1 - Penn Libraries - University of Pennsylvania

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1 - Penn Libraries - University of Pennsylvania
Good Game
Inside
Goode
Mayor Wilson Goode
spent Friday night in
HUP Page 2.
Campua Evanta Listing*
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National & International N«wa
National Sporta
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The football team edged Bucknell, 25-24, Saturday when a Bison kicker missed a lastminute field goal Back Page
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PHILADELPHIA. Monday. October 23.1989
Vol. CV, No. 92
Prof: Tenure report
gives partial picture
©Copyright IBM Tha Daily Pennsylvania!!
Hill
officials
to check
security
Green Thumbs
Another cause of the low numbers
By AMY SILVERMAN
Faculty members last week criti- of female faculty, according to a secized a recent report which indi- parate study compiled by the procates that nearly equal percentages vost's office of faculty hires between
of male and female faculty received 1982 and 1987, is the failure of many
timely tenure last year, saying that University departments to hire the
amount of female, tenure-tracked
the report is misleading.
The report, released last week by assistant professors that would corProvost Michael Aiken. states that respond to national pools of availduring the past nine years 50 per- able doctorates.
According to the study, the Wharcent of the female faculty members
who were reviewed after their sixth ton and Medical Schools, and speyear at the University received te- cific departments in the School of
nure, compared to 53 percent of Arts and Sciences — including Economics, Mathematics and Psycholmale tenure candidates.
However, professors said, the fig- ogy — hired a disproportionate
ures do not represent all male fa- amount of male faculty members in
culty who receive tenure — exclud- the years examined by the study.
Faculty Senate Chairperson
ing those with tenure from other
universities who are hired by the Robert Davies said that while the
University and those who are given numbers of female faculty members
early reviews. Microbiology Profes- have improved over the years, the
sor Helen Davies said last week that University has room for improveboth of those groups include many ment in hiring women.
"One can hardly claim this to be
more men than women.
"[The report] is actually a small satisfactory until the distribution [of
the
faculty) reflects the distribution
part of a big picture." Davies said.
"We need the big picture in order to of people," Davies said yesterday.
see whether there is a changing
Please see TENURE, page 5
mix"
of hopeful projects to be included in the center — including all-purpose Penncards to buy
anything sold there, roof-top tennis courts
and running tracks, and even bridges linking
the new building to numerous locations including Van Pelt Library and Gimbel Gym.
"We have had no shame or limits in our
vision," said committee member Mohamcd
Saadi-Elmandjra, chairperson of the Graduate and Professional Students Assembly.
grappling with the tensions between their
wishes and money and space constraints.
Several administrative offices and Student
Activities Council groups, along with members of the Performing Arts Council and The
Daily Pennsylvanian have made proposals to
the committee for the non-retail spaces.
While the committee has considered a
number of groups, most participants in the
planning process said that student needs for
such a center are the greatest, and the bulk of
By MARGARET McCOMISH
Hill House officials will meet with
desk workers this week to discuss
security in the dormitory following
the discovery of an intruder and
several thefts in the building last
Thursday.
Faculty Master Robert Lucid said
last night that senior administrative
fellow Maria Elena Viera-Branco
and desk manager Cathy Kelly will
meet with the residence's desk
workers to discuss the incidents.
The Hill administrators have requested pictures of the trespasser,
identified after his arrest as George
Cannon, to see if any of the workers
saw him enter the building.
Lucid said last night that security
officials will consider how Cannon
gained entrance to the dorm. He
said that rumors have circulated
that Cannon had identification as a
University maintenance worker, or
that he simply posed as a worker to
gain entrance.
"Our job is to find out if there is
something the matter with our security system and fix it if that is the
case," Lucid said last night
While professional security
guards work at electronic card
check machines in most dorms,
there were two student desk workers in Hill at the time of the intrusion. Hill House does not yet have
an electronic card checking system.
Both Lucid and graduate fellow
Amanda Banks said that Hill House
had always been considered one of
the safer dorms on campus.
Cannon was apprehended around
8 p.m Thursday in Hill House after
being pursued by both residents
and campus police.
Hill House residents reported
four stolen wallets Thursday morning and two that evening. Cannon is
a suspect in the thefts, according to
police.
Police said they do not know how
long Cannon had been in the building before he was apprehended, or if
he had gained entrance earlier in
the day and returned at night
Philadelphia Police Detective Michael Roche said last night that
Cannon was arrested on the 3400
block of Lancaster Avenue three
days before the Hill House arrest,
and was subsequently released.
Cannon was charged with theft,
burglary, criminal trespassing and
possession of stolen property.
In addition to last Thursday's
This week the committee will move from
its wish list to actual decisions and priorities,
Please see FOCUS, page 3
Please see HILL HOUSE, page 7
U.'s newest sorority
starts interviewing
By SU-UN CHENG
Representatives from the Alpha
Chi Omega sorority will be on campus today and tomorrow recruiting
upperclassmen to join the University's eighth sorority.
The last three years have marked
an explosive growth in the University's sorority system. The Kappa
Alpha Theta and Alpha Phi sororities colonized over that period and
some of the five already established
sororities grew by more than 50
percent
Prospective Alpha Chi members
will undergo a whirlwind four-day
rush, with interviews today and tomorrow culminating in a formal
pledging ceremony Thursday, when
the sorority will become an official
colony. The sorority is expected to
become an official chapter next
April.
Alpha Chi originally opened a
chapter at the University in 1919,
but had to close in 1969 due to low
membership.
Colonizations of sororities are
usually shorter than the traditional
rush periods for established sororities, primarily because the rush is
conducted by national advisers who
come from all parts of the country
and cannot spend extended periods
of time at the University.
Alpha Chi Rush Adviser Andrea
Dobin, a third-year Law student,
said the short rush period does not
Alaona Uaolock/DP Staff Prv-s-graoher
Area residents, including this young concerned citizen, planted bulbs at the subwaysurface stop at 40th and Baltimore streets Saturday. The event, sponsored by "Philadelphia Green," was part of a project to beautify West Philadelphia.
Please see ALPHA CHI, page 7
Committee composes "wish list" for campus center
By LAUREN SHAHAM
and LYNN WESTWATER
If Intramural Recreation Sports Director
Robert Glascott has his way, students may
soon be chasing errant tennis balls across
the roof of the campus center.
Glascott's proposed rooftop tennis courts
and jogging track are only two of the myriad
of ideas currently under consideration by the
committee planning the new campus center.
The building, which will be called the Revlon Center in honor of a $10 million seed gift
from the cosmetics company's chairperson,
Ronald Perelman, is expected to be completed in 1992 or 1993.
The committee, whose members have
been meeting weekly at 7:30 a.m., is striving
to create a student center atmosphere that
will shift the focus of campus life from Locust
Walk to Walnut Street by designing a building
that will attract everybody at the University.
The center is likely to include food services, The Book Store, study and computer
lounges, retail areas, recreation facilities and
performing arts and office space.
Committee members also have "wish lists"
Influx of students and staffers
boosts Int'l Relations program
By REBECCA GOLDSTEIN
After nearly tripling in size in the
last two years, a transfusion of new
students and staff has reinvigorated
the long-ignored International Relations program.
As part of the new emphasis, the
inter-disciplinary program has instituted new curriculum requirements
and added its first permanent faculty and staff members.
Additionally, after spending last
year housed within the Political Science Department in Stiteler Hall,
the program has finally settled into
permanent headquarters in 206 Logan Hall. The new offices offer most
of the amenities of a full department, including a student lounge, a
library and a full-time administrative assistant.
But what International Relations
officials arc most excited about is
the influx of students. The department boasts 175 majors this year —
up from 60 two years ago.
International Relations Chairperson Walter McDougall and newly-
Attorney for
class-action
suit addresses
grad students
appointed Associate Director Frank
Plantan are leading this push, attempting to rescue a program which
previously suffered from disorganization and poor reputation.
Plantan, among other things, is
responsible for major advising, a job
previously filled part-time by graduate students. International Relations Association President James
Markley said recently that the addi
tion of Plantan as a full-time adviser
Please see PROGRAM, page 2
College Green thieves keep flag issue hot
By MARGARET McCOMISH
Someone decided to keep the American flag a burning hot topic on campus this weekend, pilfering the flag
that normally Dies above College Green.
According to Public Safety, the cord securing the flag
was cut allowing the flag to fall to the ground.
The flag, which is ordinarily raised and lowered daily,
had not been taken down for "awhile," according to
Sergeant Ivan Kimblc, because the cord was twisted.
Kimble said that the flag had remained raised for at
least a week
A witness called Public Safety after he saw two males
with the flag on College Green early Saturday morning.
There are no suspects in the case, according to Public
Safety.
A new flag will be raised on College Green as soon as
Physical Plant realligns the pole, campus police said,
adding that they have not uncovered a motive for the
theft.
Molecular Biology Professor Robert Davies said last
night that although he was not aware of the theft, he
notified a Public Safety officer several weeks ago that
Please see FLAG, page 5
Wka Rocaofl/DP Sana PhoUgrapnaf
Steven Kramer, the lawyer in an antitrust suit against
the University, addresses graduate students yesterday.
By LAUREN SHAHAM
The lawyer involved with the class-action
suit alleging price-fixing by 12 major universities urged graduate students yesterday to
research whether those schools are colluding on graduate student tuition.
Saying he was interested in filing a parallel lawsuit on behalf of graduate students,
New York attorney Steven Kramer told an
audience of approximately 15 people at an
open forum that he is seeking plaintiffs for a
graduate student case.
Kramer is representing a Wesleyan University senior who filed a class-action suit
against the 12 Overlap Group universities
that meet to set financial aid packages for
students who are admitted to more than one
school.
Kramer spoke briefly and then responded
to the students, who fired hypothetical situations about the case's possible implications
from their seats around a U-shaped table in
Please see LAWYER, page 7
Page 2 The Daily Pennsylvania!!
Monday, October 23,1989
Mayor gets clean bill of health
after tests on his heart at HUP
CAMPUS EVENTS are ksleC daily
aa a pax) public service ol the
Utwersity of Panrtaywama. and are
adrrwialered lor the Unrverity by
The Carry Pennsyfravxeyi Thete Is
no charge to authorized University
aftMed groups lor lietlngeol FREE
events Latino* may Be manad o:
placed in person a! The Carry Pm
•yrVamen Bunneas Omce. 401S
Walnm Street. Irom 9 a.m. u 5 pm
Monday through Friday Campus
Events wM noi be accepled by
phone 25 won) lent Oaadane: 3
p.m. two business days m advance Thm CM, Pennsyrvanien
reserves the righl B edrt Campus
Evenls according lo space
TODAY
Wednesdays. 6pm. Fridays
6 30pm. SI Mary's Parish House
3916 Locusi Walk- Whan Too Much
is noi enough.
CAMPUS CENTER OPEN MEET
NQS Monday, 10/23. 7 00pm and
10/26. Noon 110 Annenberg
School Coma share your ideas
*
>■ somnrinti
CHINESE YOUTH GOODWILL
MISSION, irom Taiwan, traditional
performing ans. October 23rd.
Monday. 7pm. Irvine Auditorium.
34th and Walnui Admission $2 00
mlormation 222-2204
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION testimony meeting tonight
at 7 00 m the third floor chapel ol the
Chnstian Association. All are welcome Questions'* 243-4350
CHRONIC DIETERS who want to
examine their lifestyle. ABA provides a forum It s not |ust a national
obsession. It s your LIFE Mondays
7pm Houston 115.
FOR AXOmoga HRMr in at the
Office ot Fratstntjy and Soronty Affair*. For infoftnatiom. 896 5263.
Spohomore and Junior women
only.
THERE WILL BE A MEETING of
The Peon College Republicans today in The Ben Franklin Room of
Houtton Hall at 9:30.
WEST PHILADELPHIA Tutoring
Project 3»d training session Mon
day October 23. 6 30 Meyerson
B 3. Can 896-4276 lor detail
WOM KB AUIANCE MEE1 NO
Monday 7 30/Van Pert domMlory
Room 305 3909 Spruce Street All
welcome — pro-cftotce. literary magazine, social, arts events Get ■>
vorvad' Questions 896 8611
TOMORRO
AAP.ON *ME ADVERTISING
AARDVARK advises all aspiring
applicants to attend an Event Horizon Science Fiction Club meeting
9 00pm. Houston Hall Bishop
White room All allowed.
ACELA (ASOCIACION Cultural de
Esiudiantes Latino Americanos)
cordially invites you to our genert
meetings Tuesday October 24 at
7pm at the Greenfield mterculturai
Center (3708 Chestnut) En la union
eeta la hierza!
AIKIDO SELF—DEFENSE Coordination of mind and body Tues..
Weds. Thurs,. 6-7 30 Hutch Gym
Basement. Strength or size not required Wear sweat*, ortng a Irtendl
ALAN MORRISON (Curtis InsuuM
ol Muse) performs a rootaJ at The
Curtis Organ. Tues 12-12:30pm m
Irvine Free. Bring lunch. Compl.
lea a coflee 898-2848
HELP THE LADIES of Alpha Kappa
Alpha soronty. incorporated, save
hves1 Please give Wood on Monday. 10/23/89. in Low Rise North
Irom 12:30 to 5:00pm.
LADY MATHILDE EXCHENBACH.
Companion of the Salamander.
teaches SCA dancing on Tuesday
7 30-1000 m the High Rise East
dance gallery No experience
necessary Alexandra 222-8138
LEARN TO READ MINDS-No not
ealfy. just a class in old lashloned
Jewish mysticism. On-going
weekly class. Monday 7pm at Lubavitch 4032 Spruce. 222-3130.
PARIS- REGISTER BY PHONE'
Find out how on Tuesday Oct 24 at
7 8. c*9pm. Annenberg Room 111.
For Fraternity and Sorority
LISTEN TO THE compeHing testi
THE NATIONAL SECURITY
mony of two Salvadorian Refu
Agency will be holding an informagees, and learn about current deve- tion and recruiting session (or Comopments m The Repopuiation puter Analysts Engineers Mathemovement 7 30 Tonight. Christian maticians and Linguistics on Tues.
Association Sponsored by Oct 24 at 4 00pm Towne Buttng
Penncasa.
fUurnri H.n
PARIS- LEARN HOW to Register
lor class by phone. Student mfo
session 10/23 Sessions begin at 4
7. 6. and 9pm Hill House Library
OFFICIAL
PSl CHI— Psychology Honor
Society Applications available m
room 104. Psychology Otfice
Bldg.3815 Walnut St Deadline
Oct 31.
PSVCHOLOGE
OEPT
Colloquium Monday. October 23.
Elrssa Newport. University of Rochester. Acquisaon ol language.
4 00 B26. Stiteler Hall
QUESTIONS ABOUT Soronty
rush? Meet the Greeks. Soronty
rush information session Freshmen only. Monday October 23. Proosl Tower Quad 7 30 9:30pm
SENIORS' SCHEOULE PORTRAIT sittings lor The Record this
tweek and next week Appointments
pan be made m Smith Penmman
Houston Hal
A' ■•EARNE'- NK Management
consulting, will be holding an information and recruiting reception for
the Research Associate Positions
on Wed Oct. 25 at 4 00pm m Penn
Tower Penn Room
ATTENTION SAS SOPHMORES
Need help choosing a major?
Workshop: October 24 or 31.6 30
Register with the recaption*, in the
College Office iQO Logan Hall
BAIN COMPANY Management
Consulting will be holding an in
formtton and recruiting reception
for Associate Consultant positions
on Tues. Oct 24 at 7pm in the Facutty Club AJumni H—.
CAREERS -90 JOB FAIR in NY wil
be held January 9 & 10
Send
resume by Nov. 23. See Fre*da at
CPPS for details
CARO FOUNDATION will De hwd
mg an information and recruiting
season lor its Fellows Program in
Public Affairs Tuesday Oct 24th at
I Qpfll .- HOUMDfl Ki Room 904
PAINE WEBBER Mundpaf Invest
ment Banking (NY) will be holding
an mlormation and recruiting reception lor their analyst program on
Mon Oct 23 at 7 00pm in SH/DH
215
CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL OF PNladelphaa is looking for volunteers
to spend time with children in the
outpatient oncology clinic. Dsttfls.
see Career Planning books
Modical Health *
PHILADELPHIA MAGAZINE seek]
pan-time Editorial Intern Duties in
elude research, some writing, and
working with editors Details: see
Career Planning and Placement
books under "Journalism *
CPPS. DUKE UNIVERSITY
School of Law will recruit on campus Tuesday. October 24 Advance
signups required. See Sue. Sufce
20 lower-level McNeil Building.
PRUDENTIAL INVESTMENT Corporation Investment Service (NY)
will be holding an information and
recruiting reception for its PACE
Program on Tues October 24 al
6:00pm. Sheraton Hotel Umv
Suites
CPPS RUTGERS LAW SchoolNewark will recruit on campus
Wednesday. October 25 Advance
signups required See Sue. Surte
20 tower level McNeil Building
ROHM AND HAAS Company will
be holding an information and re
cruiting reception tor Accounting
Positions on Tues. Oct 24 at
6:00pm in tne Faculty Club Rms
142
CPPS SAINT JOSEPHS University MBA Program wil recruit on
campus Thursday. October 26 Advance sign-ups required See Sue.
