14
%\\t Batfo Beratstrltoratt ^ol. CD, No. 55 PHILADELPHIA. Monday, April 21. 1'ixr. Copyngm 19«« Th» Only P»nniylv«n«r U. to construct $80 million power By r I>V\ ARI) SlISSMAN The University and Amlrak have decided 10 >rocccd with plans to build an $80 million in- lependent power plant after reviewing a easibility study which concludes that the facili- y could be operational within three years. The 58-megawatt cogeneration plant is vresently contending with strong opposition rom the Philadelphia Electric Company, which s refusing to provide backup power or to allow he proposed project to use existing electrical ransmission lines. But University and Amtrak officials said last veek (hat they will proceed with the power ilani with or without PECo.'s cooperation. The facility will be constructed at Murphy Field along the Schuylkill River. The cogenera- ion process converts gas to steam and electrici- ty. PECo. currently uses oil to generate steam tiul electricity. If the plant is built. PECo. will lose two of its biggest customers and the utility's aging downtown steam loop would suffer a serious usage drop. The University currently spends ap- proximately $27 million a year on PECo. steam and electricity and Amtrak spends approx- imately $30 million a year. The move to completely separate the Univer- sity from PECo. comes just as the uliltiy is ask- ing the Public Utility Commission to grant a 28 percent rate increase to pay for the limerick I nuclear power plant. The University is formally contesting the rale increase in a hearing current- ly being conducted in Harrisburg. A ruling is expected in June. PECo. is also expected to ask for higher rates to finance the construction of the multimillion dollar Limerick 2 nuclear power plant. According to a feasibility study prepared In the Burns and Roc Industrial Services Corpora tion, if projected energy costs remain on track. the cogeneration facility will save the Universi- ty $7 million during its first year of use and will pay for itself by year three. Initial plans call for Amtrak and the Univer sity to split construction costs. The University expects to finance costs through loans. PECo. objects to the project because of the possible structuring of the plant's ownership, under which a third party compan) would be established to manage the concern. A similar third party arrangement is being considered b> the Public Utilities Commision for a facility in Chester. The University has joined in the coin plaint seeking to force PECo. to guarantee backup power in Chester. A preliminary favorable ruling was reached last month, and a final ruling is expected in June. Third party ownership allows Amtrak and the University to take advantage of tax in- centive! favoring cogeneration. Senior Vice President Helen O'Bannon said last night that the University will proceed with the plant whether the ruling is upheld or not She said she expects the Trustees to grant ap proval for the project at their June meeting and that the Univenit) is beginning the process ol applying for city, stale and federal permits. Licensing procedures arc expected to take three months io complete, "I do not believe that we can ignore the rising COStl Ol energy to the University and the fact that the University is a sitting duck in regards to steam and the long term viability of steam," O'Bannon said. O'Bannon added that she believes that PI i o , as a Mate licensed utility, will be held responsible foi providing backup electridt) to the University. Backup clectncilv would be essential for the Hospital of the University ol Pennsylvania "The issue here is under what terms and .u what price would Philadelphia Electric provide backup power," she said. "It cannot lake a walk merely bccma an entity chooses not to take all its electricity from Philadelphia Electric." She added that the third pans .iiiaiiKcniciii would allow the University to utilize outside expertise. "|The plant| does not play to our strength hut there are individuals out there who would want to take responsibility for the Univcisitv and Amtrak." she Mid, lacilitics Management Vice President John Anderson Mid last nigh: that the Univcrsiiv has decided to assume an aggressive strategy in get- ting the plant built. ((. ontinued on page 4) HELEN O'BANNON '( niversitvproceeding with plant' Tommy Laonardl/Daily Henntytvantan Penn Iri-caplain Joe <.ilU-iii attempts Io elude Brown midfield Brian Heffcrnan M. Lacrosse nets piece of title Brown falls in double overtime, 9-8 By THOMAS HILL Just minutes after his goal gave the Penn men's lacrosse team a 9-8 double-overtime victory over Brown Saturday night at Franklin Field, Kevin Nicklas was able to put the moment in its proper perspective. "This was our season, right here," he said, referring to (he win which assured the Quakers at least a lie for the Ivy League title. "We're out of the NCAAs. This was it." Even that reality was not enough to downplay the Quakers' accomplishment. In fact, the possibility that Penn may not participate in the NCAA lournameni this season enhanced the win over Brown. "Even if we don't make the tourney." tri-captain Pat Prendergast said, "we'll be able to say that we're the best in the Ivies. That's why this is so important." The manner in which the game was finally decided did nothing to belittle (hat importance. Through 60 minutes of regulation and five-and-a-half minutes of overtime, the Quakers and the Bruins battled to an 8-8 tie. But with two-and-a-halt minutes to play in the se- cond four-minute sudden-death overtime period, Nicklas drove toward the crease, beat defense Rod I lama i and fired a low shot to the right of Brown Goaltender Scott Lohan. "When 1 caught the ball, 1 thought about settling the offense down," the junior atlack said, "but then I thought that 'this is the second overtime and my man |Hamar| hadn't contained me all day. . .In the first play of the game. I realized that he wasn't (hat fast." Nicklas' decision to go to goal put an end to the marathon, which, in its later stages, had become a tac- tical war. The tying goal by Brown mid fie Id Greg Rogers with 13:09 to play in the fourth quarter did not look as if it would be the final score in regulation. Rogers' goal came just over a minute after Penn mid- (Conllnued on back page) Math TA charged with making death threats By K'DI KERTER A federal magistrate Friday denied bail to a Mathematics Department teaching assistant who has been accus ed of making death threats to a female University student. Selim Dincer, a mathematics graduate student from Turkey, was arrested by FBI agents Friday. He allegedly sent threatening letters and placed harassing telephone calls to a University sophomore. The name of the studem has no( been released. A bail hearing has been se( for Tuesday. An article in Saturday's Philadelphia Daily News said that the letters included a photograph of a body with stab wounds, accompanied by a description of a murder and pic- tures of a decapitated body. The stu- dent also received a scries of death threats over the phone. The student was in one of Dincer's mathematics classes during the summmer. U.S. Magistrate Edwin Naythons ordered Friday that Dincer be held without bail since he posed a threat to die community. Naythom could not be reached for commeni. The alleged harassment began before Thanksgiving and continued throughoul the year Campus police tapped the student's phone and were able to trace the calls to a telephone listed in Dincer's name. Mathematics Graduate Affairs Chairman Peter Freyd said yesterday that the department first learned about the FBI's suspicions Friday morning. "I'm flabbergasted," Freyd said. "We found out about this via a telephone call from the Daily News on Friday morning at around 11:30." "When I talked to (Vice Provost for University Life James) Bishop, it seemed to be brand new to him," he added. "His information only came in 15 minutes earlier." Freyd expressed surprise that the department and academic officials were not notified of the investigation earlier. "I think this was a poor way to find out something like this," he said. "If Public Safetj believes tins person »us a danger to the community, as the COtirt does, we should base heard about H earlier." Mathematics Department facult) members shared I reyd'i surprise ovn the arrest Freyd added thai since Dincer had been "well-received" by students, the bail denial on the grounds of "danger 10 the communi- ty" comes as even more ol a shock "It seems to be son ol a total shock to everyone," Mathematics Lecturet William kazcz said yesttrda) "It's completely out ol the blue." Nciihei Dincer'i court appointed lawyer. Louis Ruch, not his thesis ad viser, Vaughan tones, could be reach- ed for comment yesterday. One source in the Mathematics Department said Dincer would not have been allowed to teach had he been released pending trial. The source explained that the administra- tion would have prevented Dincer from continuing as a TA. "One way or another, he would not (( ontinued on page 9) Inside On The Record George Plimpton speaks about his experiences in journalism in an interview with The Daily Penn- sylvanian. Page 4. Lights Out A bill on the proposed Philadelphia convention center was spared probable defeat last week when the electronic scoreboard totaling votes sudden ly went down. Page 8. Helping Out A group of 150 senior citizens auditing classes at the University met Friday to discuss ideas for a retired volunteer program. Page 9. Lang elected UA chair in uncontested vote By LAURIE GOLDBERG College junior and former Undergraduate Assembly Vice Chair Eric Lang was elected the 14th UA chair at the group's transitional meeting last night. Former University Council Steering Committee and UA member Wendy Fcrber, a Wharton junior, will serve as vice chair. Both Ferber and Lang ran unopposed. Third-term Student Activities Council Finance Committee Chair Jeff Zajkowski, a Wharton junior, defeated Sander Gerber for the posi- tion of treasurer. College junior Michael Jaffee. who is entering his third UA term, beat second-year member Marc Aronstein for the secretary post. Nominated to serve on University Council Steering Committee were former UA secretary Wend) Bloom and member Jonathan I evine. Coun- cil will select one of these nominees at its April 30 meeting. Lang said last night that he intends to integrate the University's various governing bodies to better serve students. "A role that we have ignored in the past is our position as the head of Penn's decentralized student govern- ment," Lang said. "Next scar I would like to see |the UA| take the lead in organizing ihe whole govern- ment into a cohesive body of student representatives." "In the past we have done good (Continued on page K) Lawsuit over grade of C dropped by ex-student By EDWARD SlISSMAN The student who brought a $500,000 lawsuit against the Universi- ty, claiming that she was denied per- mission to tape record class lectures while suffering from a hearing loss, has dropped her complaint. Alice Stern had charged that Political Science Professor Alvin Rubinstein had denied her requests to tape Soviet foreign policy classes, in which she was enrolled as a special graduate student in the College of General Studies during the fall of 1983. Stern, who has since left the University, said she had informed Rubinstein that she was suffering from a hearing loss brought on by medication taken to treat the disease lupus. Stern had claimed that her inability to hear class lectures had led to her poor performance in the course, for which she received a grade of C. Her lawsuit in Federal District Court alleg- ed that the grade had kept her from being admitted to graduate schools. But University attorneys denied that Stern ever informed Rubinstein or University officials of her hearing loss. Instead, they claimed Stern had come into conflict with Rubinstein over apparent political differences and that her poor performance in the class was the result of academic- weakness. Had Stern informed the University of her hearing loss, attorneys said special accommodations, such as an amplifier or a work-study student to take notes for her. would have been provided. But tape recording of lec- tures, they said, could inhibit academic freedom. Rubinstein confirned last year that he routinely denies all student re- quests to record his classes. And professors in the Political Science Graduate Division, from which Stern was denied admission, said that it was her overall academic record and not the single grade of C, which led to her rejection from the University. Stern did not return repeated phone calls to her home last night. The lawsuit was "dismissed with (Continued on page 9) OaaShW Wataman/Daily Pennsylvania" Newly elected Senior Class President Barry Bear A Class Act Hard work and involvement are the key to Senior Class President Barry Bear's success. He has been involved in student leadership, athletics and other activities since junior high school. By DANIEL ZIMMERMAN Barry Bear is no stranger to politics. From seventh through twelfth grades, he served as his class treasurer. Now. he has moved up to the rank of senior class president. Bear has been involved in a diverse range of activities since arriving at the University. He is a member of the Delta Kappa Eps.lon fraternity and has been a varsity wrestler since his freshman year. Some of his other ex- Profile tracurricular projects include: writing for Mask and Wig, helping with freshman move-in and volunteering for Spring Fling. In addition, he finds time to work ap- proximately 10 hours each week at Van Pelt Library. Although he gives up a lot of his free lime, Bear said last week that he does not mind having so many activities. (Continued on page 9)

HELEN O'BANNON Math TA charged - Penn Libraries · O'Bannon added that she believes that PI i o , as a Mate licensed utility, will be held ... Eric Lang was elected the 14th UA chair

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%\\t Batfo Beratstrltoratt ^ol. CD, No. 55 PHILADELPHIA. Monday, April 21. 1'ixr. Copyngm 19«« Th» Only P»nniylv«n«r

U. to construct $80 million power By r I>V\ ARI) SlISSMAN

The University and Amlrak have decided 10 >rocccd with plans to build an $80 million in- lependent power plant after reviewing a easibility study which concludes that the facili- y could be operational within three years.

The 58-megawatt cogeneration plant is vresently contending with strong opposition rom the Philadelphia Electric Company, which s refusing to provide backup power or to allow he proposed project to use existing electrical ransmission lines.

But University and Amtrak officials said last veek (hat they will proceed with the power ilani with or without PECo.'s cooperation.

The facility will be constructed at Murphy Field along the Schuylkill River. The cogenera- ion process converts gas to steam and electrici-

ty. PECo. currently uses oil to generate steam

tiul electricity. If the plant is built. PECo. will lose two of its

biggest customers and the utility's aging downtown steam loop would suffer a serious usage drop. The University currently spends ap- proximately $27 million a year on PECo. steam

and electricity and Amtrak spends approx- imately $30 million a year.

The move to completely separate the Univer- sity from PECo. comes just as the uliltiy is ask- ing the Public Utility Commission to grant a 28 percent rate increase to pay for the limerick I nuclear power plant. The University is formally contesting the rale increase in a hearing current- ly being conducted in Harrisburg. A ruling is expected in June.

PECo. is also expected to ask for higher rates to finance the construction of the multimillion dollar Limerick 2 nuclear power plant.

According to a feasibility study prepared In the Burns and Roc Industrial Services Corpora tion, if projected energy costs remain on track. the cogeneration facility will save the Universi- ty $7 million during its first year of use and will pay for itself by year three.

Initial plans call for Amtrak and the Univer sity to split construction costs. The University

expects to finance costs through loans. PECo. objects to the project because of the

possible structuring of the plant's ownership, under which a third party compan) would be

established to manage the concern. A similar third party arrangement is being considered b> the Public Utilities Commision for a facility in Chester. The University has joined in the coin plaint seeking to force PECo. to guarantee backup power in Chester.

A preliminary favorable ruling was reached last month, and a final ruling is expected in June. Third party ownership allows Amtrak and the University to take advantage of tax in- centive! favoring cogeneration.

Senior Vice President Helen O'Bannon said last night that the University will proceed with the plant whether the ruling is upheld or not She said she expects the Trustees to grant ap proval for the project at their June meeting and that the Univenit) is beginning the process ol applying for city, stale and federal permits. Licensing procedures arc expected to take three months io complete,

"I do not believe that we can ignore the rising

COStl Ol energy to the University and the fact that the University is a sitting duck in regards to

steam and the long term viability of steam," O'Bannon said.

O'Bannon added that she believes that

PI i o , as a Mate licensed utility, will be held responsible foi providing backup electridt) to the University. Backup clectncilv would be essential for the Hospital of the University ol Pennsylvania

"The issue here is under what terms and .u what price would Philadelphia Electric provide backup power," she said. "It cannot lake a walk merely bccma an entity chooses not to take all its electricity from Philadelphia

Electric." She added that the third pans .iiiaiiKcniciii

would allow the University to utilize outside

expertise. "|The plant| does not play to our strength

hut there are individuals out there who would want to take responsibility for the Univcisitv and Amtrak." she Mid,

lacilitics Management Vice President John

Anderson Mid last nigh: that the Univcrsiiv has decided to assume an aggressive strategy in get- ting the plant built.

((. ontinued on page 4) HELEN O'BANNON

'( niversitvproceeding with plant'

Tommy Laonardl/Daily Henntytvantan

Penn Iri-caplain Joe <.ilU-iii attempts Io elude Brown midfield Brian Heffcrnan

M. Lacrosse nets piece of title Brown falls in double overtime, 9-8

By THOMAS HILL Just minutes after his goal gave the Penn men's

lacrosse team a 9-8 double-overtime victory over Brown Saturday night at Franklin Field, Kevin Nicklas was able to put the moment in its proper perspective.

"This was our season, right here," he said, referring

to (he win which assured the Quakers at least a lie for the Ivy League title. "We're out of the NCAAs. This

was it." Even that reality was not enough to downplay the

Quakers' accomplishment. In fact, the possibility that Penn may not participate in the NCAA lournameni

this season enhanced the win over Brown. "Even if we don't make the tourney." tri-captain

Pat Prendergast said, "we'll be able to say that we're the best in the Ivies. That's why this is so important."

The manner in which the game was finally decided did nothing to belittle (hat importance. Through 60 minutes of regulation and five-and-a-half minutes of

overtime, the Quakers and the Bruins battled to an 8-8 tie. But with two-and-a-halt minutes to play in the se- cond four-minute sudden-death overtime period,

Nicklas drove toward the crease, beat defense Rod I lama i and fired a low shot to the right of Brown

Goaltender Scott Lohan.

