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4 pounds of cocaine found in U. mailroom By RANDALL LANE and LESLIE KERR Approximately four pounds of cocaine from Colombia. South America was discovered inside of hollowed-out Spanish dictionaries Friday by the Romance Languages Department. The cocaine package, addressed to the Pi Lambda Phi fraternity but bearing the Romance Languages department's name, was opened three weeks after it was delivered. It has not yet been determined why the box was opened or who opened it. The cocaine, with a street value estimated to be as high as SI. I million by a narcotics expert, was found in the second-floor mailroom of Williams Hall by a graduate student who noticed that the package was open. The box had a Colombian postmark and a Colombian book dealer's return address. Besides bearing the name of the Romance Languages Department and the street address of the fraternity, the
Package addressed to jmt, Romance Languages package was addressed to an individual whose name has not been disclosed. The name does not appear in the student directory, according to a source who saw the parcel. Philadelphia Police Narcotics Division Lt. John Sunderhoff declined to comment on the case yesterday, but said that police are investigating the incident. Public Safety Director John Logan said yesterday he is unaware of the incident. An anonymous source confirmed last night that a markedly similar drug incident occurred approximately two years ago when cocaine was packaged in hollowed-out books and sent to the Psi Upsilon fraternity, also known as the Castle. The cocaine in this instance was not recovered. The Castle package was marked
with an individual's name, the Romance Languages Department's name, and the Castle's address, the source said. Oriental Studies Professor Roger Allen said last night that his office contacted Public Safety on Friday, and that the Public Safety Department notified the Philadelphia Police. Sources within Williams Hall yesterday gave the following account of the sequence of events: A box approximately one foot wide, two feet long and two feet tall bearing a person's name, the name of the Romance Languages Department and the address 3914 Spruce Street arrived at the Williams Hall mailroom about three weeks ago. Shortly before 9 a.m. Friday, an Oriental Studies teaching assistant who was making copies near the
mailroom noticed thai the box had been opened. Upon closer examination, he found six Spanish dictionaries, four of which were hollowed out and contained yellow packages filled with cocaine. The sources said that the TA notified a professor, who instructed his secretary to call Public Safety. Public Safety in turn notified the Philadelphia Police, who confiscated the drugs. The cocaine weighed about four pounds, according to the sources. A Williams Hall secretary, who did not wish to be identified, said yesterday she believes that the Romance Languages Department appeared on the package so that the box would not be opened when going through international customs. The secretary also said she heard
that the department was going to forward the package before discovering iis contents. She did not know il it would have been sent to Pi I am or returned to South America. Several Pi Lam brothers yottardaj said they had no knowledge of the package discovered Friday or its con tents, and did not believe that any members of the fraternity had been contacted by police investigator! School of Arts and Sciences Director of Administrative Affairs Saul kat/man said yesterday that the box and its contents had been handed over to police for investigation. "The only thing the dean's office |has to report) is that a box ol lines tionablc origin was found in Williams Hall and was turned in to Public Safety and (the matter) is currently under investigation," Kat/man said.
A Philadelphia Police narcotics ol ficer, who wished lo remain ■noaymOUS, said yesterday that if the drug is 90 percent pure, the street value could be up lo SI. I million. "There's no doubi thai il can be divided down into 56,000 bags at $10 a bag," the office! Mid. "If you mailed to siretch il [and halve its purity) you could even gel 112,000 mil of it." "It's such a wide unge Ol values that [the sited price] is hard lo figure OUt." he said, adding lhai Ihe cocaine's purit) decreases with the numhei ol nines it is divided. Pi 1 ambda Phi Presideni Robert Biowne said last niglii that the fraternity is unaware ol ihe shipment and has not been notified by authorities "We haven't been contacted by anyone." Browne said. Pi 1 ambda Phi Vice President Daniel Cauley said yesterday lhai every resident in the fraternity house (Please turn lo page S)
Hackney releases draft policy on harassment
Susan Qundaraan/Daily Pennsylvaman
Try Licking It SPRING FLING GOT a bit out of hand in some quarters, nowhere more so than in the Quad during
Minn's three sunny days. Kappa Sigma fraternity brothers are pictured here playing with pie.
By GREG STONE and JAY BEGl'N Presideni Sheldon Hackney this week released a draft of new guidelines regulating University policy on sexual and racial harassment, after an intense debate of the issue for more than a year. Hackney's policy creates Ihrce University-wide hearing boards, allows the ombudsman to keep specific records of complaints provided the names of both parlies are not listed, and encourages informal counseling and mediation in all harassment cases. The draft is scheduled lo become University policy in May after the president has received suggestions and comments on the new policy. In February, the University Council passed reports from committees on both racial and sexual harassment after lengthy debate over the need for a new set of guidelines and on how the policy would affect academic freedom. While boih reports recommended instituting a University-wide hearing board which would hear all cases of sexual and racial harassment. Hackney's proposal calls for three existing boards to settle formal complaints. The Senate Committee on Academic Freedom and Responsibility would act as the adjudicator in all claims brought against faculty members and teaching assistants. The Student Judicial Procedure would govern student harassment charges, and the Staff Grievance procedure
Candidates from opposing slates win contested election
Selected for three year slates were Biochemistry Professor Adelaide Delluva who is widely regarded as a liberal; Philosophy Professor James Ross who is known as a moderate; and Associate History Professor Alan Kors who is a self-described libertarian.
The committee figures prominently in Presideni Sheldon Hackney's drau policy on new University guidelines for sexual and racial harassment grievance mechanisms. Under the plan, SCAFR is the formal mechanism open to ihe University community to picseni any grievance against a faculty member or teaching asMstani. The proposal is open for comment until April 30, and Hackney plans lo prim a final version in May. Delluva said last night that she was pleased lo be chosen, bui she didn't understand why a liberal, conscr(Please turn lo page 8)
would be ihe formal judicial body lor claims against University staff. Hackney said last night (hat he believes his policies "tracks Ihe two committees' reports very closely," especially in the sections defining sexual and racial harassment. He added lhat he established ihe separate committees instead of creating new ones to take advantage of the existing bodies which deal with harassment. "I think [ihe policy is) going to meet general approval," Hackney said. "It is a significant and strong step forward."
The policy diverges from the University Council Committee reports, which suggested establishing one hearing panel made up of faculty, students and staff. SCAFR is made up exclusively of faculty members. Council has debated whether students should be able to sit on a panel lhai adjudicates over faculty. Hackney's policy also allows the ombudsman to keep a record of informal complaints that would describe incidents in detail, but would not name either the complainant or the accused. (Please turn lo page 8)
B> GREG STONE Candidates from both the liberal and conservative slates were selccied for the three open spots on ihe Senate Committee on Academic Freedom and Responsibility after two conservative faculty members contested the election.
Eight profs receive Lindbacksfor teaching By KIM HULT and GREG STONE The University has named eight recipients of the annual Lindback Foundation awards for excellence in teaching. The Lindback awards are given each year to four professors in health fields and four professors in non-health areas who are recognized by students and colleagues for outstanding teaching. All nominees for the award were evaluated on recommendations submitted by students and information contributed by other faculty members or administrators. The four health field winners are Associate Physical and Pharmaceutical Dental Professor
Stephen Cooper, Veterinary Orthopedic Surgery Professor Charles Newton, Assistant Medicine Professor Gail Slap, and Associate Nursing Professor Joyce Thompson. Associate Education Professor Michelle Fine, Assistant Education Professor Teresa Pica, Associate Engineering Professor Dwight Jaggard, and Assistant Legal Studies/Accounting Professor William Tyson were selected among the 13 nominees in non-health areas this year. Although the Lindback is the most prestigious teaching honor given at the University, some faculty members refer to it as the "kiss of death" in their search for tenure. Since 1981, three of the six nontenured Lindback recipients were denied tenure.