Suite 20. lower-level McNeil
Buldtng.
____^^_
SKEDDER ARPS SLATE Meager
& Flom will be holding an tnformatio
snd recruiting session lor legs' m
tern positions on Wednesday, Oc
lober 25. at 7 pm n Vance Hall
106/109
CPPS: SANTA CLARE UnrvanWy
School of Law will recruit on campus Thursday. October 26. Advance sign-ups required See Sue.
Suite 20. lower-level. McNeil
Building.
SUMMER JOBS IN Bntain. 1990.
representative from BUNAC on
campus Monday. October 23 Pick
up info to am to 3 pm. Bodek
Lounge, HH Group presentation 4
pm. Pennwnan Audrtonum. Bennett
Hall
CPPS THE UNITED STATES Air
Force Medical School Schokxship
Program will recruit on campus
Tuesday. Oct 31st Advanced
sign-ups required. See Sue. Suite
20. Lower-level McNet
THE CLEVELAND PLAIN
DEALER offers summer reporter
internships lor juniors/seniors.
Must have excellent English skills
and wnting ability. Deadline Dec 1
sea CPPS books under
"Journalism."
CPPS THE WASHINGTON Col
tege of Law (American University)
will recruit on campus Fnday. October 27 Advance sign-ups required See Sue. Suite 20. lowerlevel McNeil Building
CPPS UNIVERSITY OF Florida
College of Law wil recruit on campus Thursday. October 26 Advance signups required See Sue.
Suite 20. lower-level McNeil
Building.
CPPS VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY School of Law will recruit on
campus Fnday. October 27 Advance sign-ups required See Sur.
Suite 20 lower-level McNeil
Budding.
FORD FOUNDATION oilers internships overseas and In New York
City for graduate students Application and writing sample required.
Deadline Dec 12 See CPPS
books; "Foreign Affairs"
GOLDMAN SACHS A CO will be
holding an information and recruiting reception for financial analyst
positions on Wed. Oct. 25 at
7 30pm m Houston Hail Bodek
Lounge
THE CLOROX COMPANY will be
holding an information and recruiting reception for its Finance and
Accounting Development Program
on Wed. Oct 25 at 4:00pm in Vance
Hal) B 89
THE FIRST BOSTON Corporation
investment Banking (NY) will be
holding an information and recruiting reception on Monday October
23 at 7.00pm in the Palladium
US GENERAL ACCOUNTING Of
lice w* be holding an information
and recruiting session for entry
level evakiators on Tues Oct 24 at
4.00pm in Houston Hall Bowl
Room.
WPEN AM WMGK FM: offers internships m a vanety of broadcast
mg fields lor juniors or seniors Details: Career Planning and Place
ment
books
under
■communications."
INTERNSHIPS IN JOURNALISM
AND COMMUNICATIONSStudents discuss their internship
experiences last summer including
edArvjpholography.and TV production Mooday.Oct 23. 7pm. Ben
Franklin. H.H. Al welcome'
Go against the grain.
Cut down on sail.
Mayor Wilson Goode
Bali \iscd from hospital
slightly elevated.
"(The echocardiogram] demonstrated an abnormal alignment of
PROGRAM, from page 1
marks "a big step up" for students.
"There has always been sort of a
stigma because we were considered
to be second-class students because
we had no faculty advising and the
office space was really limited,"
Markley said. "There has always
been a great interest in LR, but the
program used to scare people off because of the lack of availability of
staff and the lack of advising."
Although majors are generally
pleased with the changes in the
program, they have targeted increased student interaction and
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support as a problem that still
needs to be ironed out
"IR students feel they never really get to know other IR students,
it's not the most cohesive when
compared to the more traditional
majors," said Markley.
McDougall said that the office
space provides an atmosphere
more conducive to student interaction and provides students with a
better sense of the validity of the
program.
"We have nice suite of offices so
that we can give students the home
they need," McDougall said. "Students need to know that they are not
going to a rinky-dink major but that
this is a class operation."
International Relations major Peter Bartlett called the new program
changes "encouraging".
"The offices used to be like a mailbox inside the McNeil Building that
you chased around and never knew
where it was," the College senior
said last week.
In addition, the new curriculum
changes this semester require students to fulfill a rigid set of core
courses yet also allow for individual
academic interests, Plantan said
last week.
"In the major we went from kind
of a Chinese menu which fed the criticisms that programs like International Relations are lacking in discipline," Plantan said. "There needs
to be a solid set of prerequisites and
core courses. With the changes, the
curriculum is more manageable
and provides a basis for students to
develop a concentration."
As for future projects, program directors have also targeted the se-
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WE'RE NOT IN
JITON HALL ANVMOAC
nidi seminars which employ graduate students, rather than faculty
members.
But College senior Thomas Jones
and other program majors said the
lack of professors leading the senior
seminars is not a hinderance to his
studies.
"By your fourth year, you should
have a couple professors that can
help you out," the International Relations major said. "You're a senior
you should have as much autonomy
as possible."
However, next fall the senior
seminar will be revised in order to
include more "guided research"
and increased faculty-student interaction, Plantan said. Students will
study international relations theory
and mathematical approaches and
then choose a faculty member to
help guide an individual research
project
According to the Plantan, both he
and McDougall as well as two teaching assistants are slated to lead the
seminars which would cut the current class size of about 25 in half.
College junior Kristine Butler,
who works in the program's office,
said the new facilities and improvements are encouraging to majors.
"When I was a freshman. I was
thinking about majoring in IR but I
was not happy with the curriculum
and didn't want to commit to the
major because didn't fit my needs,"
Butler said last week- "But now IR
is trying to be more inclusive and
more flexible in offering a lot of options with the curriculum
Quotation of the Day
'I only climb the flag pole when
I am asked by a University
official.'
— Microbiology Professor
Robert Davies, 70, on why he
will not repeat his 1969 feat of
climbing the College Green
pole to replace the rope.
Assistant Editors
MATT KLINE
BRKNT MITCHELL
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Corrections and
Clarifications
1 • Ha iiianttxi ol The Daly Pannaylvanlan thai aa naws reports be lair and
cored In every respect If you have a
comment or question about the lameae or
accuracy ol a story. ~J* Matthew H*.
Associate Edtor. at «8»«SSS between 4
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The
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'
one of his coronary arteries — it
was shifted to the left," Whereat
said on Saturday. "Arteries that originate in an unusal location sometimes are associated with disease or
lesions in the coronary artery."
Last Monday, Goode had returned to HUP for a magnetic resonance imaging test on his heart,
which, according to Whereat,
"showed the same thing the echo
did."
Early Friday, Goode was rushed
to Lankcnau Hospital after complaining of general discomfort He
was transferred to HUP where he
underwent the cardiac catheterization and was kept for observation
until Saturday morning.
Whereat -speculated that Goode
might have made the decision to go
to the hospital Friday with the
knowledge of the earlier test results
"fresh in his mind".
"I feel fine," Goode said to reporters as he exited HUP with his wife
Camille Saturday morning.
Int'l Relations reinvigorated by new blood
5923 Walnut St
MARAKER ASSOCIATES. MANAGEMENT consulting, will be holding an mlormation and recrurtmg
reception tor Analyst positions on
Wednesday. October 25 al 4 30 pm
•si SH/DH 351.
NINA ZUCKER ASSOCIATES
public relations firm in convenient
suburb seeks part-time intern during school year Exceient p r experience Details CPPS books
under 'Communications"
By STEVEN OCHS
Mayor Wilson Goode is expected
lo return to work today after being
released from the Hospital of the
University of Pennsylvania
Saturday.
Goode underwent a cardiac
catheterization at HUP on Friday to
ensure that his discomfort was not
caused by a heart attack or other
cardiac problems.
Speaking to reporters on Saturday morning, HUP Cardiologist Arthur Whereat said Goode was in excellent health, and attributed the
discomfort the mayor had experienced in his head and neck to
sinusitis.
"I told him he can play basketball
if he wants to." Whereat said. "He
did not have chest pains. That was
misinformation."
In August, Whereat had performed an echocardiogram on
Goode as a "routine screening procedure" after a physical had shown
that the mayor's blood pressure was
M
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Monday, October 23.1989 The Daily Pennsylvania!! Page 3
Focus
Creating the campus center
FOCUS, from page 1
ideas emphasize student interests.
The Student Activities Council
submitted a sketch for the office
space which proposes a large room
with several carrels and mail boxes
for all SAC groups. In addition, the
proposal requests offices for SAC's
Steering and Finance Committees
adjacent to the Office of Student
Life.
SAC Chairperson Anne Marie
Burgoyne said the set-up would enable her group to invest in audiovisual equipment and tables and
chairs that all SAC groups could
use.
Undergraduate Assembly Chairperson Benjy Karsch, who serves on
the campus center committee, said
that he envisions a wing of flexible
student offices so that the center's
governing board could periodically
reallocate space as groups' needs
change.
Performing arts groups are also
expected to benefit from the center,
auditorium, Bloomers President
Debbie Novick said last week. However, an Annenberg Center consultant recommended this summer in
a confidential report that the campus center include at least two
250 person theaters, and representatives of performing groups have
agreed with that figure.
•
But as the title "campus center"
suggests, the facility will service
many varied segments of the University. Vice Provost for University
Life Kim Morrisson said that while
students will be its "chief users,"
the committee wants to include faculty as well in order to increase
professors' interaction with
students.
The Faculty Senate will meet next
week with Revlon Center committee co-chairpersons Morrisson and
Stephen Gale, a Regional Science
associate professor, to discuss faculty needs — including meeting
space. Administrative offices such
'It's time for us to look and talk
big and just see what happens.
There's so much here that could
be done in this two-block area?
Robert Glascott
Intramural Recreation Sports Director
TV|l1l|»Hii'|l|l|lll|lll|lll|lll|'
rTJ llipl 11II1111 ■ | II ■ V <
as performance space has been
seen as a key component of the center since Perelman's gift was announced. Currently, groups must
jockey for the small number of available campus theaters and have to
perform two shows per night over
several weekends because most
theaters do not hold enough people.
The Performing Arts Council
asked for a 250-500 person capacity
as the Penn Children's Center,
Penntrex and the host of studentrelated offices currently located in
Houston Hall are expected to move
there.
In addition to balancing space allocations between students and
other interests, committee members say they hope the center will
also will balance retail and non
retail spaces so that the facility will
be financially self-sufficient and attract a variety of people to the
building.
While an expanded version of The J
Book Store — the only retailer
named so far as a likely candidate
for the center — will generate most
of the center's profits, the committee also wants retailers who will not
overlap with the Shops at Penn
Planning for the center also includes replacing the current
400-space parking lot on the site, at
the 3600 block of Walnut Street,
where the building will be constructed. The lot is used by playgoers at the Annenberg Center By BRENT MITCHELL
across the street.
Members of the campus center
committee have resigned themAnother of the center's attrac- selves to the fact that they may
tions will be food — members are never have enough time or money
considering possibilities ranging to plan the perfect campus center,
from a food court to a sit-down but they say they are always lookrestaurant.
ing for a few good ideas.
However, students and adminiToday the committee will hold
strators are at odds over the role of its first open forum to hear from
Dining Service. Several student people interested in the center, folmembers oppose Dining Services lowing up a relentless quest for
Director William Canney's proposal suggestions and inspirations
for a 60-seat restaurant for students which has led them through doon meal plan, because it would ex- zens of early-moming interviews,
clude many others.
hundreds of questionnaires and
In addition to the proposed re- four states.
staurant. Hospitality Services DiDuring the year-long process,
rector Donald Jacobs said he envi- the committee has collected inforsions many types of food vendors mation about every facet of a camforming "very trendy, retail pus center, from architecture to
shopping-mall type of operation." programming. They talked to UniFaculty Club managers said that versity affiliates, hired a planning
the club will not be included.
consultant and shot videotape at a
And while Intramural Recreation dozen different facilities
Committee Co-chairperson SteSports Director Robert Glascott admitted the rooftop facilities are out- phen Gale said yesterday that allandish, he advocated considering though the efforts have not always
been fun, all of them — even the
even ambitious options.
visit to Georgia during the sum"It doesn't hurt to think big," mer have paid dividends.
Glascott said last week, summing
The committee's informationup the thinking on the campus cen- gathering efforts were broken into
ter thus far. "It's time for us to look three phases: interviewing camand talk big and just see what hap- pus factions interested in the facilpens. There's so much here that ity, visiting other campuses and
could be done in this two-block asking for broad-based University
input.
CAMPUS
Meet Members of our Technical Staff
Recruiting Dates:
Radar Measurements
Communications
Signal Processing
Optics and Lasers
Microelectronics
Planning process as extensive as
proposed Revlon Center itself
for
delivery
222-1360
To accomplish the first two objectives, committee members
have discussed proposals with students, administrators, faculty
members and local merchants
during their weekly meetings, and
have travelled in New York, Georgia, Texas and North Carolina.
In the coming weeks, the com
mittee will create a plan for the
campus center, deciding what will
be included in the facility and how
the building should be designed.
This plan will be submitted to
President Sheldon Hackney at the
end of the year and must eventually be approved by the Trustees
The trips, which included Emory, Duke, Southern Methodist
and Cornell universities, provided
the committee with insights which
could never be gained from photographs or interviews, according to
Student Life Activities Director
Francine Walker who is providing
staff support.
Walker noted the center at the
University of Rochester designed
by noted architect I. M. Pei, which,
although visually striking, has
proven extremely difficult to use.
She said the building's triangular rooms have presented obstacles to its staff, and seeing both
that type of problem and the architectural successes in other
buildings were a lesson for commitee members, according to com-
mittee Co-Chairperson Kim
Morrisson.
"You have to see it [a center]
and the environment it creates in
order to see how people use it,"
said Morrisson, the vice provost
for University life.
At each stop, the committee
took approximately 200 photographs and shot videotape so they
could review the sites during
meetings, according to Gale. Trips
were organized during the summer and each included different
members.
Today's open forum and a second meeting Thursday at noon,
which will both be held in Annenberg School Room 110, are designed to augment the questionnaires which were given to student
groups and distributed to indivi
dual students, according to
Walker
The student life administrator
said the committee wants to use
the general community's input as
a way to identify the campus'
needs. Morrisson said that although the committee plans to
make decisions this week, she is
still interested in hearing from
anyone who has ideas.
"We want to give serious consideration to all these proposals''
Morrisson said, adding "we can try
to make sense of it all."
38th &
walnut
R)or
Richard
October 30
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Tin-Daily Pennsylvania!!
Monday,October23,1989
In Brief
ICA gives Warhol hat workshop
Med. student wins research award
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Law School Identifier
Acceptability Analysis
A University Medical School student recently won
a national award for his research on Alzheimer's
Disease.
The American Society of Clinical Pathologists will
present third-year Medical School student Robert
Stem with the Sheard Sanford Award on October 31.
The award is given annually to two medical students
for outstanding achievements in pathology research.
Stem was selected based on a paper he submitted detailing antibody research conducted over the past two
years, according to ASCP spokesperson Debbie
Walsh.
Stem said he found similarities between proteins
found in the brains of Alzheimer's patients and those
of normal patients.
"It's a really fast moving area," Stern said. "And it's
nice to have a national group recognize your work
and tell you you're doing a good job."
His paper will also be published in the American
Journal of Pathology.
— Sara Barth
O
American Heart
Association
ROHM
1HPRS
A Multinational Leader in the Specialty Chemicals Industry
presents
About 60 area children brandished rubber grapes,
quarter-sized mirrors, crepe roses and chocolatechunk cookies during the "Hats Off to Warhol" family
workshop at the Institute of Contemporary Art this
weekend.
During the workshop, held in conjunction with the
opening of the ICA's Warhol exhibit, ICA workers en
couraged children to make hats that showed their
personality.
"You have to decide what kind of hat you re going to
make." Workshop Coordinator Bill Adair told the
group. "The hat you wear tells a lot about you."
Adair asked them to find hats which would fit the
personalities of Kermit the Frog, Mary Poppins and a
witch. Children covered their hats with items available from the ICA including a chocolate-chunk cookie which one child took from a refreshments table.
"I've always struggled to find a way to introduce my
daughter to art," said parent Jim Wilcox.
"Hats Off to Warhol" is the first of several family
workshop* to be held at the ICA this year.
— Emily Culbertson
Leader of international
trade forum speaks at U.
He urged leaders to make trade
By LESLEY de BRJER
Arthur Dunkle, director of the negotiations a central part of their
General Agreement on Trade and national economic policy. Dunkle
Tariffs, told an audience of about faulted the United States and the
100 students Thursday that his or- United Kingdom for absorbing
ganization's current negotiations world savings while Japan and West
are likely to change the nature of Germany supply them, and urged
nations to use GATT's system to
world trade.
Dunkle, who heads the interna- even imbalances.