"When 1 caught the ball, 1 thought about settling the offense down," the junior atlack said, "but then I

thought that 'this is the second overtime and my man |Hamar| hadn't contained me all day. . .In the first play of the game. I realized that he wasn't (hat fast."

Nicklas' decision to go to goal put an end to the marathon, which, in its later stages, had become a tac- tical war. The tying goal by Brown mid fie Id Greg Rogers with 13:09 to play in the fourth quarter did not look as if it would be the final score in regulation. Rogers' goal came just over a minute after Penn mid-

(Conllnued on back page)

Math TA charged with making death threats

By K'DI KERTER A federal magistrate Friday denied

bail to a Mathematics Department teaching assistant who has been accus ed of making death threats to a female University student.

Selim Dincer, a mathematics

graduate student from Turkey, was arrested by FBI agents Friday. He

allegedly sent threatening letters and placed harassing telephone calls to a University sophomore. The name of the studem has no( been released. A bail hearing has been se( for Tuesday.

An article in Saturday's Philadelphia Daily News said that the letters included a photograph of a body with stab wounds, accompanied by a description of a murder and pic- tures of a decapitated body. The stu- dent also received a scries of death threats over the phone.

The student was in one of Dincer's mathematics classes during the

summmer. U.S. Magistrate Edwin Naythons

ordered Friday that Dincer be held without bail since he posed a threat to

die community. Naythom could not be reached for commeni.

The alleged harassment began before Thanksgiving and continued throughoul the year Campus police tapped the student's phone and were able to trace the calls to a telephone listed in Dincer's name.

Mathematics Graduate Affairs

Chairman Peter Freyd said yesterday that the department first learned about the FBI's suspicions Friday morning.

"I'm flabbergasted," Freyd said. "We found out about this via a telephone call from the Daily News on Friday morning at around 11:30."

"When I talked to (Vice Provost for University Life James) Bishop, it seemed to be brand new to him," he added. "His information only came in 15 minutes earlier."

Freyd expressed surprise that the department and academic officials were not notified of the investigation earlier.

"I think this was a poor way to find out something like this," he said. "If

Public Safetj believes tins person »us a danger to the community, as the COtirt does, we should base heard about H earlier."

Mathematics Department facult) members shared I reyd'i surprise ovn the arrest Freyd added thai since Dincer had been "well-received" by students, the bail denial on the grounds of "danger 10 the communi- ty" comes as even more ol a shock

"It seems to be son ol a total shock to everyone," Mathematics Lecturet William kazcz said yesttrda) "It's

completely out ol the blue." Nciihei Dincer'i court appointed

lawyer. Louis Ruch, not his thesis ad viser, Vaughan tones, could be reach-

ed for comment yesterday. One source in the Mathematics

Department said Dincer would not have been allowed to teach had he been released pending trial. The source explained that the administra- tion would have prevented Dincer from continuing as a TA.

"One way or another, he would not (( ontinued on page 9)

Inside On The Record

George Plimpton speaks about his experiences in journalism in an interview with The Daily Penn-

sylvanian. Page 4.

Lights Out A bill on the proposed

Philadelphia convention center

was spared probable defeat last week when the electronic scoreboard totaling votes sudden ly went down. Page 8.

Helping Out A group of 150 senior citizens

auditing classes at the University met Friday to discuss ideas for a retired volunteer program. Page

9.

Lang elected UA chair in uncontested vote

By LAURIE GOLDBERG College junior and former

Undergraduate Assembly Vice Chair Eric Lang was elected the 14th UA chair at the group's transitional

meeting last night. Former University Council Steering

Committee and UA member Wendy Fcrber, a Wharton junior, will serve as vice chair. Both Ferber and Lang

ran unopposed. Third-term Student Activities

Council Finance Committee Chair Jeff Zajkowski, a Wharton junior, defeated Sander Gerber for the posi- tion of treasurer. College junior Michael Jaffee. who is entering his third UA term, beat second-year member Marc Aronstein for the

secretary post.

Nominated to serve on University Council Steering Committee were former UA secretary Wend) Bloom and member Jonathan I evine. Coun- cil will select one of these nominees at its April 30 meeting.

Lang said last night that he intends to integrate the University's various governing bodies to better serve students.

"A role that we have ignored in the past is our position as the head of Penn's decentralized student govern- ment," Lang said. "Next scar I would like to see |the UA| take the lead in organizing ihe whole govern-

ment into a cohesive body of student representatives."

"In the past we have done good (Continued on page K)

Lawsuit over grade of C dropped by ex-student

By EDWARD SlISSMAN The student who brought a

$500,000 lawsuit against the Universi- ty, claiming that she was denied per- mission to tape record class lectures while suffering from a hearing loss,

has dropped her complaint. Alice Stern had charged that

Political Science Professor Alvin Rubinstein had denied her requests to tape Soviet foreign policy classes, in which she was enrolled as a special

graduate student in the College of General Studies during the fall of 1983. Stern, who has since left the University, said she had informed Rubinstein that she was suffering from a hearing loss brought on by medication taken to treat the disease

lupus. Stern had claimed that her inability

to hear class lectures had led to her poor performance in the course, for

which she received a grade of C. Her lawsuit in Federal District Court alleg- ed that the grade had kept her from being admitted to graduate schools.

But University attorneys denied that Stern ever informed Rubinstein

or University officials of her hearing loss. Instead, they claimed Stern had come into conflict with Rubinstein over apparent political differences

and that her poor performance in the class was the result of academic- weakness.

Had Stern informed the University of her hearing loss, attorneys said special accommodations, such as an amplifier or a work-study student to take notes for her. would have been

provided. But tape recording of lec- tures, they said, could inhibit academic freedom.

Rubinstein confirned last year that

he routinely denies all student re- quests to record his classes.

And professors in the Political

Science Graduate Division, from which Stern was denied admission, said that it was her overall academic

record and not the single grade of C, which led to her rejection from the

University. Stern did not return repeated phone

calls to her home last night.

The lawsuit was "dismissed with (Continued on page 9)

OaaShW Wataman/Daily Pennsylvania"

Newly elected Senior Class President Barry Bear

A Class Act Hard work and involvement are the key to Senior Class President Barry Bear's success. He has been involved in student leadership, athletics and other activities since junior high school.

By DANIEL ZIMMERMAN

Barry Bear is no stranger to politics. From seventh through twelfth grades, he served as

his class treasurer. Now. he has moved up to the rank of senior class president.

Bear has been involved in a diverse range of activities since arriving at the University. He is a member of the Delta Kappa Eps.lon fraternity and has been a varsity wrestler since his freshman year. Some of his other ex-

Profile tracurricular projects include: writing for Mask and Wig, helping with freshman move-in and volunteering for Spring Fling. In addition, he finds time to work ap- proximately 10 hours each week at Van Pelt Library.

Although he gives up a lot of his free lime, Bear said last week that he does not mind having so many

activities. (Continued on page 9)

PAGE 2 THK IHII.V PKNNSVLVANIAN — Moidiy. April 21. 1986

Off the Wire Today's news compiled from Associated Press dispatches

Bombs damage Libyan base TRIPOLI, Libya — U.S. warplanes heavily damaged a

naval installation thai U.S. offii ah said was a commando (raining base during the American raid last week on reputed terrorist targets in Libya.

Libyan officials yesterday allowed Western reporters to sec parts of Sidi Bilal naval installation, which includes I ibya's naval academy, in the first tour by journalists of damage to purely military targets during the raid.

A West German teacher at Sidi Bilal described the bom- bing as "vety accurate."

Reporters were not allowed inside a walled area which Libyan naval instructors indicated was an underwater training facility, and which Pentagon officials said was the main target of the attack against the seaside base. 10 miles west of Tripoli.

Reporters could see holes in the roofs of two buildings as well as many shattered windows within the walled area as their bus passed.

A half-dozen unshaven men, dressed in a mix of uniforms and civilian clothes, stood guard with automatic rifles at the gate.

Inside the base, reporters saw the remains of at least four buildings which had been flattened by direct hits Tuesday.

Libyan officials escorting reporters claimed the American fighter-bombers zeroed in on naval academy

dormitories, the infirmary, a mess hall and several offices. They said the air raid killed two naval cadets and in-

jured 15. but that most of the estimated 300 cadets had been evacuated because a strike was expected.

"We had no air defense here," said an officer who iden- tified himself as the academy's commander for the past seven years. The officer, who refused to give his name or rank, said he had no idea of the damage inflicted on the walled area, where Libyans are believed to receive training in underwater demolition and commando operations. He would not say what kind of activity went on in the walled area.

In academy classrooms, cadets aged 15-17 posed for photographers and television crews as they read their lessons.

One student said all the cadets were Arabs One of the Libyan information department escorts quickly added, "They are all Libyans."

Several cadets declined to answer questions, saying they spoke only Arabic. Technical books clearly visible in the classroom were written in English.

Five days after Tuesday's raid, bulldozers were still scooping up rubble, forming huge mounds of shattered concrete, twisted metal and burned wood. Notebooks and textbooks littered the compound's roads along with broken glass and shrapnel.

Susan Gund*rMnyDaily Pennsytvaman

The Dachshund Knows Aaarrrrhh. Yeah, so it's I Inn; and I'm surrounded by legs. And shoes. Fling. Shming — I could be hav-

ing a better time at Fairmount Park — my leash for some trees!

Gorbachev warns U.S. to change policies or risk losing summit

Officials: Raid scared Khadafy WASHINGTON — Key administration officials believe

that last week's bombing raid on Colonel Moammar Khadafy's headquarters frightened the Libyan leader, em- boldened his enemies in his own country and put renewed pressure on America's European allies to combat terrorism.

But at the same time, the same officials expect the United States may well be prompted to strike again.

"We're not looking for a pretext to hit him again." one source said, "but I think we just know the problem isn't over. It may be that Khadafy is weaker because of what we did, and that's all the more reason to keep after him."

The officials, who were involved in administration policy making in the weeks leading up to President Reagan's decision to launch the bombing raid, agreed to discuss their view of its effects only on condition they not be identified.

Khadafy's drop from public view immediately after the attack and subsequent appearances only on television, rather than in the streets of Tripoli, "suggest that he's very scared," one official said. "He's worried about assassina- tion attempts, let alone us knowing where he might be. He

obviously feels that we're going after him." Another source with access to U.S. intelligence reports

said the Libyan leader "is scared now, and he knows that if he goes after us again, we're going to go after his ter- rorist infrastructure again."

"If he happens to be sitting in the command post at the time and place that we decide to hit, then he'll pay the ultimate price," the official said, suggesting the United States would be delighted if Khadafy were killed in an air raid, while insisting he was not a specific target.

Asked about Libyan reports that Khadafy's adopted daughter was killed in the bombing and two sons were seriously wounded, one administration analyst said. "He had his family at the headquarters. It was a risk that he ran that he obviously felt wasn't a risk."

The officials said the raid was carefully aimed at Khadafy's revolutionary guard and "his political base of support, as opposed to the regular military." Khadafy is said to distrust his own regular forces and has grown more and more dependent on the special guard and the militia to keep him in power.

POTSDAM. East Germany — Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev said yesterday that he was willing to meet President Reagan this year if the United States changed policies he charged were poisoning relations bet- ween the superpowers.

Speaking to reporters at Potsdam, site of the 1945 Allied conference on Germany. Gorbachev said "the meeting [with Reagan) can take place if the United States realizes that it is necessary to take this path."

"But if it |America| goes on acting as it is today, trying to poison the at- mosphere, this will throw a shadow over any future meeting," the Soviet Communist Party chief said. "If it [the summit] is to happen, a better at- mosphere is necessary."

Gorbachev did not elaborate, but he appeared to be referring to last week's U.S. bombing raids on Libya and recent U.S. underground tests of nuclear weapons. On Friday. Gor- bachev told the East German Com- munist Parly congress those actions and the "increased |U.S.] threats" against Nicaragua demonstrated that

the United States was following a "militarist and aggressive" policy that could damage U.S.-Soviet relations.

White House Chief of Staff Donald Reagan said yesterday the United States expected Gorbachev to "live up to his word" and meet with Reagan this year.

The two men agreed at their Geneva summit in November to meet this year in the United States. No date has been set.

Reagan, interviewed on the NBC television program ''John McLaughlin: One on One," said he believed the meeting had been "postponed more than canceled."

Gorbachev made his remarks in Potsdam in response to a reporter's question. He spoke in Russian, and his comments were translated by reporters fluent in the language.

The Soviet leader addressed reporters in the courtyard at Cecilienhof, a manor house where Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, President Harry Truman and Prime Minister Winston Churchill of Britain met in

the summer of 1945 to decide the fate of postwar Germany.

Gorbachev was the first Soviet leader to visit the site since Stalin was there, East German officials said. They said other Soviets had not come for "political reasons" after Nikita Khrushchev denounced Stalin.

Gorbachev was accompanied to Potsdam, just south of Berlin, by his wife. Raisa, several members of the Soviet delegation to the congress and Guenter Mittag, a member of the East German Communist Party Politburo.

As (hey arrived at Cecilienhof, built by Kaiser Wilhelm II for his son bet- ween 1913 and 1916, they were greeted by hundreds of people waving Soviet flags and chanting "friend- ship" in Russian and German.

The Gorbachevs spent about 30 minutes inside the house. Reporters were not allowed to accompany them.

East German officials later said (he Gorbachevs visited the dark-paneled main conference room, where American, Soviet and British flags still fly together, and the former of- fices of the three delegations.

Briefs International

Castro speech attacks 'brutal' raid on Libya

HAVANA - President Fidel Castro marked the 25th anniversary of Cuba's Bay of Pigs victory with a bitter personal attack this weekend on President Reagan and a pledge to combat laziness and cor- ruption in Cuban society.

Castro told a gathering at a local theater Saturday night that the U.S. air attack on Libya last week was comparable to the bombings of European capitals by Adolph Hitler during World War II.

In what appeared to be Castro's harshest attack to date on Reagan, he called the U.S. attack "brutal, shameful, criminal and terrorist," and said Reagan ''is as unscrupulous, opportunistic and ir- responsible as Hitler."

The statement drew sustained ap- plause from the invitation-only au- dience, which included families of victims of the U.S.-backed invasion by Cuban exiles at the Bay of Pigs on April 17. I'M.I

Castro spent the first hour and 45 minutes of his speech recounting the Bay of Pigs invasion, but his principal message came during the final hour of his appearance when he spoke about the U.S. attack on Libya and shortcomings in Cuban society.

Soviet pianist performs after 60 years of exile MOSCOW — Vladimir

Horowitz played his first formal concert on a Soviet stage in six decades yesterday, drawing thunderous ovations from music- lovers who have revered the pianist's virtuousity despite his self- imposed exile from his homeland.

Horowitz, 81. took six curtain calls during an eight-minute stan- ding ovation in the Grand Hall of the Tchaikovsky Conservatory, a stage where the greatest Soviet ar- tists have performed.

The 1.800-seat hall overflowed with Soviet officials, musical luminaries, about 400 lucky ticket- buyers and hundreds of students who surged in after bursting through a phalanx of police guards. The pockets of some music students

bulged with tape recorders. Horowitz was born in the

Ukraine in 1904 but left the country 21 years later, when he decided not to return from a tour of Europe and the United States. He lives in the United States.

Horowitz's family property in the Soviet Union was confiscated and he vowed never to return.

National Blacks in military show high rate of promotion

WASHINGTON — Blacks have been more successful moving up the career ladder into leadership posi- tions in the armed forces than in any other major segment of U.S. society, according to a Nor- thwestern University sociologist.

Although racial tensions still ex- ist in (he military, the services — notably the Army — have made greater strides toward equality than most of the civilian sector, says sociologist Charles Moskos. who specializes in the military.

"Today, one is more likely to hear racial jokes in a faculty club than in an officers' club. And in an officers' club one will surely -ee more blacks." Moskos wrote in an article published in the May issue of The Atlantic magazine.

Ill effects of dioxin still under investigation

NEW YORK - More than a decade after dioxin was sprayed in Vietnam in the herbicide Agent Orange and three years after it forc- ed the evacuation of Times Beach, Missouri, scientists are still trying to determine just what danger the chemical poses for people.

Researchers reported last week that residents of a dioxin- contaminated mobile home park in Missouri had higher rates of certain liver and immune system abnor- malities — but no higher disease rates — than did a similar group liv- ing elsewhere.

