies
David Reibstein said last week thai the school will
not official!) sponsoi the trip II the Universit) were
to support this group, aftei completing ■ total
divestment ol Its Investments in South Africa, il
would damage all Foi which this Universh) claims to
stand
Iheie is nothing wrong with visiting S nation to
learn about its political and economk system, bul we
OAPSA supported the group's right to travel but
urge those travelling to remeinbet thai the) do not
said that the South African government ma) present
s "sanitized picture" ol the country.
represent tins Universit) and to realize that the) ma)
South Africa which barel) resembles realit)
Pornography, oi si least what KNM
feministi would haveui believe l« pot
iptiv. is everywhere in oui IOI Ic
i% l he) M) II linns women, children
UHI. to ,i lesser extent, the rest ol us
Before looking si this complex
phenomenon, il would be useful to
iclcct some hoiking deflnitioni
Webster's defines pornograph) as
"pictures, writings, oi IHns designed
to arouse lexual excitement " So
what's Kiting »nli pornography? ii
seems .is it "in.int.il aids" should DC
permitted, etpeciall) II a couple wanti
to watch i film with s wxual theme to
pin some spue in then lues
Feminists, however, make .i
iiu iiiitoniN between porn and erotica
For What
It's Worth
John
Budd
Diana t n Russell, writing In Take
Back tin Night, s;i\s thai pot
nograph) means ivpii.n represents
lions ol lexual behavior, verbal •»
pictorial, iiiat have as i distinguishing
characteristk the degrading oi tie
meaninj portrayal ol human be
etpeciall) women "
4lca,"she
lays, "differs from pornograph) b)
virtue ••' Its not degrading oi demean
Ing women
rims. Hustler, Chert, and othei
i ines ,it thai ilk would certain!)
he dassifled at porn Without qua
nun. an) photos which room In on
p.uiHiii.ii bod) parts, contorted oi
not, can be seen .is objectifying and
degrading rhe focus Ii on the sexual
organs, not the total person Bul Is
there anything wrong with that? Musi
the total pei sun iiu.os be ihe focus?
i .in in- .nils have generaliasd media?
Don't feministi favoi the sexual
revolution? i hr inswei. In large part,
is thai feminists favoi freedom from
■he repressive sexual motes ol the
pact, bUI onlv it in the pmeess nl
liberation the) are treated as human,
not lessei being!
i eshbach and Malamuth, in s stud)
published s decade ago, suggest that
M pereent ol male college si minus
might emulate hchavmi in S rape
■tor) "II the) were sure the\ would
not net caught." Scar) Indeed foi
women
anil wheie ilul lliese voung
men get then sallies'
line cannot look .iinnnil the ,u\
without someone In i btkinl statins
back from .i billboard oi an ad what
in (he urn lil is tin- connection between
lllimlrnlnin Hy Oavld Cho/rirtilv I'tinnsvtvnriini'
,t prett) face, i nice bod, snd s bottle
HI scotch?
Sex sells
ihere's no
question sboui thai A mail can da
iei\ little but respect women less
.■IK women who i an'i measure
UP pin si, .iiu
when ii everj lurn he
sees a picture ol s great pelt ol breasts
and wonders host lhai voung lady in
i, ,'n would look in a bikini ot less
s,i isii.u's ihe harm when an ad
i.iiks about beaches, babes, and
beers? < leart). Ihe ad reat has its
large! »eii
fms who wanl lo «•• to
i lorida, - am on babes, snd swill
brewsklei it ii more than just advei
lising, howevei i won't sttempt to
prove iiiit 'his snie ot depiction ol
women hurts women as s dan, bul il
is ;i point eas) lo understand when
ilewed on an miiiMiin.ii basil
I wo harms ire easii) seen i he firsi
is objectiflcation i M e il guys, we
aren'i exactl) seen
.is icnaitive,
talkative, and giving So .is we learn
in admire the chest ol that blond
model, aren't we going lo tend lo
break down the women in out lives
.mil think HI them -is component parti
rathei than as human being!'
l in- sat "nil point is that ver) fee
women can match the appearance ol
.in IIM.IIK Kiniieoiis woman airbrush
ad to take iwa) all hinti ol imperfei
nun s,. how in- vsimu-ii nippoeed to
react when, In then presence, 'hen
boyfriendi ogli utterl) blemishles»
women? v woman must wondei who
«iii be in hei man'i ihoughti when
ihe) .ne stone logcthei
is II right ii" men to makeswomen
leei inadequate on both ol these
levels' i Irst the) arc portrayed as s
collection ol parts totalling something
less than human rhen, the) feel fore
eii io measure up to this nie.iii.eii
amalgamation
Some "ill s.n ili.II spoils magazine!
and programs gtorif) the athletic
Science magazina and journali exall
the intelligent Does that mean that
ihe kiut/s and stupid •"'■ going lo pro
lest because ol iheit own inadc
queries? I (bviouil) not But II Sports
Illustrated'* iwimsuiti make an m
dividual woman feel inadequate in hei
own relationship, hei ligniflcanl othei
has a responsibilit) not to purchase
that issue
on a larga Kale, people In out
II
i) must start to listen Ml oi this
stntt siune women are saying ma)
seem l.n tel, lieil. 1'iit ilie il.it.i is nut
there to support il I he problems are
not going to just go away We must
make violence against women i less
dominant image and realize that KX
ualit) is something all people, not lust
men. ,.m enjo) on iheit own terms
lohn /in./,/ u ,; Wharton tenhH Pot
w h ii It's Worth appears alternate
\/,"i,/,/i i
Coming To Terms With Maturing Power
Ol \nieiK.in histon and poUtlCS, "black
leader" connotes (vis the I N screen) an ag
gressivc ami excitable big-mouth, lacking in
iiu restraint sad good nidgmeni fundamental
10 social responsibility, let alone leadei ship
Mis political ends are msulai and sell
seising, and his mean- SIS olten inipulsiie ainl
slum sighted In a word, this leadei would
lack matiiiiii tin the |oh lacking matuntv.
he is not In he taken senotisK And thus, an)
potential tupport he could achieve on a na
tional level is compionused tiom the outset
Mote sin.i.ills though, the nascent black
Ameiicaii leadei is portrayed as an upstaii
uiiiioi leaguci in the SSTJOUS game of haidhall
politici And it he is undiili criticized for his
HOI
B>
-\nt horn Hunter
M.ii.nini \ once observed thai tanerica
,iiH-s not warn .i black person to mature In tins
,iiiinin
What ilnl he
HUMn
hi tins'
\ few years ago In Nr« \oik City, i listen
ctl 10 a ienown lewish pediatIUI.in speak to an
audience of voung physicians about the Sims
of African American and liisp.ini, youth He
described his delight In the amazing
rivadousness, Imagination and affection ot
these children m then oar!) childhood, and
then hn slunk ai the changes which had an
UPOB these same rOUflg people b) BdolBSCenCC,
then remarkable verve and eswrg) replaced b)
cynical sell repression sad mean conformii)
io a hunted and uoriosiv! street existence
He denounced the tkmerican social structure
which, in his MOSS, ladtbj encourage! these
children'i collapse law the psychological,
spiritual and physical pnliologies which slip
pled so mam ol tiieni before the) had the
chance 10 reach adulthood Mis message to his
audience tight as dOCtOn 10 clmniate thOM
rorces whisli corrupt the energy and corpus Ol
non-while people, tin the crisil Ol black and
Hispani, south was also the nisis ol the
medical piotcssion. and lo a large extent, that
, let) as a whole
l lie issue of a thwarted black maturu
the individual and communits. helps clarif)
the tragic and shameliil MatOQ Ol ■Xmeiica ncaimeni ol us black leaden Ihe ver) notion
Ol ,i black ieadei in \nieiic.i. one to whom Ihe
entire nation could look for insight, strength
and inspiiation. is a udical and improbable
thought for most Americans Alter all, lo the
"mainstream." with its telesision-nutured
6
Each of them offered a
spirited committment to their
people and the nation which
rarely has been seen in any
mainstream leader.'
errors, S II some nut political spcciatoi
decides |o sluisk a hnck (oi a high-velociti
bullet) at him. well, he shouldn't have been in
ihe game anyway
Marcus tiarvey. Haul Robeson, Malcolm \
and Martin 1 uthei King were characterized in
then time as toolhaids. exceedingly ambitious
men whose reach exceeded their grap. leading
to then demise and the unfortunate bul ex
peeled fiustrstion of then people's pohnc.il
ambitions
But the record reads diffsraati) Oarve) wai
railroaded hi lbs government and banished
from the United states <at present, thcie is
leilei.il legislation Ning developed to expunge
ins conviction and exonerate Mm) Robeson
was set upon bv a liclhmsc , ongiessioii.il sub
,nni mil tee who. tin veais. tried 10 make In in a
piisnnei and ouicasi in his own countiv
Malcolm \ was considered persona nun groin
in the United States, his alleged assassination
b) rival blacks, in the government's eves, a
luminous occurrence. King, whose ,'ieiv
move came to he lurvciUed Intenaet) bv the
goveiiinieni. was miudeietl b) a semi literate,
indeed ignoianl. criminal undei ninsi
lUSpidOUl iiicunisiances
to this ,U\. mnsi
blacks and others whn've examined Ihe facts
believe the government orchestrated King's
death
I hese and tHhei leadeis (iioiabh Medgai
I seis \,lam t lav ion I'.-well and Veinon Ioi
dan) have Iveen the victims of brutality and in
justice Bach Ol them ofleied a spirited com
miltment to then people and the nation which
i .uels has been seen in any mainstream leadei
Bach "I them sacrificed their carceis 10 mi
prove \nieiKa as a home of many peoples
Vat, l hex are not esteemed as Amcncan
leaders, and then stnis is latent) withheld
I mm oi distorted before American youth and
others
Blacks know that their leadership has been
lystematicattj undermined in America since
the en ol Oarve) on into the days ol
COINTBI PRO, one of the fiendish domestk
Intelligence programs activated in the IsHHK to
contain, drug and destahih/e the black
community.
A black leader is challenged lo achieve
political wisdom, eiedibihlv and powct. while
snuggling not 10 be maligned, misrepicsented.
oi murdered lease lackson snd Ministei
I ouis laiiakhan aie successful b'ai k lesdcri
urn in terms ol then longevity I he refine
mem ot iheir mainstream appeal, iheii
pohiical "maturation" is muleiway, vet it is
apparent thai white Ama k s remains, io put it
inildlv. luglilv aniagnmsiii and skeptical
towards the possibilii) of then maturii) and
meamiigfiil contribution to the lountiv
Ihe appaiem corruption in v\ashington and
throughout the nation (ihe Hush
lowei
North gang. Id Kodl and Ins
cronies), the desperation and Irrationalit) ot
the white electorate ("David Dukes foi Presi
dent'"'!!) are glnssetl ovei 01 ignoied when ihe
Incus is on black leadei ship, juat as the impact
i
ln just a few decades,
though, with furious change*
in demographics, this will no
longer be a "white man's
country. ..*
nl such factors on the condition ol the
American ghctlo. aiguahlv the most volatile
and demanding social enviiomiieiii in the
western win Id. is trivialized,
Very lew whiles examine ihe nnines ol
America's disposition towards ii black
leaders, (hat they should be supreme!)
disciplined and talented nun .m,\ women,
prepared lo be martyred for a thankless poo
pic. and yet that they can ncvci achieve tInMature where we respect than as rile Helton's
leaders.
Cardinal John O'Connor, the generally
conservative leadei ol the powerful < athollc
Archdiocese ol New York spoke earliei tins
ve.u on Ihe ,nei.ill issue ol bl.uk political and
lorial ni.iiiiiitv during > BUM k Histor) Month
mass
"We cannoi divest ourselves ol the realit)
thai the histor) ol blacks In these t nlted
Slates is ■ hiSIOT) iiiat vve whites have
dominantl) written fox them
rheii true
histor) we deprive them ol We rip them up by
the nuns, nr sevei them tiom then cultiue,
fTon ihen ipirltuallt)
not lo hung them lo
Christ, but iii bung them into slaveiv
"We ignore the lad thai is ,i lesull nl what
was done, we in this ( hiisli.in world lod.iv still
demand ol oui black brothers and daten what
we aie mil prepared IO extend nuiselvi".
\iiii vve demand there be s growth, s matuntv
the' hiisii.ui world couldn't claim 1,800 yean
aftei Christ, when > hriitlan men were still go
mi' ii.uiml in hunt ud capture Othei men and
women
Man) while American's continue to offei
liiligeienl. stupid lesisiance lo Ihe individual
mil group progress ol African, Aaiaa and
Hlspank Americans In |usl s tew decades,
ihough, with iin nuts changes In
iltniiigiaphus, ibis will no Inngei be a
With all othei
this
nation
to
Policy on Submissions
THISIS
ACHILP
•tnKMHTi smr FOR HB 1' IW*\jt i ■-•
6Ue» WHICH ONE THE
NRfMS SPENP/Ne ,
tmimMwut*
in A PKamiK
CArwawrry
ween ofvs
VISITS me net*.
SlZWAKPett
XHOOL
auEieAf HK rug
'fenefir or me mv
ComRPCY LOCAL trim's
AMONO tXK CLIENTS VII)
KLhVtNATB STrVP FBATVKMii
■: NUPt POMLP miAV
HIIS K€N OFFeJ&P AS
A nmry PNP m/ptSH
crrictv.
«1.
reach
Us
HI
Imally allowing
lull
maturity,
The DaHy Ftimyfamm »rl.i>nif« CO
IktUghWanHl -'mmuntty in ihe lot in ol
|g|sj letter lo the erishM 1 'n.tgnctl nlihinilt M Ikn iwtgc rffPfgiClM Ihe IkPHlMNI 0x1 1 he
iiji/» Ftmtyhamtam
SMmhti eamwisg, M
lad awtwrnl rcprnrni the octmiona ol ihrH
.iuth.tr* tin) A<r COmpegtcT) '".Irifitxlriit Ol iMg OCWgpg)|sgt'g |SsgbanagOsOW atelild Ptly^gaJOl »t tllcn IcgihN gud aWaat bc«aO«|
. matrtial \liysild
tiuiuJc iheaiiih.il'* name, -ddtcM. wkpliofM nsjgp , md .. diM riptiori al i nivcmi* gffihoijSn
rhc f>ji/» PrnturrVaWMoa mrrvn ihr ngl
ilsiiihi Sc*d Mbmintom
'.li.."'.".
l"^'
>,t".""11 p,ie ,J"°'' ""' ''"'* ''''"'">
WataM Mir...