The regular rate of tenure approval is 49 perceni, according to Deputy Provost Richard Clelland. No professor may receive a Lindback award in the year when that faculty member is under tenure consideration, according to the award guidelines. This year's recipients said they feel that tenure decisions are not affected by the award. Slap, who is a junior faculty member, said yesterday that she is unconcerned about the theory that untenured Lindback winners do not receive tenure. "As for the tenure issue, it's something that's been raised through the years, but it's my belief that it is very separate from the Lindback award," Slap said. (Please turn to page 7) Brat Flahafly'Daily Panntytvanian A Human Rights Coalition member lists their demands last December
•:w i .54 plans to appeal AFLrCIO decision Fac Club worker says U. is trying to delay unwrmttion By ANDREW CHAIKIVSKY AFSCME Local 54 President Ghulam Muhammad said yesterday that he plans to appeal the decision handed down by an AFLCIO arbitrator Friday granting jurisdiction over the Faculty Club workers to another union. Muhammad said that he is discussing an appeal with his lawyers of the decision by AFLCIO arbitrator Howard Lesnic. Lesnic, a former University employee, ruled that Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees Local 274 should be allowed to represent the Faculty Club employees. Lesnic could not be reached for comment last night.
"Concerning the decision, I'm considering appealing it," he said, but did not disclose any further details on his plan. "As you know, I'm not a lawyer," he added. "A plan of appeal I leave up to my counsel. It is being discussed now." Faculty Club employee Barbara Allen said last night that the appeal is a stall tactic on the part of both Local 54 and the University. "I thought [Muhammad] would appeal," she said. "This is very stupid." "[The administration] is going to stall as well," she added. "[It's] postponing the inevitable. Why don't [they] just let it die? This is just another typical University tactic." The National Labor Relations Board now
has to make the final decision on whether ihe union local should represent the employees. Faculty Club Manager David Cantor yesterday declined to comment on the arbitrator's decision, saying that he is not directly related to the workers' unionization bid. "I have left this matter up to the University . . .," Cantor said. "I really would prefer what's best for the University and what's best for the workers. I really haven't done much research into the matter." "I leave judgment up to the University and the employees," he added. Muhammad said that the arbitrator's decision does not leave Local 54 out of the Faculty (Please turn to page 9)
Security protesters appear for open expression hearing By ROSS KERBER Ten members of the Penn Human Rights Coalition appeared before the Committee on Open Expression yesterday in their first hearing to determine whether a December 4 sit-in in President Sheldon Hackney's office violated the University's Guidelines on Open Expression. In a related incident, one Open Expression Committee member said that he is considering charges against the administration for their role in the protest. The students occupied Hackney's waiting room and an inner office to demand better security at the University and more attention to issues concerning racial and sexual minorities. PHRC member Polly Farnum said
last night that yesterday's discussion centered on the chronology of the protest and discrepancies between the protesters' and the administration's account. According to the statement from PHRC. University officials physically forced the students into one of Hackney's inner offices, preventing them from occupying an outer reception area. "[Vice Provost for University Life James) Bishop and a Public Safety officer each elbowed rather harshly at least one PHRC member, and PHRC members at the doorway were pushed away from it by Dr. Bishop and the Public Safety Officer," their statement reads. "Dr. Bishop said at this (Please turn to page 4)
PAGE 2
THE DAIL1 PENNSYLVANIA'S - Tursday. April 14, 1987
Shultz in Moscow for arms discussions
International Pope criticized for Argentine stance ROME — Pope John Paul II denounced human rights abuses in Chile, but he disappointed those who hoped for the same in Argentina, where the church has been criticized for not condemning torture and killing under past military rule. During the two-week tour ending Monday, the pope spoke firmly against the conduct of Chile's right-wing government. In neighboring Argentina, which is adjusting to a 3-year-old democracy and struggling with economic crisis, John Paul provoked criticism for not saying more about the military juntas that governed for nearly nine years and had a close relationship with the Argentine church.
National Gary Hart throws hat into the ring DENVER — Gary Hart, standing coatless before the snow-capped Rocky Mountains, announced his bid for the 1988 Democratic presidential nomination yesterday and promised a return to American ideals and a "presidency you can be proud of." The 50-year-old former Colorado senator opened his second presidential candidacy stressing idealism and the power of ideas, themes that almost wrested the 1984 Democratic nomination from former Vice President Walter Mondale. This time, it is Hart who is ahead in the early polls, with the rest of the still-increasing field of candidates bunched far back.
World population nears five billion
Paul Teltelbaum/Daily Pennsylvanian
America's Sweetheart College sophomore David Stern was declared the winner of the Vanna While Look Alike Contest that kicked off Spring Fling last Thursday on College Green. As such, he earned the title "Queen of Spring lling," and joined President Sheldon Hackney (right, wearing shades) — King Fling — during the weekend's opening ceremonies. Isn't s/he beautiful? Don't they make a lovely couple? And what does Lucy think of all this?
MOSCOW — U.S. Secretary of State George Shultz held three rounds of talks yesterday with Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze, taking up the critical issue of nuclear arms reductions at an unscheduled late night session. There was no immediate word on the outcome. At the California White House, meanwhile, presidential Chief of Staff Howard Baker said he would not be surprised to see a decision on a superpower summit emerge by the end of Shultz' three-day visit. The Soviet news agency Tass, however, accused Washington of "a fresh cock-and-bull story" of Soviet espionage at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow. The dispatch said the Pentagon came up with the "spy scare" in an effort to undercut the State Department. Charles Redman, the State Department spokesman, said Shultz and Shevardnadze brought their arms control experts to the evening meeting. The meeting was held after a Passover Seder attended by Shultz at the U.S. Embassy with about 40 prominent Jewish "refuseniks," — people who have been refused permission to emigrate. Shultz attended the Seder, which recalls Jewish deliverance from slavery under the Egyptian pharaoh, to demonstrate continued U.S. support for Soviet Jews. He told them U.S. citizens are praying for them. Shultz and Shevardnadze held two rounds of talks yesterday morning and afternoon to try to
stabilize relations in the midst of a bitter exchange of spy charges. Those sessions and a working lunch were held at a Foreign Ministry guest house about a mile from the Kremlin. Sunny skies, melting the little slush left, spoke of spring. A special van was set up to provide secure communications for Shultz to Washington and for meetings with his staff. The United Slates has accused the Soviets of infiltrating the embassy with the collusion of some U.S. Marine guards and gaining access to classified materials. About three dozen reporters and photographers were taken on a tour of two rows of red-brick townhouses where American diplomats have lived since late last year. Construction on the new embassy building stopped in 1985. President Reagan said last week the new, $191 million embassy complex might have to be torn down. Shultz planned to complain to Shevardnadze about a "pattern of intrusiveness and hostility." But he also said before coming to Moscow on a three-day visit that he wanted "to find our wa> to a more constructive relationship" and to lower the level of nuclear weapons. No details of Shultz's talks with Shevardnadze were made public. The Soviet news agency Tass reiterated its critical view of Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative and said "nuclear and space arms" were on the Shultz-Shevardnadze agenda.