Weather Scattered showers today. Highs

in the mid to upper 50s. Mostly cloudy tonight. Lows in the mid to upper 40s. Variable cloudiness tomorrow. Highs in the mid to up- per 50s.

Ivy Towers Compiled from the Nation's collegiate press

Four arrested at protest against aid to Contras

Students choose to stay and change Dartmouth

HANOVER, N.H. — Despite dissatisfaction with Dartmouth, most students who are considering transfer- ring from the college arc opting to stay, at least temporarily, and work for what they call the "challenge" of creating a more accepting Dartmouth.

Only two students have officially withdrawn from the College since January, according to student infor- mation services coordinator Theresa Scott.

Freshman Brendon MacLean began to think about transferring from the College as the result of a series of events related to last winter's attack on the Dartmouth Community for Divestment's anti-apartheid shanties.

Torn between being stifled by what he perceives as "sexism, racism and too much affluence" at the college and a desire to work to improve the problems he sees, MacLean feels "trapped."

"If I give up and assimilate into the Dartmouth mold then the battle is over," he said. "If I leave, Dart- mouth is not going to be a whole lot better."

This problem, expressed by MacLean. who has decided to take a year off, seems to be a common theme among dissatisfied students at the college.

"The moratorium solidified the feeling that there were a lot of pro- blems at Dartmouth," said junior

Margaret Cassidy. Some particular problems students

expressed to Dartmouth Assistant Dean Gregory Ricks are intolerance, racism, sexism, and a lack of external support for minority students.

"There's no place for a black per- son to get his hair cut around here." Ricks said.

"Every Ivy League school is better situated than Dartmouth," he added, referring to a lack of minority com- munity outside of the college.

Frustrated by "lack of diversity" at Dartmouth, minority student Jackie Allen expressed the desire at the time of the moratorium to leave Dart- mouth immediately.

"I almost ran away from it," she said. "I'm s'UI trying to find out if I want to stay or go. I am willing to be here and listen."

"Lots of people were disillusion- ed," Afro-American Society member Yves Denize said. "The initial reac- tion is just to get away from it. However, people came to realize this was their school and wanted to stay and make it better."

The students who have chosen to stay to work for what they call a "bet- ter Dartmouth" are facing rather than fleeing the possibility of a harder col- lege experience, and of existence on what Cassidy calls the "fringe" of the Dartmouth community.

— The Dartmouth

NEW YORK, N.Y. — Police ar- rested seven members of the Barnard Women's Direct Action (BWDA) organization last week for trespassing while blockading the Jacob Javits Federal Building to protest proposed federal aid to Nicaraguan contra forces.

Five members of BWDA — four students and three recent alumnae — refused to identify themselves to police and were consequently still de- tained (hat night. The remaining two Barnard students, senior Louise Harter and Sharon Eicher, were released after they identified themselves to police.

In an April 14 demonstration, 126 demonstrators representing political organizations from all over the city were arrested after they blockaded an entrance to the building.

According to Harter, the Barnard students resisted their arrests and had to be carried off by police officers to a police bus.

Barnard participants said the pro-

test was held at 26 Federal Plaza because it is the only federal building in the city. In addition, the CIA and FBI have offices located there.

Harter said the BWDA members had tentatively planned to resist arrest and not cooperate with the police. However, she added the plan was never confirmed, resulting in some confusion and a lack of unified group action.

The five arrested BWDA members were held for 26 hours by police and then released. Only one of the pro- testors, Jessica Shubow, was charged with contempt of court. A court date has been set for next month.

Following the morning blockade, more than 800 people marched around the Federal Building to protest the proposed Contra aid. Students from Columbia University Students in Solidarity with Nicaragua and BWDA took part in the demonstration. There were no arrests.

— The Columbia Spectator

UF police think bomb threats related to exams

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — A rash of bomb threats has hit the University of Florida campus in the past month, and UF police officials think it may be due to someone trying to get out of taking exams.

"It's either somebody who wanted to get out of class or out of work," UF police Lieutenant Earl Crews said of the people behind the latest bomb threats.

But whatever the motive, whoever is responsible for calling the bomb threats faces a stiff penalty. Being caught for calling in a bomb threat is a second-degree felony punishable by up to five years in prison and a $5,000 fine.

An anonymous bomb threat was called into an office at Turlington Hall. An employee notified UF police

of the threat, according to police reports.

That threat was a little different than the one called into Norman Hall that same week, when the anonymous caller told police the device would ex- plode within a half hour, police said. A class for children with learning disabilities had to be cancelled.

Police could not estimate how many bomb threats have been called into UF during the past month, but police reports indicate two this month, two in January and one in February. Police officials would not comment on criticism from some UF employees that police let people back into a building where a bomb threat has been called in. No bombs have ac- tually been found in any of the cases.

— The alligator

THE DAILY PKNNSYIA ASIAN — Mondi>. April 21, l*>»6 PM.t «

Focus U. services lead the way into Center City

By 111 11)1 I -. I l -. For University students who want

to use city resources, there are offices here which will help them obtain off- campus jobs, volunteer positions, or homes.

Chances are that the Career Plann- ing and Placement Service can help students who are looking for paid or volunteer jobs in their fields. Debbie Michael, an internship counselor at Career Planning and Placement Ser- vice, said that many students leave campus for summer or school-year jobs.

"A lot of students are employed in Philadelphia — a lot of students do get part-time internships during the semester and full-time internships in the summer," she said. "It's a shame if they don't use what's here —the or- chestra, theatre groups. From a career point of view, I think that they do take advantage."

While internships in technical fields such as bookkeeping, accounting or computer applications tend to be paid positions, Michael said that employers prefer to get students who will work for them without pay. Usually they can, and so many students, particularly those aspiring to medical school, take volunteer positions.

Communications is another field in which Michael said most of the jobs available to students are unpaid: Union rules prevent employers from paying part-time interns. "In TV, that's the hang-up — they're usually not allowed to pay. The attitude is that they're going to be giving a stu- dent a lot of valuable career ex- perience," she said.

CPPS carries listings for about 700 positions "from day camp work to helping start up a new business," Michael said. "We have more listings in the Philadelphia area than anywhere else in the country. It only takes a phone call to make a listing, which employers do every day."

Michael said that students who take summer or school year jobs with local businesses are also providing a service for the city. "Philadelphia businesses seem to be aware of the talent pool and list with great regularity and fre- quency the job openings that they have," she said.

"Often employers call and say 'we filled it withaPenn student.' If it goes unfilled they tend not to re-list," she added. "My guess is that Pcnn students do very well when applying for local positions."

Michael said many students choose to remain in Philadelphia or the area for the summer rather than going back home or moving to other areas because they may have full-year leases on off-campus homes or want to be near friends who are also staying in the area.

"I think you become more of a Philadelphian when you have more

Offices help students land jobs, apartments

.time to yourself," Michael said. "It's hard when you're a student to fully utilize (he city, and it's such a great resource."

Michael added that while rents are rising fast in the University City area, housing is still cheaper than in Boston or New York. "Some students by necessity aren't able to work in New York." she said. "Philadelphia may catch up but it's not there yet — it's a real estate bargain."

Penn Women's Center Director Ellie DiLapi said that one of the center's major functions is to connect women students with off-campus resources ranging from job openings to rape counseling.

"I will refer people to the various women's groups — one of the things that is very special about Philadelphia is that we have a large number of resources for women in the Delaware Valley." she said. "A number of women from Pcnn often utilize the services of the various women's groups. That could be anything from attending an educational program for pornography or the Ladies Against Women program that's going to be here, sponsored by NARAL to volunteering at the Elizabeth Blackwell Health Center."

"The unfortunate part is that many people don't know all of these resources." she added.

For students who want to know how to get a fair lease — or how many towels and washcloths are needed in a new apartment — the Office of Off- t'ampus Living is the place to go. Off- Campus Living Director Maye Mor- rison said that more than 7000 students live in houses or apartments in West Philadelphia or Center City rather than staying in campus dormitories.

"Undergraduate students tend to live at 44th Street and below," she said "Between 44th and 49th Streets you're going to find graduate and professional students. There are more undergraduates moving above 44th Street next year — houses below 44ih

Daily Pennsylvania!! Me photo

Street ate renting for as much as $2400 per month, unfurnished."

Morrison said that rents five or more blocks beyond the west end of campus are typically $50 to $100 less per month. Since graduate students prefer to live in smaller numbers per house or apartment they have always lived farther away.

She added that between 1000 and 1200 mostly graduate and profes- sional students live in Center City. "They tend to be students who are not particularly involved with the daily lifestyle of the University," she said. "There's a lot of sharing in Center Ci- ty because of higher rents."

Morrison said a fair number of

students gel involved with community projects near Ihcu oft cvnpui homes, most often with tutorial programs or attending church. "We*** also had students iavohMd with town water." sin- mid "Each ye»* we've had more than 800 students enrolled in the University City Arts I eague thc> have some very good programs

Student I lie Associate Director Claudia Apfelbaum said that there is another angle to students' use ol the city — more than 600 provide the ens with volunteer aid in some capadt) through Perm Intensions, the urn brclla volunteer organi/.mon she heads. "That doesn't include students who went there on their own - Inert are lots and lots who nisi went out there." the nld

Volunteer opportunities include counseling for a Ronald NK Donald House for families ol sick children, processing civil right! C8MI tor a local American Civil liberties Union chapter, researching eras and artists for the Philadelphia Museum of Art. and caring for annuals at the Morris Animal Refuge.

Apfelbaum said that the reason many students have for doing volunteer work is that it is relevant to jobs they hope to find after graduating. "Students arc using the city as a resource — they are volunteering because they want to gain professional experience." she said. "(They have| a chance to test some of the knowledge they've ac- quired and share some of the knowledge."

But getting a head start on a future career is not the only reason student- do volunteer work. "There's that career clement in it. there's the ele- ment of fun, remembering that there are people out there who arc not all 20 years old." she said.

Apfelbaum said that some volunteer programs are organized and run by students. These include soup kitchens and prison tutoring pro- grams, a youth study center and a group of students who go 10 public schools and give presentations on topical issues.

In addition to volunteer programs under the auspices of Pcnn Extensions are the opportunities at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania and the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Apfelbaum said.

And nearly all of the volunteer organizations continue through (he summer even though many students leave the Philadelphia area. "The need continues throughout the year," she said. "The University City Hospitality Coalition will be working throughout the summer."

But students who want (o go off campus for recrealion are on their own, said Student Life Assistant Director Fran Walker.

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working agreements with more than 30 hospitals <n the United States whe'e our students do then third and fourth years o* chrwcai clerkships. Accredited Oy the government ot Dominica • Listed m WHO • Vewy high percentage of our graduates doing residencies m U S hoep.ta*e, many of which are atfihatedwith u S medical schools • Many of our graduates are now practicing >n many states throughout the United States • Many of our students «re able to transfer mlo U S medical schools from our Basic sciences • We are approved m more states lor cUrvcai MHM| and iicensure than any othe'Car.bbean School* US Department of Education Guaranteed Students Loans VA benefits and a loan program tor entering students are available SCHOOL OF VETERINARY MEDICINE • American Velennary Medical School curriculum • Accredited by the OOvemmenl ol SI Kiln e Listed in InoAVMA • 3'-. yea' vertennary medKino proaram Boin in SI Kitts and the United Statei • Only lorergn School ol Veterinary Medicine doing clinical rotalioni in the united Statei e US Oeoertmentoi Education Guaranteed Student Loans. VA oeneriu and a loan program to' entering students aie available • Our graduates nave achieved outstanding scores on the state examinations

NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOP. SPP.INO. FALL WINTER SEMESTERS For further Intormellon cell (217) 279 5500

or write to INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION ADMISSIONS. INC 480 WEST 34TM STREET. NEW YORK, NY 10001

The Tinker Lecture Series on Latin America and the Political Science Department

present

Thomas Bossert Political Science Dept., Sarah Lawrence College lecturing on

The State and Politics of Health in Central America Tuesday, April 22, 4 PM Houston Hall, Room 237 (HSP Room)

What Do These Jobs Have In Common?

GRAPHIC DESIGNER NEWSLETTER EDITOR

• ADVERTISING COORDINATOR • RESEARCH ASSISTANT • SYSTEMS ASSISTANT

A. They're all available next year as work-study positions at CPPS.

STOP BY AND READ JOB DESCRIPTIONS FOR THESE AND OTHER AVAILABLE POSITIONS AT THE FRONT DESK OF CPPS-SEE JAY.

ALSO. A RECEPTION WILL BE HELD WHERE INTERESTED STUDENTS MAY TALK TO THE STUDENTS WHO NOW HOLD THE POSITIONS. AS WELL AS THE COUNSELORS THEY WORK FOR.

TUESDAY, April 22nd 4:00-5:00 PM, CPPS Library 2nd floor, HOUSTON HALL

ALL INTERESTED STUDENTS ARE WELCOME!

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AS* ABOU' OUR SPtCIAL PACKAtMS

THE ALBERT M. GREENFIELD INTERCULTURAL CENTER PRESENTS

A DISCUSSION OF:

Asian Women in Transition: Cultural Tradition and Social Reality April 22, 1986 6:30 P.M.

3708 Chestnut Street Refreshments will be served.

PACK 4 llll i)Ain PKNNSYLVANIAN Mondm. \pril «, MM

Campus Events A listing of University news and events

NOTICE TODAY CAMPUS EVENTS are UkM Dory ■ • PM puBac MTVKS 01 »>• Umvaraity of Pennsylvania, and are •ammialered lor Ihe UrmenMy by Tt» 0*r Ptnntytvwt-n There a no charge B airfhorued UmvanWy- ■HllialaJ groups lor katnga ol FREE evema Ustmga may be ma*M or placad in person al fhe 0M> PennsyrVaman Business Omce ♦015 Watnul Street, from 9 a m to 5 pm Monday through Friday Campus Events will nol be accepted by phone 2S word MM The Oar> PamsyrVanun reserves the right to edit Campus Events according to apace limitations

WHITEWATER RAFTING this weekend Also, skydiving hiking rockclimbing and other interest- ing things All invited lo nent Outmg Club meeting at 6 p m tonight rm 301 Houston Hall

FUTURE OFFICIAL

TODAY AAHHi WIN Kb prize lor Ivy Day T-shirt design Please submit designs lo the Office ot Sludeni Life nowi'

ATTENTION JUNIORS' Pre Law applicant workshop. Monday. April 21th 3 30 5 00 Please sign up in CPPS for appt You musl attend a workshop before seeing a counselor See Jan m CPPS

BE A Volunteer counselor al Ihe Ronald McDonald House summer camp for children with cancer Students twenty years and older eligible Penn Extension 115 HH

EXCLUSIVE HEBREW ULPAN open lo all No backround neces- sary Iree ol charge 7 00 pm instructor Chana Siev Lubavich House 4032 Spruce Street more information 382-1247

FIND OUT ABOUT REFUSENIKS Tuesday 422 7 00 p m Hillel Ironl lounge Jeff Goldberg and Kevin Aaronson will discuss their recent trip lo Russia sponsored by SSSJ

INTERNSHIP IN PUBLISHING field Involves writing, proofread- ing, research and communicating with tree lance writers and adver- tisers (or Philadelphia Engery Report Magazine Contacl Penn* Eilension 115 HH

INTRO TO TALMUD come and study Ihe logic of Ihe Talmud No backround necessary Free ot charge 6 30 pm Lubavich House 4032 Spruce Slreel 222-3130

JEWISH MYSTICISM-Eip+ore Ihe Torah portion as discussed by Chassidic mystical philosophy No backround necessary Free of charge Lubavitch House 4032 Spruce SI 222-3130. 7 30 p m

MODEL PASSOVER SEDER experience all Ihe tradition with explanations and participation no background necessary Sign up for Passover Sedo.s Lubavitch House 4032 Spruce 7 00 p m

TOMORROW ASIAN WOMEN IN TRANSITION Cultural tradition, and social reali- ty m a discussion. 6 30 pm Tuesday April 22. at th« Graan fi-ald Intercultural Center 3706 C best nut

BROWN BAG SPEAKER SE!?!ES Or Richard Starting (Lehman College) and Marcie Wolfe (Lehman CoHege) Defining Liter- acy for Women m Job Training Examples from Five Community - based Organisations " Tues April 22nd. 12-1 00 pm . room 0-45. G S E sponsored by the Literacy Research Center

IBM/PENN THRESHOLD USER GROUP meeting Tues . Apr 22. 1 pm 236 Houston Hall All are welcome Info 898-1780