I'hilaJrlphia
I'a IWMM
Bloom County/Berke Breathed
l
\ineiicans
in
lighting in earnest ret the well-being, happiness and progress ol all American children,
in honoring, protecting and heeding us liailiii
from the man) (American peoples '
inthon) Huniei Is a ttcond-yaar graduate
tiudeni in the Schooloj \n\ Sciences ,md u
format ■ otumniii •>/ I he l>aily Pennsylvanian.
Mi work has appeared regularly during Hlmk
History sumih.
...IUMWI*
THISISANAK-WSEMI^AUT0MATIC_«SAOLT RIFLE
"while
inan's COUntT) " Will white Aineiicans nun
KUVINO
I:If VOJUi.
.WOPS YOU
now KNOVJ mm
SORT Cf PKIOOISH
PLUerMes
KUN mis
M&VSfrVlrX
JJBUL
Monday, I chruarv IT, l°K9
Ikr Haiti Pennsylvania*
Page 7
Opinion
Fix It
A Slice of Life
Mum people 111 the United S
""|i defldenl in .1 en* lal ibill
I) 1 he) cannot read 11 ereal box, MM
follow directloni on .1 map, not ad
.irr*,'. .in envelope
dmple things
moil people do without much
■hough)
According ii> the National Assess
men) ol Educational Progress, "Out
It w.i 1I1 Ii, alter my mother lommilted suicide in
Novemhei I IK: (i,u lamily. refreshed altei a .h.u.
deep
"I ihe ihock off, sat down at breakfast and
took a look at Ihe ncwspa|iet
Woman Pound Deed bl Hotel," a headline glared
Was n reall) necessar) to write 1 story about 111 After
■ II. with 1h.1t kin.i oi headline, only people in » rick kind
Ol mood with a desue to lin.l out the gory details would
read 11 anvwas Anyone who actually cared about the in
. idem knew about it .ilie.i.k
B) Man Stlwar/
1 hen eyes made contact with mine as out train rumbled
past 1 itii itreet Rial's the worst 1innnii1.1t can happen
when you're stone oa the Market Prankford Una at
midnight
Bui unlike man) "i ihe othei Nrangen whom 1 had
periodical!) encountered, these men
lei's IUM say 1
wouldn't want to meet Ihem alone on 1 '•! PI \ train
began ipeaklng to me from acroai the dozen 01 10
parated us 1 couldn'i heat what they were saying
■ 1 had ins Walkman on, but 1 assumed <>i<- worst
Beyond
Ze>ro-Z«ro
1 nun then on, I've resented news departments foi
devoting Bfl overwhelming amount ol ils space and tune
si ins feat snowballed and the train moved wcstwani
Since 1 planned to net ofl ai 40th and Market, the hoi
mr ■tories-turned fables concerning that area were
n played In m) mind ovei and ovei Were the) «mni to
beat me up ! Were Ihej going lo |usl rob meT < '■ were they
■imply screwing with one ol those rich bastards they
could i.-ii went to PennT 1 didn't want i" find out and
ihought "i 1 good sscape plan
when tin- train reached my stop, and when the guys
(still talking, t.' in.) surely knew 1 was going lo gel off, 1
remained motionless until the doors began to .lose At
tin- last possible moment, 1 darted .'(t the train
my
inkle grazed Ihe converging doors ai 1 flew by
and 1
Josephine
high ichooli graduate 100,000 lum
lionall) Illiterate young people ever)
in.1 anothet POO,OO0 drop out "
Doa \IIIIIII.1 upire la have itudenti
who leave achool with ttm level of
. ompeteni
ihe illlterai \ dilemma is more than
|utt lomeone etae'i personal piohlrm
ii should in- iii great national 1 on< ern
that there are many Indlvlduali who
lack the batk ikilli required to func
lion and i" survive in today'i to< let)
1 ins educational failure hai many
devastating coneequtnoai foi om na
lion ii pom cononiii and KM lal
problemi
1 he millioni ol adulti who cannot
read and write are unable to fully con
tribute i" out society Beside* pro
Menu «iiii sell esteem, 1 hcv en
. .lum<i employment diffiiuities,
which add to ii»' coeti ol unemplo)
mini compensation
In addition,
i.ihiu productivity is declining, and
technological Innovation is slowing
In proportion to population size In
percentages, the numbet ol Illiterates
is hlghet tin blacks and Hispanics
than ioi whites, flih icsuits In more
101 iii diet rimination problemi
rherc is .1 hi^ii concentration ol
adult llllterac) In out prisons fills
implies ,1 correlation between 1 lie
numbet ol IDiterate adults and the
. nine rate
Oneol the bash goaboi the United
States' educational lystem is achieve
men) ol 1 minimum literacy level bv
itudenti However, iiir educational
lystem docs no) earn out us responlibility i"i studenu and shifts ihe
blame foi student failure to ihe
I terrified Ihtn I didn't even look bark to see then
IO Maries BbOUl murder, rape and other tragedies All loo
often tin" stones capitalize on others' misfortune lor
greatei lain Ol sieweiship
there is hide consideration
tor the remit) 'l feelings
So with Ibis bad experience
counted with Ihe fact
ill.11 I .1111 iiuly more interested in sports than I am in
man) othei topics
I began to devote more and more
'/ have been so infatuated with
sports my whole lite that I am
pathetically unaware of news that is
unrelated to athletics.9
' ' lion \i 1 tore up the stairs and ran until 1 n
1 heatnul Street, 1 thought to myself. "Man, that wai
Mualialfcin Dy David Cho/Pnlly Punnsylvaiilan
parents, iiir itudents, lociety, snd
television
1 he job ol edm sting
students is noi easy due to facton oui
snir the classroom Nevertheless, li is
SUM die Khool'i responsibilit) 10
make sure that not one itudent k
school wiihoiit learning how lo read
and write 11 ii>o students do i"" mal t
'
iv progress, they ihould be
given iirip .11 mi. c
\s .1 result .'i reduced government
expenditure on education m the last
20 years, ecademfc uandardi are
pooi. leaching quality is low, methods
ol Instruction are unsatisfactory, and
resources are lai I Ing 1 he low budget
i.M ..in,.iii.MI needs 1.' be Increased,
end teaching methods need in be
evaluated so thai teachers with
weaknesses could be identified and ol
fered iirlp
Providing swards to schools thai
improve and rewarding good teachers
with ipedal recognition does not ral
flee 1 he average it in mis ind instrw
tors cannot •*• overlooked People
Imvr lo iccogni/e I lint lo prrvrnl il
literacy, the •innliiy of our entire
•-■iii. aliooal lystem must be Improved
Miii.Mii'ii .uiiiii educational pro
grains Ioi illiterate .1.lulls .in
available, limiting hai dlmlnilhed
M.IM\ do noi lucceed in reachinti
those unable lo read and write Onl) .1
in iii pen entags .'i the illiterate is In
votved with compensatory programs
ii is ii.-.ess.11 v 10 expand the adult
educational programi and lo make
more people aware that help Is res
obtainable foi Illlterai 1
People need to understand that >i
literal 1 ii ■ seriotu rituation 11 is not
onl) worthwhile, but essential foi us
to attend to the literal y problem 1 he
1 nited Slates must lal e the respon
libility to remove Ii and io keep II
from 011 urring b) ensuring thai
everyone hai an opportunity rot
i i-ss 1.1 .nut undergoes .1 quallt)
'•1 In. .limn
Befbrs the ela (km, I leorgs Bush
laid, \i thi 1 .in. UIIIII President,' 1
"ill 1
1 national attention mi the
hallengei t»l improt Inj
1 ■■■ hools
mil
to develop methods lo com
bat Illlterai) In both itudenti and
.uiiiiis " He needs lo show hit dedica
linn tfl I ilin
.UIIIII
mil pul Ins pro
posals into public poll
President Bush, lo daaarve the title
ni
1 he 1 ducation Preeidem," you
must ton11
/..<, ;>/um-
mphomor*
I
IT
U
■/"
l-ntmrrrinit
Beyond Zero Zero op
peon iiltcrnitlr Mnniluv\
, lose
•
1 had forgotten this episode until ■ couple "i months
■go, when 1 read In the Daily Nem thai Ruth Warrington
had been whimsically pushed In front ol an oncomlni
IFPTA train at ihe tOth -mil Maiket Street station
1 was mostly shocked, paniculari) ba SUM the i iolent c
neat Penn'i 1 ampui that 1 beat and read so nw b about
h id si lualh oi 1 urred at the same lima and placa thai 1
!
■"■ t- ihe train -• 11 last lummci A lot .>i the .nun- here Ii
committed sgainsi people who don't watch out foi
ihemaelva they flaunt thru wealth, tbev argue wWi
11 1 tin 1 ivet the /IK-IS' 1 ompeteni e, they don't nail un
ni tin- last v. .mil to leave trains when ihey feel tht
e.i tint tins woman, win. was returning home from an
honest day'i work si 1 nursing ante at Ihe 1 horoughgood
Nursing Home hadnodefei
I her attack liter
rifles me even 10 ihinl about It; but what'i even more
disturbing is how 1 only Mumbled upon the Moo In ihe
hrsl plat 1
1 have been so infatuated »nh sports my whole Ufc that
1 .un pathetii iiK unaware ol news thai is unrelated to
athletics Ms senioi quote in high school, which almoM
ilelines my
line lioin funnel ( luel
lilslue
1.ui Warren "The iporti page records peopie'i ac
complishments, ihe rront page nothing but iheli
failures
1 he problem ii that my passion foi sports has distorted
inv perception ol topics that are ronikleiaMy mote un
pi.it.ml I know nothing about polities, ami less ahnul
1 111 rent events I'm not sine how this developed; II"
many possible 1 splanations, including the obvious
ports is more fun" iillitnile. bin an expriience I had as
1 11 e'.hni.ui in high s, hool may have had something lo do
with it as well
lime to learning about spOTtl while my cynicism Inward
news giew pioporiionalely. I read only a newspaper'*
sports section and when I'm finished with it. my room
in.ites will usually read Ihe rest ol the paper and throw it
away
•
iii.i forgot to discard m) Docembei loth Issue during
lui.iK las) limWtat I was bored out of my •.lull when I
lip Undying foi my math exam and flopped down on
0111 ium Ii
I looked over lo my left, and there, Innocently peering
up 111 me. was Ihe headline, "Man Hurls Woman Under
Subway 'train." I was in a sick kind of mood with a
ilesue in find out the COT) details, so I lurried lo page five
and began reading Ihe story
I was instantly sobered when I disiovered that the al
1.11 V had OS cured al 4ttth and Market II reminded me of
the nifhi last siiminei when I lan terrified mil of a subway
CaV, ui un idem I had dismissed be. ause I flgWfd I was
)USl being paranoid Hut I wonder now
And on another level, one of the few times I l.oiheieil
■ I anything but the sports section ol a newspaper I
, une .11 ross something that touched me, scared me, and
vsuke me up to the icality thai sometimes sports
sometimes isn't all thai important
while news, every
mm in.I then, 1 in be worth knowing
I very day, SUMS December lb, I have al least glanced
ovei the front page Ol my newxpaper lo gather some in
liMin.iti.in abOM i.ihei tnpus Hut I can never make up
lor Ihe year* when I never made the el fort I wonder
"What have I niiwed?"
laM Sew Wen II .; I ollrgr junior ami \/>riiiil /iro/nn
filiidt 0) Ihe Daily t'emnylvanian
Letters to the Editor
MM, there is the dangej 'li-il then
nip will only lend legitimacy, and
give .nil .un11 • un11iii. iii ihe svsiein
ol apartheid
Think First
lo ihe I diloi
Recently there have been leporis
ih,11 ova the spring recess there
will lie two tups to S.nub Africa b)
Whanonstudents </>/' 2/24). it is
alleged ilia! one ol the gioups will
meet with representatives ol the
South African government these
reports raise troubling quaatlons
What is the relationship Ol these
on .1 fad linding mission, and
want to sec .ondilions in South
s
Africa " thai the) can indge for
themselves and icach then own
conclusions.
However, In traveling to south
\im.i (and many othei countries)
one must
CSCKISC
..iiilion
I he
South African governmem con
Hois where one can x«. and who
and what one ma) sec Some ol ihe
black townships arc "ofl limits
Hi. studenl visitors may meet
with tepraaentaiives ol the govern
menl and hand picked blacks who
oppose economk lanctions, But
will Ihcy have Ihe same liccdom lo
meet wuh the South African (loun
dl of s lunches. Ihe banned trade
unions, the United Demos i.it k
liont. Nelson Mandela, the
African National Congress, the
Pan African Congress M blanks
win. lasoi s.uiciions' Will they bc
ablc 10 meet with any ol the
thousands of blacks who have been
detained, i ncominunicado.
without charge or trial?
Everyone has the right 10 inquiry. Hut visitors to South Africa
must be alert lo the possibilities ol
being presented a saniti/cd picture
of life there, an orchestiation ol
"I'olcnikiii ullages " Going 10
South Africa on the terms 01 the
government may unwillingly play
into the hands of the regime I oi
whether the students intend H M
\s hatevct the Intention! i >l
these students anil those ol us who
I in. Arts (.radiiale K)
JOHN PARKK.K
Arts and Sciences Graduate
Hit I WISItKMAN
Arti and S»-ience« (Graduate
Extra Baggage
TO the I diloi
t >vei spnng vacation,
Wharlon Students will sisil South
Africa, ostensiM) to icon sboul
ihe business and polunal climate
in thai country.
Ik-spue whatever good mien
nous the organizers and pm
ticipants of Ihe trip, their visit to
South Africa will COOVCy -i ilisluili
uig message both in and lieyom!
ihe classrooms ol Whaiton South
African Airlines, the officia
ail lines ol thai couiiliy. will ion
tnbuic much of the airfare lor the
itudents. Several South African
corporations, which tacitly endorse apartheid, will also provide
iuiaiKi.il support according to an
organizer ol the trip, students will
pay for only 11,200ol their VK.uxi
in individual espenscs. Iiulhci
more, the inunci.uy in South
Africa includes meeting wuh
members ol the exclusively while
South African ruling government
At best, a trip conveys a naive
indifference to the worldwide con
denotation of South Africa's
political and economic lystem
Meeting wuh South African "I
ficials elected through ihe
machinery of apartheid
demonstrates a belief in (helegitimacy of such a government
Chose who accept gifts Irom the
South African government and
South African conjoratlooswill in
directly benefit from an economic
system based on racial cschiM.ni
Although the Wharlon Schn.il
has not officially endorsed tlic trip,
the students visiting South Africa
will inevitably identify themselves
through the school which ihey at
d.dons" rituation
I hese un it It-tils,
lue.ii Ii nl i .mil,lent e, regardless ol
III
.