Analysts: Bankruptcy will help Texaco Oil ed by Texaco assets. In announcing the move Sunday, Texaco officials insisted the company will be conducting business as usual while reorganizing its finances — a view some industry watchers suggested was optimistic at best. "It's not mirrors. It's not perception. It's a real bankruptcy," said Richard Lieb, a bankruptcy specialist at the Kronish, Lieb, Weiner & Hellman law firm. "Texaco's got real problems."
WASHINGTON — The rate at which people are being born is speeding up again, just as the planet's population edges past the 5 billion milestone, a population study group reported yesterday. The private Population Reference Bureau cited an easing of strict birth limits in China as a prime reason for the turnaround in population growth. The Bureau's new World Population Data Sheet for 1987 estimates that the July 1 population of the world will be 5.026 billion.
NEW YORK — Texaco gained ground in its imiltihillon-doll.il legal war with Pennzoil Co. by filing for protection under federal bankruptcy laws, analysts said yesterday. In taking the step, Texaco relieved itself of the necessity of posting a potentially debilitating security bond against the roughly SI I billion judgment won by Pennzoil against Texaco in a 1985 Houston jury decision.
Late tax filers will wait for refunds
Tutu leads fight against new speech laws
WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue Service, heading down the homestretch of a successful tax filing season, is bracing for a flood of lastminute returns and reminding procrastinators they'll have to wait a bit longer for their refunds. "We're on target and our inventories (of unprocessed returns) are especially low," IRS spokesman Larry Batdorf said yesterday. The filing deadline is midnight Wednesday. Although the agency has been processing returns at a pace that has produced refunds in four or five weeks, the big end-of-season push means a wait of six to 10 weeks, Batdorf said.
State Derailment legislation is prepared PITTSBURGH — City officials, angered by a train derailment whose deadly chemical cargo forced thousands from their homes, prepared legislation yesterday to guard against future accidents. "Only through divine intervention are we here to talk about it today," said Councilwoman Michelle Madoff, who drafted an emergency resolution restricting transportation of hazardous materials. Shortly after noon Saturday, two cars from a westbound Conrail freight train derailed and crashed into an oncoming freight. Thirty-four cars toppled from the tracks, starting a fire and prompting an evacuation of the city's crowded East End.
Weather Today: Mostly sunny with highs in the mid to upper 60s and northeast winds around 10 miles per hour. Tonight: Clear with patchy fog possible toward sunrise and lows in the low to mid 40s. Tomorrow: Mostly sunny, highs in the mid to upper 60s.
That removed a negotiating club that Peniuoil had been wielding over Texaco, giving the White Plains, N.Y.-based giant oil company plenty of time to negotiate a settlement, they said. This benefits Texaco because the more lime it has, ihc more chance it has of winning a reversal of the decision, and the more time Pennzoil has to wait to get its money, or some part of the award. Fven if Texaco eventually loses the fight.
CAPE TOWN. South Africa — Archbishop Desmond Tutu and other clergymen urged people at a special prayer service yesterday to defy new limits on speech and assembly. The U.S. ambassador was among 700 people in the congregation. Ambassador Edward Perkins issued a statement saying. "It is sad that a government which claims to uphold the values of human dignity, and which portrays itself as secure and strong, should be so intimidated by the peaceful protestations of its citizens that it declares those protestations to be illegal."
it still stands to be better off, said Bruce Lazier, an analyst at the Prescott, Ball & Turben Inc. securities firm. "Pennzoil could win the final suit. But it's up to the bankruptcy judge to determine how much Texaco is going to pay," he said. In addition. Lazier noted, Pennzoil will have to stand in line for its money with other creditors whose claims are not back-
Perkins' attendance and his statement represented one of his most vivid gestures since he became the first black American ambassador to South Africa last November. The ambassadors of Canada, Sweden and Austria also attended the ecumenical service dedicated to people detained without charge under a nationwide state of emergency the white government imposed 10 months ago. Regulations issued Saturday by Police Commissioner Johan Coetzee make it a crime to call for release of detainees by word, action or in writing. Gatherings in support of detainees also are banned. Penalties for breaking the rules range up to a fine of 20,000 rand ($10,000) or 10
years in prison. Tutu, the black prelate who is Anglican archbishop of southern Africa, organized the service. He was joined at St. George's Cathedral by Jewish, Dutch Reformed and Roman Catholic clergymen in defying the regulations. Although Law and Order Minister Adriaan Vlok said prayer services at churches were not prohibited. Tutu and his colleagues openly violated a section of the rules making it a crime to urge other people to support detainees. Tutu said he would make similar statements inside or outside church.
Chad holds out against Khadafy
Rubes®
By Leigh Rubin
Libyan colonization attempts meet stiff opposition FAYA LARGEAU, Chad — A wrecked loudspeaker van, a largerthan-lifesize photo of Libya's Moamin.ii Khadafy pasted on one window, stands with all its wheels removed in the yard of a disused school building. The scene seems to symbolize Gadhafi's four-year-long attempt to impose a form of Libyan colonialism in neighboring Chad. His efforts in Faya Largeau collapsed in disgrace last month when highly mobile Chad forces handed the Libyan army its most crushing defeat, chasing it from most of the 500,000-square-mile northern Chadian desert. Faya Largeau, 600 miles northeast of the capital, N'Djamena, is Chad's largest oasis. The homes of rich merchants and camel traders are still visible in walled gardens, amid palm trees and oleander bushes. But most are in
ruins, looted of everything, even window panes and light switches. All but 3000 of Faya Largeau's 25,000 inhabitants fled from the Libyan occupation. Two weeks after the Libyan defeat, they began trickling back in trucks carrying relief supplies. Women wept when they saw their wrecked homes. Those who stayed behind tell of a ruthless regime that tried to Libyanize them against their will with the help of local collaborators. Quotations from Kadhafy's "Green Book" cover the whitewashed mosque and the People's Committee headquarters in the main square. Over some of them, "Long Live Habre" is scrawled in French in expressions of subversive support for Chad's president, Hissene Habre. French, Chad's official language.
was banned in Faya Largeau throughout the occupation and replaced by Arabic. Schoolmaster Ngaringueta Yoradi, who used to teach French to the town's Goranespeaking children in this former French colony, stayed because he has a Gorane wife. He was not allowed to teach, however. The schoolhouse is stacked to the ceiling with Arabic textbooks specially printed in Beirut, Lebanon, for the Libyans. Among them, is the inevitable Green Book, promising eternal happiness through People's Committees. When the Libyans first came in 1983, Yoradi recalled, "they assembled the population in the square and told us the imperialists were planning to exterminate us but Libya would protect us."