During a question-and-answer
tional forum on trade issues, called
on negotiators to increase access to session after the speech, Dunkle
markets, expand and implement said that the Soviet Union may one
GATT's "dispute settlement sys- day join GATT. He said that because
tem," and broaden agreements to Soviet goods have no market price,
include the international exchange the USSR would have difficulty artiof services.
ficially assigning prices to their
In his speech to a packed Vance goods according to the inconsistent
Hall classroom, Dunkle began by world market
describing GATT and outlining curMost members of the audience,
rent trends in world trade.
which included many international
"Economic forecasting is a risky students, described the speech as
business at the best of times," he interesting and informative, but
said in a heavy Swedish accent.
some criticized the GATT director's
He added that governments have style.
neglected long-term trade prob"He was droll at moments, but
lems, often to the detriment of deve- earnest," first-year Wharton graduloping countries, and warned that ate student Zeyneb Cilingirogly
this neglect could eventually come said. "I already knew what GATT
back to haunt more developed was about It doesn't make sense to
nations.
have the head of it talk about the
"Serious problems [of developing basic stuff. It's like going to GM and
nations] are increasingly becoming saying. 'Sorry, but do you manufacture cars?' "
shared problems," he said.
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Bring Your Resume and Introduce Yourself
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The Writing Program
and
The Philomathean Society
Present a Reading
by
the British Poet
CHARLES T0MLINS0N
author of Collected Poem*
and Some Americans
Tuesday, October 24, 1989
4 o'clock
Philomathean Rooms
4th Floor, College Hall
Refreshments
— mm
]
Monday, October 23,1989 The Dally PeoniytvaBian
Symposium addresses academic goals for U. n
By ANNALISE CAROL
A symposium during the Trustees' visit to campus earlier this month addressed the biggest
question raised by the announcement of the »1
billion capital campaign: What should the University do with all that money?
During the forum, held at the Annenberg Center's Zellerbach Theatre, several speakers outlined the educational and research challenges
facing the University in the 21st century. Speakers at the symposium, one of several events held
to kick off the campaign, called for increased
funding for research, teaching and liberal arts
programs.
"A challenge Penn can take is encouraging
undergraduates to enter the teaching profession," said Mary Maples Dunn, president of
Smith College. "Penn will lead the way to a
strong future for the liberal arts."
University Trustee Roy Vagelos said that a
portion of the proposed $1 billion fund will be
used to renew labs and purchase new scientific
equipment
"Penn will play a major role in the exciting developments only if its labs are large and equipment is new," he said. "Part of the billion dollars
will be dedicated to renewing labs and purchasing new equipment."
Vagelos added that the University should
target its research toward the molecular
sciences.
The third speaker, who evoked laughter from
the crowd with his joke about giving up a condominium overlooking the San Francisco Bay to
come to West Philadelphia last year, was International Relations Program Chairperson Walter
McDougall. The International Relations professor vowed to make the program "one which will
cause everyone to sit up and take notice."
McDougall also praised the University's faculty, administration and student body as "strong
and getting stronger" before the audience of ab-
out 200. He said that the University has "the tangible assets which make for a great university."
As they filed past President Hackney on their
way out several Trustees said they were pleased
with the symposium, describing it as "brilliant
excellent and inspiring."
"What was really impressive was that we had
somebody from the social sciences, the humanities and the natural sciences," Provost Michael
Aiken said. "Each showed ways in which the
campaign will build on the strengths we already
have and make us stronger as we head into the
future."
President Sheldon Hackney called the symposium, "exhilarating," and, "a good note on which
to start off the campaign." But others, including
Trustee Chairperson Atvin Shoemaker and Faculty Senate Chairperson Robert Davies, said
they were disappointed with the turnout
The Palladium
36th St. and Locust Walk
387-3463
Serving Lunch & Dinner
Lunch Mon.-Fri. 11:30-2:30
Dinner Tues.-Wed.-Thur. 5-10
Fri.-Sat. 5-11
Sunday 5-9
All fresh, all homemade
many "Best of Philly" Awards
Professors: Tenure report does not reflect entire picture
TENURE, from page 1
He said that while part of the tenure problem stems from a "historical inertia" that prevents women
from penetrating the hard sciences
and mathematics, women also have
difficulty obtaining tenure because
of bias among their male
colleagues.
Deputy Provost Richard Clclland
last week attributed the national
shortage of female doctoral candidates in the natural sciences and
mathematics partially to cultural
bias.
"We have a culture that says women don't do math and those sorts
of things," Clclland said. "Go look at
your undergraduate classes in
mathematics at the junior and senior level."
But despite the low numbers of
women in the sciences, the Engineering School hired a slightly larger number of women between 1982
and 1987 than national proportions.
Engineering Dean Joseph Bor-
dogna said yesterday that the
school has made an effort in past
years to attract and keep female faculty members, adding that eight
percent of the Engineering faculty
are women, compared with a two
percent national average.
The Faculty Senate's Davies, a
Molecular Biology professor, said
that professors in some departments often do not want women on
their faculties. He added that while
it has become unacceptable in recent years to show "overt discrimination," male faculty members discriminate in more subtle ways.
"Faculty in some departments do
not make an effort to get the best
women," Davies said.
Tenure and gender will again become an issue for the University in
November when the Supreme Court
hears a case involving Rosalie
Tung, who was denied tenure by the
Wharton School Management Department in 1985.
Tung, who is now a professor at
Flag stolen from the Green
FLAG, from page 1
the protective aluminum gutter around the cord was improperly attached, exposing the cord instead of
covering it.
Davies has rescued the College
Green flag twice before, climbing
the flagpole once in 1969 when it
was stolen amid a Vietnam War protest and again in 1976 when the flag
was again stolen prior to the bicentennial parents' day celebrations.
"I think that Americans put far
too much emphasis on flags," Davies said last night "But that's a
part of the symbolism of this
country."
Both times, Davies climbed the
pole to secure another flag. When
asked last night if he has any plans
for a third run up the flag pole, Davies, who is now 70, said "I only
climb the flag pole when I am asked
by a University official-"
30% OFF
and director of the International
Business Center at the University of
Wisconsin, filed a complaint with
the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission in 1986 charging that
her denial was based in part on her
race, sex and national origin.
The University refused to reveal
documents including peer reviews
of Tung to the EEOC, claiming that
peer reviews should be confidential
to insure honest appraisals by other
faculty members. The Court will
hear the case November 7.
STUDENT SUNDAY
SPECIAL
"2 for 1" Entrees w/I.D.
good until 12/17
(lower-priced entree is free,
not valid with anyother special.)
PaineWebber Incorporated
Municipal Investment Banking
Cordially invites University of Pennsylvania Seniors
to attend a presentation
on
The Two-Year Financial Analyst Program
Monday, October 23, 1989
The Wharton School
Steinberg/Dietrich Hall
Room 215
7:00 PM
EVERYTHING
MON. THRU WED., PARTIES OF 10 OR MORE
40th at Chestnut
(215) 387-4477
Refreshments will be served
NOT VALID WITH OTHER OFFERS
Muralmania
■Do you like fun?
' -Do you like to make a mess?
■DO YOU LIKE MONEY?
Have we got a deal for you!!!
The event is Muralmania and the idea ii to paint murals on the
walla of your dorm.
There are prime tor the beat murals
PLUS
Ws pay for the materiaUl
Proposals due October 24th
in the Dipt, of Residential Living (HRN).
Judging will be November 16th
Ask your R-A.
for more details.
Discover Your Career In
Natural Medicine.
Meet Dr. Ron Hobbs from
Bastyr College in Seattle. He'll
give you complete information
on Bastyr's accredited natural health science degree
programs for naturopathic
physicians, nutritionists and
acupuncturists. Curriculum
includes botanical medicine,
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Monday,
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BASTYR
Monday, October 23rd
University ol Pennsylvania
Career Office .it 11:00 am
( oniiKi Sue Marshall at 898-5261
Page 5
The Prudential
Investment Corporation
The Prudential Accelerated Career Entry Program
(PACE) invites students in all fields of study with an
interest in corporate finance, real estate, stocks and
bonds to attend an information meeting and reception.
Tuesday, October 24
7:00 p.m.
Sheraton Hotel
University Suite
Tha Pnidanlial Atsat Manijamanl Company. Ine
Prudanlial-lacha Securitiet Inc.
Prudential Capilal Corporation
Prudential Altai Sales I Syndication!. Inc.
The Prudential Reilty Group
The Prudential Corporate Finance Group
Prudential Equity Management Associates
Tha Pcrllollo Management Group
Prudential Power Funding Associate!
ThePrudential mb
Page 6
The Daily Pennsylvania!!
Monday. October 23,1989
'Stye -iBatltJ |tarats\jhimtum
77M Independent Newspaper of the University of Pennsylvania
105th Year ol Publication
GREG STONE. EXECUTIVE EDITOR
RANDALL LANE. MANAOINO EDITOR
ANDREW REISS. BUSINESS MANAGER
BRET PARKER. EDrroRiAL PACE EDITOR
SUE MALONEY. NiWS tun OR
DAVID LASKO. ASSOCIATE MANAOING EDITOR
HOOD QAIMMAQAMI. SALES MANAGER
MM PERLMAN. FINANCE MANAGER
CHERYL
FAMILY. CITY EDITOR
MATTHEW HILK. ASSOCIATE EDITOR
SUSAN WISE. PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
MIKE JOHNSON. PHOTOGRAPHY EDrrOR
ANDREW
TEAGLE.
CREATIVE SERVICFS DIRECTOR
GARY ROTH. DESIGN DIRECTOR
HOWARD ZALKOWTTZ. SPORTS EDITOR
BARRY DUBROW. SPOUTS EDrron
RHONDA EBERT. MARKETING DIRECTOR
MARCY ROSENBERG. PRODUCTION MANAGER
LAURA
LAZARUS.
CLASS1FIEDA?TRCUI-ATK)N MANAGER
ROMY GOLDMAN. CREDTI MANAOER
KEVIN KASSOVER. SPECIAL PROJECTS EDITOR
ALAN SCHWARl. WEEKLY PENNSYLVANIAN EDITOR
Talk Isn't Cheap
In the last two years, Connaissance has brought
about a half-dozen prominent speakers to campus. There have been interesting and noteworthy
people — sex researcher Shere Hite, 1960s radicals Abbie Hoffman and Timothy Leary and former Education Secretary William Bennett.
Unfortunately, a major academic institution de
serves more than a handful of selections. Connaissance has failed to meet Penn's needs.
The major problem lies in the fact that Connaissance has failed to distinguish between its two
main goals. It must select and entice interesting
speakers Then, it must pay them. The group,
however, has combined these two responsibilities
into a murky structure.
Presently, any University community member
may suggest a candidate. Then all Connaissance
members (currently 20) decide whether to spend
whatever remains of its $28,000 annual budget. Of
course, anyone can join the group — one has to attend only three meetings to become a voting
member. As a result, their selections are not always popular. (Take last year's sparsely attended
speech by television journalist Eric Sevareid.)
The result has been both noticeable and damaging. Students now do not expect these educa
tional opportunities, while Kiosks on other campuses are littered with announcements of numer-
ous upcoming speeches.
This issue came to a head last week when the
Penn Political Union asked the Student Activities
Council to strip Connaissance of its duties. Its request was denied, but SAC told Connaissance to
improve the group's visibility and increase the
members' responsibility.
If Connaissance is to tum itself around, it will
need take three steps. First, it will have to empower an executive council to pro-actively seek
out potential candidates. By having a small group
with specific goals, it will force itself to be more
productive. Second, it must confront SAC on the
issue of financial restrictions. Although $28,000 is
a large sum, it cannot cover the rapidly increasing
honoraria that prominent speakers require.
Finally, the group must decide whether it is up
to rising to such an ambitious challenge. Its profile and commitment to the University community
has been substandard for some time — it must
demand more time and energy from its members.
Although SAC could take control of Connaissance, its vague directive regarding the group reveals that SAC may not have the resources or
understanding necessary to bring top-notch people to campus. We urge Connaissance to whip itself into shape before SAC feels compelled to take
over.
Working for a Living
It's the real end of the innocence.
I'm not talking about learning the
truth about the tooth fairy or where
babies come from. No, I just got a
dose of reality in the form of a memo
from Career Planning and Placement Services.
This beauty of a note, addressed
to all South Florida residents, in-
Crossing
the
Rubicon
Lanelle
Polen
formed me that the Dade County
(Miami) Penn Alumni Club has requested CPPS to compile resumes
to encourage Dade firms to hire
Penn students over the summer.
Quite a useful thing to do, compiling resumes. It's a great idea, and
I'm sure I'll take advantage of it. It
also, however, is forcing me to prematurely confront the issue of summer jobs, and of how I'll be spending
those sweltering summer months.
In the past, summers meant fun
During high school, I went on vacations, bummed around, went to the
beach, did volunteer work and
maybe earned a little money somewhere along the way.
This past summer I held the consummate summer job; I was a day
camp counselor. And I loved it. I was
surrounded by five-year-olds all the
time, with someone always hanging
on to my hand or trying to play with
my hair. Even though I was an
adult, with all the responsibilities
and all the frustrations that go along
with being in charge, there is some-
thing innately childlike about working at a camp, even if you do get
paid. It must be something in the
camp atmosphere, or else it's the
fact that you're getting paychecks
for playing Duck, Duck, Goose or for
singing "The Wheels on the Bus."
What CPPS's memo forced me to
do is confront the fact that I can't go
on goofing away my summers forever. Upon reading the letter, it suddenly occurred to me that some day,
probably very soon, I was going to
have to learn how to write a resume.
Up until now, I'd been leading a
carefree summer existence, with no
bills to worry about, no classes to
concern me, and most of all, no
thoughts about my future required.
Let's be honest, the only thing my
work as a camp counselor could
have prepared me for is a job as a
preschool teacher, and I've got to
say no thanks to that
Penn gears students toward
thinking about their future starting
in their sophomore year. That is, after all, when you're expected to
have some idea about your major,
and hence, your career. Ideally, this
shouldn't be so, but realistically,
that's the way it is.
For me, therefore, it's almost
time to start somehow tying my
summers and my school years
together. No more schizophrenic
lifestyles for me. Rather than living
one life as a hardworking college
student and the other as a dilettante
extraordinaire, I now need to find
some kind of unifying link between
the two.
My summers can't continue as
they have been, yet I'm not ready to
make the jump to traditional fulltime employment. An internship,
then, would seem like the logical
compromise.
Something deep down inside of
me, though is telling me that I'm not
really ready for an internship cither.
"You'U have to do work at an internship! You'll have to pay your own
room and board! Sell out! Are you
becoming a grown up? " rages a
little voice.
Somehow, I think that's the real
issue here. Peter Pan is a neat guy
and all, but I don't think he's a very
good role model, especially for a college student. In this day and age,
the motto "I won't grow up!" won't
get you very far.
My dilemma is already clear,
months before the spring semester
even starts. In a purely technical
time frame, according to all sources, CPPS, College advising, and
friends included, it's time to find a
job that's going to give me experience and money that I can use in the
future. Yet, I long to return to my cabin of kindergartners.
The ambitious preprofessional
ethic here is pushing me toward
that final frontier of adulthood: loss
of summer vacation. It's an ambitious preprofessional world out
there, though, and the sooner I get
used to the idea, the belter Maybe I
should thank CPPS and the Dade
County Alumni.
All right, then. Maybe it is time to
move on to bigger and better things.
In which case, my goal for this summer is to find a job that puts an end
to the innocence while at the same
time meriting a grin and a wink
from Peter Pan.
It's like a clash of the titans: reality meets Disney. Who will emerge
the victor? I couldn't possibly tell
you now, but come May, I'll sure be
looking for some common ground.
Lanelle Polen is a College sophomore. Crossing the Rubicon appears alternate Mondays.
Policy on Submissions
The Daily Pennsylvania welcomes comments from the University community in the form of guest
columns and letters to the editor. Unsigned editorials on this page represent the opinion of The Daily
Pennsytvanian. All other columns, letters and artwork represent the opinions of their authors and are
completely independent of this newspaper's position.
Submissions should be typed or written legibly and must be double-spaced. All material should include
the author's name, address, telephone number and a description of University affiliation. The Daily
Pennsylvania!! reserves the right to condense all letters and columns. Send submissions to Bret Parker,
Editorial Page Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian, 4015 Walnut Street, Philadelphia Pa. 19104. Material may
be sent by facsimile to 215-898-2050.
Taking the Pledge
limic, or obese.
, .
I pledge to have normal social interactions I pledge to dress acceptably. I pledge to wear a coat-and-tie
to class every day if I am a man. and
a dress if I am a woman. I under
stand it is a sacrilege against society to dress differently. I agree to
undergo corrective plastic surgery
if my nose or any other feature is not
Mr.
as aesthetically pleasing as my
Spectator
roommate's. I pledge to date once
or twice a week but not to have a
steady relationship. I pledge never
to have sex before marriage, and afGeorge
ter marriage to copulate only in the
"missionary" position. I pledge not
Justice
to be a homo, even if I really want to
be one.
I pledge to have acceptable politi
for all incoming freshmen. Without
further comment I reproduce it cal opinions. I pledge that I will
never
make distinctions either polithere.
ically or personally on the basis of
In what has to be the greatest
scoop for readers of The Daily Pennsylvanian this semester, I have obtained a copy of the Behavior
Pledge which the Trustees of the
University discussed last week and
are considering making mandatory
the University administration,
Benjy Karsch and the Undergradu
ate Assembly, and Vincent Phaahla
and the Graduate and Professional
Students Association.