III
imongsl
have . hosen not to at i ompany the
many white students, vet the />/'
group, the name ol Wharlon will
travel With them to South Alii, .i
.houses mil In puUidai then in
discretions, all ol which aie ion
li.lenli.il IK I IIIIIM.II.IIIIMI I ur
WAVNMil ASKKH
Arts and Bdeneas t.radunlr '10
VINCENT I'll \ MII \
trips, il uiy. to the leccnl visit ol
ihe South Vfrican counsulf Doss
the Whan.MI S, hool have a mle in
these arrangjemants7 Are these
tups financed by the Mudenti
Ihemseives M by Wharton m
agents ol the South African
1 lovernment 01 corporauoni I
Whatever the answei lo ihese
questions, theic should be no
doubt thai people should be free to
go wherever they choose ii is pro
bable that tin- undents are lunpfj
tend
< KAN. M< < KOIION
Whanon Graduate 'Ki
I aw 'Mil
JOANNE MHvlK.KAWA
Whanon 'fj
Athletic Bias
1 o the I dlt.il
ihermorc, Ihe stereotype tliat tins
article reinforces is that anothei
hluck athlete, who should never
have been admitted In Ihe I inivei
-ilv m the lust place, is oneol the
lew caught slitting hv on Ihe gootl
graces ol while siudenis
And (he editor wonders why the
hlac k community does rim i
the Daily I'eiinsvbaiiiau '
We ic-ei thai the artick on the
. 11 nsion ol lose
SMK.HKY H.l.r.KBr:
l.icinv was sciis.ilioii.ilislii mil
exploilative (/>/' .'.'<! I usl. Ihe
HAVlia FRANCI
place was printed on the iports
page, ""i ttaa news page, snd It
highlighted ravarez's athletic
< ollegr HI
IMINNA r'RANt IS
Whanon t»
not ins scademk one sjao,
I BVarei was .un
II.AI I GOODBN
I ngmeering XI
ntACET M(< AIN
his name alone appealed in the
( nllege '••
I.KSI.IK WILLIAMS
< ollegr XV
though
« nllegr Ml
■ several" Mudents to be at
headline and In the text, and hiv
photograph alone ■
ipanied
the .uncle
II the />/' intended 10
print .i piece on a violation ol the
( ode nl I tin, s. Its editors should
have done so without trying to at
tract readers by exploiting the incidental athletk notoriety ol one
of ihe offenders.
in HOKAtl KOsUNhTEIN
WI-:M>\ I IBDVMI/
MAC r\ 1)1 US< II
NICOLE s< rlAFFEB
( nllege HI
No Respect
lo ihe I diioi
We lind it appalUng dial you
chose lo alienale and exploit lose
lavarc/ on the spoils pages ol the
DP (DP 2/23). I irst ol all. ihe
mailer had nothing lo do wuh
sports as proven by the content ol
ihe article Secondly, we find il unl ii si that the other names were not
mcniioned. The DP is only a
s. hool newspaper. Il is nol Ihe National inquirer, although it likes
lo think that ii tv I hose who feel
that a sludeiH's business is I.in
game for prim should name all
students implicated in a "scan
All or Nothing
In the Idiloi
We are quite disturbed by the
mil.ui treatment of Jose Tavarc/.
Ihe Wharton junior, convicted of
plagiarism last I riday by the
ludidal Inquiry tlllicc. While we
to noi condone piagjarisn, we feel
thai the article {DP 2/2i) was an
invasion ol ravarez's privacy and
a misrepresentation ol the
situation.
We feel that Ihe article should
have focused on the evils of
plagiarism and nol lavarc/. If the
HP wished to report the incident
fairly, it should have named all of
Ihe participants in this act ol
plagiarism or none of them al all.
The disclosure of Tavare/'s name
seems to be a direct attack on Ins
person. In spue of the fact thai
Tavarc/ is an athlete, whose life is
open lo public scrutiny, we do not
feel thai his indiscretions are a subject mailer for the sports page.
I II rt her more, because all JIO
proceedings arc confidential, the
disclosure of the information concerning Tavarc/ was a serious
ihe .nun a
i in- .1. ri, ie represents
nothing more
lournahsiii
than
sensational
enough pompous people in
Philadelphia right on this camput
as it is
JIM DANIKI.S
MM MILLS JOHNSON
< nllege '91
I ngineering XI
IIMOIHY IIAKKIS
Whanon XI
ALLAN POW»:. JH..
< asasjja w
I>eave Us Alone
I 0 Ihe I dilm
As a native Hhdadelphian. I am
tued ol (he airogant ramblings
against my city by people who have
mil spent ample lime in this city to
properly Midge it No doubt Paul
Herman (HP 2/2.1) has never even
heard ol neighborhood! such as
I 11' si llllt
Mill,
I'll kwooil.
III
Mayfair, let alone spent any lime
in them lo observe their beauty,
tranquilily. and the friendly, real
people who live there.
Merman is ohviouvly ignorant ol
the wide variety available on
Philadelphia radio, where he can
hear anything from classical on
Wl-I N lo hUZ00 WKII [urn Ihe
dial! Secondly, I would advise
Merman to lake a visit lo Ihe
tourist bureau and investigate Ihe
cultural activities available in this
city, ralhcr than wallowing in ignorance, seeking only lo highlight
the negative. Third, don't knock
-I MA despite its shortcomings.
I he subways arc clean and efficient, and Ihe people aboard aren'l
lude jerks, which is a gooddescnp
tion of the New York !y»iem.
I ninth, don't knock Philadelphia
sports when teams like the ( ubs.
White Sox, and Black hawki are
incdiocic at belt. As our slogan
says, "(iel to know us!"
finally, if Philadelphia did
choose lo follow New York's example it would be ihe dirtiest, most
corrupt, most crime-ridden city in
the nation. Thai's right, we're no
New York, and thank God! stop
ragging on this great city, Paul,
when you don't know ii, and
please, don'l work here. There arc
Knjoy the Scene
I o ihe BdstM
When I saw the front page
photograph of seven men running
ball naked thiough the Quad (/>/'
2/20) I laughed, cut out ihe picture
and sent it home. When I read
Morris Scotl-! letter to the editor
condemning Ihe action l/'/'2/2l),
I wai angry because he condemned
a harmless incident in which a few
student! showed a little bit ol
•.pint
Mis letter was filled with ler
minology that Hawthorne's
townspeople might have used had
Ihey seen Hester Prynne walking
about with her Scarlett letter sewn
lo her cheit. I am saddened that
our society has not progressed
form the one Hawthorne was calling hypocritical.
I too have read the Bible and
have chosen to interpret il dif
ferently. I have come lo the conclusion il is only human beings
who lake God's beauty and defile
it. It ii not the human form lhat is
ugly but rather westerners who
have chosen to adorn Godi creation with gaudy materials rather
than strolling about with nothing
but fig leafs that u ugly.
The lime has come lo shed our
embarrassment, emerge from thu
repressed adolescent society and
enjoy seven buns when they run
by. I can understand Scott's of
feme at Ihe DP making s from
page picture of seven bulls.
However, lhat is where hit argument should have remained. These
seven men did nol hurl anyone.
Ihe only thing ihey were likely to
hurt were their own butts which
would have resulted in a terribly
painful rasberry. I applaud the
sense of humor, courage and naked butts of the seven streakers.
RACHKL BKONSON
College ••
•'•gr *
I he lt.ul> l»cniM»l*a«lau
Monday, Februarj 17, iw
Off the Wire
Compiled from Ass,x:int(\1
worid
TIPS';
Dispatches
I Chicago blacks fear defeat in mayoral primary
Venezuela to suspend debt payments
i \K \i VS. Venezuela
Venezuela this week wilt sus
pend capital and Interest paymenti on id private lecioi
debt, .1 banking official ".is quoted ai saying yesterda)
Venezuelan) entralBank President Pedro llnocowas
quoted b) the new ipapci I i Nat ional aa laying n will stop
making the payments on Wednesdaj
Mterwards, he naid, the South American nation's
private ■•<■> lor debt will be renegotiated "as a block"
icr with Venezuela's puhlii sectoi 'i refinanced debi
.'i $20 i billion
In Ianuary, pressed b> declining «'ii export revenue md
shrinking inii-iii.iiinii.il monetar) reserves, \ enezuda
tuspended principal payments ovei its publit sectoi 'i debt
Officials ol i in' new s,,, ial dentoi ratic government thai
took power in early February have held preliminai s con
lat is \MIII , 11-,111.*i banks !«• resi hedulc the country's
refinanced debt ovei ■< period oi 10-25 years, up front cui
reni M years, ftted interest rates and .i gra< e pei iod «*i sis
to eight yean
\ enezuda owei .i total >>i t<' billion abroad and ranks
ioinih among i atin \in,n,an debtorsaftei Brazil,Mes
I
tins
Kb«>nu'iii sock inn strong So viol tit's
NICOSIA, < yprus
kyatollah Ruhollah Khomeini
said yesterda) he wants strong lies «iih Moscow io help
11>• in the "devilish ' West, and Iranian legislators
reportedl) agreed lo considet breaking lies with Britain
Khomeini's overtures to the Soviet Union, which he
previously condemned foi its atheist ideol »gv, camcdui
iii>'.i 14 bout meeting with Soviet Foreign Ministei
I'lln.iiil Slu-s .it,In i
Sheverdnadze latei met Prime Ministei Hussein Musavi
and delivered an invitation for him to viili Moscow. iccot
ding to Iran's official Itlamii Republit News tgenc)
IRN \ said Shevardnadze did not .i^v. Khomeini <•■
withdraw hisordei i"i Moslem zealots to assassinate
Hi III-.II authot Salman Rushdie because <>i his book " I he
Satanii Verses " line.mi reportedl) asked Shevardn
lo press Khomeini to give a reprieve lo Rushdie, whose
book has been denounced as insulting to Islam
i IIK MX)
lesK lackaon, Mayot
i ugenc Sawyer's moil vocal supporter,
nines voters to "maintain the gains" thai
M.I. u have brought locit) hall, but othet ■
.in- predicting lhai Chicago could becomi
the Ural majoi .ii\ i" have ■> Mack mayoi
defeated in •■ white
Several variables could iltet the result,
but ihe most likdj scenario
according
1,1 pun,ins .UHI polls
has Richard Dale)
who is while .m.i the son oi hue Mayoi
Richard Daley, winning tomorrow's
Democrati< primary and iii«' \prll '
election
Blacks feai thai losing powei in City
M.ill would erase >MHIS achieved in Harold
Officials point
to failed lock
on Flight 811
Washington, the city's first Mack mayor,
who *i• »-*i .. less in,mills into ins second
term in IM'
"< >i course thai feai helps motivate peo
pie io get out ihe sou." said Robert
Starks, professoi ol political science al
i hicago'i Northeastern Illinois Universl
itarki is chairman ol •• laak force on
black political powei which he said helped
.I,-,i \\tshington In Ifli'
"Nui onl) would ii be Ihe flrsl loss ol ■
I'l.i, k mayoi. il would also be •■ loss ol the
completion ol H.uoKi Washington'* lasi
mo yean in office," si.uks iaid "Il
would be i ii itfi. loss "
I sen il S.isssrr tn.ni.ip-s I,, \sin lolllol
row
.mil .i newspapei poll i
ii.nl linn gaining on Dale) bui still H
percentage points behind
il would nol
guarantee lhal .i black would slay in < it)
II.ill
i in i .i ii' . indidate in Vpril will be
while
and could be formei Washington
nemesis Edward Vrdolyak, who is run
|
.i write-in campaign foi Ihe Republican
nomination I hm candidate would face
Sawyet and third pans i indidale I Imoth)
I vans, .i black alderman A spin in the
black vote could pm .i ssinu- In offlci
Mici Washington died, Sawyet was
elected ins luccessoi in .i raucous < it)
i ouncil meeting b) a coalition made up
ivmi.I)-, to the plan, is consistent
With ll
dOOl popping open
mi,lei pretsurization oi ihe cabin as
the let gained altitude and ai
mospheii, pressure outside Ihe alt
crafl declined, National rransporta
non Safet) Board investigatot I at
Dickinson said it a late Saturda) news
. onference
More than 10 Investigators, In
eluding 16 from Ihe NISII. worked
yesterda) on finding ihe cause ol ihe
acddeni
iiin the Coasi Ouard
lutpended ■ s,-a and ait wan ii n*>
miles south ol here aftei finding more
debris front ihe plane
i IINI ;
Police Mocked < hina'i leading dissident
iiom attending i banquet held b) President Bush yeatei
da). then tailed him foi an houi and .i hall aftei ordering .i
I.IM and .i bus not to pick hint up
Bush had invited Fang Lizhi, an International!)
reapei ted astrophysidst, .is i gesture ol support foi
i hinesi- intellectuals who have called foi greatei political
freedom, While Houae officials said
" i ins real!) shows < hina'i attitude toward human
rights,' i ang said latei in .i telephone Interview
He Mes, i Ibed the police action as "weak and n ared"
and added, "All I wanted to do was shake the hands ol Ihe
president and Mis Bush "
ii ss.is noi immediate!) known whethei Bush knew i ang
ss.is blocked from attending the rexaa style barbecue
\s the banquet ended, a reporun yetted, "Mi Preal
dent, what about human rights?" Bush smiled but did not
ins wet
\\ hue House National securit) adviset Brent Scow* rofi
said later "^ dl the presideni. ol course, would hope thai
.ill ol ins guests would be allowed to attend thedinnei ol
Coaai i .ii.u.i i leutenani
Brad
Nelson said ihe search was hampered
b) high seas "There's probaM) not i
lot more lhal can be picked up," he
said
United 1 Ill-Ill III, ..II i sine ts-l
people, had taken ofl i rida) foi Nr»
Zealand and was about t<*> miles
from Honolulu »hrn the fuselage rip
jse.i open ovet the Pat Iflt Ocean. Nine
passengris weic sucked out and arc
presumed <iead
111.- plkM
Tower denies allegations «»f alcoholi.Mii
u kSHINOTON
iviruses,-,retaij designate lohn
iaid yesterda) lhal he Is not an alcoholic and issued
an extraordinary pledge not lo lake i single drink ii he ii
confirmed b) the Senate lo head Ihe Pentagon
\s rowei defended his reputation in nationall) televised
interviews, Senate tamed Sei vices< 'ommittec c lialrman
San Nilnn iii i ieorgia) act used the \% hlte House ol leak
log information from the i HI report on i owet and
threatened to reopen the haai logs on the nomination and
subpoena anonymous witnesses quoted In the agenc)
review
i he committee voted II 9 along part) lines laat rhun
da) lo ret ommend lhal the tnil Senate raja i I own "i
nomination, »nh Niinn citing allegations ol excessive
drinking b) the nominee
In ins iII si interview since ihe vote, i <>»ei denied thai
be was an al.olioli, . ami With Ins unusual pionuse SOUghl
to alias fears among ins formei colleaguei and remove the
obstades to his confirmation
Weather
i ixi.is Parti) sunn) »nii highs m the low *>s
romorrow MoaU) cloud) »uii snow ot rain »nii highs
in Ihe 4<K
losl pOWei
ill one Ol 'In
loin engines and shut down anothei
when I fire ui.li.aioi li}-lu wenl on.