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ILY PENNSVI.VANIAN — Tuesday. April 14, Iv87
PAGE 3
Gleeful club Montgomery led Penn 's singers in a gala concert
Suun QundorMn/Daily Pennsylvanian Montgomery, who has directed the Glee Club for one quarter of its existence, says he loves his work
B> ROM *\ IKVlSh In IS62, 16 undergraduate men sang in the chapel of what was then Collegiate Hall lor "an audience that was unusually select and large, the Hall being Tilled to its utmost capacity" in the first Penn Glee Club concert. In 1987. 150 current Club members and alumni performed together in a unique concert at the Annenberg Center's Zellerbach Theatre to celebrate the group's 125th anniversary. Although the Glee Club has evolved from a stand up chorus into a multifaceted song-and-dance group performing around the world, the group's unflagging enthusiasm for singing and its dedication to spreading friendship through music has not changed. Under the direction of renowned composer and arranger Bruce Montgomery during the past 31 years, the Glee Club has appeared on national television, sung on radio broadcasts and toured 16 countries on three continents. In honor of these accomplishments during the past 125 vc.irs. Glee Club members, alumni and their families and friends gathered for a day-long reunion in February. The event included a luncheon, a rehearsal for students and alumni, a performance of this year's club production Time In — Time Out, an additional performance by members of the graduate club and a gala party. Sitting in his office surrounded by Glee Club photographs, programs, recordings and memorabilia, Montgomery said that the reunion, which had been covered by three area television stations. WFl.N and the society column of the Philadelphia Inquirer, was an exciting experience for everyone in the club. "When this all finally came to fruition, to have to get in front of all these alumni and tell them what to do, it felt odd," Montgomery said. "It was an honor. There was an incredible fraternal closeness — it was a life experience for everyone. We have a very faithful and supportive alumni organization." The highlight of the event, however, was the announcement of the naming of the Glee Club's $250,000 endowment for Montgomery, a surprise for the director. "I bawled my eyes out," he said. "Not many people have reduced me to tears, but they did." According to Undergraduate Club President Brendan O'Brien, the tribute to Montgomery is a fitting way for the club to express its appreciation of its director's many contributions to the group. "The club would not be anything like it is without Bruce." O'Brien said. Montgomery, who also directs the Penn Singers and Philadelphia's Gilbert and Sullivan Players and serves on
the boards of several area foundations, composed and arranged much of the music performed in Glee Club shows "What makes our Glee Club unique is a certain knowledge and ability in music and my absolute devotion to theater," he said. "Ours is not just a musical but a theatrical revue." The Montgomery endowment, which will be funded by the .graduate club over the next three years, will feature a special videotape and two album set ot recordings by vv I I \ vv I 1 N will also broadcast the gala concert at a future date. For Montgomery, the Glee Club is not only a University activity, but a loyal group which shares a vision of caring and achievement. This year's three-week tour of South America will not only allow the club to reach large auJICIKCS and serve as goodwill unbWMdOfl for the University and America, but will also raise money for charities "When we were in South America 20 years ago, we raised money for Indian children." Montgomery said. "They were astonished that we were an instrument that could raise so much money." Montgomery expressed his pleasure in the worldwide honor the club has brought the University. "The Glee Club has brought the name of the University to the student body, its alumni and large segments of the world," he said. "Choral groups all over the world use music with our name on it." O'Brien, a College senior who won the General Alumni Society's Alumni Award of Merit for his involvement in the Glee Club, agreed with Montgomery. "Our appeal is universal — not just to Penn," he said. "We've altered opinions of people about what Americans are like." "To take the best aspects of a high quality performing arts group and the best aspects of a fraternity and put them together is such a great experience," he continued. In the upcoming 125 years, the Glee Club has no intenions of resting on its reputation, but plans to continue touring with its song-and-dance revues. The club hopes eventually to travel to China. While the formal of the shows will slay the same, the group will continue to evolve, Montgomery said. "One of the things which has kepi us alive is our ability to change with the limes," he said. "We have before and we will again if necessary." For Montgomery, the 125th anniversary gala accomplished exactly what he had hoped. "It was an opportunity for people who loved the undergraduate experience to relive it again and shine again and help future generalions to enjoy these experiences."
Absurd drama 'Better Days' opens at Festival Theatre for New Plays at Annenberg By SARAH PREMERMAN Richard Dresser's Better Days opened the Philadelphia Festival Theatre for New Plays on a hysterical note when two desperate, unemployed factory workers turn to evangelism — and arson — to avert the feeling of
Review impending doom thai haunts their house. Packs of wild dogs roam through the streets of Lowell, Massachusetts. Unemployment is causing the town's businesses to shut down. The cold emptiness of the decaying town penetrates the home of Ray, played by Frank Girardeau, and his waitress wife Faye, played by Jayne Haynes. Ray and his friend Arnie, however.
know the way to salvation. Ray heard the voice of God one night while standing on his roof, and now he feels he must spread the word to the citizens of Lowell. With the support of his friends, Ray's initial hopelessness warms to confidence in his claim to a religious leader's status. Faye brings home a professional arsonist, who offers Ray and Arnie fresh employment opportunities in burning down cars, homes and eventually the whole town of Lowell. Their ex-lawyer friend runs frantically in and out of the picture, selling cleaning products and living out of his car with his teenage girlfriend. Ray lakes up arson lo supplement his income while he continues to pursue new spiritual dimensions by call-
Violence and evangelism are seldom separated in Dresser's drama
ing up the Voice. When beckoning the Voice, Ray employs a helmet wired with antennae, a pizza and a look of intense concentration. He and the others decide to gather followers by distributing fliers in the local mall alongside other self-proclaimed evangelists. The plot builds around Ray as an evangelist, wryly commenting on today's well-packaged offers for salvation. "You call yourself a man of God?" Ray is asked. "You've never even been on television!" Ray is the kind of man who would give anything to be on television simply to spread his own brand of the Word. Girardeau brings an innocence to the character that he never loses, even in Ray's final speech during the play's climax. As the play tangles into a frantic ball of confused desperation, familiar elements of modern drama emerge in the script. Ray's descent into fanaticism and his quiet, trampled pride recall the tragic downfall of salesman Willy Loman. The play defines black comedy, as though behind all the colorful antics lurks a gaping emptiness waiting to swallow them all up. The theatrical melee of bizarre characters caught in an absurd situation strikes a familiar note. Though audiences may be acquainted with this genre of playwriting, bordering on the absurd, familiarity does not detract from its impact. The question is, where has Dresser left the audience after the two-hour journey through a silly land of dangerous dogs, threatening crowds and bizarre rituals? Our protagonist Ray never quite grasps the big picture; he scuttles through the town lighting fires, torching even his friend Arnie's home, and planning the salvation of Lowell with a sort of tunnel vision that never broadens into understanding. The audience is left to draw its own conclusions about the dark comments Dresser makes about the alienation of society. As the play unravels, Gloria Muzio's production builds into a wonderfully absurd mess that leaves its viewers winded. In the final scene, when the town disintegrates in flames and a screaming crowd turns to him for guidance, Ray leaps onto his roof and flings his arms heavenward. The play closes as the prophet is enveloped in falling snow and silence.