MULTI-CULTURAL MEDICINE A symposium on race and health care April 22. 8 00 p m Houston Hall Bowl Room A President's Forum on Racism event

ORGAN RECITAL - Cart Nittmger Final Recital of Spring Noonday Series Refreshments to follow Tuesday Noon lo 12 35 free Irvine

THOMAS BOSSERT WILL lecture on the state and politics of Health in Central America on April 22 in HSP- room of Houston Hall at 4 00 p m

PASSSOVER SEDERS Wed and Thurs nite al 7 30 pm Experi- ence the Passover of 1986 our link to Jewish Pr«Je suggested dona- ton $9 00/seder Lubavitch 4032 Spruce

PENN ANTI-APARTHEID COALI- TION presents literature of Libera- tion Poetic Reflections on ihe Struggle to end Racism Sonya Sanchez Temple Unrversiy 4 30 pm CA Thursday April 24

YOU TALK WE HELP Guideline peer counseling 387-4141 7 p m -7 am Anonymous, non- (udgementai strictly confidential

WEEKEND BAROQUE AND RENAISSANCE concert featuring the Bel Canto Singers ol York on Sunday April 27 at 2 p m University Lutheran Church. 37th and Chestnut For info 3872885

FUTURE COMET HALLEV VISIBLE from campus observatory Monday thru Thursday this week. 8 p m -10 30 pm each day if clear See it soon, comet Halley gets fainter each day

FILM I STAND lor Your Dreams'' ( A film about Kermal Atnturk) and Danseurs de Dieu" (Mevlana Dervishes) 4 00 Eighth floor, lounge Williams Hall

GUIDELINE STUDENTRUN overlhe-phone peer counseling Non-judgemental and strictly confidential We're here to listen seven nights a week 7 p m -7 am 387-4141

ISRAEL FOR a summer, a semes- ter, a year to study in University m English! On Kibbutz to travel first timers A old-timers, to learn The experience of a lifetime' There's a program that's right lor you' Call Ellen. 898 8265

OFFICIAL ABRAHAM S STRAUSS offer summer retail management internships for tunior minority students interested m retail management and/or merchandis- ing Available at all A&S locations For details, see CPPS tiles under * management"

ATTENTION JUNIORS1 Graduate business school application work shop. Tuesday. April 22 3 30-5 00 Please signup in CPPS for appt You must attend a workshop before seeing a counselor See Jan m CPPS

ATTENTION JUNIORS' Pre-Law applicant workshop. Monday. April 21th 3 30-5 00 Please sign- up m CPPS lor appt You must attend a workshop before seeing a counselor See Jan in CPPS

CPPS HAS MANY listings for full-time teaching internships after graduation Most require no certifi- cation or teaching experience For listings with details, see CPPS files under Education'

DREXELBROOK ENGINEERING Co . Harsham, PA. has summer openings lor sophs /|un»ors major- ing in electrical mechanical or chemical engineering, computer science or journalism Musi have 3 0 GPA Details CPPS "Engineering "

GRADUATE STUDENTS in Arts/ Sci/Ed/Ann/FA Spend half a day preparing for it Th 5/15. 10-2p m . Franklin room. Houston Hall (4 session. 1 hr each ) Info/sign-up Ernilie 898-7530 CPPS

JUNIORS Plan ahead lor next year Career planning and place menl Anyone planning on using on-campus recruiting must attend For dates and sign-up. call Manea 896-7529

' LONDON TEMPS will be recruit mg on-campus April 22. room 302 Houston Hall 3-5 Students inter ested m summer temporary work Sign-up with Barbara T . CPPS by April 21

MICROSOFT CORP seeks |unior business or comp so students lor summer sales position Know- ledge ol microcomputers and Microsoft Word desirable Travel required Details CPPS

Computers "

MOUNT SINAI MEDICAL CENTER NYC offers various summer positions through volun- teer services depi Patient care, administration or lab lOhrs/wk CPPS Files Medical "

PEOPLE EXPRESS HAS summer cdustomer service internships at Newark Airport as well as airports in 45 cities with People Express offices Minimum 2 5 GPA required Details CPPS dies under Marketing"

THE JUNIOR LEAGUE ot Phila has openings this summer for tour guides Explain history and culture of the Free Ouaker Meeting House to lounsts al Independence National Park CPPS ties "Historic"

TRAMMEL CROW REAL ESTATE developers seek sludeni for summer position Delaware Valley native w/ car and good knowledge of Ihe Philadelphia area For details. CPPS Part-time Summer Jobs Book

Stress on Osage

UNDERGRAO Remember to Engineering J receptionist m

• Houston Hall) Planning Board Towne Building Listms

ENGINEERS check Summer

lob Book iSee CPPS 2nd floor And the Carreer (Mezzanine Level. ) for Summer Job

US POST OFFICE will be on campus recruiting for part-time summer and academic year posi- tions Apr 22 room 309 from 10-2 Apply m person CPPS Part time fob board.

WHAT DO these jobs have m common'' Graphic Designer. Newsletter Editor. Advertising Coordinator. Research Assistant They are all available next year to worksludys at CPPS Reception. Tuesday. April 22nd. 4 00-5 00. CPPS Library. 2nd floor Houston Hall All interested students welcome

Something Old, Something New...

Advertisers: The Daily Pennsylvanian is publishing two special issues to help you reach thousands of customers!

Something New The new Student Issue is ^»-

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published on July 1 and reaches 3,500 new Penn students who are anxious to learn about Penn and Philadelphia. They count on The Daily Pennsylvanian to help introduce them to places where they can shop, explore, and have fun. Reach out to regular customers and get to know new ones - It's business you can count onl

Something Old The Graduation/Alumni Weekend Issue is published on May 16 and reaches a potential 20,000 graduates, family, and friends who will be on Penn's campus for this exciting weekend. These people will be looking for places to eat and things to do to make this time even more memorable.

Advertising deadline is May 9, so act fast! Contact The Daily Pennsylvanian's Sales Department today! We are open 9-5, Monday-Friday at 4015 Walnut Street, or caii 898-6581 ftie Daily Pennsylvanian.

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Clinic provides neighbors with counseling B> DENA GITTKLMAN

The question of the emotional stability of the people who lost their homes in last year's MOVE fire has surfaced in light of the April 15 shooting of an attorney by Osage resi- dent Frnest Bostic.

Bostic. one of the 251 people displaced by the May 13 fire that destroyed 61 homes, shot his attorney David Novitsky and threatened to shoot Chief Deputy Solicitor Arman- do Pandola last Tuesday.

The Consortium, a community mental health center that has been working with the Cobbs Creek neighborhood on the problem of racial confrontation since a year before the MOVE fire, has been pro- viding stress-management programs and workshops as well as counseling services for the Osage Avenue residents.

The Consortium Executive Director Teri Doke said last week that she feels Bostic's violent reaction to the stress of the MOVE incident is an extreme case.

"That's just one individual's response," Doke said. "Other per- sons might easily experience difficulty on the job or within their home en- vironments, but there's nothing to suggest that this is a violent communi- ty at all."

"These are law-abiding, peace- loving, stable, working-class people,"

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the exception, not the rule." But Doke also said the Cobbs C reek

community was not shocked bv the at tempted murder.

"Everyone knew that they were under considerable stress and that anyday someone might well go over the edge." she said. "I think that, though they were distressed about it. I don't think anyone was really surprised."

"If anyone of us was placed in a similar set of circumstances, we might easily have gone over the edge." she added. "It's a testimony to the strength of character of that par- ticular community that no one has ac- tually succumbed to the stress prior lo now."

"By Ihe time that May I3.J985 came around, we were already firmly established in the community and we sprang into action." she comtinucd. "On Ihe day of the May 13 confronta- :ion. we established a hotline. . . and then we were on-site as they moved the residents around."

In addition, Doke explained that The Consortium is reaching out lo Ihe community in an attempt lo avoid any permanent psychological damage from occurring.

"We are so intimately and assiduously involved in our outreach strategy to try to avert any serious psychological repercussions over time." Doke said, adding that the

Power plant (Continued from page I)

"We want lo lake on all |PECo.'s| excuses that keep delaying us on this project," Anderson said, adding that the power plant presents many temp- ting opportunities for the money the University will save by not using PECo.'s services.

"A lot of University educationally related things can be done for $7 million a year," he said.

Osage Avenue community has been under considerable stress since long before the MOVE fire.

"Most people see it for only the lay year, bui they've been under unrelen- ting stress for the past three years," Doke said. "They have coped, | would say, remarkably well under ihe circumstances."

The executive director targeted fut

high-risk groups on which The Con- sortium has focused its attention.

"There are five at-risk groups," she said. "The children, the older adults, people who are already undergoing therapy. . . people who are undergo- ing a personal crisis. . . and the care- givers — people who work for social service agencies such as ours."

According to Doke, The Consor- tium is prepared to stay wiih ihe Cobbs Creek community until ihe situation calms down.

"We've made a five-year commit- ment to this community," she said. "We're prepared to continue our in- tervention strategy. . . until we can feel this community has been restored lo normalcy."

"They'll never return to their former slate, but at least to some con- dition of normalcy," Doke added. "And that can't even begin until they're actually physically moved back."

Consortium staff member Debor- rah Wilkinson said last week thai the menial health center will stay with the community as long as its help is needed.

"You can just not arbitrarily say a year after the residents have come back in, services are going lo be discontinued because more than likely there will be some residents who will need additional services," Wilkinson said.

"We will continue the programs as long as they're needed by the com- munity residents," she added. "With post-traumatic stress there's no telling how long the effects will last."

THERE ARE TWO SIDES TO BECOMING A NURSE IN THE ARMY.

Atxl they're both repre- sented by the insignia you wear as .i member of the Army Nurse Corps. The caduceuson the left means you're part of a health care system in which educational and career advancement are the rule. not the exception. The yold bar

en the right means you command respect as an Army officer. If you re earning a BSN, write: Army Nurse Opportunities, P.O. Box 7713 Clifton, NJ 07015. Or call toll free 1-800-USA-ARMY.

ARMY NURSE CORPS. BE ALL YOU CAN BE.

THE

UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA SPONSORS:

A FORUM ON S0VTH AFRICA: CORPORATE AND SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY

DATE: TIME: PLACE:

PANEL INCLUDES:

TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 1986 4:00 - 6:00 P.M. ANNENBERG SCHOOL AUDITORIUM 3620 WALNUT STREET

Judge A. Leon Higginbotham. Jr. University of Pennsylvania Trustee MODERATOR

Ms. Barbara Kommer Manager of Investor Communications Hewlett Packard Corp. Mr. Dumisani KumaJo Project Director American Committee on Africa Dr. Michael Sinclair Senior Analyst Investor Responsibility Research Center Mr. Lewis H. Wilking Executive Assistant for General Motors Corp. General Motors Corp.

Student Reception to follow.

THK DAILY PENNSYLVANIA!* — Mondav. April II, l<MMi I'M.I 5

On the Record George Plimpton: the state of his own art

I* *W ma ^Jfl

A* L* . M George Plimpton, former editor of The Paris Review, sportswriter and "par- ticipatory journalist," visited the University last week in a Connaissance-sponsored event. Daniel Zimmerman and Edward Sussman of The Daily Pennsylvanian spoke with Plimpton about his early interest in writing and his views on the present state of literature.

THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN: Tell us about Ihc April Fool's story you did for Sports Illustrated.

GEORGE PLIMPTON: It just so happened that Sports Illustrated had an issue coining out on April 1st. I think it happens every four years or so and they asked me to do something pertinent to that particular day. . . The English papers, for example, are very big on doing something about April Fool's Day. A couple of years ago they had a story. . . on a Japanese marathon runner who had come to England to run in the London marathon but he had got- ten things confused and he had run not for, 26 miles but for 26 days. . . The editor of Sports Illustrated said. "Why don't you go out and do your own." So he was giving me carte blanche to try to provide a hoax story. It was a tremendous opportunity. It had to be about baseball since the season was coming up. and it had to do vaguely with pitching. It had to be a pitcher who could throw the ball unbelievably fast. He had to come not from this country because, you know, they would have heard about him. So he had to be a foreigner. . . Then came a Buddhist monk. . . I had to make the things I thought seem so ab- surd that it would be evident after a while that one was be ing spoofed. When the issue came out. it got out instantly. A lot of newspapers fell for it. St. Petersburg had a televi-

sion crew out to interview this guy. I think Sports Il- lustrated got 2500 letters. They got more letters about that story than any other single issue. . . it was astonishing Some people were outraged, some people were just charm cd and delighted.

DP: When did your fascination with sports begin? PLIMPTON: Well. I've always been interested in

sports. I never really thought I was going to be a snorts journalist. I still don't think I'm really a sports journalist

DP: Were you a frustrated athlete? PLIMPTON: Not really — I played tennis in college

and some sports. Of course I think everybody dreams of being a great athlete. I think there arc two things that peo- ple discover. Women discover they are not tremendous beauties and men discover they're not going to play center- field for the New York Yankees. And those are the two terrible verities of life.

DP: So you never really had any ambition to become an athlete?

PLIMPTON: You realize that you're not going to be one — that you're not fast enough, you're not good enough. I pitched baseball for Harvard, but I just wasn't good enough I knew it.

DP: Is it your instinct that writers are people who have innate talent to express their feelings or is it something that's learned?

PLIMPTON: Well, you learn to write a good English sentence. It's very difficult, but you can learn it — it's a craft, like putting together a cabinet. But for the writers who go beyond that and write disturbing, interesting novels, I think they do have extra creative talent. I don't know quite what it is. . . Sometimes it's psychopathic dif- ficulty that drives the thing out. or some quirk, or some sadness, or some compulsive thing. But to write a simple English sentence, although not many people can do it, is something which can be learned.

DP: Have you seen other very good writers write? Have you ever seen Hemingway write?

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UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA Division of Recreation and Intercollegiate Athletics Department of Recreation

Recreation Class Registration

SUMMER SESSION

Monday Tuesday Wednesday

April 21, 1986 April 22, 1986 April 23, 1986

12 Noon - 4:00 PM 12 Noon - 4:00 PM 12 Noon - 4:00 PM

Hutch Gym Hutch Gym Hutch Gym

Room 210 Room 210 Room 210

Available Classes: Aerobics Monday, Wednesday, Friday Exercise Monday, Wednesday, Friday Yoga Tuesday. Thursday Yoga Monday, Wednesday

12 Noon - 1:00 PM 1:00-2:00 PM

12 Noon - 1:00 PM (Intermediate) 12 Noon - 1:00 PM (Beginners)

Classes: Begin April 28 and end June 14, 1986

Cost: Penn Students Penn Fac/Stafl Penn Alumni Penn Dependent Community

$15.00 $25.00 $25 00 $25 00 $35 00

For more information, call: 898-8383

or 898-6101

•MUST HAVE ID WITH VALIDATED 85/86 RECREATION STICKER OR NEW PENN ID

PLIMPTON: I know how he wrote. He would stand up lo wrile. He wrote ibom three to four hundred words i day. He fell very strongly that you should stop before the well was dry. You should always Stop ill the middle ot knowing where you were going lo go.

OP: Is there a lot you'd siill like lo do? PLIMPTON: Well, I'd certainly like lo go to space —

the last marvelous erc.it adventure \nJ I'm going lo try to sing with the Metropolitan opera.

OP: What have you done thai you havctl'l written about yet?

PLIMPTON: I'M never written about playing with the New York Philharmonic and I've never written about playing basketball with the Celtics.

OP: Do you think yout celebrity sialus keeps some of your serious works from receiving critical evaluation?

PUMP ION: I don'l know that someone would noi buy lomethini ot mine because they've seen me being a irape/c attist. In the 60s, I ihink, people were very much mote concerned with selling out. They were much more principl- ed about how you behaved.

OP: Oo you think il's getting harder to make your living as a professional writer if you're not willing to write what people want to read?

PLIMPTON: Yes If you hadn't said that I would think you could make a very good living writing. There arc many departments. You can write for radio, you can write for television, you can write ads. look how much reading material there is around here, all of which requires so- meone to sit down and write good English sentences. If you can write a good English sentence, you can make a fortune. And you don't necessarily have to compromise to public taste. But if you really want to write what no one wants to read except you — if you want to be a Joyce — then it's difficult. The Paris Review publishes a lot of that sort of material — writers who make absolutely no com- promise whatsoever. And our circulation is about 10.000.