hui the plane returned safd) io
Honolulu
Tommy I •onwdl/P.nlv I'Mnnnylvnnliin
College junior MeUgga Klein give* ■ ride to hei friend, three yeai old
IS-SSUM Pappo Hoy, on I ocusl Walk I ridaj
Raging ocean storm batters 8 ships; 8 dead
i ISBON, Portugal
A. fierce storm in the Mlantk Ocean sank
oi disabled eight ships yesterday, and rescue workers said eight peo
pic drowned and 23 were missing and presumed dead *d least BO
people ware rescued
I in- storm, which battered ■ wide set non ol the Mlantk from Iin
lain (0 "spam, piixlmed winds up IO HO inph ami K> foot waves
In Spain, si ions- winds knocked osei hillhoauls an,I hies* oil part I
ol mots, k i iii ii}' rise people In the eastern dt) ol \ alent la and iwo
HUMe in seniial Vall.ulolid. Spanish National K.ulio reported
\
man dmuned when ins canot overturned III ihe i ratona reservoii in
the noiihein spam, ibc i.uii,. reported
1 vso sessels sank diiimii Ihe norm ami one i.ui aground
In the most sefiOUl incident, a Nigerian cargo slu| with 4(. people
aboard developed engine trouble two miles ofl I apt I spichel, Pot
lugai. a rock) promonior)
Oale force winds and 16-root waves then dune the 1,000-ton
ship, ihe RJveji Ourara, onto the rocks, i spokesman foi ihe Pot
tugueac run | said
A Portugate frigate picked up n people, including three women
ami three children, from lifeboats, said Ihe spokesman Rescue
workers recovered cighi bodies but called ofl thdt search foi the u
S /'( 7» /-(m c ).\7 YEAR i >K hX )/s 11\l i >/s rwo 71 K.M.s (V
people sun missing
■\ Singapore-registered freighter, Ihe \nni Leonhardt, issued a
distress call and sank ofl France's Mlantk coast Saturday, and
rest ne workers scan bed fruitless!) yesterda) foi 14 sailors who were
aboard
"I iinnk ihere's no longei an) chance lo find them," said I ran
ems Reuillot, dm-, 101 oi ihe Regional • Ipenulonal Rescue i entei in
Moihihan in ssesiein lian.e Several IIOIIIS lalei . ihe search was
called on
Reuillot said the captain radioed late Saturda) to sa) he and the
crew were abandoning the sinking ship in heav) teas about 120 miles
west ol Bordeaux rhe cause ol ihe Anna Leonhardt's distress was
not daai
Kemiioi s.ud Marchers round debris from the 1,199 ion ship, In
duding lifeboats and Uferafts rhe search was hampered b) howling
winds and to foot waves
rugboats front the Lisbon Port kuthorit) lowed a Bulgarian
tup to shore aftei ii caught fire and was bating bad!) In heav)
seas about sis nnies oil i Isbon Officials wen- unable lo sa\ how
man) peopkt were aboard the Voyana, but Ihe) said foui people
from ihe ship were injured, none serious!)
Give.
ondurtedby*
kpfr m Oxhanl A stpn UaJ M.nnnrt aa-waMiM) i* .tun li>» tt« \\ l>-
UiM tdln^ MMaflMI inirmmhipai with (\Hsgtm** with ihr VVhilr Ikvtar wilh tikf mrdM *inl
Midi iMnl
'' *i««i .hNiuualkMn tuunar* «rr uiiigfhi by arnior Vrvrl mnrmnx-ni
laHk-kkK whoavr *ta»mhol»rm dtittl b\ rx(irr1ci*i«1 kWgfTWsafaal NsnilUi t^wwiuiiiDr^ in inittlk
.irfnaahiim JJT ssflrml iwiih atcaKtrnikt rrrdiii in U>ndon (Fall. S|niii|t «KJ Summer)
The Washington International Stndlee Center
.. *.- sji' s,,n.
WMhn^tun D C J0003 13031 M? 337S
Hi / AA
Abr^
INFORMATION MEETINGS
INTERN IN
WASHINGTON, LONDON
Hush headed here after a two-day
visit to China, whose troops foughi
on the side ot North Korea in thai
1950s conflict An Porce One left Bd
ling ai : -is a m today local lima
(<• is p in i si yesterday) rot ihe
slightl) more than three bom trip lo
Seoul
winie in i*«-i II in-. ihe president
it raised new. much-improved U.S
relations with China Hut ins upbeat
sis.it was mailed bv li.u.issinenl ol a
leading dissident
l In- dissident, astrophysicisl i-ang
I i/hi.
said
Ins
elloiis
io
allend
1)Penn-in-Leuven (Belgium)
(Cultural Literacy in the Media Age)
Monday. Feb. 27.3:00 P.M.
2)Penn-in-Salamanca (Spain)
(Language, Literature, Civilzation)
Monday. Feb.27, 4:00 P.M.
3)Penn-in-Freiburg (W. Germany)
(Intermediate German)
Tuesday, Feb.28, 3:00 P.M.
4)Penn-in-lbadan (Nigeria)
(History, Political Science, Theater,
Art History, Music, Folklore)
Tuesday, Feb.28, 4:00 PM
\ securit) force 120,000 suongwas
niobili/ed lo guaid Hush dining his
live bout sisii against threats, both
from student radicals and from North
Korean commandos
IGHTINGFOR
VOURIIFE
gv
American Heart ll
Association X^
All Meetings: West Lounge, 4th floor
Willaims Hall
* -f *S
BEIJING
Restaurant
Try our authentic Chinese cooking
Beijing now accepts credit cards.
Hours:
Mon.-Thuni.
3714 Spmcv SI.
Stouficr Triangle, (1 of Penn)
Fit & Sat.
Tel: 222-5242
222-5215
Sunday
11:30 am - 10:30 pm
11:30 am- 12 midnight
12 noon - 10 pm
a
farewell banquet hosted by Hush were
repeated]) frustrated by police, even
though he and his wife had been invited by the presideni
South koira's capital lias been but
feted in receni weeks bj si,item antl
kmericau .leuioiisiiaiions as ladaal
simlenls demanded dial (he U.S.
bases be aimed
SPEND YOUR SPRING BREAK WITH
30
I 'ut\i tn\ ii..*
-.:\><U !.* .»» vi.r 01 It* OUT CM IWO irnn* i.'uri JuiaeOI
-.Kkiii'.^n .tiiri ||\ rtii.4l.-ii in IIM-II I»»IU-KT^
si-t >i i| . South Korea
Presideni
Hush. , ailing ihe i inhed Stata "i
I.in hi ul 11 lend and I dependable alls"
ol South Korea, said today he hat BO
plans io reduce U S iroopi stationed
in ihis suite lorn nation, ihe laat slop
on ■ whirlwind five da) Asian lout
"They will remain in ihe Republic
oi Korea as long as they are needed
.nut as long !• wc believe h is in ihe In
leresl Ol pea.e." Hush said m lemaiks
prepared foi i speech loihe National
\ssembls
Hush's visit came amid unusually
stringent securit) because ol ■ rash ol
recent antl Ainerican demonstrations
i in- presideni made no mention of the
often violent protests in ins prepared
remarks, but focused on the hlstor) ol
the 11 s
mllitar) presence lhal
Korean radicals warn removed
in 1990, when Notih Korean forces
invaded Ihe south, "without heeita
non oi delay, American and IIN.
forces rushed io yout aid rogether,
kmericans and Koreans fought side
bv side loi voui right IO deleinime
voiu own future," Hush said
"I reiiienibei the devastation of
voui Country Your cities lav in tub1,1,- Voui factories wen- III shamble!.
Millions of your people wiuulried ihe
itreets homeless and hungry "
"I
OXFORD
WhSC
American
troops to
remain in
S. Korea
Hi Ho Silver
to iheu deaths, federal tnveitigatori
IB)
MI
,..r. — .
iini he .iiso stressed lhal race Is not thr
onl) faclot m the election, saying, "The
issue fundamental!) is about forwards and
backwards; It's about being progressive oi
regressive, so I think that io cental ihe
analysis on race misses much <>i ihe
point "
llie plane ami lending nine pass,T
IWkY stop (Itsskktil fnMii nut-fin^ Hush
dordc%Batage itWaiNO
Bui lackson told an Operation PUSH
meeting Saturda) lhal Sawyet hai "main
i.mu-.i ihe gains" brought by Washington,
,m,t he has urged the divided black elec
IOI.IIC to unite behind Sawyet in the
primal)
IIONOI a'l |i
\ failed loci ma)
have caused a United Mrlines jumbo
let's cargo doot to pop open at 22.000
feet, ripping i im}'.. hole up the side ol
Nation
IMIM 111 Itlatalsfgll
mosiK ol white aldermen who opposed
w aahington,
Monday. Irbnuty V, MM
HM-
lH»y PrM*ylv*alaa
P«f* •
data
systems
THE QUALITY GOES IN BEFORE THE NAME GOES ON
ZENITH
DATASYSTKMS
Z-286LP
DESKTOP PC
GREAT
THINGS
DO COME IN
SMALL
PACKAGES
ZENTTH INNOVATES AGAIN
THKZ^iLI'ISNOWAVAIUBLKAIYOllKN^KBY
ZENITH DATASYSTKMS CAMPUS CONTACT.
Computer Connection
at the Bookstore
3729 Locust Walk
Philadelphia, PA 19104
(215)898-3282
LOGITECH MOUSE
AND MICROSOFT WINDOWS
INCLUDED FREE
\1K
ins,>ii Windows is .i rrtfishTt'd Irmlomark of
\1K MIS.ill
( ur|).
P»t* 10
TW IHII> Prnnsylvaalaa
Monday. I cbruary 27, IW>
MASTERS of
INNOVATION
COMPETITION
Win a $5,(MX)* Zenith Computer System.
We're searching Ibr tomorrow's innovators.
If you've developed or used software or hardware—thai is compatible with
Zenith Data Systems products—to creatively address a problem or task in vow
Held of study; we warn to hear from you.
You could win a $.">.<>( )<)* Zenith Data Systems computer system foryourselt
S").(MK)* worth ol computer equipment for your college campus given in
your n.imc. and national recognition from your peers.
For More Information And Official Rules, Call 1-800-553-0301.
Competition Ends March 1,1989. Void Where Prohibited.
\!
mini I data
I systems
THE QUALITY GOES IN BEFORE THE NAME GOES ON'
'I'II/I
v.ilin - lux 11 i HI i i ii 11 ill A nidi I ).n.i Svsli IMV sl.HMl.lt 11 i ill ii .iimii.il ■ >i n m^
VIIN'II I'IIINII-III
In ('IIMll In llic KI>K< i KM lim.in \n<n> v ln<
IVM
iK IlilU ( \
CIW /null, l)a(., SwrntN
Monday. February 27, 1989
Gymnastics scores high
in loss to powerful Owls
H> rODD SEGAL
ii» Penn gymnastics leant is In .1
lull.line paiiern, bui it stagnation eve
were good, the Quaker* have found il
\ii.i lotlng to Yale iwo weeks
I'.MII h.is competed In ihrccnuns and
have icored consistently in .ill three
. 'onsistently well, thai is
iiu- Quakers (6 S) tuned up fa
Saturday'i Ivj 1 eaguc I hampion
ships .11 Yale bj scoring I7< ss polnti
ltd temple .11 M,I lonigle 11.ill
wink- iiu- <>«is (is i) compiled a
whopping, INI 1. Penn was pleated
with us performance agaimi an < Kris'
learn considered to i»- one ol the lorj
ihree icami on the Bui coail
"We've been really coniisteni,"
Muraika injured ha left ankle on ha
uneven parallel ban routine and
freshman Mamie Flaki sprained ha
neck dismounting from the balance
beam NeJthet injurj should k.-.-p tintwo Iron competing next weekend,
i>ui both *.-u- unable 10 compete on
ihc riooi exercise .m.i 1 Inks did noi
receive .1 score foi ba beam
performani.
Although (lit- Quakers recovered
soundly iftei Plaks'i Injury, 1
''recovered'' team hai little chance 10
slay with powerful remplc Penn pa
formed roui oi iheii sis beam out
soph.1111.in- SIIS.III I Idik) s.ii.l "Wc
knew iliis probably wouldn't be ■■ win
linns w.is respectable
And when freshman ten PeartOfl
tallied .1 ') I .111,1 led Penn 10 a 44.2 in
ning meel |but] bj doing well in ihb
in.-ri 11 i.-.iiK s.is us up tin the I vice 1
think we're peaking at the righi
time
rhe Quaken came 10 the halfwaj
in.ni ol ih<- meet i.-ss than two poinu
behind tempi.- \s usual, hinioi 1 IS.I
Muraika'i vault score was Penn'i
highest .m.i ha '»i>s guided the
Quakers 10 .1 u J agaimi the Owb'
•is ss on the uneven parallel bars,
Penn tenioi Kaj Cee inass' routine
merited a 9 <i from the indgcs and the
Quaken headed into the second halt
oi iiu- meet down only, **> 43 HK S3
Dm Penn suffered .1 disheartening
setback when two ol us top com
petitori were injured during tin- meet
By CARTES MUSH MAN
Penn sophomore rrmtlla Mike
Priedman (UK) Mood ready in the
.enter ol Ihe mat tor Ins opponeBI to
emerge from the Princeton beach
i riedman waited
hands up. i
bent, eyes glaring
while the ligers
soiled ihiough til leCOndl of confu
lion.
I hen seven iniiinies after
I'nii,clou's lason Neuiiiaik linally
took ihe mat, i riedman ml bin bat k
to the bench outhustled, outclassed
and throughly bcalcn, 21 6.