Things begin to go awry in the town of Lowell, Massachusetts when people begin to dream of Better Days
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THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIA*! — Tae«U>. April 14. 1987
Campus Events
Campus Briefs
A listing of University news and events
A summary of University news
CAMPUS EVENTS are listed dairy M • pad pubac tame* of tw Unr«amty of Pennayfcanav and are ■drmrltad for tw Unwersny by The Duly Ptmtyhm*Ti Thar* a) no charge to authonzad UnrverMy af»aHJ groups tor Mngs of FREE everts Listings may be mated or ptacad in person at Th» Duty Ptnmytvanmn Business Office. •015 Walnut Street, from 9 a m to 5 pm Monday through Friday Campus Events will not be accepted by phone 25 word bmit The Omfy Pamsyhmnan reserves the right to edit Campus Events according to space limitations
TODAY ADVANCED GEMORAH class in Tractate San Hedrein Background necessary Teits will be supplied Teacher Rav Bnsman begins 4 until 5 Mincha following Lubavitch House. 4032 Spruce ANTHROPOLOGY LECTURE SERIES - Past, present and future Or P Chase will speak on Archeology 4 p.m. Fourth floor College Hall Philomathaen Society Free refreshments Be there ANTHROPOLOGY LECTURE SERIES Past, present, and future Dr P Chase will speak on Archeology 4 pm 4th floor College Hall Philomathean Society Free Refreshments Be there GLASS IN THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE Some observations on Ottoman Lattice Windows Dr Omur Bakirer. Middle East Technical University. Ankara Tuesday. April 14 4 00 p m . 329 University Museum (MEC) LEARN SELF-DEFENSE and relaxation techniques Ihrough KiAikido Improve coordination and concentration Meel every Tuesday and Thursday 6-7 30 p m Hulchinson Gym Lower Level All welcome! PASSOVER SEDERS open to all Participation, insights, singing, good food, hand made malzoh Friendly atmosphere Reserve 382-1247 Lubavitch House. 4032 Spruce Seders bgin at 7 45 p.m PENN FILM COOP MEETING every Tuesday night at 6 pm 14th floor HRE lounge All students welcome Learn to use equipmenl and make films TALMUD GEMORAH class Shiur with Rav Dov Bnsman Study Tractate Sanhedrem Williams Hall room 307 Background necessary Tens provided No charge Sponsored by Lubavitch House
THE CENTRAL AMERICA Solidarity Alliance is meeting tonight at 4 p m in the Christian Association 3601 Locust Walk New members welcome TUTORING LIAISONS NEEDED for CWPPS 87-88 program Coordinate tutors at a West Phila Public School Contact Tom 8-8514 or Hayley 3-7878 now! WOMEN'S TORAH STUDY GROUP will study in depth Torsi! portion of the week Participation encouraged No background necessary HRN 2nd floor lounge 7 30 p.m Info 243-8803 DUKE UNIVERSITY MEDICAL COLLEGE will be recruiting on campus Tuesday April 14th For sign-up see Jan in CPPS
TOMORROW ANTHROPOLOGY LECTURE SERIES- Past, present, and future Dr A Appadurai will speak on cultural anthropology 4 p.m. 4th Floor College Hall Philomathean Society. Free refreshments"1 ATARI USER GROUP Meeting Wednesday, April 15. 4 pm 235 Houston Hall Demonstration of the Atari 1040 ST Last meeting this semester All welcome Into Greg Ouaglia. 243-5516 ATTENTION WHARTON WOMEN presents Eileen Miele. Assistant Vice President of Continental Insurance speaks on "Accounting's Newest AssetWomen". Wednesday. April 15 103 SH-DH at 430 pm All welcome! AVANT-GARDE FILMS of 1987 shown in conjunction with Institute of Contemporary Art Exhibition '1967 At The Crossroads " Wednesday April 15th 7 p.m Meyerson B-1 Free. COMIC COLLECTORS of U Of P final meeting of the year This is it! Wednesday April 15. 9 p.m., Houston Hall room lo be announced Questions? David/Vic Sage 387-4078 FILM NIGHT The Central America Solidarity Alliance will show films "The Real Thing" and "Short Circuit" Wednesday at 7 30 p.m in the Christian Association KOSHER CHINESE FOOD weather permitting Locust Walk and 36lh street Freshly prepared food incredible prices egg rolls, lo mem. etc 11 am to 2 p m sponsored by Lubavitch House
BRIDGE WEDNESDAYS 7 pm above Skilonik's in Houston Hall Novices welcome Partnerships arranged Call John 243-7265 or Rob 387-0784 evenings LIBERAL PARTY platform approv al session McNeil 103 at 7 30 p m New members welcome We'll be discussing a variety of issues
FUTURE FILM EL ASFOUR (The Sparrow) in Arabic w/ English subtitles Director Youssef Chahine Introductio Dr Thomas Ricks. 7.30, International House Cosponsored by Villanova 4 International House LOGAN COLLEGE OF CHIROPRACTIC MEDICINE will present information session all interested persons should come lo CPPS see Jan for info NASA'S "TOP GUN" Dr James C Fletcher will be speaking on "America, Technology and Your Future" on Thursday April 16 in Steinberg Dietrich 350-351 PENN AFRICAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION Election of a new Executive Committee Saturday April 18th 4 00 pm Benjamin Franklin Room - nominations call 243-3235
COMMENCEMENT Invitations Students in College. Wharton Undergraduate and GSFA pick up invitations April 13-16, 2-4 p.m. in Houston Hall lobby Others pick up at school offices MAKING A LIVING and Doing Your Art A program lor graduate students in Fine Arts Thursday April 16. 7 p.m . Ben Franklin Room. HH Call 898-7530 to sign up CPPS SKIP. THE COMUNITY Service Magazine for schools, kids, involved parents, Bala Cynwyd. PA, has summer openings tor interns in magazine publishing April 15th deadline CPPS books 'Communications''. STUDY BETTER NOT LONGER University Reading/Study Improvement Service offers free interviews, courses, tutoring A-10 Education Building. 3700 Walnut. 898-8434. SUMMER POSITION with Coldwell Banker, Phila Familiarity with computers, able to collect information Need a car. Jr preffered Resume to Barbara T , CPPS by Apnl 17. THE FULER BRUSH Company announces openings in sales and marketing For details see CPPS books under "Marketing"
SEE A TALENT SHOW to benefit the prevention of child abuse April 15 & 16, 8 p.m , Houston Hall Auditorium Sponsored by Nu Delta For morte info call 243-7821
THE RFESEARCH COUNCIL of Washington, Inc. offers summer internships in research and marketing for graduating seniors. Strong academic and communica lion skills CPPS books under 2Marketing "
THE FRENCH CLUB presents "The Return of Martib Guerre" starring Gerard DePardieu. Thursday April 16. 7 pm, Logan Hall room 15.
TSO FINANCIAL CENTER. Horsham, Pa, seeks juniors and above for summer marketing anal yst position See CPPS books under "Marketing "
OFFICIAL BUSINESS PROFESSIONAL Advertising Association. NYC. places students in month-long internships in June in Advertising agencies and departments April 15th deadline See CPPS books under "Marketing" B.V CAPITAL. INC small NYC investment banking firm will interview for summer intern 4/27/87 Drop off resume lo Barbara T by 4/17/87. Details: CPPS books under "Financial Services" CITY OF WILMINGTON has summer openings in administration and in counseling See CPPS books under "Management" and under Social Service"
VETERANS ADMINISTRATION Hospital. Philadelphia has openings for Psychology Technicians assisting in all aspects of research protects Details: CPPS books under "Psych Services " EUENA "I>tjprraiel> Scckinc Sonwow" III I issi k DALE "Not Maru-I lltmiaiwiy" MAZER GREG "3 ain't bad but il Mill ain't ihr Itad" STONE Nifhl I ihioi.
UAVED "HI Pally" RIGBERI. Photo Night Editor
7 appointed to SAS Board of Overseers
Morgan to read poetry today at College Hall
Seven new members have been appointed fo the School of Arts and Sciences' Board of Overseers since last fall, according to the dean's office last week. SAS Executive Assistant to the Dean Linda Koons said last week that the Board of Overseers was established to assist SAS efforts to promote the College to alumni, prospective contributes and friends. The new appointees are Natalie Koether. Edward Mathias, Alan Hassenfeld. Jerrold Kingsley, John Goldsmith, Stephen Heyman and Austin Fitts. Koons said that undergraduate education is (he primary focus of the Board of Overseers. She noted that during the past year the dean's office has worked in conjuction with members of the Board of Overseers to write the SAS five-year development plan, which targets improving undergraduate education, research opportunities, graduate programs and the College of General Studies.