I pledge allegiance to the Hall of
Flags, and to the institutions for
which it stands. Therefore I pledge
allegiance to Harvard, Yale, Prince
ton, Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Pennsylvania. Skolnik's, and Little
Caesar's.
I pledge not to take any of the food
from the Hall of Flags back to Van
Pelt, unless it's something really
disgusting like Krazy Krusts which
will annoy and drive at least eight
other patrons out of the library.
I pledge while in the library not to
attempt to do any work but to lake
there my one or two dates a week
for some healthy conversation and
social interaction.
I pledge to abide by a rigorous
code of ethical standards. Specifically. I pledge not to cheat on any
examination or plagiarize while
writing any paper. I pledge not to
miss any classes because of hangover, fatigue or boredom. Furthermore, I pledge to do all my reading
— on time — and be well prepared
for every class discussion. I pledge
never to make fun of my professor,
but to listen to him or her as to a
prophet of the gods.
1 pledge to treat my body as a
temple. I will not ingest any alcohol
until I reach the age of 21, except for
the alcohol contained in cough
syrup and vanilla extract, and the
cup of spiked egg nog that my family
traditionally shares on New Year's
Day. (Special "Alcohol Consumption Dispensation Forms By Trustee Decree" will be available in the
Dean's Office for cases like this.)
I pledge never to smoke marijuana (also known as pot, hash,
smoke, reefer, jay, weed, grass,
mary jane, etc. — see The Hardy
Boys Detective Handbook by F.W.
Dixon for other drug nicknames)
and certainly never to snort cocaine, shoot heroin, or lake LSD or
mushrooms. (Special "Hallucinogenic Drug Consumption Dispensation Forms By Trustee Decree"
will be available in the event a student has tickets to a Grateful Dead
concert.)
I also pledge not to eat too many
fatty foods in the dining halls because I know that cholesterol is a
nasty thing. I pledge to remain
within 10 pounds of the societal
norm for a person of my height; I
pledge not to become anorexic, bu-
IHu«lr»lion By S»m AdM/Daily P^nniyfvinun
race, sex. religion, handicap, hair
color, eye color, intelligence, body
odor, personal charisma or musical
taste.
I pledge not to boo Ronald Reagan when he speaks at the University this spring. I pledge to vote Republican in all elections, even if the
Republican is Dan Quayle; he's trying his best and, anyway, I will be
like him someday.
I pledge to respect all existing
power structures at the University,
including President Hackney and
I think you'll agree that although
this code would be a great aid to
making students responsible, there
might be one or two small problems
with it. In any case, the Trustees are
on the right track, and we should all
pledge to write them in support o(
the Behavior Pledge.
George Justice is a graduate stu
dent in the School of Arts and Sciences. Mr. Spectator appears alternate Mondays.
Letters to the Editor
Behind the Names
To the Editor
What power is there in a
name? A name is a powerful tag
that introduces us to the world.
In his sarcastic commentary
"Passing the Buck" (DP
10/13/89), Brian Grossman assigns grossly insensitive names
to familiar homeless individuals
on campus deliberately making
them grotesque caricatures.
These people have real names
and real histories. And if Grossman had taken a moment out to
ask them their real names, he
would have discovered thai "T.
Fuhrer," also known as Mike, has
a family, a college-educated
daughter, carries family snapshots in his wallet and is on medication to control his outburts.
A transplanted Southerner,
hospitalized for a nervous breakdown in the seventies, "Licketyspit" or Thomas, was thrust onto
the streets during the deinstitutionalization of the '70s. He is testament of how the cruelty and
solitude of street life can affect a
human being.
Fats Domino," "Joe Kicker,"
"Skeeter," "Rasta Man" and "Abnudge" — they all possess real
names and stories. And they are
not a collective pool, of harassing
homeless. Instead it is Grossman
— seated safely behind his wordprocessor in his heated room
wrapping himself in the mantle
of the righteous victim — who is
the harasser.
Would Grossman have taken
such liberties naming professors
and administrators? Would he
have ridiculed his friends? Or
more precisely, would he have
publicly taunted any individual
capable of responding to his column? We doubt it!
It is an act of cowardice to kick
someone when they are down.
But it is an act of bravura to offer
that someone a hand to help him
stand up. These men who survive
on the streets each night they
are the brave ones. Grossman,
we guess that makes you "The
Coward." So, how do you like
your new name?
ANDREW LIGHTMAN
Graduate Student
Schools of Arts and Sciences
UCHC Food Coordinator
FAKAH JIMENEZ
College '90
UCHC Director
Gross Offense
To the editor
We have allowed two of Brian
Grossman's aptly-titled columns,
"A Waste of Print," to pass without comment. However, Grossman's last column (DP 10/13/89),
has not only incensed and offended us, but this time, he victimizes those who may not be
able to defend themselves.
We are not attacking Grossman's political views or his right
to slate them. However, ridiculing members of our West Philadelphia community who are
underprivileged and emotionally,
menially or physically disabled
reflects an unfortunate attitude
that students are the only people
who have a right to exist in West
Philadelphia.
Perhaps Grossman could next
visit some homes for retarded
adults and find some "humorous" material to again make himself feel intellectually and financially superior to the vast majority of the country.
We arc asking that Grossman
apologize for his gross insensitivity and failure to recognize the
value in other human beings regardless of the size of their wallet We understand Grossman's
Swiftian sarcastic approach. But
aside from the fact that his column lacked the humor he attempted, to give "cute" names to
individuals who may be mentally
disabled makes neither a statement nor does it offer a constructive solution to the problem
of homelessness.
We share University City with
a diverse mix of people. Those
who do not have a home or money have as much a right to stand
on streets and ask for change as
we have to look away and keep
walking. Grossman, are we
lying?
MELISSA CHECKER
Co-coordinator
Penn Hunger/Homelessness
AcUon
College '90
TAM1 TROST
College '90
Better Language
To the Editor.
As a female student I feel I
must take issue with Nathaniel
Popkin's assertions in his column (DP10/9/89). He claims that
the term "freshman" is somehow
more honest and straightforward
than the term "first-year student" He claims that the term
"first-year student" is inconsiderate to the individuals it describes. He claims that the term
"freshman" is basic and to the
point and helps us focus on life's
realities.
Perhaps hundreds of years
ago, "freshmen" was straightforward and adequately described
first-year university students.
However, I would suggest that
I'upkin is ignoring the fact that
the reality of 1989 is that the firstyear class like all classes at
Penn, is composed of men and
women, and the reality of the student body makeup should be reflected in the term used to describe it
The fact is, far from being inconsiderate, the term "first-year
student" is actually much more
considerate to female students
than "freshman." It is a perfectly
complete description of these
students' academic standing
which is all that is required from
such a term. Popkin's assertion
that the term "freshmen" is valid
because of its connotations of
"new, naive, and impressionable" is indefensible in the face of
his purported desire to use unambiguous, honest terminology.
I would also like to point out
that, contrary to Popkin's implication, language does not suffer
when new words are added to it.
New words and phrases are constantly being coined, and if they
replace outdated or discriminat
ory terms, so much the better
No language was ever impoverished by the expansion of its vocabulary. We should welcome
rather than scorn the revamping
of our language toward less sex
ist and racist terminology. Traditional is not always better.
KIRSTEN SHANKS
College '90
Monda> tX-tober23 1989 The Daily Pennsylvania!!
Hill security being checked Lawyer Kramer speaks on collusion suit
HILL HOUSE, from page 1
thefts, two wallets were stolen from
Hill House on October 5, according
to Public Safety. Police could not
say last night if those burglaries
were connected to last week's
incidents.
College freshmen Edward Shin,
whose wallet was stolen October 5,
said that he was taking a nap around 11 a.m. that day when a fire
alarm sounded. A man then walked
into his room.
"He said, 'Remain in your room,
it's only a test,' " Shin said, adding
that the man later returned to his
room, and while Shin was looking
away, stole his wallet.
The student said he believed the
man worked for the University and
he did not think anything when the
man returned in order to write
something down at Shin's desk.
Shin, who was still half asleep, said
the man acted very casual and even
cracked a joke.
Newest sorority on campus
ALPHA CHI, from page 1
concern her.
"What they are looking for is a
cohesive group, people who can get
along together rather than just fit
in," Dobin said.
Approximately 20 students have
signed up for interviews, members
of the Alpha Chi advisory board said
at a meeting last night, adding that
the increasing popularity of sororities at the University led to approval
for the Alpha Chi colony.
Advisory board members said
they were very optimistic about student interest in the colony because
of the national increase in sorority
membership.
"Over 100 girls were cut out at
Perm last year that wanted to join,"
said advisory board member Pam
Cooper
Only upperclassmen can rush
Alpha Chi next week, but freshmen
will be able to join during regular
sorority rush in January. Advisory
board members said they hope to
pledge 50 to 75 members this week
and have a total of 90 by the end of
spring rush.
"This is a pre-visit to make sure
that Alpha Chi suits the campus and
we can get enough members and
become established," said Alpha
Chi Colony Adviser Wendy Long.
LAWYER, from page 1
the Law School's Moot Court Room.
Graduate Student Associations
Council President Elizabeth Hunt
said she is not sure if her organization will undertake Kramer's prop
osed research project, but that
some individual students will probably begin polling other
universities.
Hunt also said she thinks a graduate student plaintiff will emerge
from the University, adding "if I had
to guess, I'd say yes."
Kramer told the students to compare tuition rates across the different schools because he thinks major universities must be subject to
antitrust laws as all businesses are.
He charged that the financial aid Kramer is waiting for the case to be
set ling practices give "new mean- ,i|i|iinved as class-action, and said
he expects the suit to be resolved
ing to the concept of chutzpah."
"If I were voting, I would vote for a within two-and-a-half years.
Kramer also said that students
free and open market place,"
who attended the universities being
Kramer said.
He said that the schools do not sued in the past four years are rephave to meet to collude in price- resented in the suit
Students also questioned whether
fixing, and that he thought only graduate students who have paid tui- Kramer thought the fact that financial
aid packages often drop significtion from their own pockets could be
antly for sophomores could be evipotential plaintiffs.
The New York attorney said a dence of collusion
GSAC Treasurer Wayne Glasker,
group at Brown University, whom
he addressed last week, is consider- who said last week he is considering
becoming a plaintiff, said that he
ing becoming plaintiffs in the suit.
He also discussed the history of thinks GSAC will begin the research
the initial price-fixing lawsuit, say- Kramer recommended before Glaing the plaintiff, Roger Kingsepp. sker decides whether to become a
worked in his office last summer plaintiff.
For all the news that affects
your day, read the new, early
'Daily Pennsylvanian'
WORK IN BRITAIN LEGALLY FOR UP TO 6 MONTHS
The 1989 BUN AC FALL ROADSHOW will be visiting
U Penn on Monday, October 23. Information will be
available in the Bodeck Lounge from 10-3pm with a
presentation to follow at 4 pm in the Penniman Library of
Bennett Hall. EVERYONE WELCOME!
I'ai!«-
HIGH EARNINGS
FREE TRIPS
National travel and matkelii'g co.
seeks highly motivated individuals lo
represent its collegiate travel vac
atons on your campus for SKI &
SPRING BREAK No experience
necessary. Will train. Call 718 855
7120 or write: Campus Vacations.
26 Court St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11242
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Typesetting
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the copy center
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r-ssss
it y°u
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University City Mall-4009 Locust St.
Philadelphia. PA 19104 382-9011
FALL SPECIAL
ONE MONTH FREE
When you join for 6 months PIF
Limited time offer. Expires 10-31-89
Mention this ad when you join to get your free month.
NEW EQUIPMENT-ABDOMINAL CIRCUIT!
For information on hepatitis B and whether you should receive the vaccine,
contact the Student Health Service, Penn Tower, 34th and
Civic Center Boulevard, at 662-2869 or check with your doctor.
Open 7 days • Free Trials • Complete Instruction
GOLD
MASK AND WIG
presents
se?Q ties, and
masking tape
1989 Fall Undergraduate Production
Questions about sorority rash?
COME MEET THE GREEKS
2nd information and pro-registration session
MOM.. OCT. 23
Wed. Nov. 1
Thurs. Nov. 2
Fri. Nov. 3
Sat. Nov. 4
Shows at 7:00 and 9:30
Houston Hall Auditorium
PROVOST TOWER. OUflD
7:30-9:30 PM
FRESHMEN ONLY
TICKETS ON LOCUST WALK
Page 8
The Daily Pennsylvania!!
Monday, October23,1989
Off the Wire
Compiled from Associated Press Dispatches
Man Versus Machine
World
World chess champion beats computer counterpart
Soviet groups form new federation
MOSCOW — A federation of Russian environmental, patriotic and religious groups yesterday
formed a federation to press for a multiparty political system and the preservation of Russian culture,
a reporter said.
The People's Front of Russia is similar to grassroots political organizations that first appeared in
the Baltic republic of Estonia in 1988. Other groups
bearing similar names have been formed in Latvia,
Lithuania, Moldavia and the Ukraine.
The organizations have been asserting the rights
of indigenous ethnic populations, which number
more than 100 nationwide.
NEW YORK — It was a battle of two
chess champions — one active and outspoken, known to sip tonic water during
matches, the other sitting quietly on a
desk, taking in a different kind of juice.
World chess champion Garri Kasparov, who hasn't lost a tournament
since 1981, met Deep Thought, the winner of this year's World Computer Chess
Championship, for two games yesterday.
The human won the first game after
2-1/2 hours when the computer retired
from the game after Kasparov's 52nd
move. He won the second match after 2
hours when the computer surrendered
after 37 moves.
"I expected it," Kasparov said. "It's a
good player but without position and
experience."
Kasparov said after the first game he
realized early on that he would win when
the computer missed some tactical op-
portunities and was not able to analyze
all of the champion's decisions.
"I don't mind who's sitting opposite
me," said Kasparov, who lives in the Soviet city of Baku, in Azerbaijan. "If a
computer should win, of course, I would
have to challenge it to protect the human race."
Murray Campbell, who helped create
the computer at Carnegie-Mellon University in Pittsburgh, said it appeared
US investigators visit site of air crash
TEGUCIGALPA. Honduras — A Boeing 727
shook violently and seemed to plunge just before it
crashed in flames into a hillside, killing 131 people,
a badly burned survivor said yesterday.
"They told us to put on our scatbelts for landing,
and then suddenly (he plane began to shake, like air
turbulence," said Evenor Lopez, a Honduran
businessman.
"But it went on for a long time, and we seemed to
be descending too rapidly. Some people were
screaming," Lopez said in an interview.
Investigators from the National Air Transportation Safety Board arrived yesterday from the United
States aboard a Coast Guard plane and went directly to the site of Saturday's crash.
Lebanese peace
plan approved
in Parliament
Bison-napped!!
TAIF. Saudi Arabia — The Lebanese parliament yesterday passed a new power-sharing accord to end the
country's 14-year-old civil war, but Christian leader Michel Aoun appeared ready to reject the pact
Fifty-nine of 62 deputies present voted for the draft
charter but made their action contingent on approval
by Aoun and his rival, Moslem leader Salim Hoss. Two
deputies abstained, and one voted against the
agreement.
Just as the session began, Arab League envoy Lakhdar Ibrahimi flew to Beirut, Lebanon, for separate talks
with Aoun and Hoss. The Arab League has been sponsoring the peace efforts.
Aoun heads a Lebanese Christian government competing for legitimacy with the predominately Moslem
Cabinet headed by Hoss.
In Beirut, Aoun appeared ready to oppose the peace
plan, saying acceptance would be "a crime."
Aoun said at a news conference the plan did not meet
his demands for a specific timetable for a Syrian withdrawal from Lebanon. He said he accepted political
changes that would give more power to the Moslems.
"But I reject the part concerning Lebanese sovereignty We don't know what the Syrian role will be in
Lebanon — what for and how long," he said.
Aoun also said that if the Syrians threaten to resume
fierce shelling that battered Beirut from March to September, he is ready to defend himself.
Plane crashes into village in Ecuador
GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador — An air force fighter
plane that was performing air stunts crashed into a
residential neighborhood on the outskirts of this
port city yesterday, killing nine people, officials said.
The plane destroyed four houses as it hurtled
down into the suburb of La Atarazana, near the air
force base of Guayaquil, about 170 miles southwest
of Quito, Red Cross official Eduardo Estrada said.
Nation
Passenger, freight trains crash; 4 hurt
UPPER SANDUSKY, Ohio — An Amtrak passenger train broadsided a CSX train yesterday, injuring
four people, knocking a shack into a swimming pool
and throwing a freight car into a homeowner's yard,
authorities said.
The 116-car freight train was carrying "everything from sand to syrup," including carbolic acid in
one car, but none of the cargo spilled, said Andrea
Just, a CSX Transportation spokeswoman in
Baltimore.