Friedman'l siunning opening per
formance k,-ve,i Penn'i 22-19 victory
Ova Ihe ligers In.l.o allcinoon at
Hut,hiiison <,vin ihe Quaken first
Ivy I eagUt Wfal came in its la.sl Ivy
cises withoul .1 I.ill I ulsky's K US on
iiu- beam paced the Quaken 10 .1
which considering the In
meel
I can') say enough ahoul Mike."
Penn head COach Kogcr Rcina said
"lie winked hard ovei the summer,
and he'i really Improved, tic's proved
Ininself to be one of the best
IIX pounders in the league. Por a
sophomore, he wreslled a very noise,I
ihe iiooi exercise, the Quaken had
doted iiu- competition on .1 positive
note
In I meet in which Penn losi I l.iks's
SCOK on iln- beam and (he floor,
Muraika'i score on the floor, and In
Which Ihe scores front Ihe |udga were
match to get things started today.'1
consistent albeit quite low. the
Quakers' Final scon looms ill the
more Impressive
"The} really performed 10 thai
[score]," Penn head coach tom kovi.
said "I7sss reflected a genuine
performance."
Inedinan's victory proved an
auspicious beginning lor the Quakers
IHIX I. 14 1 Ivy league). Wins in
the next two weight classes by junior
Inn 1 mules (|26) anil lieslunan Rick
Dabhs (I 14) slaked I'enn lo an early
I I ti lead which il never relinquished.
I umley trailed I 0 until Ihe Ihrrd
period when he gained an escape
point to tie Ihe si ore lie added
auoihei ,-s. ape point with 40 seconds
left and then scored a clutch
lakedOWn with hlSt rout seconds re
mauling in the match to secure a 4-1
win.
Princeton's woes continued al 134
pounds as a knee injury forced Icam
•\nd 17". S3 Should PUl Ihe Oiialeis
in reach foi the Ivj 1 eague title,
ol Ihe lael thai lie playi foi I'enn .is
well as Ins i.ilenis li is .1 1.1,1 Demenl
readily admits
"Duncombc is still a betta offat
live player," Dement said "When he
. .11, his Ihe lull lie should ICOrC
because ol the position he p
"Jackson yets moved ofi the lane
quite t I'M .m,l when he Huns ,11 mi ml.
he's not always in position 10 go 10 the
basket ronight, he got pushed ofl in
Hassan quite 1 Ml, but he is able 10
1 i/e thai anil p.iss oil
lackson'i roui assists were roui
in,ne ih.in Duncombc has .ill reason
ll was a showdown worth
remembering And even II Duncombc
says he "approaches every game Ihe
same »,i\," la, kson. .1 product ol Si
Michael's High School in loionio.
Ontario
Ihe same high school lhal
■loomed 1 >•<< Rautlns, ihe former
earl) '80s Syracuse MM and first
round draft pick ol ihc NHA'S
Philadelphia '6'en
1,11 something
was sp,-, i.ii about iiu- confrontation
"It's impossible not 10 feel ins
presence," lackson said "t Dun
combe both on and oil ihe court. '"I
Icel he's .1 big pan ol how I played
lagainsi Penn).
All this happened on Saturday, the
second par! of ihe scheduled Ivy
centa showdown Dm on Friday, >
showdown never inaleriah/ed as
Holmes COUld not pain,ipate I'.-.aiisc
ol .1 muscle knol in his lell shoul.ler
Columbia head coach Watty Halas
said thai Holmes , ould not cyen lilt
ins arms 10 retrieve .. rebound, lei
alone liy 10 yn up against Duncomhc
lhal lell (. X. 17(1 pound Danen
DeWilde to man the I ions' middle
DeWilde. who stalled tins season on
(he jayvec squad, round himsell in
daj night exposed 10 ihe massive
Duncombc
Vet I'.-Wilde's aggressive play mas
hay.- Iieen pert ol flu- icason that
Duncombc disappeared In ihe second
hall against Cornell
Duncombc
refuted 10 acknowledge any ratlgue
down the stretch Saturday, but be
ended up logging only SK minutes on
ihe weekend
missing six oi eight
shois m Ihe second hall against Ihe
Big Red
And with Holmes oul ol ihr lineup
I inlay, nohodv would have expected
Duncombc ',> have 10 work lhai hard
DeWilde held his own lor a
preseason iayvee plav.-i against the
Quakers as he nolched 14 poinls and
corraled live rebounds Perhaps the
til Kit protein and milkshake diel (ol
uinhia lias him on 10 bulk him up is
working, even d n "tastM real bad
"We project htal M center." Halas
maintained, adding thai he hoped
DeWilde would eal a little moic
Duneoinhe mighl 1101 have been
preparing any differentl) rot lackson
and < ornell than he was loi .1 ( olum
bit team without Holmes. IMII lie , ei
1.11 nlv didn't expect to get the light
from DeWilde lhat lie ended up
getting.
And in the end. DeWilde was an annoying presence.
If Halas keeps Inm at .enter.
DeWllde'i opportunities to start will
he tew and lar between. Hut in a
weekend highlighted by the league's
dominant .enters, ihe lanky 'leshman
made his presence known.
II
Wrestling pins Tigers
for first Ivy victory
Two noted center battles
CENTERS, from page 14
wisiis iiu- premlet reboundet
i lackson)
i >i course, Duncombc remaini the
centa oi attention
1 combination
Tbt Daily Prnmylvania
captain loan Ripley to forfeit ins
Jo«nn« Rlm/Dntfy Pennsytviiniiin
match with Dabhs
I he victory could not have come at
a heller tune for the Quakers as they
piepare for Ihe Eastern Intercollegiate
Wrestling
Association
tournament
Prim's l.arry ('ofsic> (lop) wrestles John (.lurkow in Ihr 22-19 win.
beginning March 3 al l.ehigh. After
struggling through a winless Ivy
season, In,lav's victory erased Ihc
memory of a season riddled with in
lonsisicncv. sluggishness and self
doubt
I iie.lman (21 6). who has wreslled
well all season, said: "All year, we've
had lo say 'We could've beaten than'
and 'Wc should've beaten Ihcin' until
we finally started lo think lhal maybe
wc couldn't. Today's team win was so
important II gives us a lot of moinen
turn for Ihe Easterns "
The victory, however, was not clinched after ihree matches. The Tigers
(13-9 I. 2 4) closed the lead lo 19-13
after winning three matches and tying
one. I'enn sealed the victory only after
iri captain Steve Hrody won an intense, 21 match over Paul Dzenitis
Afler a scoreless first period, Brody
elected to set up on Ihc bottom to start
Ihe second. Brody achieved an early
escape to lake ihe lead, Ml Then with
1:15 lefi in Ihe final period, (he
Princeton bench erupted when
D/cnitis gained an escape-point lo lie
ihe scon
Neither wrestler chose lo be the
aggressor in this match; a sore
shoulder slowed Brody's normally aggressive style, and D/enitis opted for
slow, defensive ladies which had
already earned him Iwo cautions for
stalling. After falling out of bounds to
slop Ihe clock with four seconds remaining. Ihe Iwo wrestlers set up in
the middle, with Brody on lop. Instead of trying to earn an escape,
D/cnilis struggled to run out-ofbounds.
After the buzzer sounded and the
match had appeared lo end in a I-1
tic. ihe referee awarded a third stall
ing caution to D/enilis. The result —
a penalty poinl agiinsl D/enilis and a
clutch win for Brody.
"Ik new I had lo have a good malch
lor us lo win." Brody said. "Now wc
have lo look to the Easterns "
W. Swimming places sixth in Easterns
By MIKM AMBARtRI
Its dual meet record was■ raihei discouraging t I
this season, ami the I'enn women's swimming Icam
was not expected to pott any noteworthy results al
llns weekend's I -astern Inter, olleri.ue Seahonl
Regsonab al i'enn State
Hill |iisl when the < tiiakcis weie read) I" fall into
iiu- ranks ,,i mediocrity, Penn swam to us best
finish ever ai ihc Easterns, thereby mrprising and
silencing many ,<i III critics
rhe Quakers tied lot sixth place in the lO-team
field. Penn finished behind champion Harvard,
I'enn Stale. I Ml I anil Brown and lied < oincll
What makes ihe acoinplislmicnl even more nil
pressive is thai in many instances, the Quaken were
edged OUl lor points bated on their final pla.nn-s
i ach relay team qualified in icventh place Mm onlv
sis teams participate In the relays' respective finals,
and I'enn thus losi ihe pivotal points that a i.l.n
,.lines (Twice as mans poinls .ue men lor relay
finishes as compared to individual eseiils )
ihc Quakers' chances ,•' threading the top five
.sen- also hurl because many I'enn swimmers finish
ed fth In qualifying heats and barely misted out on
ihe ,,insolation rounds privied 10 the lop IX swim
ineis Ihe Quakers again losi potential points
Nevertheless. I'enn posted some unpiessive in
dividual and icam performances
lunior Sarah Ralsion s,-i | new I'enn record in the
100 yard butterfly ill "-7 4 seconds as she finished
third overall in Ihe event Ralston also placed Ittth
in the li»l yd freestyle ind 12th inthc200-yd. free
and gamed a great deal ol points tor ihe Quakers in
Mu- process Head < oach Kaihy Lawlor piaised her
swimmer's determination and final results
"Although we were surprised thai Sarah did so
well in Ihe fly, we always knew lhal she was a
capable swimmer." lawlor s.ii.l "Sarah had a
weak lust ball ol the season, .m.i then ski do Mad
at winter break lhal she wanted 10 score points for
us al I tttarUS, which is exactly what she did."
Ralston herself had to be <|uilc pleased. It was Ihe
tirsi tune in Ihree years thai she had swum Ihe 100
fly tapered and shaven And above all. her parlicipation in IIv was exirinperaneoiis
"I swam Ihc fly on a whim." Ralsion said. "I
don't think anyone on Ihe icam rcallv expected it.
Still. I'm very happy with the record."
Ilren.la Harto was the only I'enn freshman lo
reach a top-six final. She placed fiflh in Ihe 100 fly
as she touched the wall in 57.69.
"I knew that llrcnda was a superb flyer when I
„.is i.-,inning her.'' I awlor said. "Il was quite an
i. lomphshmenl lor a trcshman to make finals al
I asieins I think it's a sign ol good things 10
come."
"It was a big accomplishment for me." Barlo
said. "I was glad lo make the final. I'm already
looking forward lo next year's Faslerns "
Ralsion and Barlo did not slop there. They both
were part of two relay teams lhat scl new Penn
records. Ralsion, Barlo, (alii Alexander, and Pam
l-reilich teamed to swim 3.32.86 in the 400 free
relsy, and then Ralston and Barlo joined Freilich
and Marianne Markey lo set a record (3:59.3) in the
400 medley relay
Pcnn's lone divei, freshman Belh Bauer, became
ihe first Quakers diver ever lo reach Ihe lop-12 final
as she placed 8th in the one-meter springboard.
Banes was also vi, iimi/c.l by Ihe "just miss" syndrome, finishing 13th in Ihe three-meter sprmgboard competition
Afler five dives, Bauer stood al 17th place But
.luring a break, she spoke with her coach, Rob
Cragg, who convinced her lhal she did indeed
belong in the competition and aided her in regaining
some of Ihe composure she had losi
After the break, Bauer dove six limes, rose II
places, to sixth place and eventually placed eighth in
the finals.
In a way, Bauer's experience epitomizes Pcnn's
past season. Just as mediocrity seemed lo settle in,
the Quakers reached down and pulled oul a redeeming effort
*L"S
-i reft
AC i!
Top of the morning!
Tis your lucky day.
PENN FITNESS CENTER|fH
Division of Recreation and Intercollegiate Athletics
St. Patty's Special
CAREERS IN
WRITING
Speakers will discuss career opportunities in:
•
•
•
•
magazine
newspaper
proposal/grants
free lance
Wednesday. March 1
7:00-9:00 p.m.
Smith Penniman Room, Houston Hall
Sign up with Amy at CPPS.
only $55.00
Gives you the opportunity to find your pot of gold
at the PENN FITNESS CENTER for the remainder of the semester!
This is NO BLARNEY!!! We knead bodies like yours!!!
Register at PENN FITNESS CENTER
10am-4pm
Hutchinson Gymnasium
898-2060, 898-2042
*offer
expires March 3rd<
P«t« 12
The Duil, Pfnnsylvani»n
Monday. February 27. 1989
898-1111
Classified Ads
FORRENT
HOW TO PUCE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD
BY PHONE
CALL (215) 898-1111
Telephone lines open
9 am-5 pm Monday
through Friday during
each term. Closed
weekends and holidays
CLASSIFIED
RATES
INDEX
1-2 days
30* word/day
3 or more
25« word/day
7th day is FREE when you
run 6 or more days
10 word minimum
FOR SALE
OPTIONAL JUMBO
HEADLINE
4015 WALNUT ST, 2ND FlOOfl
Hours 9am-5pm Monday
through Friday during
each term. Closed
weekends and holidays
SI 75 per line per day toi
large, bold headline above
regular classified ad.
Maximum 18 characters
per line Maximum 4 lines
DEADLINES
PAYMENT
HELP WANTED
LOST a FOUND
MISCELLANEOUS
RIDES OFFERED
RIDES WANTED
12 noon, one business day
preceding publication
CLASSIFIED
DISPLAY
INCREDIBLE APARTMENTS 18
loot ceilings 23rd and Walnut
Robert 569-1257
ROOMMATES
SERVICES
LARGE 2 BEDROOM Parkview,
d/w. w/d. available now $575 includes heat, hot water Call
O'Donnell 222 2600
SUBLET
TRAVEL
TYPIST
Classified ads must be
paid in full at time of
placement — none will be
billed Visa and MasterCard are accepted for
payment Ads may be
placed by telephone during business hours — call
(215)898-1111
LINER ADS, CHANGES.
CANCELLATIONS
FOUR BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE
dean, well maintained, washer.
dryer yard, cable 41st Ludlow
JUne 1st $900 349-8981
PERSONALS
LARGE CLEAN private rooms in
comfortable home Washer/dryer
3875364
WANTED
TERMS
MODERN SHARED HOUSE 41st
and Walnut
One bedroom
$215/mo March August Call Da
niello. 222-6047
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
3 p.m., two business days
preceding publication
ON PENN CAMPUS. Various MM
apartments, newly decorated
Convenient public transportation
Weisenthal Properties. 386 2380
4029 Spruce Mon thru Sal . 9 to
4
PENN MANOR. 40th a Baltimore
Bright one bedroom, separate
kitchen. $405 plus Spacious,
bright studio, separate kitchen
$350 plus 496-0184
4 BEDROOM Sprue
3 story apt New renovation,
4041 BALTfMORt ' . •
apartment $570 p*u» fiW* 'eo.>
valed. secure laundry facflaaa.
available Jun>
NEWLY RENOVATED dean
quiet, close to campus.