Unlike many of the more modern fashionable poets, Frederick Morgan concedes that his poems are comparatively easy to understand for the average reader. Founder and co-editor of the acclaimed literary quarterly The Hudson Review, Morgan said that he opposes "precious and pretentious" poems void of content and form. "I feel a poet has an obligation to be direct and convey his meaning without unnecessary elaborations or mystifications," Morgan said last week. "All great poetry almost always seems difficult to its readers," he added, citing examples of poets Wil|jam Butler Yeats and John Dunn. Morgan will read from his works at 4 p.m. today at the Philomathean Society, 4th floor College Hall. Before the reading the winners of all the Writing Program contests will be announced. — Abbe Klebanoff
— Kim Hull
Open Ex. Committee begins new hearings (Continued from page 1) point, "You're being violent." Where the protest was held is significant because the Open Expression Committee ruled this month that protests in the waiting room of (he president's office can be allowed under the Open Expression Guidelines. The administration, however, has asked the committee lo reconsider and clarify that ruling. A description of the events submitted by Nicholas Constan, assistant to the president and legal studies professor, contains no mention of any protester attempting to remain in the reception area. According to the administration's chronology, the students were violating the Open Expression Guidelines by occupying a private office and an office containing confidential records. When the students did not leave the office. Bishop informed them that they could be "sub-
ject to a range of judicial sanctions," according to Constan's report. Constan declined to comment on details of the case yesterday. Open Expression Committee member Jon Landsman, a third-year law student, said yesterday that the committee should also determine whether the administration violated the guidelines in their handling of the protest. "This is a very complicated case," Landsman said last night. "The committee needs to wrestle with what effects the actions of the administration had on the conduct of the students that might be a violation of the guidelines." "What happens when the students and the administration both violate the rules?" Landsman asked. "And 1 am not convinced at all that the students were in violation of the guidelines." In an opinion last month on an
earlier sit-in in Hackney's office, Landsman contended that the Public Safety officers present acted improperly in informing the students what they were allowed to do. He also cited the administration for failing "to inform the Committee on Open Expression of the complete story regarding the day's events." and said it was wrong of Bishop to inform the students that they might be suspended. The issues in the current case are similar to those surrounding the April 9, 1986, divestment demonstration, Landsman said. Today's hearing was closed to persons not directly involved in the case. The Committee is charged with determining whether a violation of the guidelines had taken place. If so, the case then goes before the Judicial Hearing Board to consider possible sanctions. The protesters have not been given a date for future hearings.
MACK FOR MVP Sports Mgal Editor DEBBIE ABRAMS ADRIAN HEWRVK Day Stuff
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UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA DIVISION OF RECREATION AND INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS DEPARTMENT OF RECREATION
SUMMER JOBS AVAILABLE IN
NATIONAL YOUTH SPORTS PROGRAM PROGRAM DATES: June 29 through July 31 Monday through Friday -- 8:00 AM - 1:30 PM Available Jobs: Counselors Secretary Instructors Lifeguards (ALS) Water Safety Instructors
Applications available at Hutchinson Gym, Room 210 between 9:00 AM and 4:00 PM. Deadline for applications April 24. For more information call - 898-7452
In conjunction with the exhibition "1967: fit the Crossroads." the INSTITUTE OF CONTEMPORARY fiRT presents
Icelandair Direct to Luxembourg from New York is only $599 round trip! • Free express motorcoaches to Germany, Holland and Belgium. • Only $15 by train to Switzerland and France. Economical Eurailpasses are available. • Kemwel Rent-A-Cars with no mileage charge start at only $79 per week short term and even lower for long term rentals.* • Prepaid Hotelpak coupons, start at only $26.0X) per night in 19 European Countries.** • Our unrestricted fares are also super low priced to Paris and Frankfurt. • We fly from New York, Chicago, Boston, Baltimore/Washington and Orlando.
ICELANDAIR CALL ICE FOR THE PRICE AT 1-800-223-5500 OR YOUR TRAVEL AGENT. Fare facts Super Apex Fare is valid 6187 thru 9 7 87 7 day minimum 60 day maximum Payment 14 days prior to departure Fares subject to change Penalty for cancellation. $3 departure tax and $10 U S customs immigration fee Limited availability, other restrictions may apply • Prices based on rate of exchange 21187 • • Reservations subject to availability Full refunds with a 14 day prior cancellation
AVflHT-QflRDE FILMS OF 1967 Wavelength by Michael Snow findy Warhol by Marie Menken FgiLife, figainst the War bv Robert Breer, Storm De Hirsch, Stan Vanderbeek, and others
FREE Wednesday, fipril 15th at 7:00 pm Meyerson Mall B-1. 34th & Walnut Film patrons are invited to visit the exhibition "1967 fit the Crossroads" in Meyerson Holl before viewing the film."
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIA* - Tmmitf, April 14. IM7
PA<;K
U. files defense against vet. students B> NINA STUZIN In a siatemeni filed in federal court lasi week, the University contended that it did not violate the rights of two veterinary students who are refusing to take a non-therapeutic surgery course. The University also asked the court to deny the students' request for a preliminary injunction. The Injunction would require the University to provide an alternative surgery course until the case is settled so that the students would be able to continue their education. The two third-year students. Eric Dunayer and Gloria Binkowski. are suing the University for forcing them to take a course which requires "unwarranted" surgery and destruction of healthy animals. They contend that the University is violating their First. Fifth, and 14th Amendment rights. In its response, the University claims that these amendments offer protection only from "governmental action" and not from the University, which the statement says is a private institution. The response also says that "Neither the Courts nor the plaintiffs have the right to substitute their judgments for the University's academic judgments concerning curricula and requirements for the degree of Doctor of Veterinary Medicine." Robert Sugarman. the lawver representing the
two students, said yesterday that he feels the University qualifies as a public institution. "We think that the University is sufficiently public in terms of the First and 14th Amendments and that it cannot walk away from its responsibilities, especially the Veterinary School and its activities as such," Sugarman said. "The Veterinary School is heavily supported by the commonwealth." he added. According to Sugarman. during the 1950s and 1960s the commonwealth authorized the construction of 10 University buildings, including the Veterinary School building. He said the University pays one dollar a year for these buildings. He added that the state funds over 50 percent of the tuition costs of the current veterinary students, and requires that 70 percent of students be Pennsylvania residents. But according to the University's response, the state does not require the University to establish minimum quotas for Pennsylvania residents. The University is asking that the court not grant a preliminary injunction on the grounds that the plaintiffs "cannot prove a likelihood of success on the merits of their constitutional claims" and "cannot demonstrate irreparable harm sufficient to support granting a preliminary injunction."
The Universit> claims thai since the Vctcnn.ii\ School Committee on the Academic Standing of Students voted on March 17 not to expel the two students and they ate both curreniK enrolled in classes, they are not in danger of expuUoil and a preliminary injunction is not MCMUT) In addition, the University claims that a delay ol a year would not constitute irreparable harm to the students' education, but that an injunction would "severely damage" the integrity of the University'] academic processes and could start a bad precedent for dissatisfied students Sugarman disputed that contention, laying that the students' academic futures are in danger because they cannot advance in their studies and graduate without taking the course. "They may not be expelled in so many words, but they will be precluded from graduating, which in essence is the same thing," Sugarman said. "It is a verbal play on words. Ii\ like laying we're not going to kill you, we're just not goin^i to give VOU Ml) food and see what happens." The students are listed as having failed course 8002. a core surgery course, and are nor permitted to lake electives that require 8(X)2 as a prerequisite or advance to the fourth year curriculum until the) complete the course.