The accident occurred at 5:43 a.m. when the Amtrak's Broadway Limited train traveling from New
York City to Chicago hit the freight train bound for
Newport News, Va., from Chicago, at a crossing,
said Deborah Hare, an Amtrak spokeswoman.
Quake rescue work
continuing in S.F.
Dsvs Bsrau/DP Sank* Photographer
Zealous Quaker fans kidnap the Bucknell Bison at the end of halftime during Saturday's game. Bucknell cheerleaders had to rescue the unlucky mascot from the stands
Guerilla wins attributed to weaponry
City
Two off-duty cops shot in W. Phila.
PHILADELPHIA — Two off-duty police officers
were shot outside a bar in West Philadelphia early
yesterday, police said.
One was shot in the back and the other in the leg.
They were treated at city hospitals and released a
few hours later. Their names were being withheld.
Police said they had two suspects in custody yesterday. One, James Fielder, 19, suffered multiple
gunshot wounds in the shooting. He was in critical
condition in Lankenau Hospital, where he was
under police guard.
The second suspect was being held at a police
station for questioning. Police said he had a gun
when he was apprehended at the scene, but they do
not know yet what role, if any, he played in the
shootings.
Details of the shootings were sketchy.
Weather
Later Sunny and milder. Highs in the low to mid
60s.
Tomorrow: Partly sunny. Highs in the 60s.
there was a bug in the computer during
the first game.
Commentator Shelby Lyman, who
helped arrange the match, said before
the games that Deep Thought was
"clearly the first chess computer with
the potential to draw blood and defeat
the world champion. Kasparov has
never played a machine at this level, and
it will make moves he may not expect.
This will be historically interesting."
BANGKOK Thailand — Sophisti
cated anti-tank weapons have
helped Cambodian guerrillas score
unprecedented victories against the
Vietnam-backed government, according to Western diplomats and
senior resistance officials.
piercing, anti-tank rockets in the
past few months.
The weapons were used in the recent offensive in northwestern
Cambodia, in which guerrillas
seized several key towns and a number of government military posi-
l
This is the most important weapon we have
ever received9
Gen Dien Del
Deputy commander
"This is the most important weapon we have ever received," said
Gen Dien Del, deputy commanderof
the Khmer People's National Liberation Front. "We can now defend
ourselves against tanks."
The Liberation Front and another
guerrilla faction reportedly have received several hundred armor-
lions, according to Western diplomats and guerrilla sources interviewed last week.
The Liberation Front and a group
loyal to Prince Norodom Sihanouk
are loosely allied with the Communist Khmer Rouge in a war against
Cambodia's Vietnam-supported
government, which was installed af-
ter Vietnam invaded Cambodia in
late 1978 and ousted the Khmer
Rouge from power.
The newly acquired weapons are
the West German 67mm Armbrust,
the 84mm Swedish Carl Gustav, and
the 89mm French LRAC, say the
diplomats and resistance sources.
Both the Armbrust and the Gustav came to the two non-Communist
factions through Singapore, while
the French weapons provided only
to the Sihanouk group came as part
of a larger package of weapons from
France earlier this year, according
to the sources.
France has denied shipping weapons to the resistance.
"We receive many weapons ... we
don't know where they come from
or who pays for them. I don't know
and I don't wan. to know," said Dr.
Abdul Gaffar, the Liberation Front's
senior military analyst
SAN FRANCISCO — Rescuers euphoric over finding
a survivor in a collapsed freeway resumed work at a
frustratingly cautious pace yesterday, and earthquakeshaken Northern Califomians mapped strategy for today's commute through "gridlock."
Longshoreman Buck Helm, who spent four days in a
tomb of Interstate 880 concrete and steel, was in
critical-stable condition at Highland General Hospital
in Oakland with some slight improvement, hospital officials said.
Engineer Steven Whipple, hailed as a hero of the rescue, said he was checking the fallen double-deck freeway for stability on Saturday when he spotted the back
of Helm's head with his flashlight, and then saw a hand
wave at him.
"It stopped my heart. I thought maybe the wind was
blowing and that's what caused it. I thought I might be
losing it," said Whipple, 29.
The number of dead pulled from the 1-880 disaster
rose to 38, including a 4-year-old boy, bringing the
earthquake's toll to 59, with thousands injured and
homeless and dozens still missing. Damage estimates
topped $7 billion, making the quake the costliest natural
disaster in U.S. history.
Baseball commissioner Fay Vincent announced yesterday that the World Series would not resume until
Friday night, three days later than originally hoped.
The championship between the Oakland As and the
San Francisco Giants was suspended the night of the
quake.
The Afro-American Studies Program
and the W.E.B. DuBois College House of
the University of Pennsylvania
invite you to the
Honorable A. Leon Higginbotham, Jr. Lecture Series
The Honorable A. Leon Higginbotham, Jr.
CAREERS IN AN INTERNATIONAL WORLD:
A CONFERENCE FOR GRADUATE STUDENTS
Tuesday, October 24, 1989
2nd Floor, Houston Hall
Issues discussed will be of interest of both U.S. citizens and foreign nationals.
4*0
Welcome
Ben Franklin Room
4:15-5:30 International Development
Ben Franklin Room
Joan Carroll, Manager of Employment
and Training, The Ford Foundation
4:15-5:30 International Education and
Cultural Exchange
Bishop White Room
Sally Baldus, Senior Campaign Associate, United Way,
formerly of the International Visitors Council
Alison Moves, Foreign Student Advisor and
Study Abroad Advisor, Bryn Mawr College
5:30-6:30 Teaching Abroad
Ben Franklin Room
Daniel Soffer, Teacher, Wyncote Academy
Richard Young, Director, English Language Program, Perm
5:30-6:30 Who Hires Whom: Trends in Multinational
Hiring
Bishop White Room
James Beirne, Director, Wharton Graduate
Division, Career Development and Placement
Circuit Judge ol the U.S. Court ol Appeals lor the Third Circuit
Adjunct Professor ol Sociology end Ule Trustee. University ol Pennsylvania
6:45-8:00
U.S. Work Permission for Foreign Nationals
Ann Glusker, Foreign Student Advisor,
Office of International Programs, Penn
Ben Franklin Room
presents the Inaugural Lecture
6:45-8.-00
Summer Jobs/Internships Abroad
Deborah Gould. Assistant Director,
Career Planning and Placement, Penn
Bishop White Room
Race Relations Laws in the U.S. and South Africa:
A Comparative Analysis
Friday, October 27,1989 at 4 pm
Penniman Library
2nd Floor, Bennett Hall
34th & Walnut Streets
Please register in advance by calling 898-7530.
t
Tl A~c7 6 M E N T
%
CAREKR
UNIvrilSlty
OF
PCNHSYIVANIA
j
Monday. Octobcr23,1989 The Daily Pennsylvania!!
Pages
Volleyball looks for tie of Big Five title
VOLLEYBALL, from page 14
Leading the hit parade were
Sherry Clarey (19 kills) and Melissa
Ingalls (16). Ingalls, the two-time
Ivy Player of the Year, amassed a
whopping 60 spike attempts during
the grueling match, and, along with
setter Tracy Clarke, scrambled for
20 digs.
Yet, for all the history making,
Perm let a 12-8, fifth-game lead slip
away. When Brown pulled to within
12-11, the Quakers unraveled and
committed three straight service
reception errors or the way to losing 13-15, 15-10, 9-15, 15-12, 12-15.
"It was a ridiculous way to lose
the game. I'm still kind of numb,"
Sagula said.
Despite the weekend's disappointing results, Perm remains up-
Frosh lose
FROSH, from page 14
ing his long touchdown run.
Penn's offense was much more
balanced The Quakers were eightof-28 in the air for 199 yards, as receivers Chris Brassell and Tom
Gibbs combined for 184 of the yards
Penn's running game was hindered
by the rainy conditions in the first
half as Mike Morosky and Sundiata
Rush could only manage 40 and 37
yards, respectively.
The Quakers are still playing all
three of their quarterbacks: Mike
Baker, Mike Barthlow and Scott
Hauncher. Each effectively led
Penn down the field at least once
but made a mistake that ended a
drive Rackovan explained that
those kinds of mistakes were to be
expected.
"In practice, each one of them
gets only one out of three repetitions, and that's the dilemma of
freshman football," Rackovan said.
"But our main goal here, even
though we play to win, is to develop
these guys into varsity football
players."
beat and quietly confident After entering the Ivy tournament as the
number one seed the last two years
and losing both times, the Quakers
are eager to see how they fare as
underdogs
"We may be belter off going into
[tournament playl as a lower seed,"
Von Essen said.
In addition to the two Ivy
matches, the Quakers began play in
the Big Five championships yesterday. Penn beat La Salle 10-15,16-14,
16-14, 15-13 and fell to Temple, 9-15,
17 15, 7-15, 7-15, for (he second time
this year. However, if the Quakers
can manage to defeat Villanova today (at La Sallc's Hayman Hall, 5
p.m.), they may be able to salvage a
share of the City title.
Lightweight Footb«all loses
LIGHT, from page 14
"Their offensive line is young and
inexperienced," Penn defensive
lineman Steve Blazcjewski said.
We (nought we could put a lot of
pressure on the quarterback. The
defense, in general, just didn't have
a good night We didn't get one sack
for the first time since I've been at
Penn."
"We've got to stop the drives and
get people out there to come
through with some good hits, and
play a little football," Penn linebacker Joel Frauenhcim said.
This is not to say that the whole
Penn team failed to show up for the
game. As he has every game this
season, All-ELFI. running back
Mark Dianno romped for over 100
yards, this time gaining 151 yards on
25 carries and scoring two touchdowns. Junior fullback Rod George
supplemented Dianno's effort with
73 yards on 10 carries. But four
second-half turnovers and numer-
ous penalties stagnated the Quakers' offense
The defense, however, could not
share in this success.
"The game is a total team effort,"
Penn senior center Paul Vaccaro
said "It's kind of hard to sit on the
sidelines watching the defense.
Sometimes you feel like going out on
to the field and helping them, making some tackles for them. In this
game, we just beat ourselves."
Rutoers
Pann
6 14
6 21
7 14—41
0 0—27
P - Rod Gaorg. 20 run <1M* laiMd)
fl — Earl Jackson 27 past Irom Sleva Surman
(kick failed)
P—Mark Dianno 42 run (pass lassd)
R — Dan McNamara S pass Surman (Mark
Schwarzman kick)
P—G«orge 15 mn(ChnsHebola pass from Bob
OBrian)
R — Stave Spstghl 3 run (Schwarzman kick)
P — Dianno 2 run (Edson McCMIand kick)
R — Speight 4 run (Schwarzman kick)
P.—George Kuhnel run (Schwarzman kick)
R - Jackson 5 pass Irom Surman (Schwarzman
Mckl
NOMINATIONS FOR THE LINDBACK AWARDS
FOR
DISTINGUISHED TEACHING
will be accepted through
December 1st. 1989
Information Available:
Office of the Vice Provost
200 Houston Hall/6306
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"What makes your
LSAT course
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International Raw Materials Ltd. is a privately held merchant trading company specializing in the marketing and
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interviewing on November 1st. Contact Career Planning at 8987531 for more information.
Itrraxii Kn|uiicil
Pigment Plant A« .lUhk ^H
Page 10 The Daily Pennsylvania!! Monday, October 23,1989
Penn beats Bucknell, 25-24, for third straight squeaker
What do women
really talk about
when they think
no one else
is listening?
SAFETY, from page 14
clock [after the third play]. I watched them tick
down myself. I felt we should have had the opportunity to kick a field goal, which would have been
an obvious three points and made the
difference."
The game only came down to the final seconds
because Penn's offense was unable to convert on
any of its six possessions in the second half. Five
times the Quakers penetrated into Bison territory and came up empty. A fumble, a missed field
goal and a loss of possession on downs kept Penn
off the scoreboard. Meanwhile. Bucknell drove
for two touchdowns, turning a 23-10 halftime deficit into a 24-23 lead on fullback Brian Henesey's
three-yard touchdown run and Barimo's conversion with 12:02 to play.
"I'm happy with the performance we gave in
the first half," Keys said. "We feel we can score
every time. It showed in the first half. But in the
second half, we short-circuited. We didn't execute, and there's no excuse for that"
After rolling up 121 yards in the first half, Keys
was held to eight yards on five carries in the third
quarter. The leading rusher in Division I-AA finished with 189 yards on the day to up his total to
859 for the season.
Quarterback Malcolm Glover completed
17-of-29 attempts for 168 yards. But more significantly, he ran nine times for 82 yards, scrambling
away from Bucknell pass rushers. Four times his
running kept Quakers' drives alive.
"They were trying to rush around the ends,
leaving huge openings in the middle," Glover
said. "They were giving me a lot of green, and I
caii 976-2700
,
Uo
ID
7 mm#m* SC
Young Friends From
Taiwan Visiting Penn
1989 Chinese Youth
Good Will Mission Presents
Adventure in Chinese Opera, Dances, Songs
Painting and Hakka - Custume Show
Oct. 23, 7:00 - 8:30 p.m.
Irvine Auditorium $2.00 admission
tried to take it."
Glover, though, started the game as if he were
a green quarterback rather than an experienced
senior. After Penn drove to the Bucknell three on
its first possession, Glover was intercepted in the
end zone by safety Mike Augsberger. On their
next possession, however, Glover and Keys led
the team to the Bison one-yard line. Penn lined
up with a full house hackficld, out of which Glover
usually gives to Keys in short yardage situations.
This time, however, fullback Steve Fair got the
call on a counter and scored his first touchdown
as a Quaker.
The Bison responded with a 12-play, 86-yard
touchdown drive, but Penn came right back, with
Farr again scoring out of the three-back formation. That scoring drive covered 62 yards, 51 of
which were gained by Keys.
After the Quakers' defense again held, Penn
was again in business from the Bucknell 43. Six
plays later, Glover hit Keys on a 10-yard slant
pass the end zone. Keys ran the wrong pattern
but redeemed himself when the ball hit wide receiver Derek Adame and Keys caught the carom
in full-stride.
After looking nearly dominant in the first half,
the Quakers went belly-up in the third quarter.
On Bucknell's first possession of the half, Henesey (27 carries for 128 yards) ran 22 yards for a
touchdown. Despite good offensive field position,
the closest Penn came to scoring was Friedenberg's missed 30-yard field goal attempt midway
through the third quarter.
"They didn't do anything (defensively) we
couldn't handle," Keys said of the Bison. "They
SUCCESSFUL
INTERVIEWING:
CAREERS IN
MARKETING
Experts in:
\^
INTERNSHIPS
IN
• Brand Management
• Product Management
• Market Research
AN EMPLOYER'S PERSPECTIVE
Students discuss
their internship
experiences last summer,
including editing,
photography and TV production.
will describe career opportunities
Wednesday, October 25
7:00 - 9:00 p.m.
Ben Franklin Room, Houston Hall
Wednesday, October 25th
4:30 - 6:00 p.m.
Smith Penniman Room, Houston Hall
Sign up with Amy in CPPS.
Classified Ads
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preceding publication
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preceding publication.
4015 WALNUT ST.,
PHILADELPHIA, PA 19104
4015 WALNUT ST.. 2ND FLOOR
Hours:9 am-5p.m. Monday
through Friday. Closed weekends
and holidays.
OPTIONAL JUMBO
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classified ad. Maximum 18
characters per line. Max. 4 lines.
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ads), priced by size.
-4r! ' HE < TN'I' STREFT Mfl
rtt/i-nae 2 bedroom 1 bath availaMe Dae——i »15 00.
30TMANO PINE, largo 1BR $450.
tncJudee a» Furnished. Close lo
campus. 387-4137
BR
INDEX
-THE IVY VINE" PERSONALS
FOR RENT
SUBLET
ROOMMATES
HELP WANTED
FOR SALE
RIDES
TRAVEL
INSTRUCTION
TYPIST
WANTED
ADOPTION
LOST & FOUND
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR RENT
FOR RENT
41ST ft BALTIMORE Newly renovated Secure DkJg.. large, modern,
one bedroom Fireplace Flexible
la— Unw EntTpnaea 222-5500.
41ST PINE. One or two bedroom,
newly renovated 1485 483 €583
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
1 BR
2 BR
Large
No refunds for cancelled classified
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1 -2 days: 30c per word per day
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42nd 4 WALNUT
43rd a Pint
42nd & Sartsorn
3*7-4137
S350 Includes Heal
1440 Plus
(425 Includes Heat
3 BEDROOM HOUSE modern
kitchen, bath, w/w carpels refng 1
1/2 mi from campus $450* Call
coaael altar 5 (609)461 3161 Days
Can Carol 215 462-2323.
42NO ANO PME One bedroom
Huge, sunny, beautifully maintained $450. 846-4608
42NO t LOCUST. 2 bedroom
$380. t bedroom $285 large lum
isned room $195 Eastern States
Realty 386-0922
42ND SPRUCE Mutto available
no*. $320 Heal gas included
483 6583
7:00
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Wonvjol
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Portrait ol
the Eon* The Sky Above
WHO'S
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Mean ota
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Jim Nenaent Mans ••• -Cure's Heart" i 1909 Oreme) Whoon
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EFFIC. FOR RENT Available
1/15/90 39th and Pine $340 00
Call 222-2675
HOUSE FOR RENT
1 MONTH FREE
sMMTyboerdt
[Pro Cnamp
|
Sport ecenif
ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT
Newly renovated, located at 4052
Chestnut Available lor sublease
Jan. 1st Can 387 5796.