S58O-J670 June 1
020-9390
387-9523
558 S. 48TH STREET 7BR h/w
floors, access lo laundry
$510-540 Available March. June
or Sept 898-5755 or 459-3715
WEBSTER MANOR, Osage
4224-Brlght one bedroom, sepa
rale kitchen $450 indudes utilities
498-0184
6 BEDROOM HOUSE
SANSOM STREET,
WILDWOOO I BLOCK to beach
Large 1/2/3/4 bedroom apartment
Available weekly, monthly and
seasonally
Please call
201 223-5477
8300/person 380-1117
39TH & CHESTNUT ST
40TH AND SPRUCE TWO
BEDROOM APTS
S21 SOUTH 42ND Street, spacious 1 bedroom, private entrance, newty painted $400 heat
included 388-7475
4711 HAZEL Sparkling 6 bed
room Victorian new kitchen 2 new
bathrooms, freshly painted, fin
ished hardwood floors New reIngerator. washer/dryer, garbage
disposal, dishwasher, wet bar
$1200 month plus 4234500
41ST ANO SPRUCE area One.
two and three bedroom apart
ments Furnished available July
and September Call 004-0539
RENNOVATED 4. 5. ANO • bed
room apis Hardwood floors, exposed brie* walls reiling fans
new kitchens, dishwasher Avail
able June 1st Call Ken. (16
or Sid MO-1999
ROOM FOR RENT 43rd and Pine
$186 plus W/D Avail March t
6625182
44TH STREET between Locust
and Walnut 3BR. large livm
groom, h/w floors $075 includes
heal, hw Available 9/1 or August
8985755 or 459-3715
CKHJS
42NO ANO SPRUCE Finest apart
ment 848-4006 number I rated
47ND ANO SPRUCE 2. 3 bed
rooms, efficiency June Unfurnished renovated $090 00 up In
eludes heal, hoi water 483-8503
42ND AND WALNUT: beautiful 3
bedroom m secure building Original woodwork hardwood floors,
modern kitchen 387-1117 days,
evenings, weekends
2 BATHS. LIV RM, din rm. w/d.
porch, yard 4030195
ATTRACTIVE HOUSES A apart
ments on campus Available June
4 September Eastern Stales Re
alty 388-0922
■pad
BrsaM MsssSe Ipss.
■one «nii !'.'• windows porcfe and '■■
I la lam.
uu*h«-i dryci dishwaahei pariMMSB itliiniaal 14 how security
Furnished and
Unfurnished
Apartments
39th to 44th
Chestnut to Baltimore
From $-470
COTTAGE TYPE APT
Very
large, quiet Furnished or unfurnished West Ml Airy. Near train
247-M29
The> Courts Apts
33lh Si row.llon
386-3177
Efficiencies. One and
Two bedrooms
S255 to S600
Newty Renovated
Three Bedrooms
$975
APARTMENTS
FOR RENT
STILL LOOKING
Efficiencies
$350-8430
One Bedrooms
S35O-S430
You needn't look any further
University Ctty Housing Co features the most extensive
selection of housing opportunities in University City
In fact, most of our properties are within
two blocks of the Penn campus, and our prices
won't leave you wide-eyed Call us today and
make an appointment to look at our selection of
newly renovated apartments
3 modern Townhomes on
Baltimore Avenue
And the finest selection
of eff., and one bedrooms
plus spacious two
and three bedrooms some
newly renovated
"Beige Block" and other
locations near campus.
Some available now,
most available
June/September
Penn Consumer Board
Approved Leases
Open
Monday f'riday
9:00 am - /OO pm
Saturday - Sunday
10:00 am - 4:00 pm
415 South 42nd St
382-7167
382-5558
222-7909
39th & Pine
FOR SALE
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
Feature! Include
' Dishwashers
' Self defrosting
' Exposed brick walls
refrigerator!
' Garbage Disposals
' Hardwood floors
' Balconies
' Convenient semester payment schedules
UNIVERSITY CITY HOUSING CO. 382-29S6
"let our Houses be your Homes''
4502 SPRINGFIELD 6 h»c. v.,. i
1/2 bath modern kitchen 'inished
basement, rear yard, palion
S119.000 S76-6241
FENDER STRATOCASTER.
case. Seiko tuner, for sale S400
Call 243-7061
HMt COMPATIBLE. 30 MEG color
monitor printer, mouse, desktop
software and more 12100 or best
offer 243-5804
PRESENTED BY
Harm *
'r-
Perm's Hottest
Hangout!
D>«1
40 Divers
1 Bo> cautiously
S With 50 *
city near Tel Avn
10 Sopiano Gluck
14 Ad.
protection
24 Within C
lotm
SS Shoo! the
26 •
•I in
i■
ick down
lightly
33 Jetty
16 Aqueous
descent
icily
39 Standard of
perfection
up
18 Subject ol this
puzzle
20 College'
attended by 18
Across
77 John. If .■'
trader
!'
SO Not a soul
imos firmly
loceti
03 Virgil s tree of life
05 Apropos Ol
41 To a"
4.'
i owed Comb
form
43 Roman
company
CO"
40 Acio' James
■s 0 c
i
D EM
A LA
R 1 S
N A S
■
R A N 0 N
E
AIV
L E
I 1
sssf S
0 N 1
C AlNlZ 0
E
E MEE R
T
D E|E|D
■
s
s
1
L E
R E V
A N 1
N 1 T
A T 1 N
N E
0 R E
N E T T
0 N U
s
1
fc
SB
S
cm
**M
0 0 E
T E R
R A S P
E G
H
M E T
1 E T V
E
s
A N
00 Opposite of dele
07 Happening
•■nsh
passion
09 Nalfian
American spy
17
20
3
?!
■
I
I
i
•6
IS
1"
" IB
n
qecoup
on horses
J
l*
M
44
1
W
70
19 Namesakes of
Ruths
mother-in-law
32 Award lor 18
Across 1964
5 More distant
0 Papuan native ol
New Gumea
7"
Chan.T N Page tale
0 Sergeants
commands
21 One of L B J s
beagles
25 Palm liber
35 Playhouse
placard
36 American sports
org
27 Long, heroic
poem
37 Stud to the gills
A
11 Milks lo
Michelle
28 Pheasanls'
brood
40 Middle name of
18 Across
S
12 City in N D
29 Adolescent
44 Future fish
K
13 Wrathful
30 Absolute
45 w.iii and
A
9 Thee m Tours
10 Clumsy vessels
T
OVERSEAS JOBS
$900 2000/MO. Summer, year
round, all countries. aN fields Free
into Writs UC. PO Bo> S? PA05
Corona Del Mar. CA 926-25
37
i
i •'
1
; j:
B
l
34
30 Ages upon ages
61
■
"
Call- 382-1300
r
■i-i
TRAVEL
FLY TO EUROPE P.in An- R 1 ■<"
S28S 00 Call last' Jose 222-5040
SAVE $$»$ on domestic and inter
national airline tickets Call lor
best deals International Travel
Fxchange, 332-2444
TYPIST
ACCURATE. PROFESSIONAL
typing Humanities, sciences.
foreign languages Free pick-up
and delivery Anna. 732-3732
ATTENTION! WHAT'S VOUR
Type? Professional word processing Free pickup and delivery
Bob. 54M725
DENISES RELIABLE TYPING
Reports, theses, letters, resumes,
transcriptions
Reasonable
549-1050
STUDENT. PAR TIME late afternoon, earty evening Good phone
personality 386-6201
WANE'S EXPERT, professional
typing service Word processing
References 8988-6776.
SUMMER JOBS TO SAVE Envi
ronment Earn S2500-S3500 National campaign positions lo pass
clean air act, stop toxic pollution,
tighten pesticide controls and
promote comprehensive recycling, available m 18 states ADC
Intvs on campus 2/27.28. J/l Call
Kate loll-free at 1-80O622 2202
WORD PROCESSING Profes
sional computerized Reasonable Laser printing Free pick-up,
delivery 722 1817
GIVES ADVANCED LESSONS o.
conversation
No beginners
3660971
OUITAR INSTRUCTION with ex
penanced teacher, musician.
Penn grad Many styles, begin
mng to advanced, reasonable
rates. 1st lesson free 387-1369
ACT NOW
f 1000 00
Card Everyone approved. »
bankruptcies (609) 667-6730
i-
1r
UNBELIEVABLE SUMMER SUBLET: Ultra modern. 4 bedrooms.
finished oak All appliances 4000
block Pine
Price negotiable
222 1404
HMAfTEP
STATISTICS TUTOR Needed by
learning disabled student Contact
Diane, nights at 333-2936
aak bf Mr^ •
or ov pm «>nl> 67f>»?S»
■I l.>r |Wlt>
fin
■
SPACIOUS STUDIO available
March 2nd at 41st and Chestnut
Rent $350 per month includes
cooking gas Rent negotiable CaM
387 1586
REOUIRCD FOR PHILADELPHIA
Theatre Caravan. 3700 Chestnut
Street typist. Mondays and Thurs
days. 9 00-1 00. $7 00 an hour
fluent English and good spelling
essential 896-6068
EXPERT NATIVE
FRENCH TEACHER
J:.
RITTENHOUSE SQUARE Area
Lovely studio with separate
kitchen, sleeping loft working fire
place March 1 August 31 $450
546 7838
13
H
M
i ball
3 Stale firmly
4 Produce anew
OFFICE MANAGER: Real estate
office specializing m residential
sales and management requires
experienced employee with
bookkeeping and computer skills
Varied responsibilities Send resume Urban Developers 4100
Walnut Street. Phila . PA 19104
I Hu
m
n
•7
LIBERAL ARTS MAJOR. Clerical
position. Center City. T. W Tr.
9 30AM 5PM Must be excellent
typist Must work Fridays, but
other days can be flexible $5-6/hr
Call 627-2493
66
45 1 I4*
r'
HELP WANTED Students needed
part time Radiation safely office
Interesting work, flexible hours
$8 00 Science background preferred Contact Sandy ft
89*7187
and Fragrant Potpourri
at the
PhilaJrlphia PIOVJBI Show
M.mh 4 12*
Call r-or jn intrmrw wnh
The Rig Ulaml Plant Company
<* S Vhit |B|0
o
"
"
■
IBM
EXERCISE. AEROBICS: exper
wnced teachers and apprentices
for Gwendolyn Bye Dance Center
Contact Barbara King. 896 2881
SERVICES
WE ARE A HAPPILY married,
tun fcjvmg Cafcforma couple, eager
to adopt beb> to share warmth.
love .iiui ,. .....it' wuiultutul MC
ure future CONFIDENTIAL
IEGAL EXPENSES PAID Please
call collect
Jerry or Ion
818^951-4360
INSTRUCTION
1?
37
44
13
ii
CAR ANO BICYCLE couriers
needed1 Appro* $8/hr. 5-15 hrs/
wk, on campus Fat Boy Delivery.
662-0659
Kam Between
V4 00 atn.1 W> (I) .in hour
srllint: r-\'*tK Plants
f"S
1H
I
i<
1
10 IM
J*
13
SO
»
H"
70 Jerez formerly
71 Aulhor Gardner
•
:
"
H*
DOWN
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE
■
J
*
47 Harrow s rival
A H A B ■ D|R| 1 E
L A M E
UILIT R ft
C R A D
E|S|0 N G
0 P T 1 0 N
0 N A L
B A
N A D E
E N
R
A L A
M A
0
B U T
1' 1 A C A T E
1
14
15 Musp o! .
poetry
17 Grve
(assist)
1
SO See 5 Across
BOOKKEEPER/OFFICE MAN A
QER Real estate office speciali/
tng in University City residential
salmi and management requires
experienced employee with com
pulei skills Varied responsibili
ties Send resume Urban Deve
topers 4100 Walnut Street. Phtla .
PA 19104
O
Edited by Eugene T. Maleska
ACROSS
aparvp rota paaoa ^-»
airh program <tapanda on you
Suits Help
"<7>
3801 Chestnut Street • 222-7322 • Sun-Thurs, 11 to 11; Frl 4 Sat, 11 to midnlte
MtlAiOAOUPSCSStON DA |
Uonda*. Manfi 1" IW* ' pm
luaaday Marcli 14, ion ar?30pm
Tupadat Uareh M, IBM « : ,*,
Wadnaaflai Matt* i& IN* ai 7 pm
Iiajadpt Uatcti ». i» at ' pm
w-adnaada,. Uarit 29. IMP « I pm
IrturPdPf Ua/Lfi .1) ItW. ai 1 30 pm
Saturday Apm i 11MP at .' (•"
I jaadai/ Aprt 11 IMP M / pm
Wadnaada> Aprt t? ifH. Pi / pm
loundpy Apm ii iaa» at i JO pm
WANTED BICYCLE MESSENGERS and drivers with own vehicle Decent pay Kangaroo Cour
iers 2012 Sansom Street
561-5132
SONY RECEIVER 35 waits/
channel Great condition Best ol
ter Call Dave at 387-6963
The New York Times Crossword
una *» ad ratMnkaanj "ia> b* a
baM aa mulwA comwaaM
naawcaltM Cartn at 4/1 »»o> aaa (Maan AI I
Uondd* Prougn *ndd» to lurthai waarm—m ai *w ■
afegtjdt* daOannnad an appOAaMPM conParnail and a* daaaaa) a n& arrangad ht and from M
iwrthaaial ooma- •>• V* A Spnm St t mm a
DOOR MEN WANTED V.
lounge 3801 Chestnut Street
Apply in person Wed after 4.
Thurs and Fn after 12 noon
AVAILABLE NOW
OR UNTIL JUNE
CALL
EMERSON APTS
FOR HOUSING?