Romance Language Dept. discovers cocaine shipment (Continued from page I) is a University student, but added that any alumnus could possibly have mail sent to the house address. Office of Fraternity and Sorority Affairs Director Bruce Arnold said yesterday that he could not discuss the matter at the time. "When an investigation is in place there's not much I can say," Arnold said. He would not say whether he has been contacted by either members of the fraternity, police or federal authorities. Castle President Michael Solomon confirmed last night that a similar incident had occurred in 1985. "I definitely, definitely remember that the incident occurred," said Solomon, who was a pledge at the time. "Because I was simply a pledge I was not privy to [detailed] information." Solomon said that the officers at the time contacted someone in the provost's office and other high
SHAPIR STUOIOS
University officials. He added that Castle brothers at the time were eager to prove their innocence and stressed that no fraternity members were implicated. But Solomon admitted that his fraternity had a history of drug problems. "The history of the house and cocaine is very serious," he said. "But that is a thing of the past right now." "It will never occur again," Solomon added. "If anything we're
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Bureau of Investigation later estimated that at his peak, Lavin, along with Dental School partners David Ackerman and Kenneth Weidler, were trafficking appro\ imately 175 pounds of cocaine per month. Lavin was apprehended again in May, 1986, after jumping bail soon after the 1984 arrest. He is currently serving a 42-year prison sentence for dealing cocaine and for failing to p») $350,000 in income taxes.
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too clean." Last week's incident is the second major drug scandal involving the University community during the last three years. In September, I984, University and 198I Dental School graduate Larry Lavin was arrested and later convicted for running a multi-million dollar cocaine business in Philadelphia. Lavin began dealing cocaine as an undergraduate in the spring of 1978, during his senior year. The Federal
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The Independent Newspapevof the University of Pennsylvania lOfkUftar ofPuklk&ion PAGE*
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Representative PR Master likes to a hold a backyard barbecue for the local folks everv summer. He's been doing it for 20 years Hot dogs for all the kids and a beer DJ two for the MM MM M«*l ivlitics old style 3 JfejU and these days, dollar for dollar, doesn't win Ml manv votes compared to television advertising and slick billboards But P R keeps it up anyway if only M remind himself once a year what being a politician used to be about. Squee.-ing the greasy palm of the auto mechanic who's got a shop down the street, smiling for a picture with Miss Teenage Stewed Prune 1987, exchanging a few word* about the national debt with old Dot. For a few hours everyone forgets that Representative PR hasn't introduced a successful piece of legislation since the last barbeque Or was it the barbeque before that" • No one seems to care now that the beet is flowing and the hot dogs are roasting and the film crew is filming. i Did you think PR would let the moment go unrecorded?) One year a grour Of navsayers showed up (it was the only time during the year they rjoeJM pc: dew enough to talk to the congressman! and complained about the neighborhood just outside P.R.'s hackvard Cnme is everywhere, they complained Everything is expensive Michael suggests the newspaper newspaper coverage of a local election and a whole lot of people seem to ought to have given more space to the makes it unfair is so self-evidently sildislike each other. ly that it barely warrants response. UA's petition drive against tuition "Have a hot dog folks," P.R. ca- hikes. For years the UA has collected My God, cover an election? The canioied fcventuallv the naysayers got signatures on a petition which is then didates might have to think and be angry Representative P.R.. they dutifully handed to the president, who held accountable for their promises. thought, had an obligation to hear several weeks later announces the Try looking directly at the UA and them out. What's more, they believed same tuition hike already planned. it fades away into a non-story, a selfRepresentative PR. had the power to The newspaper ran a story announ- satisfying publicity machine. Has M something to address their woes. cing the petition drive, then it drop- anything been accomplished by the Which, when it comes to Congress UA which has lessened the growing and congressmen.is essentially true. trend of serious crime on campus or Congress does have the power to tax helped alleviate strained race and wage war and spend and legislate. relations? And congressmen are supposed to How can the UA change? Somehow represent the people of their district. it's going to have to stop spawning If a congressman is ineffective or inCongressman P.R.'s. For starters, the competent, it's likely his or her fault. election process warrants reform. But But PR. honestly doesn't see it that beyond that, a change in attitude way. He learned his political lessons among UA members is needed. from a school of a different sort, Rather than a body which acts as a where power really was outside his Edward suggestion box for the administration, control, where style really did equal the UA should assert itself as a Sussman substance. He got his start in the monitor. And when it is unable to perUndergraduate Assembly. suade, it ought to protest. Better to let • ped the topic. Instead the newspaper everyone know that nothing can be I don't feel all that sorry for the concentrated its efforts on stories done than to pretend possible soluP.R.'s of this world. But lately I've about the tuition increase itself. If the tions are still down the road. felt just a bit of sympathy for the P.R. petition this year had netted Will the UA ever actually acprototypes working their way through miraculous results, the newspaper complish anything of a serious the UA. After all, what they take sure would have looked stupid. But magnitude? In its present structure, I away from their undergraduate exwas there ever really any danger of doubt it. The UA is not Congress. It perience in student government will that? has no sweeping authority which it probably influence the way they handle their real life political manueverings. Good public relations is viewed as an end unto itself. The UA could warp the minds of its members forever. Last week former UA Chair Michael Gordon wrote that student government hadn't gotten its fair shake in The Daily Pennsylvanian. He argued that the UA had accomplished lots of good stuff this semester. He went on to imply 1 harbored a secret longing to be on the UA myself and What else could the newspaper have can invoke. It has no leverage which it had therefore distorted the written about? Should we have run can use to make those with power do newspaper's coverage against student repeated stories about the heralded things they don't want to do. Its only government. Now Michael is a fine suggestion board proposed by the UA power at present is in its ability to peryoung man, but I'm afraid he's losing which somehow never found its way suade and lead campus opinion. It touch with reality. to campus? Or, perhaps a bit more must persuade administrators to act There's nothing I'd rather see in the coverage on the mythical nautilus or persuade students and their tuition newspaper than story after story on equipment which the UA has devoted dollars to react. But no one seems to the UA accomplishing heroic deeds, itself to would have been be listening. starting new programs, righting appropriate? wrongs. It would make great copy. It The Daily Pennsylvanian's Edward Sussman is a College junior would sell newspapers. It would fill coverage of the recent UA election and editor-in-chief of The Daily Penspace. Unfortunately as it stands, it demonstrated the UA as it is. nsylvanian. Modern Times has apwould also be entirely false. Issueless. The complaints that peared alternate Tuesdays.
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Statement on Senior Class Disqualifications /he following is a statement from the Class of 1987 Board regarding the disqualifications of two candidates from the Class of 1988 Senior Class Board elections
We. the Senior Class Board, would like lo address a Mew ihai has been sadly understated in The Daily Pennsylvanian during the past mo weeks. Repeatedly. people have thrown the First Amendment at us and informed us of the right to free speech and free press. What is often forgotten is that with the right to free press comes a great responsibility. Il is rather ironic that the DP can put the blame on the Senior Class Board, when the) are the monster that we are trying to tame. When the Board ran for their offices one year ago. we were plagued by problems that were the sole responsibility of Penn's sell-proclaimed HTNI Amendment watchdog — the DP. The editors of the DP are very powerful on this campus because they control the most powerful, and in essence the only, source of information on our campus. In contrast, people seeking information about an election outside of the University communit) have many resources, Philadelphia alone lias al least two major newspapers as well as various television news programs from which information on candidates can be obtained Elections >re conducted over a lengthy period of time, enough time for the public to hear many different lidet of the story and to accurately weigh the information presented. Furthermore, reporters are not likely to be roommates or friends of candidates. At Penn, however, the DP has a disproportionately large effect on what information is presented and how that information is presented to the University community. For this reason, people of integrity arc needed to present unbiased, responsible reporting and editing.