ON PENN CAMPUS Various silo
apartments, newly decorsted Convenient public transportation Weisenthal Properties. 386 2380 4029
Spruce Mon thru Sat. 9 to 4
STUDIO
2 BEDROOM
BEDROOM
f"9"
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SIX BEDROOM 2 baths. Irving
room, dining room, kitchen, porch,
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Pay 222 4416 rate 463-6196
TOWNHOUSE lor rent
3 bedrooms. 2 baths, pato 22
South 41st Si Call 2220347 tor
appotn.lnioiits.
PENNOREX APTS. Ettoenaes.
1 and 2 bedrooms. Monthly
loaoos. 34Q-9428.
ROOMS FOR RENT
CHARMING 18TH Century House
4610 Spruce Spacious, clean.
$200 J300 including uMlies Free
washer and dryer Mark 472 5528
ROOMS FOR RENT. $325 includes all
Close to campus
367-4137.
EASING
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CAMPUS APTS
ONLY A SELECT GROUP
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DON'T DELAY
SPRUCE HILL AH new appaance
great share. Orad students pre
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Mevka: •• "ferae tefaBSW"llsW. Oremj) Phytoa Hashed
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FOR RENT
4515 PINE 2bdr 2 btti. sun porch
fireplace, washer, dryer, stunning
Kitchen, all new appliances Close
acessibihty to campus $750.00.
735-1100
East Lanadownt. Large jijn feti
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Five maae from University $595*
Utilities 622-5723
898-1111
43RO ON OSAGE Two corn-enable and charming one bedroom
apartments Starting at $325 00
Have hardwood floors, lots ol light
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688-0205.
8 MONTH LEASE!
TV TONIGHT
Entarteminent Eveetea
Tonight
Maganne
■Sign up unth Amy at QP2S
icomt:
898-1111
BY MAIL
Speaker: Michael Kearns
Penn Alumnus '87
Human Resource Associate
Merck and Co., Inc.
Mondov, Oct. 23
7:00 p.m.
Ben Franklin Rm., HH
All Welcome!
started blitzing a lot more. They brought their defensive tackles and ends up towards the outside.
Most of our offense game is to the outside, and
they overshifted at the right times.
However, the much-maligned Penn defense
was able to maintain consistency in the second
half by controlling the line of scrimmage suffi
ciently enough to disrupt Bucknell's offense. Several players making their first starts, including
linebackers Tony Frazier and Joe Kopcha,
helped hold the Bisons on three consecutive
possessions.
"It seemed we played better defense this
week," said Penn coach Gary Steele of his defense which held an opponent to under 200 yards
passing for the first time this season (Auchenbach was ll-of-29 for 131 yards), but allowed the
Bison over 200 yards rushing.
"We showed a little more character," Steele
continued. "I felt we competed a little harder
than we have in the past few weeks."
But a minute into the fourth quarter, the Quakers broke down. Auchenbach caught them in the
wrong defensive formation and flipped a screen
pass to tailback Dan Scocca, who cut back
against the grain for a 60-yard gain to Penn's sixyard line. Two plays later, Bucknell had a 24-23
lead
The Quakers responded, riding on the back of
Keys to Bucknell's 20-yard line. But on fourth on
one, Keys was stopped, giving the Bison the ball
and the lead with 7:19 to play. But then, the football gods intervened, as two holding penalties
forced Bucknell back to its own four to set up the
decisive safety.
TWO APARTMENTS Near Fan
mount Park Eight minute drive
front campus Three large rooms,
wall/wall carpeting Excellent
neighborhood Available Novenv
bat. 477-2188/ 232-7889.
TWO BEDROOM with yard.
$520.00 One bedroom with deck
$355 00 724 2295
SUBLET
SPRING 1990 • rvafied loom w
bathroom 4053 Spruce Many
ammemties- ressonsbie rent
Glenn 387 6750
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lor spring. 4024 Spruce Roomy
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CallJaOyn 222 8125
ROOMMATES'
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priced from $295 - $550
Facilities include:
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on-site laundry facilities
intercom system
full kitchens with eat-in area
short leases available
I mo. free for students and
Penn affiliates
474-1331
44TH ft PINE Non-smoker grad or
lacuty to share enomsout 2 bedroom. 2 floor apartment Sunny,
quiet sale Storage, wd backyard
porch $37S/mo 366-3810
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get llvlngroom. bedroom, bath.
kitchen, carpeted partially turn
■shed, utilities included. Only
$300.00 per month. Graduate Student 972-1434 or 546-1434
NON-SMOKING Grad/Facully
Large room; convenient Three
hc-jsema.es $230 215 386-4961
SHARE TWO Bedroom apartment
45th and P»ne with graduate stu
dent, S300vmonth Spacious many
windows, view, good storage, reno
vaied Information Mike 284-0329
Momv) 898 ''460 'Won')
HELP WANTED
ADMIN ASSISTANT FT adminis
lor research projects and undergrad computer lab Sol up tiling
systems, type and edrt rvawslaissr
Transcribe recorded interviews.
oversee budgets, purchase sup
plies and equipment
Arrange
travel, schedule meetings and use
tlltB i a ; .ir-iuj'n, ■Mi /1-1
tosh Call Marybeth at 898 4912
CUTTERS GRAND CAFE Now hiring all positions Apply m parson at
2006 Market Street m (Commerce
Souare) or cat John al 851-6262
E.O.E.
DATA ENTRY Rll|Jbl« detail
oriented, work-study student
needed lo enter research study
data into CLINFO system Approi
tShrs per/week. Flexible hours.
Call 590-2097
EBELUS Pro Indoor seoks highly
motivated individual interested In
sports marketing Must be conndent, with exceptional msvketing
and organizational skills Work with
one ol the top sporting events in
Philadelphia Flexible 40 hour wont
week includes days, evenings and
weedends October thru February
Must have car 947-2530.
FILE CLERK PART-TIME Tern
porary position al busy Untversrty
City office. 10 20 hours per week.
Flexible schedule available Cat
Pamoa at 222-8454.
FULL AND PART TIME Openings
Balers. Walters and Drivers. Center City Delrvenes Kangaroo Couriers 2012 Sansom Street. Philadelphia. Pa 19103 581-5132
FULL TIME TTPIST needed lot
busy physical therapy practice Exoenence necessary Pleaae send
resume to PlPT. St Lenerd's
Court. 396 Chestnut Sis Phla., Pa
18104 ARn Gana
KAPPA ALPHA THETA needs
person tor kitchen duty. S nights ■
week Pay and meals For more
into, cal Becky 387-5837.
LOSE WEIGHT Earning SSS Doctor recommended program. II you
need lo lose 10-I00lbs* call
run 4143
Telemarketing
No Sales
EiwnrJnj leterfjrkasng Oett
has opwwtot for
Fi» s Pan frnvj People
• Day 1 Evening Shirts
■ Good Public Trans.
• Good Salary
For Info. Call
476-1200 278
• JOBS • JOBS • JOBS
WORK-STUDV ANO N0N
WORK-STUDY. THE ANNENBERG CENTER NEEDS
USHERS. ESPECIALLY
NEED PEOPLE TO WORK
WED., THURS, MATINEES,
12 NOON TILL 4-5 Pll
NEED OTHER DAY AND
EVENING USHERS ALSO.
APPLY AT ANNENBERG
CENTER 3660 WALNUT,
RH331. APPLY IN PERSON
ONLY. NO PHONE CALLS.
Monday. October 23,1989 The Daily Pennsylvania!!
Penn gains from Curtin call
CURTIN, from page 14
Curtin lined up on the right side of
the defensive line in a variation of
the same stunting, twisting defense
Penn used to contain Auchenbach
all day. Curtin drove past Bucknell
left guard Paul Austin directly into
Auchenbach to give the Quakers a
25-24 lead with just under six minutes remaining.
"We had been taking a lot of outside rushes all day because we were
worried about his scrambling ability," Curtin said. "We got a lot of
pressure on the outside and [Auchenbachl did not have any place to
run. I gave a move outside and came
inside and just came up on
Auchenbach."
"We wanted to throw the ball
quickly," Bucknell coach Lou Maranzana said. "It was a single drop
back pass. I felt we could protect
Auchenbach and get rid of the ball,
but their defense beat a man inside
Bucknell
Penn
0 10
7 16
7
0
NON-SEXUAL ASSAULT SURVIVORS, RAPE
SURVIVORS, AND INCEST SURVIVORS,
NEEDED for study being conducted by Dr. Fiske at
The University of Pennsylvania Psychology Department. Please tell us about how you dealt with your
experience in a completely confidential interview,
(not a counseling service.) Financial compensation
available. Call Deborah Stearns at 724-2634 and
leave a message.
We didn't protect well enough and
they got a big play."
The last time the Penn defense
registered a safety was in 1985 when
Quakers' All-Ivy linebacker Jeff
Portna tackled Dartmouth tailback
Tim Duax in the end zone.
A bigger result of Curtin's safety
nay be giving Penn's questionable
defense a feeling that things are
improving.
"I thought right now we needed
some positive things to happen,"
Penn free safety Steve Johnson
said. "We needed some big plays.
We were lucky enough to get Danny
Curtin to come out there and make
that play. He is a competitor.
"IThe safety) was definitely an
emotional boost for the defense,
when we really needed it," Johnson
continued. "In effect, the defense
went out there and won the game at
that point."
7—24
2— 25
PASSING — Bucknell: Auchenbach
11-29-1-131. Penn: Glover 1729-1 168
First Quarter
P — Farr 1 run (Fnedenberg kK»). 2:13
Second Quarter
B — Manual 2 past from Auchenbach (Banmo
kick). 13:40
P — Farr 2 run (Friedenberg luck). 10-19
P — Keyi 10 pass from Glover (kick blocked).
8 02
B —Barlmo27FQ,4:18
P — Friedenberg 28 FG. 33
Thkd Quarter
B — Heneaey 22 run (Banmo kick). 10:31
Fourth Quarter
B — Henesey 3 run (Banmo kick). 12 02
P — Safety. Auchenbach tackled m end zone.
RECEIVING - Bucknell: Scocca 5-89.
Miller 3 18. Papa 1-13. Marshal 2-11 Penn:
Whaley 7-91. Keys 5-23. Young 118. Adame
2-15. Caner I-1S, Duma 16.
558
Attendance — 21.807
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING - Bucknell: Henesey 27-133.
Auchenbach 749. Erb 1-17. Barnes 4-11,
Scocca 2-8 Penn: Keys 34-189. Glover 9-61.
Farr 2-3. Malay 1 -5. Malhews 5 2 .
TEAM STATISTICS
FIRST DOWNS
RUSHING YDS
Attempts
PASSING YDS
Attempts
Completions
Touchdowns
Had Intercepted
INT RETURN YDS
Yards Per Return
PENALTIES YDS
FUMBLESLOST
THIRD DOWNS
Percent Converted
FOURTH DOWNS
Percent Convened
POSSESSION TIME
Buck
Penn
16
202
260
Come share them at
CAMPUS
CENTER
OPEN
MEETINGS
51
168
28
17
1
1
0
00
10-84
2-1
7-16
43 8
1-2
500
34:20
131
29
11
1
1
0
0.0
6-43
1-0
5-16
31 3
3-3
100.0
2540
OFFICE ASSISTANT
Area research center's Business Office needs a student to
assist with general office tasks including copying, filing, and
light typing. Hours are flexible but individual must be
dependable and reliable. This is a part time position
available immediately with up to 15 work hours available per
week. Salary range: $4.75-$5.25 per hour. EOE. Please
contact: Peggy Moke, Monell Chemical Senses Center,
3500 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104-3308 Phone:
898-3054.
DO YOU HAVE OPINIONS ABOUT THE NEW CAMPUS CENTER?
21
41
Page 11
Monday, October 23
EXPOSE YOURSELF TO THE
BEAR
Thursday, October 26
7:00 - 8:00 p.m.
Noon - 1:00 p.m.
FACTS
Be Educated about Alcohol Resources
Oct. 23 - 27
110 Annenberg School
FACT 1: One out of every four people
surveyed reported that someone
in their immediate family had an
alcohol or drug problem.
Brought to you by the
Drug & Alcohol Resource Center
898-2219
Members of the Campus Center Advisory Committee encourage you to
participate in the planning process.
n*
Classified Ads
898-1111
HELP WANTED
MARKET DISCOVER Credit
Cards on your campus Flemble
hours. Earn as much as
$10.00/hour. Only len positions
available Call 1-800-950-8472.
—t3.
OVERSEAS
JOBS
$900-2000/mo. Summer, year
round, al countries,, all fields Free
information Write UC. P.O Box
52 PA 05 Corona Del Mar. CA
92825
PART-TIME SECRETARY:
Strong organizational, typing and
word processing skins Familiarity
with University helpful 15 to 20
hours per week in OIP Contact
Patnoa Hanrahan. 898 4661
PART-TIME OATA ENTRY-PERSON Computer experience necessary. Afternoons and Saturdays
Please call 387-2020
HELP WANTED
PICK UP LIZ<3> ar
hour each day. We
turday and Sunday
Mary 222-6973 %-l
SPRING BREAK 1990 Individual
or student organization needed to
promote our Spring Break trips.
Earn money, free trips and valuable
work experience Apply Now" Call
Inter-Campus Programs.
1-800-327-60.3.
STUDENTS... EntoyaWe pan-time
position in TCBY Frozen Yogurt
store University Pa campus. Serving customers and minor food prep.
WW tram. Cal 735-6388 9 to 5.
THOROUGHBRED BREEDING
Farm. Washington. DC Good
wages, proomising future, small
house included References
(301)948-5369 noon or evening.
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
PROGRAMMER ANALYST
leading international supplier oi
newspaper computing systems is
looking for talented Macintosh
programmers The position includes designing, implementing, installing, and supporting Apple Macintosh based pagination and
graphic subsystems. Applicants
must have a degree in Computer
Science or related field and excellent programming skills. Experience with any of C. Macintosh.
UNIS/XENIX. DOS. VMS. QuarkXPress, networking, printing/
publishing, and graphics is a plus.
In general, applicants writ be evaluated on their ab*ry to work as part
of a leam, technical skills, commitment, communication skills, and
ability to learn. Apply m writing with
resume, recent salary history, and
specific skills which make you particularly qualified to . Software Consulting Services, 3162 Bath P*e.
Nazareth. PA 18064
HIRING
SERVERS. CASHIERS. Purchas
ing Agent. Finance Manager
needed lor trie Underground Cafe
Apply at PSA 3rd/FL Houston Hall
SHORT ORDER COOK, .-.pin
once preferred ally Bob s See
Mark or Wanda. 40in Spruce.
222-4340 or apply in person
STUDENT TO HOUSE CLEAN.
FlemcJe hours $5 per/hour
Cal
545 3266
WANTED
SPRING BREAK
Sales Representatives
Average
S3.500 Commissions, part-time,
fieubfe hours, plus free vacations
(Cancun. Bahamas. Bermuda, Rio.
etc )
Vacation Planners
1 -900-47-PARTY (10AM-7PM)
The New York Times Crossword
PRESENTED BY
ONLY A SlieCt GBOVf Of
2 if DffOOM AND I UOtOOM
AND IfFICIlNCieS SlUAIN
CALL 382-1300
Edited by Eugene T. Malcska
25 Filth sign ol the
ACROSS
zodiac
1 Aclress Arthur Of
26 Gradients
Simmons
30 Strelchable
5 "Thou art
- Mall 16 18 34 Insl al Dallas
10 Ostentatious
display
14
Stanley
Gardner
15 Century plant
16 BfJ
17 Fastens
IB Voluminous
volumes
1* Capital ol
Norway
20 Boil
22 Reminded
24
Chaney ol
early films
35 Caughl sight ol
37 Some Nigerians
30 ln|ure
40 Fruil drink
41 Rudoll Ring and
Noel Coward
42 Silkworm
43 Faces
46 Individual
47 Rouse by
sudden alarm
40 Tank or Civil War
general
51 Inlel
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE
52 Female sheep
53 Consecrated
SB Reply
62 Opposile of the
psyche
63 Characienslic
I—
r~
i
H
II
70 Delia or Pee
Wee
71 Congers
11 i■
i
"
"
»
■
■
1
1'
1
R
4 Cuddle
5 Monopoly-right
documenls
6 Conceit
7 Pack down
lightly
6 Eternally
• Did a
shoemaker's |Ob
10 Declares
intention to wed
11 Drying kiln
12Dislanceol
5.280 leel
13 Trudge
21 Sharpen
23 i hojdvM gaunt
pieces
H
1
26 Symbols of
penitence
27 Clever
26 Papal court
26 Bowling score
30 Adolescents
31 Dialect
32 Blackmore's
"
Doone"
33 City in the Ruhr
..li'i'.
ANTIQUE CAR-1958
MORRIS MINOR CONV.