Ptiolos bv Dan Schmutttr/Daily Pennsylvanian

DPIs Ihe Pans Review one ol Ihe lasl holdouts ' vie .1 lol of the other quarterlies and lilei.uv magazine) eonc?

PI IMPTON:Thcte ate always about the same number. I mean Ihcte are some here al the University ol Penn lylvania, I'm sure I don't know what their names are. bin they're little mimeographed sheets and everybody*! heart and soul gives into iheni. and they're tadical usu.iHv Peo pie who write lot them ate saying the public be damned. There ate lots of them, there are thousands of those I lie so called quality maga/ines — there are not very many. Ihcv'd be Antaeus, Ihe Paris Review, The Hudson Review, The Patlisan Review. I lie Sewanee Review. . .

OP: Ihete don't seem to be many mass maga/ines that regularly print fiction anymore. Weren'i there more?

PI.IMPTON:Ycs. there were more. P. Scott Fitzgerald, for example, made great sums of money. $25,000 ,1 itory, writing for The Saturday Evening Post. There's not very much of that. But ihose wriieis have gone on to wntc mo- tion pictures and 10 wrile lot television. . . I'm not toying the equivalent of I it/gerald has. but a lol of that wilting has been taken up by other media. But serious liction- writing can still do very well. 1 mean. Philip Roih. Km 1 Vonnegut, John Irving — ihey write exttemcly complex books that become best selleis hciausc people realize they have to go out and read these people. They're very impor- tant But there was probably a lot more excitement when a new Hemingway novel came out. . . I can remember when these things came out. I'm sure there was much more reading of books in colleges than there is now. We all used to talk about Salinger when he had a new short sioty that had come out.

OP:Would you say that serious reading has become less of a big public activity than it used to be?

PLIMPTON:l don'l ihink so. But I don'l know. You'd have to talk to a publisher about that. Bui there's still as many books published as there were. And the publishers would all start going out of businessif they weren't doing pretty decenllv.

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Perm's all-male a cappella singing group

AUDITIONS Tuesday, April 22 7-9:30

High Rise East 14th Floor

SAC Funded

■■

The Independent Newspaper pf the University of Pennsylvania

1112 ml Year of Publication ■ z

PAGE *' Monday. April 21. 1VM

The Class of 1990

UFELOVER

A Fan Letter

It's the lime of year when (he University pulls out its admissions numbers and compares them to last year's statistics. And the numbers are. on the whole, positive. Almost everything indicates that Pcnn is truly becoming a "hot school" — across geographic, racial and ethnic boundaries. Because this is one area where statistics generally don't lie, let's look at the scoreboard:

■Total applicants reached a record high of 13,014 this year, judging by the increasing number of ap- plicants over the past few years, it seems that the Ad- missions' Office boast that Penn is out of the Ivy League basement and onto the first floor may finally be true.

•Minority admissions increased to 1118 students, an eight percent rise. Apparently the University is

becoming attractive to a more diverse crowd. This should help dispel the feeling that Penn is a homogenous school. However, Admissions Dean Lee Stetson attributed this rise mostly to an increase in applications from Asian students.

•The number of black students admitted decreas- ed from 340 last year to 330 this year. Bad news, guys. After all (he selling done by admissions of- ficers, blacks still realize that life on this campus is not what it's cracked up to be. This is a recurring failure on the University's part; the school cannot afford to allow these numbers to decrease further.

The Class of 1990 promises to be Penn's most diverse class yet. However, the University must make a substantive commitment to the recruitment of black and other minority students.

Letters to the Editor Public Safety Lieutenant Decries Photo's Caption To the Editor:

I found it most disquieting lo have a photograph and accompanying cap- tion of a university police car which had obviously been involved in a serious rear end collision (DP, 4/16/86). This reprehensible attempt at humor goes well beyond the parameters of poor taste.

As official spokesperson for the Department of Public Safety and (he officer who investigated ihis accidenl, I would have certainly responded to all queries regarding the nature of this accident.

A few facts to (he DP photographer and whoever approved such a tasteless caption:

On April 12. 1986 at 3:00 a.m.. when most people are at home asleep or outside by choice, Sargeant Thomas Messner, while on routine palrol. was struck by a drunk driver as he was slopped for a red traffic light at 38th and Walnut Streets. The force of the impact, estimated at 40 miles per hour, propelled the police car into the center of the intersection. It also severed the backrest from the bench of the front seat. Had the of- ficer nol been wearing his seat belt, the impact would have, in all probability, thrown him imo, if nol through, the windshield. Sargeant Messner as well as the intoxicated operator of the striking vehicle, who was arrested, were tranported to the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania for treat- ment. As of this date. Sargeant Messner has not returned to work.

While investigating the accident, and its aftermath, several students walked up lo me and expressed their concern for the injured officer's well- being. Their comments were certainly appreciated and helped lo ease the

tension suffered by me, charged with investigating incidents thai result in an officer's injury or death. The in- jury of any police officer, regardless the circumstance, raises fear in all police.

Whal makes this thoughtless photo and commentary so particularly of- fensive is that the injured officer is a member of my staff and a supervisor in one of the two platoons under my command.

I am happy to say that Sargeant Messner is at home convalescing and will return to work soon. This police officer was hurt while patrolling the campus lo safeguard the members of this community. The Department of Public Safely and its police deserve better than whal was depicted in your April 16, 1986 paper photograph.

Another consideration is that in one senseless act, a drunk driver has im- pacted on the whole community. Not only has she injured a police officer, she has also reduced Ihe fleet of mark- ed police cars available to service the community by one third. I believe that the paper should apologize for such disparaging remarks attached to a photo which obviously shows the greatest likelihood that someone was injured in this accident.

LIEUTENANT STEVEN K. HEATH Commanding Officer 1500 and 2300

plaloons Department of Public Safely

Students Note Similarity of Show to Distributions To the Editor:

We tip our proverbial hats lo the Committee on Undergraduate Educa- tion for ils proposal lo alter the Cur- riculum of the School of Arts and Sciences. We commend their plan lo

divide the requirements into the following six categories: Society. Culture, Expression, Abstraction, Ihe Animate World and the Physical World. Our kudos go to any attempi to make the College resemble our favorite game show, Jeopardy.'

Picture this scenario — it is Freshman Convocation, and Presi- dent Sheldon Hackney announces. "THIS IS PENNSYLVANIA! Now entering the auditorium are this year's contestants, all students from the Class of 1991. And now here's your host. . .IVAR BERG!" Subsequent- ly, Dean Berg (handsomely attired in a suit furnished by Mr. Guy of Bever- ly Hills) presents the aforementioned calegories. and play begins. Students select courses from the 100 to 500 levels ("I'd like Society for 200 please, Ivar."). Only those who end up with a positive score — failing a course would place a contestant in a deficit situation — would be allowed to graduate.

Unfortunately, the proposal is not ambitious enough. The distribution categories could be used as a first round of Jeopardy! for freshmen and sophomores. However, we call for the formation of another committee to create a Double Jeopardy! round for juniors and seniors. Potential categories for this round could be Racism, Sexism, Homophobia, the Greeks, Business and Industry (for Dual Degree candidates and Wharton "wanna-be's"), and starts with "C." Graduation with honors would re- quire Ihe correct response to a Final Jeopardy! question (wiih Dean Berg exhorting contestants to phrase their response in question form).

We urge serious consideration of this matter and encourage further discussion by the entire University community.

JUKI. Ill KM »V\ I I / College 'S7

liKl ( I GOLDFARB < (.liege Wharton '87

ATTENTION: NEW COLUMNISTS The Daily Pennsylvanian is currently accepting applications for positions of bi-weekly

columnists for the Fall 1986 semester. All members of the University community are strongly urged to apply. Applicants

should submit a sample column and an outline of the topics they intend to cover or general theme of their regular column — please be as specific as possible.

Deadline for applications is Friday, May 9. Applicants will be notified of final deci- sions over the summer.

Applications are also being accepted for regular columnist positions in The Summer Pennsylvanian.

Send applications — which should include the writer's year, school, home address and telephone number — to Craig Coopersmith, Editorial Page Editor, The Daily Pennsylva- nian, 4015 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104.

BLOOM COUNTY/Berke Breathed A

dLOOtA COUNTY

SPECIAL Miit*AMPpm-me PHOTO? KAPHEK SIEVE PAUMS ms wmmzp TOTHEST PEPNHOTZ MEM0K1AL HOSPITAL TVCW SUPWHN0 FKOmLOTSOf BPVSES AW A BPCHEN BACK. /> PESUT OF ON Afmmr ASSAULT BY Km amPENN.

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A »W Of'■*32 67 IS BEIN6 OFFEKtP F0K THE PPOMPT PELWERV ofHOST ANY SUBSTANTIAL OPTION Of n\ PENN'S ANATOMY 10 THE PESK OF MIU> BLOOM AT THE

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psm MY FKIEWS ''OH'6CV YES, MYmsups >Norm* ecmKivurnne sfwrrs OP A MAN IN PWSKAC cms imi A SHM or LOYALTY BY HIS

COMMms.'

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YCWE rWMtBTUto ITT

Robin Sweeney

Dear Phranc. I have never written a fan letter

before. Even after I saw Lily Tomlin's In Search of Intelligent Life in the Universe, (which is the most incredi- ble performance of anything I've ever seen) I didn't write a fan letter. Fan letters have always struck me as a little weird, and I have never been affected

by anything enough lo bother overcoming my bias against fan letters. However, at a point last week when I fell I had become everyone's favorite target for gross homophobic attacks. I stopped and asked myself what a nice lesbian

from California like me was doing al a place like Pcnn. In answer to my own question, I found myself humm- ing one of your songs. And then I found myself singing one of your songs and skipping. It was thai mo- ment when I realized how important your music had become to me. and I sal down, right then and there on Col- lege Green, the heart of campus, and started writing you this letter.

I have spent Ihis semester writing a column for The Daily Pennsylvanian, ihe University of Pennsylvania newspaper. I didn't think • thai it would be that big a deal, writing a col- umn from a specifically les- bian/feminist perspective. I thought Penn was a reasonably accepling place, and Ihat my one little gay voice would be lost in the crowd. There are so many other important issues going on in the world lhal I figured people had accepted the rights of gays and lesbians.

I mean, my life doesn't seem lhat different from lots of the other people that I'vemcl here at school. (It's kind of like your song, "One O' the Girls" — "I can stick out yet still fit in / Feeling a belonging from deep within") You talk about how you can be a lesbian but still feel connected to your heterosexual friends. I feel very close lo lots of people who aren't gay or lesbian. And that's perfectly fine with me, and perfectly fine with my friends, gay and straight.

But so many people have reacted so strongly, and I don'l understand il. I talked about homophobia, and people have explained that they're not homophobic, they're "anti-gay". Do you understand il? I don't. Prejudice and bigotry seems like prejudice and bigotry no matter what. (Write a song about being harassed because you're a lesbian. I figure you probably have gotten some crap for who you are, since vou seem so proud of who you are.)

It's gotten to the point where I ex- pect people to be close-minded and

unaccepting, even when they're not. For instance, last Thanksgiving my friend Ardcn's mother came to visit. Arden's mom has been pretty accep- ling of ihe fact that Arden's gay. but there's a point after coming out to your parents where they accept ihe fact you're lesbian or gay but don't necessarily want to see anything con- nected to your life. (It's sort of an ad- vanced form of prejudice, when "ac- cepting" folks don't want gays to "flaunt" it.) We were afraid Arden's mother was going to be at Ihis phase of accepting her life.

Well, we sal down to our Thanksgiving turkey dinner, and Arden put on your album. The other gay people at ihe table almost died. How could she be so confrontational? Wasn't it enough thai her mother seemed relatively calm about meeting Arden's gilrfricnd? Your album played on, and everyone got tenser and tenser.

And ihen, lhe line was played. THE line. You're singing about being on the swimtcam — "I've always been one of the dudes, with my flattop and my combat boots. Now I'm learning all the thrills I that come with wearing espadrilles" — and Ihe final line. "I feel lucky to have these friends, and they feel lucky to know a real, live les- bian." Al lhat moment I fell face for- ward into my mashed potatoes. Another friend left the table gasping for air, and Arden hysterically asked, "Didn't you hear that?"

Her mother calmly wiped her lips, put her napkin down, looked al all of us and said. "Yes. and I think she's a very talented musician." Since lhal moment. I've used your album as a

litmus test for how accepting people are of my identity as a lesbian.

Even though there have been lots of moments when people have been sup- portive and when people who I ex- pected to be bigoted jerks weren't, I still never realized how stupid and ig- norant and frightened people are of anything different. But there's been one song of yours that has golten me through a lot of the obnoxious and dangerous responses that I've gotten to my column. When people were quoting the Bible and saying the Nazis should have killed the queers, and even when people were telling me nol to be so "obvious," I would go home and play this song.

"Recently / friends have been departing / permanently, but not me / I plan to stick around you sec 'C.iusc I'm a lifelover, that's me." It's a wonderful song about overcom- ing ihe most serious of obstacles, and I appreciale you writing it very, very much.

It's why I called my column "Lifelover," because you have to love something or someplace very much to fight to change it. And even though L love Penn very much, there are! enough problems that need to be solv-; ed that I'm willing to fight. I'm a Lifelover, and I plan to be back.

Consider this an open invitation to play at Penn whenever you tour th< East Coast.

Sincerely, Robin Sweeney

Robin Sweeney is a College sophomore. Lifelover has appeared alternate Mondays.

WAIT..1W5TIME W§ HIT THE UACKPOT-THIS SAPS PROPERT1! OF FERPIMANP fiW f/VIELPA /MARCOS...

Send Us Mail

The Daily Pennsylvanian wel- comes comment from the Univer- sity community in the form of col- umns and letters to the editor.

Signed columns, letters, and car- toons appearing on this page repre- sent the opinions of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the DP Board of Managers.

Please limit letters to two typewritten pages. The DP reserves the right to condense all letters. Send all material to Craig Coopersmith, editorial page editor. The Daily Pennsylvanian, 4015 Walnut St., Philadelphia, PA 19104.

Quotation of the Day 'Ihe issue here is under what

terms and al what price would Philadelphia Electric provide backup power. Il cannot lake a walk merely because an entity chooses not lo lake all ils electrici- ty from Philadelphia Electric.'

— -senior Vice President Helen O'Hannun

Stye ^Batly |Jerat8glbmtum JEFFREY GOLDBERG. EXECUTIVE EDITOR

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THK DAII V PKNNSVLVANIAN — Mondi». April 21. IfM HM.h 7

Ecstasy — A Medical View By Larry Merkel

MDMA, also known as Ecstasy, XTC. Adam, or Xing, is the latest in a 'eries of amphetamine derivat.ves being used as a recrea- tional drug. Ecstasy has been on the campus at Penn since spring 1985. It is the methylated derivative of MDA, the "love drug," which was in use both therapeutically and recreationally until the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) placed Schedule I drug controls on MDA. labeling it a controlled substance with a high abuse potential. On July I, 1985, MDMA was also placed, temporarily, on Schedule I restric- tions. There will be hearings in July of this year to finalize MDMA's status. Both MDMA and MDA are among nearly 2000 amphetamine derivatives. Others that have been used "on the streets" are MMDA. TMA. and DOM (STP). MDMA is a "designer" drug in that it was especially designed to have the ef- fects of previous drugs but to pass DEA control. The fact that MDMA is a "designer" drug may add to its appeal, giving it the air of fashionability. not unlike "designer" jeans.

MDMA. MDA and other such amphetamine derivatives are con- sidered hallucinogenic-psychedelic agents resembling mescaline and LSD in their effect. Much more is known scientifically about MDA than MDMA, but it is likely that there is little difference between them, comparable perhaps to the difference between amphetamine and methamphetamine. Both MDMA and MDA have been known for many years; MDA was first in- vestigated in the 1930s. Both com- pounds' appeal appears to be their apparent ability to enhance emo- tions, empathy and aesthetic enjoy- ment while increasing self-awareness and decreasing defensiveness. Their effects appear most reliably when the drugs are used in low doses and under controlled situations, such as drug-enhanced psychotherapy. Their use in psychotherapy, however, remains highly controver- sial. At higher doses they have caus- ed distortions in perception, hallucinations and "bad trips." Other side effects, seen even with moderate doses, include blurred vi- sion with enlargement of the pupils, tension and spasm of the muscles (especially of the jaw), sweating, loss of appetite, sleeplessness, elevated blood pressure and heart rate and tremors. Physical exhaus- tion and fluctuating anxiety, seem- ingly unrelated to situational

pressures, have been experienced for as long as two days after use. as have brief, non-recurring hallucinations. When taken orally, the effect of MDA begins after 40 to 60 minutes and peaks about half an hour later. The effects usually last for two to three hours, but may continue as long as eight hours.