HELP WANTED
ti<»i««yr-*k*4*«« ■■ g>«duafj» amaa— tnwwn ira agMo* ■• and Man
I ». I ipa-inttntal
aw »cem*■■'«- <n atapaw tmainaa uMumg hypnuM am oaf* hfpnoaaa At that
rtpjil—i InatMuM o* **> •■•«noT«.anaa Hnapiat |«g«i and Marka4) m
program o> itaa Uapa>M*ani at Pa-in—H Urw*«rM> o> "WnnavKanaa
cmanuad aucc-Ma o* out tuaa/cfi afama dacaantti upon ft Ha>p ol
An natal group
partcip—nQ -. a iap»raramad aoaoiamom ** fwia, 'N>un»n and a cngnMN* taaa fa
if I ir? KM laftraatory
rm ana a \±tmmu* Mta howa '—anrr. hooaiw to f madad ftart
4fMv*feaia< youaf naoaero a tofcanraantAiraaroaniol|l9 M*0» row ama andpamaaaWwi «l'
o> a*ac*> ■•■ ba madad (D vnu aa aoon aa tra> uakpnoma raaaatc" bnofeM <a 'acp'iad
Out H> ■■">■:■■* liaam aif*rtu»ng lariMWuww <**t approamaM** "• Itw.l ol lha>
I at »Sa and ol Pa> rokal atoup a
FOR JUNE 4200 BLOCK Spruce
4 Bedroom. 1 balh Bi level $1450
a month heat included Call
222-4418
INSTRUCTION
HELP WANTED
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED
FON
PAID PSYCHOLOGICAL EXPERIMENT!
FOR JUNE 3 BEDROOM. 3 balh.
bi-level $1080 plus utilities per
month Call 222-4418
FOB RENT
BY VISITING
OFFICE
FOR
EFFICIENCY, ONE. TWO bed
room apartments near University
with fireplaces 222-4535
898-1111
llano
50 Grind the teeth
51 Corporeal
channel
52 Actuator of
above award
54 Quality |udge
57 Short leller
59 Welles role 1941
00 Hun1 '
01 Viva-voce
62 Parl Ol TV
64 Annoy
CAMPUS APARTMENTS
4043 WALNUT STREET
40TH AND SPRUCE Two house
majtjM ''afjpx! (or eleven bedroom
co-ed nouee Newty renovated
with modern kitchen and jacuzzi
June to June Call Dave 222-8660
Z
PROFESSIONAL PROOFREADIWO. adding of youi papers, applications Experienced consultants
also translate Spanish. Frenh English Low basic rales Quick turnover 222-4267
RESUMES 26.»SII UCR Graliks
over 2 years experience on campus 3801 Locust Walk (CA bldg )
Office numbei 33 (3rd floor)
222-2846
WANTED: 80 OVERWEIGHT pecpie lo try doctor recommended
weight control program
Lose
5-100 lbs Fast. easy, effective,
affordable! Call 243-8730
DP
Sports
means
Baseball
Softball
Lacrosse
Tennis
Track
Crew
Penn Relays
every day.
And that's
just our
spring
lineup.
Daily
Pennsylvanian
Monday. February 27, 1989
The DaUj Pcnnaylvanian
Paft 13
SportsWire
Compiled from Associated Press Dispatches
Scoreboard
■NHL
■NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
New York
Philadelphia
Boston
Washington
New Jersey
Charlotte
L
IB
24
Pet
673
547
W
463 IIV,
21
21
15
404
382
278
14",
16
21V*
Central Division
Cleveland
Detroit
Milwaukee
Allanta
Chicago
hull.in.i
W
L
41
36
33
34
32
13
12
15
18
20
21
40
Patrick Division
GB
25 29
31
34
39
INCAA
WALES CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W
37
29
Pet GB
774
706
4
647 7",
630
8
604 9V>
245 28",
NY Rangers
Pillsburgh
Washinglon
Philadelphia
New Jersey
NY Islanders
L
T Pts GF GA
32 23 8
32 24 7
72 256 230
71 284 269
30
31
21
21
70
65
53
46
24 10
29 3
31 11
37 4
232
241
225
209
Adams Division
W
43
30
27
27
x Montreal
Buflalo
Boston
Hartlord
Quebec
L T Pts GF GA
15 7 93 257 185
28 6 66 241 248
24 11
65 217 199
31 4 58 233 232
22 36 6
50 215 282
CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
Norrls Division
W
33
31
30
28
13
8
L
22
22
25
24
40
45
Pet
600
585
545
538
245
151
GB
1
3
3'/i
19
24
VV
28
22
21
19
22
Detroit
Chicago
St Louis
Minnesota
Toronto
W
37
34
32
L
17
19
20
30
26
21
26
15
11
38
45
Pet
685
642
615
588
500
283
196
GB
2V,
4
5V*
10
21",
27
Yesterday's Games
New York 122. Boston 110
Indiana 128. Utah 89
Denver 122. Philadelphia 115
Detroit 110. L A Clippers 98
Portland 124. Miami 102
L A Lakers 134, Phoenix 122
x-Calgary
Los Angeles
Edmonton
Vancouver
Winnipeg
"Princeton had an easv first-round
match, and Ibey finished early,"
Molloy said "Our'l lasted an hour
longer II pushed us behind tcheduk
We had to tush to shower, lo eat and
to gei back |io play Princeton)."
W
43
32
32
27
21
hits
2-hour,
27-minule
match
and
the
in the third round at Memphis.
"Only time will tell," Becker said when asked if he can
surpass Ivan I.endl and Mats Wilander lo become the
world's lop ranked player. "I don't think I have reached
L T Pts GF GA
14 8 94 276 182
25 6 70 311 273
27 6 70 270 247
30 7 61 206 203
31 10 52 235 275
BRINK, from page 14
stronghold with a furious comeback from a nine-point
deficit with seven minutes to go, earning Cornell a 65-61
TOP 20
Missoun 97. Oklahoma 84
Georgetown 63. St John's 55
Indiana 75. Minnesota 82
North Carolina 100. Clemson 86
South Carolina 77. LouisviKe 73
Michigan 92. Wisconsin 70
Seton Hall M, Providence 80
Stanford 60. Oregon State SB
ISU 88. Nevada-Las Vegaa 87
St Mary's. Call! 63. Portland 41
Ball Slate 76. Eastern Michigan 63
win.
The Big Red's victory may have been forseen by whal
happened Friday nighl when Columbia found some craefci
m the Palestra*! foundation and nearly ended Penn's
dominance. The I.ions pulled to within 63-61 with 57
seconds left, but Quakers forward Jerry Simon converted
five-of-six free throws in Ihe final minule to preserve the
win, 68-61.
I his has gol to be the biggest win of the season for
us," { omell center Bernard Jackson said Saturday night.
"We haven't won here in 21 years. It's a great win for a
young team like ours."
The loss pushed Penn (11-12, 7-4 Ivy league) to [he
brink of elimination, three games behind league-leading
Cornell 65. PENN 61
Steward
SpSSkSI
IleWMe
Shamon
Chiles
MecPfi a
. mem
Woody
KuMus
Recko
■ Mh
warn
Scheee
liunrnmh.
FraW
M '.' ' "
the
Iptairii Mallard and Brad < '.irlson
and Perm's othei
seniors
Petei
I uhov.il/, and McBce "Mac" Butcher. Four years ago, Penn WH not
expected to have a great year, but the
Quakers toiled prediction! b) ending
up fourth.
But this year, many
thought Penn was expected to be ihe
best leant
m the country,
nib
weekend, ihe Quakers settled for
Simon
Curran
1'etlibone
lavsaeri
HBama
Totals
Columbia
P Pts
FC-A FT*
4
8
3-10
2-2
I?
2
8
:■!
S-7
5
3
I 1
5-15
■l
13
0-3
ul
3
0-2
16
I
48
0
M I
13
I
M
0
00
00 0
0
00
200 21-56 1319 29 13 27 61
PENN
Mm FG-A PTA
1-6
64
32
02
00
II
8-9
2-3
28
212
1-3
40
37
13
26
01
13
15
7*
13
15
23
33
12
23
12
9
00
OO
2
00
23
10
200 22-50 2132
P Pts
0
0
IB
7
7
2
9
B
9
3
10
1
43
18 20
S
0
4
68
Field Goal Percent Columoa 3' 5. PENN 44 0
Three-Point Field Goal Percent: Columoa 46 2
[Shannon 4-8. Speaker 1 2 Woody 1 31. PENN 25 0
(Fra/ier 2«. Peltibone 1 2 McMahon 0-1 Simon 01
Walts 021. Free Throw Percent: Columbia 68 4
PENN 65 6 Stocked Shots: Columbia 1 (OeWildei
PENN ? (Duncombe?). Steals: Columbia 5
(Sleward-3. Shannon, Livingston) PENN 7 (Friurer-2.
McMahon-2 Curran. Pett*>one. Simon). Turnovers:
Columbia 8 (CnHee-2. Livmonon-2 Shannon?
Speaker-2). PENN 11 (Cremibers-2. Gilkams ?.
Schewe-2 Ouncombe. Marshal McMahon. Pemoone
Simon) Team Rebounds: Columbia 3 PENN 1
HeKtlme: PENN 29-21 Attendance: 1830
EJ^G^^ERXBf-Cf
SUMMEBJOBS
Boytm
Pascal
ideal
Weiier
Metataj
3?
.13
31
M
33
Jotimon
McFU*
Halpem
Lmcom
Horns
Tot*
10
?
II
8
Warn
Schetn
(m uses
Fruitr
McMahon
Simon
Curran
Pstteone
Marsha*
Mam
totals
QOflMfl
P Pts
FCJ-A FT-» R
01
4-6 2
4-7
03 7
4-12
5-7 12
24
04)
1-1
MO
23
1-1
01
1-2
OO
00
2-4'
01
02
2-2 1
11
OO 0 0 0
2047 14-23 33 14 1! 65
200
PENN
FO-A FTA
01
01
30
12
2-2
n 9-17 1-3
.IS
9-19
5-9
1-4
01
00
IS
il
1-5
i?
02
It
00
23
4
11
1-2
00
7
1-4
200 25-58 5-14
a
good serve-and-volley player, bul not really as a guy who
can stay there often ftom the base."
Mayolle said he thought Becker was hilling harder and
earlier than he has in the past.
"He was awfully strong off the ground." Mayotte said.
"I think ihe biggest problem for me was scoring pout! oil
my second serve."
Becker this week goes to Dallas, where Stefan Edberg of
Sweden, ranked fifth, is playing in the WCT Finals III
three important prior meetings between the two, Becker
won two Davis Cup lilies and Fdberg won the Wimbledon
title.
"1 think he's as much upset thai he lost lo me in Davis
Cup as I'm upset that I lost to him in Wimbledon, so il
Cornell quells Quakers' hopes, 65-61
Saturday's College Basketball
Select Scores
Yesterday's Games
Detroit 4. Chicago 4. lie
Winnipeg 1 Calgary 0
Hartlord 8. Pittsburgh 8
Montroal 5. Vancouver ?
Los Angeles 1. New Jersey 1. lie
But Becker's nowet and timing were tested by Mayotte,
who had reached ihc final here four straight years.
"I thought lhat he has improved a lot on his baseline
strokes," Becker said of Mayotte "He's known as a very
evens out." Becker said.
tin peak yet."
FAft WEST
California 78, Oregon 74
RBCMe U 86. Utah SI 84
UCLA 56. Washington St 55
(-clinched
M ■« a
hardest is wiih ihe Quaker*' seniors
Dtja-vu.
T Pis GF GA
11
67 258 256
10 54 245 269
10 52 209 229
14
52 205 232
5 49 193 258
won the
who fell to Mayotte in the semifinals Saturday aftei losing
SOUTHWEST
Southern Meth 81. Texas Tech 48
PENN 68, Columbia 61
NATIONALS, from page 14
fourth.
$123,800 lop prize by taking five straight games from 13
in the final scl. The victory came just a week after Becker
won the Stella Artois Indoor in Milan. Italy.
Becker was seeded second here behind Andre Agassi,
Becker
Princeton with only three games left in the season.
"Obviously, we don't have destiny in out own hands
M. Squash
loss
EAST
lona 73, St Peter's 70. OT
Penn SI 91, Duquesne 78
Spectrum.
SOUTH
Emory 100. Carnegie-Mellon 92
N C Wilmington 60. East Carolina 55
playott berth
Utah at New Jersey. 7 30 p m
Dallas al Allanta. 7 30 p m
San Antonio al Milwaukee, 8 30 p m
Washington at Houston, 8 30 p m
Denver at Golden Slate. 10 30 p m
Seattle al Sacramento. 10 30 p m
Saturday'!
defending champion Tim Mayotte 7 6 (7-4), 6-1, 6-3 in the
MQ2.S00 U.S. Pro Indoor Tennis Championships at the
Tonight's Games
Los Angeles al New York Rangers. 7 35 p.m
UN) at Toronto, 7 35 p m
Philadelphia al Calgary. 9 35 p m
Tonight's Games
Where
power and speed will lake him.
Ilui aside from making 12 double faults, lie showed few
weaknesses yesterday in defeating No. 3 seed and two-time
TOP 20
Arizona 77. Duke lb
Illinois 94. Ohio SI 71
Iowa 84, Purdue 67
Syracuse 80. Kentucky 73
Temple 74. West Vuginia 56
Virginia 78. N Carolina St 75
Smythe Division
Pacific Olvision
LA Lakers
Phoenix
Bt MM
Golden Slate
Portland
Sacramento
LA Clippers
L
26
32
31
29
36
I'Hll.AIM I I'HIA — Boris Rccker. the world's thirdranked player, isn't ready to say how far his resurgenl
Yesterday's College Basketball
Select Scores
212
214
262
261
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Utah
Houston
Denver
Dallas
San Antonio
Miami
Becker defeats Mayotte in three
sets to take U.S. Pro Indoor
R
1
4
7
3
31
P Pis
2
0
»
2
?
1
1
2
0
1
1
17 18
now." Penn head coach Tom Schneider said. "This was
an extremely disappointing loss for us "
The Quakers appeared to have Cornell (8-15, 5-7) under
control when senior guard Walt Fra/ier (game-high 23
points) and freshman guard John Pcttibone lit up the
perimeter in a 16-6 run that gave Penn a 57-48 lead with
7:21 to go. But then the Quakers went absolute zero cold,
and Ihc Big Red fought back with three three -pointers lo
lake a 62-59 lead.
Bin Penn center Hassan Duncombe tossed in a leaner to
CUl Ihc lead to 62-61, and then Cornell's Monte Boykin
iravelled. giving the Quakers the ball back with 56 seconds
left. After two timeouts, junior guard Tyrone Clilliams
missed an off-balance jumper, and the long rebound
started a Cornell fast break. < niard Shawn Maharaj finish
ed the break and was fouled by Clilliams in the process.
Maharaj, a freshman, eompleled the three-point play to
provide the winning margin.
"That was a huge free throw by Maharaj," Cornell
head coach Mike Dement said "That's a tough shot for a
freshman in the Palestra."
Ahh, the Palestra, the mighty Palestra
61
Field Goal Percent Cornell 42 6. PENN tj.1
Three-Point Field Goal Percent: Cornell 55 0 (Pascal
45, Maharai 35, Weiier 24, Home 1-1 Halpem 12
Johnson 0-1). PENN 46 2 (Frsner 5-9. Petebone 1-2.