RIGHT
HAND DRIVE
Call
676 9287
HEALTHY MALE AND FEMALE
APPLE IMAGEWRITER II with
stand, cables and original pacMngv
mauats 8 months old Mint condition 2*3-4343
VOLUNTEERS
APPLE MACINTOSH PLUS
Apple Macintosh SE tor sale. Beat
otter Call Bob at 647 5610 9
a_m -5 p m or 363-5996 alter 6
pm
over the age 18 to participate in
APPLE MACINTOSH 512K lor
sale Perfect condition, great price.
Cal 387-0776.
DRUG RESEARCH STUDIES.
GOVT SEIZED Surplus Vehicles
available Irom $100! Call toi immediate information1 1-312-742-1142
All participants
will be compensated
We are conveniently located in Center City
Call (215)790-8040 for information
CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY UNIT
Wyeth-Ayerst Research
e«l 3602
IKEA SOf ABED FILE cab.net bed
and matrass call 563 6681.
7 30-9:30.
m. Comfort and conve
mence. For city commuter Just five
miles from University City. Charm
ing 38R single home $122,900
Call Mark lor details 352 5200.
MONTERO perfect winter car.
4-wheel dnve. 5 speed. AC. good
stereo, security system, low miles
$7000 negotiable 386-3360
11
'
'
i
36 Weddingceremony
response
30 "Love and
1955 Emmyaward song
6'
'
"
53 Aide Abbr
54
conlenden
."
43 Praise
insincerely
44 American Ballet
SAVE $$$ on Domestic and International Airline Tickets Call lor
Best Deals International Travel Exchange 332 2444
SPRING BREAK IN the USSR.
Moscow. Kiev. Vilnius. Leningrad
For more inlormation call
546-7827
TYPIST
DIANE'S PROFESSIONAL Typing
Service — Dissertations, manuscripts :apes word processing.
696-6776
TYPING BY MAGGIE... Papers.
Theses. Resumes Laser Printing. I
will pick up. type, deliver for
proofreading, edit and submit to
you in perfect final form by your
deadline for a very reasonable rate
848 8976
MALES 21 YEARS OR OLDER
■
:
'
;
i ■
apese i devoal pharmacological
•CudkM Aeaae cs* 662 6'06
PIANO AND FURNITURE
Home- office- apanemnt. Piano
wanted'726-6817
MISCELLANEOUS
'.
NEW WORK STUDY POSITIONS
•,«.
TRAVEL
AIR FARE SALE Round trip lares
SFO $189 00. HKG-S729.00. MNL
$940.00 rrwmwonq 440 ;2oo _
■
■'.
■■■.:■
:
'
oa< 7 OBfi 7 nqhts basement,
traen '•move, ran* and cJeanout
En a—iW cat—we— 366-5603.
I"
•
- 1
1
78 vw POP-IOP B •rCatnpar
sink, tlove. etc. Runs great $3800
215-732-1261
MAGIC MAIDS CLEANING S-M
vca speoafc&ng m heavy detail
"
r
i
19
"
i
■MSI
3 Opposed lo
awealher
•
We are looking for
FOR SALE
VESPA 125 cc only 980m Blue
$400 muy tres elegante Bill
222 7004
■1
"
DOWN
M
DIVISION OF ONCOLOGY RESEARCH
SEEKING TWO WORK-STUDY STUDENTS
FOR GENERAL CLERICAL DUTIES AND
ERRAND-RUNNING.
PLEASE
CONTACT
LORIE WINGROVE AT 2222-43701.
FOR SALE
I960 -PUCH" MOPED $50000
contact Howard 12 30 lo 2 00
896 5444
»
B
1NFL leam
2 Canal of lake
n
n
I
HELP WANTED
■•
1
!c
65 Quote
66 Dross
67 Enroll
6B Group including
SAC
60 Raced
'
(
HELP WANTED
898-1111
55 Bradley or
Khayyam
• Not previously advertised
• Insight into graduate admissions process
• Public relations/marketing for an internationalized
MBA
• Great pay!
• Work directly for Senior Staff
The Lauder Institute, a joint Wharton MBA/Arts and Sciences
MA in International Relations, is looking for candidates.
56 Lake m Ireland
57 Social
engagement
SO Sagacious
60 Cousin ol etc
45 Stitched
4B Slannum
61 Sports officials.
lor shofl
so' M
64 Plural ending
Interested? contact: Susan Teegardin phone: 898-5154
VCR. STEREO. AND anawertng
machines 'epa*red Free estimates, reasonable rates, guaranteed work The Movie Ticket. Houston HaH 222-0101
Page 12 The Daily Pennsyrvanian
Monday, October 23.1989
F. Hockey travels to Penn State
Penn must beat 4th-ranked Nittany Lions to have chance for NCAAs
Investment Banking
Opportunities at
First Boston
First Boston, a special bracket investment banking firm,
headquartered in New York, will be recruiting for its financial
analyst program. Positions are available in the Investment
Banking Department (including the Mergers and Acquisitions,
Real Estate, and other Groups), and the Public Finance,
Mortgage Products, and Sales and Trading Departments. All
Seniors are cordially invited to attend a presentation.
Presentation:
Monday, October 23, 1989
Palladium Restaurant
Memorial Hall Second Floor
361" and Locust Wilk
7:00p.m.
Interviewing schedule:
January 30, 1990
For further information and inquiries, please feel free to
contact:
Investment Banking
Jonathan Rouner
Caroline Cavanaugh
(212) 909-4869
(212) 909-4372
Public Finance
Jennifer Daugherty
(212)909-2191
By NOAM HAREL
In the biggest game of the year to
date for the Penn field hockey team,
the most important decision was
made by a football coach
"It's really up to [Penn State football coach] Joe Paterao," said senior midfielder Carrie Vesely about
whether the game was to be scheduled for a grass or artificial surface. "I don't know if he's the Athletic Director, too (he isn't), but he's
the football coach, and that's
enough."
The final decision is that 16thranked Penn will play fourth-ranked
Penn State today on the grass at
Lady Lion Field (3 p.m.).
Apprarently, Patemo decided he
wanted to have his team practice on
the artificial surface at Holuba Hall.
The Nittany Lions' football coach
had more influence than he might
have expected when he made that
decision, because to the Quakers
(7-2-1), grass is a four-letter word.
Both of Perm's losses mis year have
come on the dreaded surface. Thus,
Paterno inadvertantly made the
right choice for Penn State (12-2-1). decision.
"If anyone deserves to get fired
"Any team in their right mind
would choose to play us on grass," up to play us, it's them," Vesely said.
Added Donohue: "They're really
Penn junior goalkeeper Sue Donohue said on Saturday. "I really going to come at us out there. Every
hoped we would play on turf. We time we play Penn State we know
play a short game with a lot of little it's a really big game."
But don't feel too badly for the
passes, and it just doesn't work well
on grass. Our home field (Franklin Quakers. Even after two losses and
a
tie
so far this season, they know
Field) is turf, and turf is usually all
we ever pracUce on. so we're better that beating a national power like
Penn State could earn them one of
on turf."
Uncontrollable factors further the 12 berths in the NCAAs next
hurt the Quakers when last week's month. Penn determination thus far
rain prevented Penn from pracUc- has been successful, as evidenced
ing on the natural surface at River in last Tuesday's 1-0, overtime win
Field. They made the trip to West- at 13th-ranked Temple.
"One of our goals in the beginning
ern Pennsylvania early yesterday so
they could get in at least one day of of the year was to make the tournament," Vesely said. "And now we're
practice on grass.
The Quakers' past performances going to be just as fired up to win as
against Penn State could ironically Penn State is."
Penn also has a successful preceprove unfavorable. Penn has won
each of the last four meetings be- dent to look back on concerning the
tween these two teams in double surface of today's game. Two years
overtime. Two of those came last ago, the then-struggling Quakers
year, and the most recent on the won, 4-3 in double overtime (of
Nittany Lions' minds was the one in course), at Penn State, ending the
which they were eliminated from Nittany Lions' 60-game home grass
last year's NCAA tourney with a 3-2 winning streak.
Our Halloween crazies are here!
-hWtUMuvUL
Mortgage Products Sales and Trading
David W&rren Jane Morison-Canlon
(212) 909-3454
(212) 909-7749
FIRST BOSTON
Park Avenue Plaza
New York, N.Y. 10055
Halloween is
early* this year
so come in soon
and see our
Boo Bazaar!
IHaodtWIlbDD
•According to the pumpkin patch
r ISM Hn* Cot
*?
For Finance
and Accounting,
why Clorox?
Top business graduates have a tremendous choice of careers.
Why do so many of them choose to join Clorox in our Finance &
Accounting Development Program?
Because at Clorox they have an opportunity to work in a very
successful consumer products company that manufactures and
markets category leaders.
Because at Clorox they have exposure to all areas of finance AND
accounting with increasing levels of responsibility and scope.
Because at Clorox they can obtain a strong operations orientation in
finance and accounting that enables the F8A group to play a key role
in developing short- and long-range business plans. Experience that
translates into leadership positions within the company at all levels of
management.
If you are an undergraduate business major, join us at our oncampus presentation and we'll tell you more about the opportunities
and rewards available at Clorox.
Finance & Accounting
On-Campus Presentation/Reception
Wednesday, October 25th
4:00 to 6:00 PM
Vance Hall
B8-9
IS COMING TO
University of Pennsylvania
Interviews will be held October 23 - 25.
To sign up for an interview, or to
get more information, contact the
Office of Fraternity and Sorority Affairs,
898-5263.
*
*
On-Campus Interviews, November 30th
& December 1st
rCLOROX
* OPEN TO SOPHMORE/JUNIOR/SENIOR WOMEN *
We are an Affirmative Action Employer.
Monday, October23,1989
The Daily Pennsylvania!!
Page 13
SportsWire
Compiled from Associated Press Dispatches
World Series will resume Friday
Scoreboard
■ NFL
NHL
WALES CONFERENCE
Patrick Division
W L T Pit QF GA
6 1 1 13 35 24
NY. Rangers
New Jersey
NY. Islanders
Pittsburgh
Washington
Philadelphia
Buffalo
Montreal
Boston
Quebec
Hartford
9
7
7
7
3
Adams
W
5
5
4
3
3
30
32
29
30
21
26
32
33
34
32
Division
L T Pis GF GA
3 1 11 31 24
5 0 10 29 27
4 1
9 27 29
4 1
7 37 34
5 1
7 29 35
CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Norrls Division
Minnesota
Chicago
Detroit
St Louis
Toronto
W
5
5
4
3
3
L T Pis OF GA
2 1 11 31 27
4 1 11 39 37
4 1
9 32 38
4 0
6 31 28
5 0
6 35 44
Smyth* Division
L T Pts GF GA
Calgary
2 2 12 45 35
Los Angeles
4 0 10 41 38
Vancouver
4 0 10 33 33
Edmonton
4 1
7 30 29
Winnipeg
4 0 6 25 33
FRIDAY'S GAMES
Buffalo e. Montreal 2
Vancouver 3. New Jersey 2
NY Islanosrs5.Washington3
Chicago 4. Winnepeg 2
Boston 3. Edmonton 0
SATURDAY'S GAMES
Detroit 3. Hartford 3
Quebec 7. Minnesota 2
Vancouver 2. N.Y.I
NY RangenS.Phi
Butlak) 4. Pittsburgh^
N«w Jersey 5. Montreal 4
Calgary 5. Boston 2
Toronto 6. Washington 4
Los Angeles 6 St Louis 4
LASTNtGHT'SGAMES
Winnipeg 5. Edmonton 4
Chicago 7. Los Angeles 4
TONIGHTS GAMES
Hartford at Montreal. 735 p.m.
Vancouver at N.Y. Rangers. 7:35 p m
New Jersey at Toronto. 7:35 p.m.
r.'asnmgton at Calgary. 9:35pm
TOMORROW NIGHTS GAMES
Ecmonton at N.Y. Islanders. 7:35pm.
St Louis at Philadelphia. 7 35 pm
Chicago alDottpt. 7 35 p.m
■ NCAA
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eastern Division
W L T Pet
NY Giants
6 1 0 .857
Philadelphia
5 2 0 .714
Washington
4 3 0 .571
Phoenix
3 4 0 .429
Dallas
0 7 0 .000
PF
175
162
186
137
96
PA
109
140
166
163
213
Central
W
Minnesota
5
Chicago
4
Green Bay
3
Tampa Bay
3
Detroit
1
Division
L T Pet
2 0 .714
2 0 .667
4 0 .429
4 0 .429
6 0 .143
PF
146
192
182
148
98
PA
113
136
181
152
170
Western Division
WLT Pel
San Francisco 6 1 0 .857
LA Rams
5 2 0 .714
New Orleans
3 4 0 .429
Atlanta
2 5 0 .286
PF
192
183
175
128
PA
135
165
130
163
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Eastern Division
WLT Pet
5 2 0 .714
4 3 0 .571
4 3 0 .571
2 5 0 .286
1 6 0 .143
Buffalo
Indian^olis
Miami
New England
N.Y. Jets
Cincinnati
Houston
Cleveland
Pittsburgh
PF
190
134
144
108
122
PA
163
120
159
169
192
Central Division
WLT Pet PF PA
4 3 0 .571 148 117
4 3 0 .571 194 170
3 3 0 .500 138 88
3 4 0 .429 93 169
Western Olvlslon
WLT Pet
Denver
6 1 0 .857
Kansas City
3 4 0 .429
LA. Raiders
3 4 0 .429
Seattle
3 4 0 429
San Diego
2 5 0 .286
PF
160
137
141
133
125
YESTERDAY S GAMES
Kansas City 38. Dallas 28
Miami 23. Green Bay 20
Indianapolis 23. Cincinnati 12
Philadelphia 10.LA Raiders7
Minnesota 20. Detroit 7
Buffalo 34. NY Jets 3
Houston 27. Pittsburgh 0
Washington 32. Tampa Bay 28
San Francisco 37. New England 20
Phoenix 34. Atlanta 20
Denver 24, Seattle 21. OT
New Orleans 40. LA Rams 21
N V Giants 20. San Diego 13
TONIGHT'S GAME
Chicago at Cleveland 9 p.m
PA
105
159
124
148
146
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
SATURDAYS GAMES
TOP 25
tt Notre Dame 28. »9 Southern Cat 24
•2 Miami. Fla ide
n Colorado 49. Kansas 17
M Nebraska 48. Oklahoma 23
•5 Michigan 26. kx« 12
#10 Alabama 47, M Tennessee 30
Texas 24, #7 Arkansas 20
•8 Pittsburgh. xSe
114 Florida Si 22. Sll Auburn 14
ClemeonSO. »12N CaroinaSl. 10
•ISBnois M.Michigan St 10
#22 Arizona 23. «i 5 Washington St 21
#16 Houston 95. SMU 21
»l7P*nnSl idle
•18 West Virginia 99 Cinemas 3
Texas Chnsssn 27. »1» Ak Force 9
•20 Fonda 27. New Mexico 21
•21 Bnghem Young 49. Texas El Paso 24
»23 Texas AaM 14, Baylor 11
•24 South Carokna 24. W Carokna 3
•25 Oklihoma 43. Iowa SI. 40
EAST
Army 34. Lalayeae 20
Navy 27. Boston Coseg* 24
Boston U 34. Rhode Island 31. 20T
Brown 28, Cornel 7
Yale 23. Columbia 0
Harvard 6. Dartmouth 5
HolyCioes31.Colg«le6
Lehign 33. Northeastern 13
Maine 30. Connecticut 8
Delaware 21. Massachusetts 14
New Hampshxe 21. Richmond 7
Perm 25. Bucknel 24
Pnnceton 38. Fordham 20
Syracuse 49. Rutgers 28
Vasnova 20. waum a Mary 17
SOUTH
East Carolina 14. VigkHl Tech 10
Georgia Tech 17. North Caroma 14
Kentucky 27. Louaiana St. 21
Duke 46. Maryland 25
Akron 31. Murray St 31
SW Louaiana 24. S Mississippi 21
Georgia 35. Vandert* 18
Virginia 47. Wake Forest 28
MIDWEST
ISnooSl 15. IndonaSt 13
Inctana 28. Minnesota 18
MMoufl 21. Kansas SI 9
N. larns 42. Nevade Las Vegas 24
Oho St 21. Purdue 3
OfaoU 37. Kent St 14
Wisconsin 35. Northwestern 31
SOUTHWEST
Texas Tech 41. Rice 25
Ti«a 31. Louavue 24
FAR WEST
Oregon 27. Arizona SI 7
Washington 29. Caifomia 16
Colorado St 31.Hawaa 16
Utah St 28. New Mexico St 13
Oregon Si 18. UCLA 17
Utah 27. Stanlord 24
Eagles hold off Raiders, 10-7, to keep pace with first-place Giants
SAN FRANCISCO — The World
Series is already a memory, more so
by the day. It's not even over and
may not be until November.
Game three will now be Friday —
three days later than expected
in
the earthquake-ravaged Bay area.
The delay stretches the layoff to a
record 11 days and pushes a possible Game 7 to November 1.
Baseball commissioner Fay Vincent, in a joint statement yesterday
with San Francisco mayor Art Agnos, said the city was not ready to
play tomorrow, as originally hoped.