The experience of students at Penn, using MDMA ("Ecstasy") has been typical of experiences with it reported elsewhere. It has been described as causing an initial reac- tion characterized as being "a real trip," as if "wasted" or drunk, which lasts about 15 minutes. After the initial experience, students have related feeling "settled down" and "just wanting to talk with friends." Their sense is that it intensifies rela- tionships rather that creating them. For the most part there has not been "bad press" about MDMA among students at Penn; however, we at Student Health have seen several students suffering from bad reac- tions ranging from rather frighten- ing muscle spasms, to paranoia and agitation during the initial phase of the drug's effect.

Physicians at Student Health have reviewed the medical literature for reports of serious reactions to those compounds. Five deaths have been reported in Canada due to overdose of MDA. There are also reports of three near-fatal reactions to MDA which resembled Strychnine poson- ing with seizures, fever and severe muscle spasms preventing breathing. The doses of MDA taken. 500 mg. were only about five times the amount taken in controlled clinical situations (75 to 150 mg). However, in each of these cases amphetamines and barbiturates had been used also. There is a brief mention in the medical literature, without details, of one confirmed death due to an overdose of MDMA. In the brief report it was not clear if the MDMA had been taken with any other substance. There have been no other reports of severe reactions.

The literature on animal research similarly supports the narrow margin between the "therapeutic" dose and the lethal dose making the possibility of toxic accidental oever- doses more likely. The LD50 (dose causing death in 50 percent of the animals given MDMA) was only about ten times larger than the usual therapeutic dose. For comparison (he LD50 for LSD is 100 times the therapeutic dose. Animal research also suggests that MDA use depletes serotonin, a chemical transmitter in the brain, and that chronic use may destroy the cells which produce

serotonin. This is parallel 10 the ef- fect of methamphetamine on dopamine (another chemical transmitter in the brain) and dopamine-producing cells.

Some students we spoke to estimate that about 5 percent of the student body has tried Ecstasy and that use seems to have leveled off. A single "hit" of approximately 100 mg sells for $20. while one gram costs $125 to SI70. It is usually being purchased in capsules and taken orally. Not uncommonly, it is also being used with alcohol or marijuana.

There is already mention of a newer version called "Eve" being available on campus, which is pro- bably similar in effect.

The most important understan- dings to take from this information are:

•The effects of MDMA (EcsUUJ) i are comparable to LSD. mescaline and in some ways amphetamine, when used in comparable doses.

•The potential for near-fatal or fatal reactions with MDA and pro- bably MDMA is variable, but ap- pears to be greatly enhanced when other durgs (especially am- phetamines, barbiturates and pro- bably cocaine and alcohol as well) are used with it. Lack of sleep, emo- tional instability and malnutrition may also increase the risks for per- sons taking these substances.

•The delayed onset of the drug's effects when it is taken by mouth may inadvertently lead to accidental overdosage, if someone expects a rapid onset and takes more drug when no effect is felt after several minutes. The danger of this pattern may also be increased by the use of other drugs or alcohol.

It is important that students have accurate and up-to-date information about drugs they take or are con- sidering taking. Students should also know that the University provides confidential assistance and referrals in this area. If you feel your use of alcohol or other drugs is causing you problems or if you are not sure and just want to talk it over confidential ly, there are trained professionals able to help you at both Student Health (662-2860) and the Universi- ty Counseling Service (898-7021). Confidential (and anonymous, if you wish) referrals to off-campus evaluation and treatment resources are also available. Full confidentiali- ty is maintained in all contacts with students.

Larry Merkel is a staff psychiatrist at the Student Health Service. Samuel h'ager and Mark Giesecke assisted m the preparation of this column.

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Airport increases security measures HEATHER SCHILDGI

In light of the escalating terrorist situation around the world, the Philadelphia International Airport is putting extra emphasis on security.

According to the airport's Opera- tions Manager Bohdan Korzeniowski, security in the Philadelphia airport has always been tight, but it is con- tinually increasing.

"I am very confident about airport security," he said. "However, anytime anything occurs around the world, there is an increased awareness of safety."

Korzeniowski added (hat he likes to compare the widespread effects of ter- rorist incidents to a strand of beads.

"I like to use the example of a str- ing of beads — pull one and the others bounce around too — there is a reac- tion, an impact on all airports," he said.

However, Korzeniowski said securi- ty is not something instantly changed, although the airport presently is being cautious. He added that although the Philadelphia International Airport

has not often been a terrorist target, such violent incidents are not unprecedented.

"Historically we've had no real problem with terrorism," he said. "The only time we've had an incident that I remember was in the early '70's. There was some sort of hijacking — I'm not sure of the details and it wasn't a very major event."

According to Korzeniowski. the air- port is concerned with "security working as an overall package." He added that airport security is being reviewed constantly to see if it con- forms to the national standard.

"There is a lot of emphasis on stan- dard checks — local authorities are constantly evaluating the airport security," he said. "Airports in other countries may need more security strengthening than those in America because they don't have the overall standard to constantly measure up to."

Korzeniowski also said the airport is increasing security measures, but he could not disclose any specific infor-

mation because "one of the primary requirements of security happens to be secrecy."

American Airlines General Manager in Philadelphia Nick Cicalli said he feels "airport security has always been tight." He added that the airport is being "extra cautious" in light of recent international events.

"We have done some additional things." he said last week. "Philadelphia is definitely a potential target for terrorism — I would say that every major city would be a potential target."

In addition, Cicalli said the terrorist threat is not diminished even though American Airlines does not make many international flights from Philadelphia.

''There is much concern domestically as well as international- ly." he said.

According to Cicalli, the various airlines finance security, both in- directly and directly. He added that he does not expect security costs to rise because the airport has always main-

tained strong security. Cicalli also said he feels the cons-

tant security checks are very effective and even minor violations are caught and remedied.

"There are so many checks and balances in our concourse," he said. "The Airline Transport Association and the Federal Aviation Association are constantly checking that we con- form to guidelines. Also the city police are constantly patrolling the field and if they see anyone without identification, they pull them in."

"For example a couple of months ago one airline hired new employees," he continued. "They were on a plane without their ID's and within minutes the police spotted them. The police are doing a fantastic job."

Cicalli added that he feels the lack of violent incidents in the Philadelphia airport is testimony to the constant tight security.

"Hijackings are few and far bet- ween in the U.S.," he said. "I think the credit is due to the high security measures."

Phila. convention center bill blacked out By PAUL MOORE

A bill creating an authority to oversee the proposed construction of a new Philadelphia convention center was spared a probable third defeat last Tuesday when the electronic scoreboard totalling votes suddenly went blank.

The resolution, calling for an allocation of $455 million to con- struct a Center City convention center, has been voted down two times in the past by the Pennsylvania General Assembly in Harrisburg. The bill was behind 105 to 85 votes when the scoreboard failed.

Although the bill later was taken up by House Speaker Leroy Irvis after the board was repaired, a motion by House Majority Leader James Manderino was passed to suspend ac- tion on the bill for the day. No further action on the resolution was taken.

Democratic City Council Member l.ucien Blackwell, who was not pre- sent at the Harrisburg meeting, said

he believes the circumstances of the Scoreboard's failure are suspicious.

"I believe there were some shenanigans going on," Blackwell said. "(The bill) would have gone down for the third time [had the scoreboard not failed). Some of my friends in (he legislature said it was a joke."

Blackwell. who is opposed to the passage of the bill in its current form, said he does support the construction of a new convention center.

"I believe we need a convention center." he said. "1 advocated the first bill about it. We all agreed to do certain things. . . In Harrisburg, they changed the whole thing."

In addition, Blackwell also said he believes the bill in its current form is essentially dead, adding that alter- native plans are being discussed.

"What we're doing now is looking at other options," he said. "We've consulted with business people and developers, and they believe it's do- able and believe we can save some

money. "Now it's up to us to give them

room to discuss the ways and means of going about drawing up plans," he added.

According to Blackwell. Penn- sylvania citizens, who will bear the brunt of the construction costs in state taxes, should have more say in the convention center's logistics and planning.

"I believe we should have more say- so in how it's built, how it's operated," he said. "The money you pay (in taxes) for the convention center that you don't even control, could be used to make city repairs."

"Cars clink along here in Center City at five miles an hour," he added. "There have been no studies to in- dicate what kind of troubles the taxes could be used to avoid right here."

The council member added that he feels Philadelphia has a real need for a new convention center in order to compete with other large eastern cities in attracting major events.

"I believe we have to move on it now," he said. "As leaders, we have an obligation to compete with other cities like New York. Baltimore and Norfolk."

Philadelphia Industrial Develop- ment Corporation Director Joseph Egan said last week that his organiza- tion is developing plans for the con- vention center's construction even though the proposed bill has not yet been passed.

"We're proceeding with the plans we have." Egan said. "If we receive the support of the Pennsylvania legislature, we'll move ahead with this plan."

Egan added that he also feels Philadelphia needs the convention center to compete with other eastern cities.

"I feel very strongly about it," he said. "It's important to go ahead because nothing stands still. Either cities reach for the stars, or reach for a can of peas."

Cedar Park homes to be open for public tours By YAEE LEVY

Cedar Park residents will open their homes to the public on Sunday, May 4 when the University City Historical Society sponsors a self-guided tour of historic homes in the area.

According to Tour Committee Chairperson Suzanne Stone, the tour is the society's major fundraiser and has been given every year for the past

12 years. "Every year we do a different sec-

tion of University City," she said this month. "We usually get between four to five hundred people from the city and out of town."

Stone said that many families whose homes are on the tour are en- thusiastic about the event.

"People who are asked are by and

Lang elected UA chair (Continued from page I)

things, but only with the elected representatives," he continued. "Next year the government will act as a whole."

Zajkowski said last night that he in- tends to improve the UA's financial influence on the University.

"I think the UA needs to make a concerted effort in terms of looking at the tuition increases and how the University's budget is allocated," Za- jkowski said.

The Nominations and Elections Committee announced last week that the following students will serve on the 1986-87 UA, in order of highest to lowest number of votes received in

their respective schools: In the College: Wendy Bloom, Eric

Lang, Joy Sturm, Adam Shiff, Mike Jaffee, Steve Brodksy, Jill Kaufman, Gus Castillo, Marc Aronstein, Stephen Cohen, Ira Gaberman. Ran- dy Karafin. Ronit Walker, Andrew Shapiro and Colin Samuels.

In Wharton: Wendy Ferber, Sander Gerber, Arik Prawer, Gil Bonwitt, Aram Nadell and Jeff Zajkowski.

In Engineering: Jonathan Levine. FHward Yun and Dave Richter.

The one Nursing School seat went to Michelle Haris, who ran unopposed.

All members and officers officially begin their terms today.

large very flattered and very eager to participate," she said.

In addition, she said many of the homes undergo restorations each year for the tour.

"Some homes are restored to their original looks and others are renova- tions," she said. "This year we have a good mix."

Stone said she has worked on the committee for the past four years, but (his is the first year she has been the chairperson.

"I got involved through neighbors who have been active," she said.

The title of this year's tour is "Queen Anne Cedar Park" because the majority of homes on display were built at a time when Queen Anne ar- chitecture was fashionable. The tour features predominantly mansion- type, single-family dwellings.

Cedar Park Neighborhood Assosciation President Joan Coward, a board member for the Historical Society, is opening the doors of her own home for the tour.

"My house was built in 1889," she said. "It has fireplaces with elaborate wood manllepieces and tiles, elaborate wall decorations, and one room with a heavy wooden-beamed ceiling. I have leaded glass windows."

She added that "a lot of the homes [on the tour) have stained glass windows."

According to Coward, the homes are presently "in a continuous state of renovation."

"They're putting in older light fix- tures, stripping the paint from the woodwork, and sanding the hard- wood floors," she said. "These houses have been owned by people who modernized them."

In addition, Coward said the tour is intended to be a way of familiarizing outsiders with University City.

"I've had my home on the tour twice before and I'm very comfor- table with that," she said. "I think a lot of us think that it's a nice way for people from outside University City to see what a good community Cedar Park is."

Tickets for the tour will cost $12 if purchased in advance. Anyone who volunteers to be a host or hostess in the homes will receive a free ticket.

The tour takes place from I p.m. to 4 p.m. and runs from 46th Street to 50th Street and from Larchwood Avenue on the north to King Scssing Avenue on the south. Each ticket lists the 13 homes on display and bears a map identifying the residences.

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Sr. citizens discuss volunteer program »» CANDICi: MOORI

The Senior Associates, a group of over ISO senior citizens audiling classes al the University, met Friday to hear ideas for a campus-wide, retired volunteer program at the University.

Jim Davis, the coordinator for the Retired Volunteer Service Corps at the University of Maryland, discussed Maryland's program to provide ideas on how the Senior Associates could introduce a similar one here.

Senior Associates Audit Program Coordinator Karen Weidel said last week that the group wishes to provide this service to the University in return for the opportunity of furthering their education,

"Volunteers could take their skills, creativity and energy and put them in- to work on a collective campus — this area is ripe for it," said Davis.

He added that the senior citizens could provide services such as tutor- ing, counselling, academic advising, lecturing, office assisting and pro- gram coordinating.

"Volunteers could give a unique perspective that's not available on what's happening in certain fields and Ithese senior volunteersl would have wisdom of the ages because [they've] been there and have experienced it," explained Davis.

"The volunteer program would also be a way of keeping active and in- novative, not just vegetating," added

volunteer steering committee member Sidney kulick. "Associating with younger students is a rewarding experience."

Students who have taken classes with senior cilizens at the University feel that the program could initiate more senior citizen/student interaction.

"Senior citizens add a lot of con- trast to the classroom and they pro- vide new perspectives for college-aged students." said College sophomore Kevin Porter.

Senior Associates Co-chairman Reeba Richardson said that she believes the program will be a prac- tical one for the University.

"We are hoping thai the various

departments will identify places for us where they can use the Senior Associates and then we'll identify the Senior Associates who can fit into ihose areas." Richardson said.

The Senior Associates hope to design a definitive program over I he summer which they plan to bring 10 ihe University in the fall.

"We look forward to the time when we will be an integral, active part of Ihe University community where there can be maximum arrangements for in- tergcnerational interaction of students and older people that will enrich the learning process for us as well as for siudcnts," said Senior Associates Co- chairman Norton Shapiro.

Phila. increases fight against drug abuse By DOUGLAS DANOFI

Philadelphia is attempting to in- crease its fight against drug use through a variety of drug abuse prevention programs.

In fact. Mayor Wilson Goode recently announced that drug arrests in the city increased by 47.7 percent from December, 1985 through January, 1986

As a city project, the Drug Educa- tion Program will reach approximate- ly 85 public, parochial and private schools in Philadelphia, as well as numerous public housing projects.

According to Acting Health Com- missioner Bettina Hoerlin, (his prevention program differs from other programs because it deals with

the intellect rather than with emotions.

"The thrust of these preventive programs is how to say 'No.' " she said. "(They are| not oriented to scare tactics."

Hoerlin added that the project tries to get to the heart of the sensitive issue on a rational level, and thereby ex- poses the underlying causes of drug use.

"We try to get into some of the reasons why kids get into drugs," she said.

The commissioner also said the method of educating youth about drugs appears to be successful, even though numerous forces make it dif-

ficult to judge. "Our experience has been that this

|is| a more effective approach than other approaches," Hoerlin said.

In a press release b> the Mayor's of fice, Hoerlin explained that Philadelphia's drug education pro- gram reached 116,200 youths l;i-t you and is expected to touch approximate- ly 30 percent of the city's young peo- ple this fiscal year. She also said the program is considered one of the most effective networks in existence.

"Philadelphia is considered b> other cities to have the model school and community-based drug abuse prevention system." Hoerlin said.

However, the city docs not plan 10

stop its fight there. In conjunction with the health department, it is cur rently working out the details for several new programs, including one called Citizens Against Pushers.

According to Mayor's Office Infor- mation Officer Jim Murray, the idea behind CAP is "to have communities where there are noted drug pro- blems ... contact Ihe Health Depart mcnl."