McMahon 01. Simon 01) Free Throw Percent: Cor
net 55 7 PENN 35 7 Blocked Shote: Come! 5
(Jackson-2. Medina 2. McRael. PENN 4
(Duncombe-4| Keels: Cornel 7 |FJoykin-2. Med™-?
Psaca>2 Hatoern). PENN 6 (Duncombe-3 Marshall
Schewe. Walts, Turnovers: Cornel 13 IBmfirt*
We.ler-4 Hakjem-2 Jackson. Lincoln) PENN 10
(Frawjr-4 Ouncombe-2 Curran Marshal. Pembone
Walts). Teem Rebounds: Cornel 4. PENN 6
Harmme: PENN 29-2' Attendance: 3640
Hut somehow
Maharaj was nol impressed by the granite structure which
had sent 20 previous Big Red teams down to defeat
"My high school team (Norwalk, Ct.) played in ihc
siate championship last year before a few thousand fans,"
Maharaj said, "and earlier this year, we played (Syracuse)
in the Carrier Dome, and we played al Duke and Stanford
When you play there, those are great fans. Not to lake
anything away from the Palestra and the tradition, bin it's
not the same."
Penn looked tired and confused down the stretch of the
( orncll game, forcing shots and missing the front end of
four consecutive one-and-onc opportunities. For ihe
game. Ihe Quakers shot a miserable 35.7 percent from the
foul line.
"We missed a lot of one-and-ones down ihc stretch,"
Ciilliams said. "When you're playing a close game against
a good team, you have to convert."
Additionally, the Big Red scored many of their final
points off of second shots, which upsel Schneider greatly.
"The reason we lost this game was because of their offensive rebounds," Schneider said
What ihe Quakers did do ihroughout ihe weekend was
move ihe ball with great success. Penn was able lo go inside to Duncombe, who scored a game-high 18 points
against Columbia (7 17, 3-9) on eight-of nine shooting
and came back with 19 on Saturday. Duncombe was
helped Friday by the absence of the Lions' starting center
Dane Holmes, who bruised his shoulder last weekend
against Harvard. Freshman Darren DeWilde made his
first collegiate start in Holmes' absence, but Duncombe
held a 70-pound advantage over DeWilde and was easily
able lo establish position.
Against Cornell's 6-9, 258-pound Jackson. Duncombe
had a more equally-sized opponent, but he still controlled
the lane, pumping in seven of his nine first-half shots. But
in ihe second half. Duncombe could nol get his shots to
fall, and Cornell was able lo come back.
"Hassan has got lo be one of ihe premier players in the
Ivies," Jackson said.
On the defensive end, Duncombe received help from his
teammates, as Penn double teamed Jackson every time he
touched the ball. And while this may have limited Cor
nell's burly center to 13 points on four-of-12 shooting.
I.K kson called on his little-used passing ability to amass
four assists, mostly on three pointers taken by the man left
open by the double-team.
•
I'RKK THROWS - Despite the end of Penn's twodecade dominance over Cornell at the Palestra, the drama
of the weekend occurred in the sfends and the Quakers'
locker room.
Responding lo Clilliams'
absence from
the starting
lineup since missing the New York trip two weeks ago. the
crowd started chants of 'We want Tyrone' during both
games. When Schneider finally did insert Ciilliams, the
crowd went crazy, and each nighl when Ciilliams hit his
first shot, Ihe fans went delirious
"I thank God for the support I'm getting." Gilliams
said. "Il shows not only thai my teammates support me.
but also Ihe fans ."
Luckily for Gilliams, the fans recognize him by face,
because he and three of his teammates were forced to wear
different uniforms on Saturday night after their normal
shirts disappeared after the Columbia game and and were
presumed stolen. Simon. Gilliams. Ray Marshall and Ken
Graf all wore new numbers against Cornell. The shirts are
listed
as doubtful
for tomorrow
night's
home
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
DIVISION OF RECREATION & INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS
Recreation Class Registration
Fourth Session
FAIR
Monday, February 27
\
5>7 p.m.
Bodek LoungoVHouston Hall
Freshman ■ Ph.D.
Monday. February 27. 1989
Tuesday. February 28. 1989
12PM-4PM
12PM-4PM
Hutchinson Gym
Hutchinson Gym
AVAILABLE CLASSES:
Beginners Swim
Adv. Beginners Swim
Intermediate Swim
Speed Swimming
Beginners Squash (Evening Classes Only)
Int. Squash (Evening Classes Only)
Tennis (Beginners Only)
CPR
Gymnastics
Ballroom Dance
Self-Defense
Conditioning for High Level Fitness
STEVEN OPPEMHEIM
CHIEF EXECUTIVE PfiRTMER
OF
SPICER a OPPENHEIM
PRESENTS:
avisos
Cost Per Course:
$12.00
25.00
25.00
25.00
35.00
35.00
Penn Students
Penn Faculty/Staff
Penn Alumni
Penn Dependents
Affiliates
Community Residents
MUST HAVE I.D. VALIDATED WITH 88-89 RECREATION STICKER
TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 2«
VANCE HALL B-1
7:00 PM
For More Information Call:
Hutch Gym - 898-7452
•-,-*.
Gimbel Gym - 898-6101
game.
Sports
Page 14
The Dally Pannsytvanian
Monday, February 27, 1989
Penn on the edge of elimination
Ivy hopes
in jeopardy
after loss
Two different
center battles
mark games
By BARRN IH BROW
Right now, ever) center in the Ivy
League is being compared to Penn
sophomore Hassan Duncombe, who's
listed at 6-7, 250 pounds. Sometimes,
even Duncombe is being compared to
a 250-pound Duncombe.
With Columbia freshman 11
Holmes and Cornell sophomore Bernard Jackson coming to the Palestra
this weekend. Ivy fans were to be
treated to the confrontation of the
Ivies' young, explosive centers
Saturday, without a Penn Pride
game to attract students, fans still en
joyed a matchup worthy of the price
of admission. In the opening
By JAY SELIBER
Sound the retreat bells atop Irvine.
Run for cover in the Rathskellars.
Hide in the newly icfurbished exterior
of the C lass of 1920 Commons.
Because the fortresses are crumbling. The walls are being scaled. The
rest of the Ivy League is starting to
break through.
It was one thing when the Penn
basketball team lost to both Columbia
and Cornell in New York two weeks
IVY STANDINGS
Ivy Overall
Princeton
10-1
18-5
Dartmouth
8-4
15-9
PENN
7-4
11-12
Harvard
7-5
11-13
Cornell
5-7
8-15
Yale
5-7
10-16
Columbia
3-9
7-17
Brown
2-10
7-17
AtCourtskte
moments of the first half, Jackson
and Duncombe were pushing, bump
ing, grinding, grimacing and shoving
for position on both the offensive and
defensive ends.
Penn head coach Tom Schneider
and Cornell counterpart Mike Dement battled with each other over
substitutions. Each jockeyed to have
his horse in the game whenever the
others' was Both centers exited for
the first time at 11:1.1 of the first halt
and both appeared for the final run
with 5:45 to play in the second. In all,
Jackson played only one minute more
than Duncombe in the half (15-14)
and one minute more in the game
(31-30).
But while these two forces were in
the game, each team had different
strategies in trvin^ to stop them The
Quakers double-teamed Jackton,
while the Big Red allowed Jackson to
guard Duncombe one-on-one
Duncombe hit his first five shots ol
the night, en route to a first half in
which he scored 15 points and grabb
ed four rebounds — all defensive.
The 6-9, 258-pound Jackson, meanwhile, had entered the Palestra off of
an eye-opening 34-point. 19-rebound
performance last Saturday againsi
Dartmouth and its 7-1 center Waltei
Palmer Jackson did not disappoint
againsi Perm as he hauled down I
bounds to complement his 13 points
and four as-isis
Clearly what fans saw was the Ivies'
premier inside scorer (Duncombe)
Please we CENTERS, page II
INSIDE
The Penn women's
swimming learn finished
tied lor sixth out of 30
teams at the Eastern
Regionals Page 11.
The Penn wrestling team
pinned Princeton for its
first Ivy win of the
season Page 11
The Penn gymnastics
team scored well in its
loss to powerful Temple
PageH.
Weekend
Results
Friday Night's Games
Penn 68, Columbia 61
Princeton 65, Cornell 46
Yale 78, Dartmouth 61
Harvard 100, Brown 91. OT
Saturday Night's Games
Cornell 65, Penn 61
Princeton 78, Columbia 62
Dartmouth 71, Brown 67
Harvard 101, Yale 86
Suun WlM'Dady Pennsylvania!!
Penn's Hassan Duncombe is banged by Cornell's Monte Boykin (10) and Bernard Jackson as the ball (top rifjht) and the name not away.
B> AI.Et SCHWARI/
Ivy League universities experienced a 12 to 14
percent drop in total applications this year, and
Penn is no different according to the Admissions Office. But Penn also experienced a 25
percent drop in applications by recruited
athletes - almost double that of the total appli
cant pool.
"The admissions coding process, that is the
way they code athletes applications, is not complete." said Penn Associate Athletic Direcioi
Skip Jarocki. who serves as a liason between the
Admissions Office and the Athletic Department. "The numbers arc not final yet. and I expect 25 percent to be a little on the high side "
I ast year. 1400 of the 13,105 applications
came from recruited students. This year, just
over 1000 came from the pool of 11,100 applicants Jarocki, however, maintained that
recruiting is still going strong.
"Some of our older coaches are being more
selective." Jarocki said. "They are screening
athletes more carefully and suggesting that those
not qualified academically should not pursue
Penn.
"Also, the other Ivy institutions are taking a
more active role than ever before. They used tc
take on, what 1 would call, a laissez-faire attitude toward recrui.ing. Now more are going
out there."
The admissions office was unable to
breakdown the athlete applicants by the sports
they play and Penn head football coach. Ed
Zubrow, who almost annually has the largest
number of recruits did not know how many
football prospects are actually applying to
Penn.
"We don't measure the total number of applications." Zubrow said. "We have our top
prospects and those are the players we worry
about."
Zubrow did not wish to comment on other
schools' recruiting programs.
Jarocki also said (hat the high tuition and cost
of going to college is turning away several
athletes.
"It's expensive to go to Penn," Jarocki laid
Re-lax
"It costs $19,500 a year. Many students are considering these costs before they apply to schools.
"The application costs themselves are getting
expensive. Students are being more analytical.
They are no longer applying to several schools
and are ruling out the ones they don't think they
can get into."
Overall, Jarocki did not think Penn's
recruiting process has changed in any way and
attributed the drop purely to a declining population in the country's high schools.
"There is a decline of 17 percent in high
sdiool seniors this year." Jarocki said. "That
alone is going to reduce the number of athletes
who apply."
M. Squash gets fourth at
National Championships
By JOHN Dl PAOLO
Did you ever have a feeling of dejavu?
The Penn men's squash team sure
might have. In fact, the Quakers may
have had recurring nightmares after
their experiences in the Intercollegiate
Squash National Nine-man Team
Championships at Yale this weekend.
For the Penn men's squash team
found itself suffering its second 5-4
loss to Princeton and its second 6-3
loss to Harvard this season.
The first defeat to the Tigers came
18 days ago at Princeton. With that
defeat, the Quakers were
mathematically eliminated from the
regular season nine-man National
Championships.
Last Saturday, Princeton (8-3
overall, 3-1 Ivy League) inflicted
greater damage as the Tigers
eliminated Penn (9-4, 2-3) again, this
time in the quarterfinals of the ISA
tourney. The loss ended the Quakers'
dream of being the number-one team
in the country — that honor was
reserved for Yale (14-1) as the tlis
trounced Princeton. 7-2. for the second time this season.
W. Basketball
Columbia 74. PENN 69
PENN 68. Cornell 57
M. Feectat
PENN 19. Duke 8
PENN 18. Rutgers 9
W. r'cackat
PENN 9. Tempi* 7
PENN II. Rutgers 5
PENN 15, Duke I
Gyataartttt
Temple 181.1. PENN 175.55
W.:
Tied for 6th place
EISL OtampkMMliipt
M Track
9th place
Heptagon*! Championships
Wrealktf
PENN 22, Princeton 19
Please see BRINK, page 13
Athletes' applications down 25 percent
M Backet baN
PfiNN 68, Columbia 61
Cornell 65, PENN 61
W. Track
4th place
Hepiagonal Championship*
ago. That had happened as recently as
1985-86. Because even though those
two losses put the Quakers two games
behind Princeton in the Ivy race, they
were returning to the guarded walls of
the Palestra for five consecutive
games.
The Palestra, the holy of holies in
the Ivy League. The Palestra, where
Penn had gone 21-4 in league games
over the past four years. The Palestra,
where a banner naming the Quakers'
26 Ivy championships hangs from the
rafters.
And most importantly, the
Palestra, where neither Cornell nor
Columbia had been able to walk off
the fabled floor with a victory for 21
years.
But on Saturday night, the Big Red
finally solved the mystcrv of Penn's
The Penn men's lacrosse team opened its 1989 season Saturday at Franklin Field with
scrimmages against Hofstra and Franklin & Marshall. The Quakers, who reached the
Final Four before losing to Syracuse. 11-10, last year, beat Hofstra, 14-10, and F& M, 9-5.
Deja-vu.
In the consolation match held
yesterday, the Quakers had a chance
to be number three in the nation as
they went up against Harvard.
But after losing, the feeling of being
i^"?»=1-3&:]Mij
number four did not sit well with
Penn. Especially after the Quakers
felt they could have been number one.
"We thought we had a chance to
get the title," Penn head coach Al
Molloy said in a telephone conversation Saturday night.
The first time Penn lost to
Princeton was because of the
Quakers' sloppy play. This
weekend
deja-vu. Penn's only
bright spots were the performances of
second-seed Stewart Italian! and
seventh-seed Scott Lasner, as each
reversed a defeat against the Tigers in
the regular season into a victory on
Saturday. Quakers' first-seed Rudy
Rodriguez, the national champion,
won all three of his matches. But
that's becoming a given.
"It was almost a carbon copy of
last time," Molloy said.
One contributing factor to Penn's
loss may have been the energy the
Quakers expended in its 5-4 victory
over the University of Western Ontario (Canada) Saturday morning in
the first round. The completion of all
the matches required almost an hour
more than expected and gave Penn
only a short time to rest before the
Quakers had to face a well-rested
Princeton team, which had destroyed
Cornell in the first round.
nuliBG
Please see NATIONALS, page 13
© Copyright 2026 Paperzz