"We have agreed that baseball
should resume with enthusiasm
this coming week, but we also
agreed that [tomorrow! was too ambitious," Vincent said.
By the time the Oakland Athletics
and San Francisco Giants meet
again, they each will have played
just two games in nearly three
weeks
both won by Oakland. A
World Series thrives on momentum,
and this one lost it last Tuesday at
5:04 p.m. PDT, 30 minutes before
the start of Game 3.
Everyone admits the games won't
be the same. But Vincent and Agnos
say the World Scries should be finished, even if it's two weeks late,
provided it's possible.
The city needs to test its ability to
handle traffic — the Bay Bridge, the
very symbol of the series, is closed
after a partial collapse — needs to
line up adequate security and, most
importantly, must make sure Candlestick Park is safe. Vincent and Agnos said they expected everything
to be ready by the weekend.
"We would not come to you and
say we'll play Friday unless there
was a high certainty we could play
then." Vincent said.
Vincent said he has not yet met
with Mayor Lionel Wilson of Oakland, the site of the deadly freeway
collapse.
"He's a very busy man," Vincent
said, adding he didn't think there
would be a problem with playing in
the Oakland Coliseum
Later yesterday, Wilson said he
has mixed emotions about resuming the series but he firmly believes
no games should be played while rescue efforts continue on the freeway. He said he questions whether
it is appropriate to play at all be-
cause of the damage and continuing
recovery effort.
Now, Games three and four and, if
necessary, Game five, will be played
during the weekend at Candlestick
Park. Monday would be an off-day
and the series would finish at Oakland Coliseum with Game six Tuesday and Game seven Wednesday,
November 1.
All games will be played at their
original starting times, each approximately at 5:30 p.m. PDT.
Should the series go beyond five
games, it would be baseball's latest
ending ever. Los Angeles won the
1981 World Series on Oct. 28. ending
a strike-marred year that included
an extra round of playoffs because
of the split-season.
Vincent admitted baseball considered canceling the World Series.
"We did give it some thought," he
said, but strongly emphasized, "We
will finish this series right here. It is
no longer appropriate to think about
moving this series, nor is it appropriate to think about canceling this
series."
Agnos agreed.
"Cable cars are running, the opera is performing, conventions are
starting, the 49ers are playing.
We've even had our first protest demonstration and that's a sure sign
of things returning to normal in San
Francisco," he said. "It's time to go
on."
The San Francisco 49ers were
scheduled to play New England at
Candlestick Park yesterday, but the
NFL game was moved to nearby
Stanford Stadium for fan safety reasons. The Giants held a one-hour
workout at Candlestick on Sunday
while the Athletics practiced at the
Oakland Coliseum.
"They want to play, but they recognize these are different times,"
Athletics general manager Sandy
Alderson said. "I'm certain it creates problems for your pitching, for
motivation."
"Now that there is a definite date,
the players will respond to it,"
Giants general manager Al Rosen
said.
Football
PHILADELPHIA — In a game of
misses, near and wide, a hit was the
difference for the Philadelphia Eagles yesterday.
Philadelphia converted two interceptions into a Randall Cunningham one-yard touchdown run and a
field goal by Luis Zendejas, and the
Eagles' defense contributed a key
sack late in the fourth quarter for a
10-7 victory over Los Angeles, the
Raiders' first loss in three games
under Coach Art Shell.
Trailing 10-7, the Raiders moved
from their 42 to a first down at the
Eagles' 20, but linebacker Seth Joyner sacked Steve Beuerlein for
eight yards on third anil six and
Jeff Jaeger's field goal attempt with
1:59 remaining in the game sailed
wide right.
"We wanted to keep it close and
we did." Shell said. "We just didn't
get the job done."
"I think the tougher the opppnent
is. the tougher we play," Joyner
said. "I just don't understand why
we've just been able to squeak by
the last couple of weeks (a 17-5 win
over Phoenix).
"At times we're playing exceptional, but at times we can play a lot
better and a lot smarter.
The Eagles (5-2) kept pace with
the first-place New York Giants
(6-1) who beat the Chargers 20-13
yesterday at Jack Murphy Stadium
in San Diego.
The Eagles' defense, which allowed its first touchdown in three
games, contributed three other
sacks in addition to the two interceptions, making up for a poor outing by Cunningham, who completed
just eighl-of-20 for 64 yards.
The Eagles (5-2) snapped a scoreless tie with 1:56 left in the third period after cornerback Izel Jenkins
intercepted a Jay Schroeder pass
and returned 22 yards to the Raiders' 24.
Cunningham then passed 12
yards to wide receiver Ron Johnson, and Anthony Toney ran 10 for
a first down on the two. After Toney
gained one. Cunningham dove into
the end zone for a 7-0 lead.
Philadelphia increased it to 10-0
as Zendejas kicked a 34-yard field
goal on the last play of the third
period.
Management Consultants
cordially invites
THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
Classes of 1990 & 1991
to a presentation and reception on
Associate Consultant Career Opportunities
and Internships in
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Boston
San Francisco
London
Paris
Milan
Munich
Sydney
Tokyo
Toronto
Corporate Strategy Consulting
Tuesday, October 24, 1989
The Faculty Club, 7:00 PM
ALL MAJORS WELCOME
Pag*14
The Dally Pennsytvanlan
Monday, October 23,1068
Sports
Curtin falls on Bucknell, 25-24
Tackle's safety
is margin of win
After icing game,
lineman ices knee
By JOHN DI PAOLO
As Penn defensive lineman Dan Curtin stood on the
sidelines and watched Bucknell placckickcr Steve Barimo come perilously close to converting a 46-yard field
goal attempt with 14 seconds remaining, a feeling of
powerlessness overcame him.
Earlier that quarter Curtin had seen a 16-yard sack of
Bison quarterback Scott Auchenbach, which would
have left Bucknell with a third-and-goal from the
23-yard line, erased on a defensive holding penalty. On
the subsequent play, Bison fullback Brian Henesey
powered his way for a three-yard touchdown and a
24-23 Bison lead with 12:02 left in the game.
And now, with 20 seconds remaining, Curtin was on
the verge of witnessing his second sack negated, too —
On the Sidelines
the safety which gave the Quakers the lead, 25-24.
"There was nothing much I could do," Curtin said. "1
hoped someone could get their hand up and tip the
ball."
While no Penn special teams player was able to ascend quick enough, the Quakers' guardian angel must
have been near because the ball hit the bottom of the
crossbar.
For the third consecutive week, Penn led by three
points or less in the waning moments but came out
unscathed.
Curtin's season, however, has not been so damagefree. Early in preseason camp, Curtin, who moved to
defensive line from linebacker, was penciled in as the
number-one weakside tackle. But an injury to his left
knee during training camp required arthroscopic
surgery to repare bone and cartilage damage and sacked his hopes of starting at least temporarily. And as he
spoke, his left leg was elevated, his knee wrapped in ice.
"The injury was frustrating," said Curtin, who returned to action last week against Columbia, two weeks
earlier than expected. "I kept trying to play for a week
(after the injury), but I was not able.
"Coming from linebacker, I really don't have the instincts of a defensive lineman," Curtin continued. "I
just have to get in there and get some [repetitions]. My
job is to get some pressure on the quarterback and
make an impact mainly on second- and third-and-long
so the defensive back can get in position to make an interception, n just will] try to contribute any way I can."
And the way which Curtin left his mark Saturday was
in defending the scrambling Auchenbach, with the
same opportunistic style reminiscent of previous Penn
linemen. Throughout the fourth quarter, Curtin made
Auchenbach very conscious of his presence by pressuring the Bison quarterback to hurry his passes.
Midway through the quarter, facing third-and-21 at
the eight yard line, Auchenbach dropped back into the
end zone with the idea of completing a quick pass to ensure that Bucknell would not have to punt from its end
zone.
Please see CURTIN, page 11
Dave Berett/OP Senior Photographer
By GREG BROWN
In the Penn football team's last two victories over
lightly-regarded Columbia and Brown, the Quakers'
defense yielded a combined 51 points. But when Perm's
offense stalled in the second half against Bucknell, it
was up to the defense to provide the winning margin in
the Quakers' 25-24 victory before 21,807 Saturday at
Franklin Field.
Defensive tackle Dan Curtin sacked Bison quarterback Scott Auchenbach in the end zone for a safety
with 5:58 remaining to give Penn (4-1) its third consecutive victory by a field goal or less. But the Quakers
couldn't celebrate until Bucknell's Steve Barimo's
46-yard field goal attempt hit the crossbar and bounded
harmlessly "-—^™
back into the
IVY STANDINGS
field of play
Ivy Overall
with 20 sec- Princeton
3-0
4-1-1
0 n d s Yale
3-0
5-1
remaining.
Penn
2-0
4-1
"Before the Cornell
1-0
3-1
game started, Harvard
2-1
2-4
1 told the de- Brown
1-3
1-5
fense that at Dartmouth
0-3
1-5
some point, we Columbia
0-4
0-6
would be in a
Tomorrow's Games
position to win Penn 25, Buckn.ll 24
it," senior free Brown 28, Cornell 7
safety Steve Harvard 6, Dartmouth 5
Johnson said Princeton 38, Fordham 20
after Penn de- Yale 23. Columbia 0
tea ted the Bison (2-4). "Sure enough, we came through
with two points for the safety which was the difference
in the game. Then, we held them far enough back to
keep them barely out of field goal range."
But that missed field goal for Bucknell may not have
mattered if another Bison field goal had been attempted. After junior Rich Friedenberg kicked a
28-yard field goal with 33 seconds left in the first half to
put Penn up 23-10, Bison returnman Lester Erb broke
through the Quakers' kickoff coverage and went
streaking down the right sideline. But senior linebacker Mike Begg ran cross field and finally caught up
with Erb at the Penn 17-yard line with 20 seconds left
Auchenbach threw two incompletes, and Bucknell
called time out with seven seconds remaining.
Instead of attempting the 34-yard field goal, Bison
coach Lou Maranzana had Auchenbach try once more
for the Quakers' end zone, but the senior quarterback
overthrew Erb, who was heavily guarded by comerback Steve Palmer. It appeared that time was still on
the clock, but the officials let the half expire. The Bison
were irate, but apparently there was a problem with
the scoreboard clock earlier in the quarter — when the
clock kept running after tailback Bryan Keys' touchdown reception and the officials were the only ones
keeping proper time.
"I thought we were robbed at the end of the half,"
Maranzana said. "There were two seconds left on the
Defensive lineman Dan Curtin makes Bison quarterback Scott Auchenbach hurry his throw.
Volleyball loses key matches to Harvard, Brown
By ZACH CONEN
At some point in Penn volleyball coach Joe
Sagula's life, his mother must have told him
that there'd be days, weekends and even seasons like this. But if she did tell him, Sagula
certainly doesn't remember it
"I never anticipated being in this situation
at this point in the season," he said yesterday.
The reason for Sagula's somber words is
the Quakers' performance this past weekend
against Ivy League rivals Harvard and
Brown. Penn, a preseason Ivy favorite, was
Penn looks to tie for Big Five championship today
soundly spanked on the road by both the
Crimson, 3-1, and the Bears, 3-2.
On Friday night the Quakers (7-13 overall,
2-2 Ivies) were beaten by Harvard (6-7,1-2) for
the first time ever. Perhaps Penn was looking
past the lightly-regarded Crimson in anticipation of its meeting with defending Ivy champion Brown the next day. Perhaps they were
tired from the long bus ride to Cambridge.
Perhaps they were worried about midterm
exams. Whatever, the Quakers came out for
the match flat, falling behind by two games almost immediately.
"We were pretty awful," Penn co-captain
I'.im Von Essen admitted. "We're just on a
bad roll right now."
The second game was especially atrocious
for the Quakers, who lost their composure as
Harvard played like the league's preseason
favorites in a 15-2 victory. The Quakers, how-
ever, battled back in the next game, eking out
a 15-13 victory. But Penn couldn't sustain the
attack and fell in the next game, completing
the 15-10,15-2, 13-15, 15-8 Harvard conquest
Though a loss is always a loss, the Quakers
were fairly pleased with their effort against
Brown (5-8, 2-2) on Saturday. The intenselycontested match lasted the full five games, as
Penn set a new school record for spikes (247)
and digs (112) in one match.
Please see VOLLEYBALL, page 9
Navy jayvee beats Frosh Football
Dunphy's Day
By MICHAEL AWAD
A powerful friend of the Penn
freshman football team in its first two
games has been the big play, but as
the Quakers found out Friday afternoon in their 7-0 loss to Navy's jayvee
team at Franklin Field, few such
friends are loyal in the game of
football.
With 3:46 remaining in the first
quarter. Navy quarterback Sean
Shingler scrambled away from the
Quakers' defense for a 57-yard touchdown run. And for Penn, who outgained the Midshipmen, 310-252,
missed opportunites prevented the
Quakers from any big plays of their
own as they were shut out for the
first time this season.
The loss was the first for a Penn
freshman football team since 1987.
"We played a good game against a
good team," Penn coach Dave Rackovan said. "It wasn't lack of effort
that cost us the game. We just did not
execute in critical situations. We're
improving as a football team in all
phases each week and that's important, but we've got to maintain more
consistency."
Big mistakes at the wrong times
plagued Penn's offense, stifling several long, sustained drives. A blocked
field goal in the second quarter,
three fumbles and an interception all
helped to keep the Quakers (2-1) off
the scoreboard. Navy (1-2), despite
not having practiced much as a team
because it serves as its varsity's scout team, minimized its mistakes,
giving up one interception and missing a field goal.
"[Navy's] lack of team practice really didn't show," Rackovan said.
"They executed pretty well. Lately,
we've been getting four or five turnovers against teams, but we only
stripped one fumble and got one
interception."
Rackovan said his defense passed
the test of stifling Navy's wishbone
offense and handling the Midshipmen's superior size on the line. Navy
used a lopsided attack, completing
only one of five passes for just nine
yards. But Shingler didn't need to
pass to survive as a quarterback as
he gained 103 yards rushing, includPlease see FROSH, page 9
Lightweight Football drops second
in a row with 41-27 loss to Rutgers
■ JohnsonOP Photo Editor
Men's basketball team's new coach Fran Dunphy
instructs forward Vince Cumin at the Quakers' first
practice Saturday. The women also began the new
year Saturday under first-year coach Julie Soriero.
By JAMES SAINT
Whatever the Penn lightweight
football team came to do in a 41-27
loss to Rutgers Friday night at
Franklin Field, it did not come to play
the way potential Eastern Lightweight Football League champions
come to play.
The Quakers, who began the season with three consecutive victories,
have almost taken themselves out of
the ELFL race the last two weeks.
Penn (3-2 overall, 1-2 ELFL) lost to
Army, 21-19, two weeks ago and is
still looking to clinch its first winning
season since 1961, when it went 4-2.
"We did not play that well against
Rutgers," Quakers sophomore cornerback Ty Miller said. "I felt we deserved to win against Army. We did
not deserve to win this game."
But Penn was leading 28-20 at halftime despite the fact that the Scarlet
Knights (2-1,1-1) surprised the Quakers by establishing their passing attack before the run.
Rutgers quarterback Steve Surman had a superb night against the
usually tough Penn secondary, completing 15-of-29 passes for 216 yards
and three touchdowns. Surman was
particulary lethal in the second half,
when the Scarlet Knights dominated
the Quakers, outscoring Penn, 21-0.
"Surman came out and did exactly
what we wanted to do," said Rutgers
coach Charlie Eibeler of his quarterback whose five-yard touchdown
pass to wide receiver Earl Jackson
with 9:40 remaining sealed the
Knights' victory.
"He went to the pass right from the
start and had success with it," he
continued. "We weren't afraid to let it
fly."
Penn's defensive line had expected
to put more pressure on Surman, but
was stymied all game by Rutgers' offensive front.
Please see LIGHT, page 9
Please see SAFETY, page 10
M. Lax tries
out new rules
in scrimmages
Because of radical rule
changes for the upcoming
season, the Penn men's lacrosse team traveled to
Yale this weekend to play
In a
preseason
tournament
Penn, who lost in first
round of the NCAA Tournament to Navy, 12-11 last
season, played two 30-minute games against Yale,
Cornell, Princeton and
Brown. Each scrimmage
was officiated, in order to
work out some kinks in
new rules which could
drastically change college
lacrosse by preventing
teams from stalling in their
own zone. No official
scores of the scrimmages
were available.
The biggest change In
the rule book Involves
clearing from defense to offense. In the past, rules
had been modified so that
the team clearing the ball
had to maintain forward
motion, or else lose poses
sion of the ball. This year,
the rules have changed
further, and the clearing
team must first move the
ball out of the restraining
box within 10 seconds.
Once out of the box the ball
may not re-enter.
Sound confusing? Think
basketball. The defense
must cross halfcourt in 10
seconds or give up
possession.
Here's another change
in the lacrosse rules: after
the ball crosses the midfield line it must be advanced into the defense's
restraining box within 10
seconds. If the ball is again
removed from the bos it
must again be moved in
within another 10.
— Alec Schwartz

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