When members of a drug-troubled community call their problem to the city's attention, outreach teams visit the neighborhoods in an effort to direct drug users toward treatment programs. These teams will also offer preventive counseling to citizens in the community,

Bear plans to do job with 'creativity and efficiency' (Continued from page I)

"I do my best when I'm busy," Bear says. "If I'm not, I don't use my time effectively."

The College junior is also well ac- quainted with campus politics. He has just finished a term on the Undergraduate Assembly, although he admits that he "didn't get as much out of it as I thought I would."

In discussing the UA, Bear says he feels the issues the assembly discuss are often too large to lead to directed

■action.

"I think sometimes we lost sight of things," he says. "Bui we got a lot of things done last year."

He notes examples such as the renovation of the Hutchinson Gym- nasium's weight room as proof of the UA's effectiveness in certain areas.

However, Bear says that while he feels the UA is a necessary student forum, its size leaves some "dead wood" in Ihe organization inevitable.

"A lot of people get disillusioned

with |the UA.|" he says. "I got disillusioned with it."

Bear contrasts the UA's vast role with what he feels is the more goal- specific job of senior class picsident.

"The roles of the Senior Class Board and the president have more realizable goals," he says. "There arc certain things we have to get done, and we will get them done. We want to do this with creativity and efficiency."

Bear says one of his main goals for next year is to increase senior class in- volvement in board-planned ac- tivities. While he acknowledges thai all 2200 seniors will never show up for a single activity, he says he feels it is important to increase interest as much as possible.

As incoming president. Bear takes offense with the labeling of (he elec- tion as a popularity contest, saying that perhaps popularity can be redefined as "visibility." He adds that visibility is achieved through -action.

"The most visible person is often the person that's been around a lot and has been active with campaign- ing." he explains. "I've personally met people in a lot of groups."

In terms of the recent election. Bear does not believe the contest was problem-free.

He says that he disagreed with the printing of a column about the elec- tion in last Monday's Daily Penn- sylvanian. and adds thai ii may have affecled the results of the race.

But what made him most angry was that the writers of the column picked two candidates and called them "frontrunners."

"I have a lot of conscientious friends in the DP, but the irrespon- sibility of a few individuals during the election questions the reliability of the DP," he says.

Although he feels the contest bet- ween the candidates was basically fair. Bear adds that "it was not a gentlemen's election."

He attributes his victory to consis-

tent support from his friends and members of his fraternity. Also, he says other candidates supported him in the runoff after they had lost the preliminary election.

When he went to Smokey Joe's the night before the runoff election, the crowd and singer Pat Godwin official- ly endorsed him. The Interfratcrnity Council, at a banquet on the same night, also pledged its support.

"I guess I am a campus-wide representative," Bear says.

The new Senior Class Board has already begun its job, with prepara- tions for Hey Day on Friday, April 25.

The board is currently looking for a replacement speaker for President Sheldon Hackney, who normally ad- dresses the crowd at the junior class event.

"I was very suprised that he's not available," Bear says, adding that he believes Hackney has an important prior engagement during this year's event.

TA held without bail (Continued from page I)

be allowed to continue teaching," he said. Should Dincer be released on bail at Tuesday's hearing, the Univer- sity may take action against him.

The source indicated that Dincer might have grounds for a lawsuit against the University, if ad- ministrators take action against him, and he is found innocent.

Vice Provost for University Life James Bishop said last night that the University will make a decision con- cerning Dincer's employment soon.

"I have only some limited informa-

tion on the young man," Bishop said. "I expect to have more information by Monday and at that time the University will decide what steps to take."

Public Safety Lieutenant Steven Heath declined to comment last night on the incident. He referred questions to the detective division of the depart- ment. Detective Supervisor Michael Carroll could not be reached for comment.

Amy Weslfeldt contributed to this article

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Student drops suit againstU. (Continued from page I)

prejudice," meaning it can never be brought again. And attorneys for both sides confirmed there was no out-of-court settlement reached to at- tain the dismissal.

"We agreed to a dismissal of her case — period," Associate General Counsel Neil Hamburg said last week.

According to Hamburg, the condi- tions of the dismissal mandate that each side will pay its own expenses and attorneys' fees to date. He added that, had Stern persisted in the case, costs would have escalated con- siderably because the University was prepared to fight the suit in court.

"I'm pleased that the matter has been concluded without further legal expenses for either side." Hamburg

said. "It could have been costly for both sides."

Stern's attorney. David Harrison, confirmed last week that the case had been dismissed but declined to com- ment on the reasons for not pursuing the matter.

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Changes aid W. Crew in weekend race Penn beats Rutgers, but loses to Cornell

By SNOO/.KR AK< HKR

Changes would be (he one word lo aplly describe this season's Penn women's crew. Prior to Saturday's loss lo Cornell and win over Rutgers, the Quakers lineup underwent another alteration.

"The changes in lineup arc making a difference." Penn coach Bruce Konopka said. "We had the closest loss all year and Cornell is the top boat that we've raced.

Penn finished in a 6:52 with Cornell winning in 6:50 and Rutgers two boatlengths behind.

"The amount Cornell won by, they got from the start," Cathy Hallenbeck said. "They had a quick start and were ahead six seats at the beginning. We kept going back and forth, two seats or six seats behind the entire race."

The changes — made the day before the race — have not been kind to the junior varsity, as they lost to a strong Cornell crew by two boatlengths.

"Our boat rows better when we're ahead." Molly VanDyke said. "We didn't have that advantage. Cornell took off right at the start."

The first freshman boat finished third. The second freshman boat finished second, behind Cornell.

"All the crews are starling to settle in," Konopka said. "The other schools are beginning lo slow down and we are moving. We are starting to learn how to race well."

Kevin Rlcharda/Daily Pennsylvania"

The Penn lightweight crew went winless in its races against Princeton Saturday on lake Carnegie

Ltwt. Crew winless in four By MICHAKI. IMMMI I I \KH

For the second week in a row. the Penn lightweight crew failed to win a race as the Quakers were shut out by Princeton Saturday on Lake Carnegie, losing lo the defen- ding national champion Tigers 6:14.4 to 6:23.3.

"We've had better days," said Penn coach Fred Leonard. "Princeton took every race by a considerable margin."

Penn started off the line at a characlciistically-high stroke rating of 44, and at 500 meters was only down by two seats. The Quakers were not able to keep the rating up, however, and settled down lo 37 strokes per minute. By halfway through the 2000-meter race, Penn was down by less than a boatlcngth, but the Tigers gradually and

consistently pulled out to (he two-boatlcngth margin of victory.

Because (he Tigers suffered iheir first loss in two years (o Rulgers lasl week, they may not have been suprised by the Quakers holding with them. That loss may have condi- tioned the Tigers not to take any opponent lightly.

"Princeton is not playing around anymore after Rutgers," Penn coxswain Gary Lowitt said."

This season, the Quakers have rowed every race at a high rating, but a headwind on the race course made their

quick eari> pace red uncomfortable. "We felt scrambled at the high rating," senior Ron

Birnbaum said, "ao Wf made a decision lo take H down. At one point we were only at a 35."

The Quakers did not feel that they rowed a poor raw, they were just ouiclassed b> a stronger program.

"It certainly wasn't our worst race," Had ■ophmorc Steve Lancman.

The Penn j.v. boat lost 6:27.9 to 6:46 4 Penn fell behind at the start and jusi could not keep up,

"IPnnceton] just kept moving away," senior Jerry Socoiovsky said •■< iin only coflaotation is thai tbej have beaten every boat they have raced by that much."

Coach I eonard was noi as willing 10 accept this excuse however. Although he has been considering making lineup changes for a few weeks, changes arc now assured.

"Our third boat was practically as i.isi .is our j.v.." I eonard said "We arc going to see if ore can get one boat that is faster "

I'he third boat's nine Saturday «,is 6:39.7. tourteen

seconds behind the Tigers. The Penn freshmen were overwhelmed by Princeton,

losing by twenty two seconds

W. Track runs well in Rutgers meet (Continued from back page)

having to go to Rutgers," Quaker assistant coach Julio Piazza said. "We had some solid performances. We placed 12 people in the top five, which, in a meet of that magnitude, was outstanding."

The Rutgers meet did hold some relevance, though. The Penn-Cornell confrontation usually served as the qualifier to decide which athletes

would represent the two schools in an exchange meet in England this sum- mer. The top (wo finishers in each event of the meet would have gotten placed on the team that will be heading overseas. However, since the

meet was cancelled, it was agreed that the members of the team would be decided on the basis of each athlete's best performance during the outdoor season, including the action (hat took place last weekend. So there was definitely motivation for the Quakers to improve on their previous efforts.

"We won't be running any relays.

Everybody will compete in Iheir own even(s," Penn women's track head

coach Betty Costan/a had said before the meet, emphasizing that upgrading individual performances to gain a place on the learn going lo England would be (he objective of the meet.

However, only one Quaker — junior Van Grover, with her 57.2-second time in the 400-meter dash — was able (o set a personal record in the meet, so Penn will have (o rely on past performances to garner

spots on the team, which will be decided on Wednesday night. Mean- while, junior Jane DeMarco took home the lone Quaker first-place finish, winning the 3000-meter run in a time of 10:00.3.

"I was happy with the race. I had been hoping it would be a faster field because I wanted a faster lime," DeMarco said. "We did pretty well. The track wasn't all that fast, and ii was fairly windy, yet people still put in decent performances."

Some of those included freshman Christelle Williams' two fourth-place finishes in the 100-mcter dash and Id) meter high hurdles in times of

12.93 and 14.87 seconds, respectively:

senior Kate O'Hcrn's 2:11.5 time in the 800-mctcr run for third place; junior Michelle Payne's second-place finish in the high jump with a 5-6 ef- fort and fourth-place finish in the

long jump with a 17-5 performance; senior Cricket Batz's 4:36.8 fourth-

place clocking in the 1500-meter run; junior Tracey Charles' 1:05.0 time in the 400-meter intermediate hurdles in her first action since injuring her back three weeks ago; and sophomore Courtney Callahan's 14.87 100-meter

hurdle and 1:04.5 400-meter hurdle limes, which Piazza termed as "en

couraging." considering she is still suffering slightly from a twisted ankle

"Everyone had pretty solid perfor- mances," O'Hern said. "It WU a good matt. Ii wasn'l really a high- pressured meet, |bul| i( was a good meel going into the Penn Relays Everybody's running really well."

"The Kelavs cues us some good

competition before the |Heplagonal Championships, which take place on May 10th and lltilj," Callahan laid "A lot of people have been injured, but as long as they come back before Heps, we'll be okay."

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M. Track run over by Big Red Just seven Quakers qualify for England trip in 121-42 loss

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B) JENNIFER REINGOLD The disappointment in the voice of

Penn men's track head coach Irv Mondschein could not be disguised. Saturday's meet against Cornell was one of the most eagerly anticipated matchups of the season, a meet from which a team would be selected to compete in England this summer. For the Quakers, the results were disastrous, as the Big Red soundly defeated Penn. 121-42.

"We got our doors blown in," Mondschein said. "Instead of it being a tight meet, it ended up a runaway."

Injuries to the Quakers' co- captains, senior Kris Szabedhegy and junior Randy Cox, lessened the chances for a Quaker victory, but Penn (4-2) hoped to be able to qualify several athletes for the Penn-Cornell exchange to Oxford and Cambridge, an event which occurs only once every four years. However, only nine of the available 27 slots went to Quakers, a disheartening number for many who had hoped to qualify.

"We had a little discussion and

talked about it." Mondschein said. "It's not the end of the world. A lot of us have had a big disappointment, and we have to get over it."

Nonetheless, there were several ex- cellent individual performances in Saturday's meet from both Cornell and Penn. Sophomore high jumpers Todd Ream and Jim Rose jumped 6-8, but even this was not enough to win the event as two Cornell jumpers lied with leaps of 6-10 to take first place. Sophomore O.J. Kastberg con- tinued to outclass his opponents in the steeplechase, winning in a time of 9:13. While Kastberg is primarily a middle distance runner, he has been running the steeplechase for training purposes and is performing remarkably.

"[Running the steeplechase] is so good for him — it teaches him discipline." Mondschein said. "You have to run steady and smooth, take the pain and run with it. It's excellent training for middle distance."

Senior Ron Bloomberg competed in

two events within the span of half an hour and placed second in the 400-meter dash (48.16 seconds) and third in the 400-meter hurdles. Sophomore Ken Feller won the 800-meter run in a time of 1:54. Freshman hammer thrower Max Crome had a personal best, throwing a 151-7, an impressive effort consider- ing that Crome is new to the event.

"What Max is doing is really outstanding." Mondschein said. "|He's| considerably better than any |novicc| we've ever had."

But the overall mood of the day was one of disappointment, magnified by the injuries of the co-captains and a mishap in the pole vault event.

According to Mondschein. the pole \aull pit was illegal and unsafe, and the me.iMiiements were oil by at least an inch When seinoi pole vaulter I'.iv I Vital/lc appioachcd the pit. the pit caught the pole and toic skin from his hands. loi»iiig him to withdraw from the competition Schat/le was, bOwtVU, named to the team to

England, due to his outstanding record and Cornell's admission that the pit did not meet the standards.

Mondschein fears that Szabedhegy, who has been plagued by a bruised heel for the majority of the season, might actually have sustained a stress fracture. An injury of this magnitude would probably end the season for Szabedhegy. the favorite to win the decathlon in this week's Penn Relays.

"We're supposed to get the x-rays in today, if we can cut through the red tape," Mondschein said. "We're just hoping that we can do something — but it's a painful ailment."

for now, the Quakers must play a wailing game in order to see who will recover in time for the Relays and the Heptagonals, as well as trying to regain the positive mental attitude damaged by Saturday's rout.

"Hopefully we'll rise from (he ashes, like the Phoenix," Mondschein said. "You've got to quietly resolve to yourself that you'll do better — it'll show what kind of character you have."

W. Tennis cruises with ease past Bulldogs, Bruins (Continued from back page)

Molly Quest in straight sets; and Julie Price fell to Elizabeth Baldwin.

With the teams tied, 3-3. Penn found itself with a definite advantage entering the doubles competition. The Quakers' doubles play this season has been very strong and Friday's match was no exception. Penn won all three matches easily.

At number-one doubles, Simon and Ray beat Williams and Quest, 6-3, 6-3. Robins and Price followed by

smashing Liebowitz and Baldwin in straight sets. In similar fashion. O'Donnell and Greene destroyed Brown and Lisa Gollob. 6-3. 6-3.

"We were very happy with this win," Leary said. "Yale was number three in the East before we beat them."

The Quakers' dominance did not stop. They were back on the court Saturday and crushed Brown, 7-2. Before the match, Penn's plan was to win more singles matches and take

some pressure off its doubles teams. The Quakers accomplished just that, winning four of their six singles matches.

With an unorthodox serve. Robins beat Stephanie Frisco at the number- one singles slot. 6-1. 1-6, 6-4. In the number-three spot, Simon defeated I IIKI.I Molumphy in straight sets, and O'Donnell followed at number-four by crushing Susan Emmer, 6-2, 6-4. In a come-from-behind victory, Ray defeated Mimi McKay. 1-6. 6-0, 6-0.

With these victories, the Quakers needed only one doubles match to secure the win. But Penn again proved to be dominant in doubles play by taking all three matches. Simon and Ray beat Frisco and Gillian Leonard, 6-4, 7-6. Price and Robins defeated Molumphy and Katz 7-6, 6-0. At the number-three slot, O'Donnell and Greene demolished Nancy Norfolk and Mackay, allowing the Eli tandem just three games.

Miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllllllllllllllllllllllllll.il

*TV# ~WA Tommy Leonardl/Daily Pennsylvanian

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M. Tennis falters in league race Doubles combinations lack power in losses to Yale, Brown

By JAY BM,IN 11 was a frustrating weekend for the Pcnn men's

tennis team The Quakers lost two matches to Yale and Brown, by the scores of 5-4 and 6-3, respectively.

Two wins could have put the Quakers (8-6. 4-4 Eastern Intercollegiate Tennis Association) in con- tention for the EITA title, but things just didn't work out for Penn.

On Friday at New Haven, the Quakers had their chances. In fact, they were leading 4-2 after the six singles matches, need;.)* only one win out of three in doubles competition to clinch the match. But it wasn't to be. as Yale took all three doubles matches.

At first doubles. John Sobel and Greg Band fell. 6-3. 7-6 (7-5). Glenn Ciotti and Mitch Spiegel lost their second-doubles match, 6-2. 6-2. The third doubles team of Paul Settles and Bob Surgent went down, 6-4. 6-3.

The Quakers had a chance to clinch victory in the singles competition, but couldn't secure that last needed match. At sixth singles. Spiegel lost to Yale's Bill Sibold. 6-3. 6-7 (2-7). 6-0 In the second

set. Spiegel squandered two set points while leading, 5-2, and then dominated the tiebreaker. Sibold came on strong in the third, winning the first three games at decisive 3-3 points, and shut out Spiegel.

"I got frustrated and tried to overcomnensale by going for too much," Spiegel said.

Band had a rough weekend losing to Andy Thurston, 7-6 (7-3), 6-4. Up 5-4 in the first with a

set point at 3-3. Band missed a shot b> two inches. Band then lost the tiebreaker. In the second set. Band took a 4-1 lead, but Thurston won the next five games.

"When (Thurston) got behind, he started play- ing more aggressive and started going for his shots," Band said.

At number-one singles. Ciotti staged an im- pressive win over Bill Bcnjcs. 1-6, 6-3. 6-4. Ciotti is very familiar with Bcnjes' game, having played him once before and practicing with him on numerous occasions. After relinquishing the first set, 6-1, Ciotti did not give up hope.

"I lost the first set and it didn't worry mc thai much," Ciotti said last night. "I could have gotten killed but I slowed the pace down and let him hit more balls."

Despite the windy conditions at Brown, the Quakers set out on Saturday to repeat last yaar'l performance when Penn trounced the Bruins. 9-0. This time, however. Brown came out on top.

The Bruins managed to capture four out of six singles matches. Sobel and Spiegel provided the two lone Quaker singles wins.

Spiegel beat Steven Ryu. 7-6 (7-3), 6-4, in a

dogfight. Ryu went ahead in the first set, 5-2. and had two set points. But Spiegel wu too tough.

"I just concentrated much better and won in the tiebreaker." Spiegel said.

In other singles action. Ciotti lost to Tim Donovan, 6-2. 4-6, 6-3. Settles was defeated by

Kevin Wyman, 6-1, 2-6, 6-3. Bruin Gordie BraM beat Band in straight sets and Surgent lost to John Shipka in three sets, 6-3, 3-6, 6-4.

At first doubles, Sobel and Band beat Wyman and Khoury, 6-2, 6-3. Ciotti and Spiegel loM to Shipka and Ernst in three lough sets. 6-4, 4-6, 7-6 (7-5). Brown's team of Donovan and Friend beat Settles and Surgent in straight sets, 6-4, 6-1.

Head coach Al Mollos said that the weekend was a disappointment but he could not fault any par- ticular player.

"At Yale we had our opportunities and we couldn't come off with a doubles win." Molloy said, adding that after the singles competition, his players were not playing aggressive enough. "Everybody was waiting for someone else to win the match. We couldn't close out the doubles

"A lot of the matches went three sets and wc couldn't seem to win the third sets," Mollos .iJ.I ed. "It was a very frustrating weekend for us yet we all played well."

Softball ends batting woes, wins two By ED GEFKN

PROVIDENCE. R.I. — Despite splitting doubleheaders at Yale and Brown this weekend, the Pcnn soft- ball team played better than it has al any time this season.

The Quakers (5-9, 2-6 Ivies) handed the Bruins their first league loss in yesterday's opener, 2-1, beforedropp-

ing the nightcap, 1-0. On Saturday, Penn lost the first game to the Elis, 4-3, but came back for a 7-4 second- game victory.

"I'm very happy," Penn head coach Linda Carothers said. "We

played four very competitive, hard- fought games. They were the best games we've played all season."

"We played as a team instead of as a group of individuals," said second baseman Belh Hohcb, who started three games and went two-for-ninc in her first starts since injuring her knee

three weeks ago. "There was a lot of support from everybody."

The Quakers headed up to New Haven with a .201 team batting average, but they also brought with

them a different attitude. "We were really relaxed at the

plate," Penn pitcher/third-baseman

Patti Vivial said. "People didn't put that much pressure on themselves."

This attitude helped the Quakers break out of a month-long batting slump. Penn picked up 30 hits in the four games. None of those was as im- portant as Vivial's seventh-inning tri- ple in yesterday's first game.

With Brown leading, 1-0, and (wo

outs away Irom victory, Vivial drove Bruin pitcher Lisa Gawlak's pitch high and deep to left field. Brown out- fielder Mary Corcoran broke in in- stead of back, and the ball rolled to the fence. Quaker Sue North, who had led off with a walk, scored easily. With two out and the count no balls

and two strikes to Mari Kai, Gawlak's waste pitch turned into a wild pitch. Vivial scored easily, and the Quakers

had a 2-1 win The second game was another pit-

chers' duel. 1'itiiiN I itula Algerio and Brown's Tracy Goldstein both had

shutouts through five innings, despite numerous chances by both teams. But

the Bruins (20-5, 5-1 Ivies) put together a two-out sixth-inning rally that culminated in Carolyn Ross' run- scoring single that brought home the game's only run.

At New Haven on Saturday, the Quakers pounded Yale pitcher Sue Douglas for 10 hits en route to a 7-4

victory in the second game. "A couple of clutch hits ncre and

there." Carothers said, "and we could have walked awa> with four W's. But we have nothing to be ashamed of."

Vivial (3-3) picked up both wins for the Quakers.

Nicklas's OT goal gives Penn Ivy title (Continued from back page)

Seaman's first appearance on the sidelines since an April 10 appendec- tomy — knew who he wanted to have the ball.

"Kevin came to us and said 'I can take this guy.' " Mix said. "For- tunately, he was able to come back and get away from his man."

Nicklas' moves certainly didn't constitute all of Penn's good fortune either. Were it not for the clutch goaltending of O'Leary, the Quakers never would have had an opportunity

to win. For the fifth consecutive game — dating back to Penn's April 5 vic- tory over Cornell and including wins over Princeton, and Dartmouth and a loss to C.W. Post - O'Leary has been the backbone of the Quakers' defense.

In those games, O' Leary has re- bounded from an five-shot, no save showing against Harvard to make 72 saves while allowing only 30 goals (71 percent). During that period, he has

upped his save percentage from 51 percent (40-of-79) to 62 percent (1I2-OM81).

However, no matter how spec- tacular O'Leary had been through this span, none of it matched his 20-sa\e performance Saturday.

"The defense had been playing well

all night," Mix said. "We gave up the outside shot. Willie has to make the saves. He did. Willie has been playing great."

Penn. however, looked as if it would make it as difficult as possible for OT.eary to do his job. With the

Quakers leading, 3-1, midway through the second quarter, Prendergast misjudged the flight of a pass and allowed it to skip into an unguarded net. which O'Leary had vacated as Penn was attempting to clear the ball.

Prendergast committed what could have proven his most costly miscue when he took a one-minute slashing penalty with the score tied at eight

and and just 1:29 rcmaing in regula- tion time.

"'1 was feeling anxiety," Prendergast said. "| During the timeout before the penalty began.)" G.W. said to the defense 'the game is in your hands."

But Brown got off only one shot during that opportunity — a blast by Brown's leading scorer Tom Gagnon.

which O'Leary deflected. After that, it was time for Pcnn to

go to work. And work it did, through a full overtime period and nearly half of another, before Nicklas stopped the clock with his second goal of the

game. Then it was time for the Quakers to

rejoice. Each and every one of them poured from the sidelines to engulf Nicklas in a sea of red. white and blue.

It was time for Mix to proclaim, as fellow assistant coach Drew Bowden doused him with a bottle of beer. "I've never had a better night."

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SPORTS Page 14 The Dally Pennaylvanlan April 21, 1986

Quakers i^nch share of Ivy title

Penn attack Kevin Nicklas (II) and John Shoemaker Tommy Laonarm/Daity Pennsylvaman

<I9) celebrate after Nicklas' game-winning goal in the Penn men's lacrosse team's 9-8 win

Nicklas goal gives Penn 9-8 OT win

(Continued from page I) field Chris Flynn gave the Quakers an 8-7 lead with his second goal of (he season.

"The entire game, we had them on the run," Penn attack John Shoemaker said. "We were almost too aggressive. Everybody wanted to go to goal. We wanted this game more than any other."

Following the goal by Rogers, both teams took fewer chances, which translated into fewer qulity shots and an 18-and-a-half minute drought before Nicklas singlehandedly ended the game.

"Everybody started to get a little scared," Nicklas said, "that the last goal might win it."

So the offenses took more time set- ting up their shots, while the defenses tried to push them farther from the crease. The result was a plethora of long distance shots.

"They had the ball in the offensive zone a lot," Shoemaker said. "Our transition slowed up and Willie (O'Leary] came up big. (In a timeout during overtime), G.W. (Mix] told us to 'calm down and clear as fast as we can.' "

"They were aggressive all game," Mix said. "And all of a sudden, we're telling them to take the good shot, to take more time. They knew that if they took a shitty shot, the goalie would eat it up and (Brown] would go downfield."

So the Quakers didn't rush matters. And when enough was enough, Mix — who was handling a large share of the coaching duties despite Tony

(Continued on page IS)

Baseball swept twice — again Seventeen errors lead to 15 unearned runs, four losses

By DAN HOI I I-KM AN The Penn baseball team threw away, dropped,

misplayed. and otherwise errored its way through northern New England well enough to earn four losses this weekend. The Quakers were swept in Eastern Intercollegiate Baseball League play for the second straight weekend, this time at the hands of Harvard and Dartmouth.

In fumbling its way to these four most recent losses, Penn (II 18, 4-12 EIBL) committed //er- rors. Directly due to this plethora of miscues, the Quakers allowed IS unearned runs. In yesterday's games with Dartmouth, all of the Big Green's runs were unearned on the way to 7-0 and 7-5 wins.

"The difference in the game was that Harvard got the base hits when they needed them," Penn head coach Bob Seddon said after Saturday's 11-4 and 6-1 losses at Cambridge. "We just can't hit in the clutch."

Seddon's comments could also apply to Sun- day's second game. Penn jumped out to a 3-0 lead in the first inning against the Big Green, but saw the home team tic the score in the bottom of the same frame. The Quakers would add another run

in the fourth inning, but Dartmouth would blow the game open, with one run in the fourth and three more in the fifth.

Quaker co-captain Steve Adkins — pitching on no day's rest — would take the loss, after giving up two hits, seven unearned runs, walking six and striking out two. Adkins hurt his own cause as he committed (wo of Pcnn's three errors.

The Quakers committed six errors in the opener, as they were shut out for only the second time all season. The Big Green broke out quickly against starting pitcher Steve Grunblatt. Dartmouth would get all of (he runs it would need in the first inning, as the Green plated two off of Grunblatt. Dart- mouth would add three more in the third, and two in (he sixth off of reliever Steven Bishop.

The Quakers' play against Harvard was also not a coach's dream — in fact, it resembled a nightmare. It was not the way that Seddon and Penn wanted to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Quaker-Crimson baseball series. After three in- nings had been played in (he opener, Harvard held a 10-0 lead. Crimson starting pitcher Wall Pres/. had a no-hitter through four innings until (he

(Quakers knocked him out by scoring four runs of their own in the fifth. With the bases loaded and nobody out. first baseman Rich l.uftig doubled in the Quakers' first two runs. Two outs later, center fielder Nick Ferrara singled in two more runs. Har- vard added another run in (he bottom of the fifth to ice the 11-4 final, a game highlighted by five Penn errors. Adkins took his first loss of the weekend by allowing four hits and four runs in two innings of work.

The Quakers managed only three hits in the nightcap off of two Crimson hurlers. Penn took a 1-0 lead in (he fourth, as designated hitter Tom Picrsanti drove in lefl fielder Gordie Hotchkiss with a single. After that, it was all Harvard, as the Crimson scored six straight runs. Steve Toth took (he loss, giving up seven hits and four runs in four- and-two-thirds innings.

This weekend was another chapter in the ever- lcng(hcning Penn baseball saga. Seddon and the Quakers have painfully learned that if a baseball team can't gel (he hilling and fielding to support the pitching, (he (cam will go in one direction — down.

Francis Gardtar/Daily Pennsylvanian The Penn baseball team didn't field well this weekend

W. Tennis cruises by Bulldogs and Bruins

B> I.ORI s( IIKI I /M \\ Proving that it is a formidable op-

ponent at home, the Penn women's tennis team soundly defeated both Yale and Brown this weekend.

"We played the way we are capable of playing," Penn head coach Cissic Leary said. "And it also helped to be at home."

leading the Quakers (4-8, 3-3 Ivies) were Leslie Simon and Sophia Ray as they combined to have a hand in six of Penn's 13 match victories. Both went undefeated in singles play, and the two combined to form an unbeatable doubles team.

The Quakers began their weekend

Friday against Yale on a positive note by beating the Elis. 6-3. Penn ac- complished this feat by winning three of the six singles matches and by sweeping the three doubles matches.

The Quakers won at the second, third, and sixth singles positions. Nina Greene defeated Sue Liebowitz, 6-4, 6-7, 6-2. Simon crushed Andrea Williams allowing her (o win only two games throughout the match, while Ray gave up only one game in her match against Jennifer Brown. In the other singles matches, Gina Robins lost to Meghan McMahon, 7-5, 6-2; Sheila O'Donnell was defeated by

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W. Track races well in unscheduled meet

By EVAN SPIEGEL Some Relays took place this past

weekend. Not the Penn kind, though. The Relays to which the Penn

women's (rack (earn travelled were at Rutgers Friday and Saturday. The meet was not where the Quakers had wanted to be originally, as Penn in- itially had been slated to host Cornell at home.

However, a scheduling snafu caus- ed the meet to be cancelled. The Big Red coaches refused to split the women's team from the men's team, which was scheduled to compete at home against Penn. They said that if there was (o be a women's meet, the

Penn women would have to come to Ithaca. When the Quakers refused, the meet was dropped.

This suddenly left Penn in search of competition to compensate for the then-empty weekend. So the Rutgers Relays, whose other paticipants in- cluded Army, Syracuse, Fordham and Manhattan, quickly was inserted into the schedule to fit the bill. The Quakers adapted to the change as well as can be expected, since there would have been more incentive to compete well against'Ivy rival Cornell.

"(Penn) ran very well consider- ing not having met with Cornell and

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Blackout Hwt. Crew suffers first loss as Yale takes Blackwell Cup

Kavln Rlch»rcl»/Daily Pennsylvanian The Penn heavyweight crew lost its race and its shirts on Saturday

By SNOOZER ARCHER The Penn men's heavyweight crew

knew it wouldn't last forever. "It is impossible to stay undefeated

in this league but it was hard to im- agine who would beat us," Josh Col- lins said.

Now the Quakers (4-1, 3-1 Ivies) know who could beat them. On Satur- day, Penn lost to Yale for the Blackwell Cup on the Schuylkill River, but finished ahead of Columbia.

"Yale is a very fast crew and they have an excellent coach," Penn coach Stan Bergman said. "They have beaten Harvard four of the last five years."

Due to heavy rains lasl week, the water level had risen quite a bit and the currents had picked up. This con- tributed to a very fast race for all the crews.

"The race was really quick, there was a tail wind and the current was strong," Collins said. "At the start they jumped out on us and we never caught them."

The Elis posted a 5:07.3 with the Quakers right behind, finishing in 5:08.6. Columbia was third in 5:31.7.

"We rowed a really good race," Bergman said. "We got behind early and because of the fast conditions we didn't get a chance to catch them."

The Quakers were down by a full boat length after the start but with 300 meters to go, they started to make up ground. However, (here was not enough race in which to catch up completely.

"We just got started and suddenly it was over," Collins said. "There aren't any excuses in rowing. They were just faster yesterday and that's all that matters."

The race was much the same for the junior varsity crew, as a quick start and fast conditions contributed to a win for Yale.

"They had us by about a boallength just after a few seconds," Mike Boyce said. "They kept it the whole race."

The Yale junior varsity had a time of 5:30.9, with Penn finishing in 5:36.8 and Columbia well behind in 5:59.9

"We didn't have any idea how good they were," Boyce added. "But I think we could come back and beat them at (the Eastern] Sprints."

"It was a boxing lesson and they bloodied our noses a little," Bergman said. "We rowed tough and we rowed well, just not fast enough.

"It is a nice thing about athletics that we will get another chance," Bergman added, referring to the Eastern Sprints in May when Penn will have a shot of evening the score.