Last year, the DP ran a column during the campaigning period for Senior Class Board elections written b> two of its editors. In this column, these editors decided that there were two frontrunners in the race for the Senior Class presidency, irresponsibly discarding the other candidates as beyond consideration without knowing anything about the quality of the people they had just buried with a simple stroke of their pen. In addition, they smeared the campaign of another candidate by exposing any dirt they could find on him. After that unnecessary column was published, manv letters were written to the DP chastising the two editors for their lack of professional character and for biasing the election due to their unretractable errors. How does one go about creating a fair election when this son of unfounded support is given to certain candidates through a medium as powerful as the DP". Obviously, the DP proposes that we should allow them to write as they see fit. We've already seen the unfortunate effect this had on many candidates, and we had no intention of allowing the DP to destroy any more campaigns. It is an age-old rule that candidates who are active in the Penn community can be mentioned in the DP because there is no reason that they should not be acknowledged for their contributions to the campus. However, the rule states that they are not to be quoted so that such injustices can be curbed. This rule was poorly enforced in the past, and many problems arose. Therefore, we chose to strictly enforce this rule, and the candidates knew of our decision. In our minds, we saw this as the best way to keep candidates who might have friends to support them, or even worse, enemies who might slander them, in the DP from receiving unfair attention. Even after all the dust has cleared from this election, we stand resolutely behind our decision.
Letter to the Editor Penn Children's Center Should Be Kept Open To the Editor: [here is a slogan that says that children are our most precious resource. However, to judge by the forthcoming closing of the Penn Children's Center in June, the University doesn't think so. The Penn Children's Center is a daycare facility for pre-schoolers operated by the School of Social Work. It is located next to St. Mary'l Church and serves the entire University. Half of the children at the Center are children of graduate students and half are the children of University employees. In 1985-86 the Center charged $76 for five days of care and had a full enrollment of 48 children and a waiting list. This year the tuition was raised to $90 a week. Enrollment has dropped to 16 "full time" children (five days a week), with another eight children there two days or more a week. If the children who are there only one day a week are included, there are 35 children at the Center. The full time equivalent enrollment is 24 children. The unavoidable question is why has enrollment fallen? One school of thought holds that there has been a demographic shift in recent years. Fewer of the traditional users with children are coming to Penn. However, numerous graduate students and University employees have told us that they wanted to send their children to the Center but could not afford to pay $90 a week. A typical graduate student teaching assistant receives a stipend of $600 a month. At the present rate, they would have to pay $360 a month, or more than half of their monthly stipend, to place a child at the Center. The Graduate and Professional Students Assembly believes the enrollment has fallen because graduate students and lower level University employees with children can no longer afford to pay the tuition. Astonishingly, most of the other daycare centers in the University area are even more expensive than the PCC. Low income parents — grad students, racial minorities
and single parents — and University employees will suffer the most if the Center closes. They were never able to afford the other daycare centers to begin with. PCC used to be within their financial reach. Now, it too is eluding them. To their credit, in the fall Provost Thomas Ehrlich and Senior Vice President Helen O'Bannon agreed to allow the Center to remain open this year and subsidized it. They stipulated, however, that the Center must have a fulltime enrollment of 38 children by June I, or the Center would be closed this summer. The Center has a fulltime equivalent enrollment of 24, and as of now will be closed in June. In response to the pleas of the graduate parents, GAPSA has asked the University to subsidize the PCC. Graduate students will pay a general fee of $744 each next year. We believe that a small levy of $10 per grad student who pays the general fee (dissertation students don't pay it) could be used to subsidize the Center. In our view, if the general fee can be used for renovations of the Quad (where almost no grad students live), $1 million in deferred maintenance on buildings, and other items, a small part of it can also go to support daycare for graduate students. After all, it is our money, and if we want some of it used in this manner, then it ought to be done. GAPSA believes that subsidization from the United Way donor option plan and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania could make the Center financially viable. Since half of the users are University employees, the employee benefits pool could be tapped on their behalf. We firmly believe that the Center can be made viable if there is a real commitment to do so from the administration. GAPSA has asked the University Council to support its plan for subsidizing the Center, and we hope that the president and provost will heed the advice of the Council. GAPSA appreciates the pressures to balance the budget. However, we must not sacrifice the welfare of our children in the process. WAYNE GLASKEK Chairman. Graduate and Professional Students Assrmblv
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MODERN TIMES
Try looking directly at the UA and it fades into a non-story, a self-satisfying publicity machine. Has anything been accomplished by the UA which has lessened the growing trend of serious crime on campus or helped alleviate seriously strained race relations?
Let Me Be Heard Are you tired of reading other people's opinions and knowing yours are better? Do you think you have something to say to the University community? You're not alone, but if you can write we may have just the thing for you — becoming a Daily Pennsylvanian columnist. The DP is currently accepting applications for approximately 13 regular columnist spots for the fall semester. Eager columnists-to-be should send a sample column, a list of potential column topics and a short letter explaining why you w*.nt to be a columnist. The deadline is Friday, May 8 1987 Stick it all in an envelope (be sure to include your year, school affiliation and your summer and local addresses and phone numbers) and send it to "Let Me Be Heard," care of Laura Shaw Editorial Paae Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian, 4015 Walnut Street, Philadelphia Pa 19104
Send Us Mail The Daily Pennsylvanian welcomes comment from the University community in the form of columns and letters to the editor. Signed columns, letters and cartoons appearing on this page represent the opinions of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the DP Board of Managers. Please limit letters to two typewritten pages. The DP reserves the right to condense all letters. Send all material to Laura Shaw, editorial page editor. The Daily Pennsylvanian, 4015 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104.
Quotation of the Day 'The only thing the Dean's Office [has lo report] is that a box of questionable origin was found in Williams Hall and was turned in to Public Safety and [the matter] is currently under investigation.' — Saul Katzman, director of Administrative Affairs for the School of Arts and Sciences.
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«■« THE DAILY PKNNSYLVANIAN — Iwsd«>, April 14. 1«#87
New Dartmouth president served as lITSean
By CHRISTIAN MAHR A former University law professor will be moving from the Iowa cornfields to the New Hampshire woods this summer to become the fifteenth president of Dartmouth College. i James Frcedman, who has served as the president of the University of Iowa for the past five years, was a member of the University's law faculty for 18 years before assuming the position of law school dean in 1979. i Dartmouth's trustees unanimously elected Freedman president of the school on Sunday, and he will assume his new post on July 19.
. According to published reports in The Daily Jowan, Freedman addressed the faculty at Dartmouth yesterday, saying that he welcomes the challenges of his new position.
... f\ . . "I was delighted at the opportunity to come to Dartmouth because of its intellectual distinction," he said. "Dartmouth College has a historic obligation to educate the leaders of this nation." Freedman, presentlv visiting Dartmouth, could not be reached last night for comment. An editor at The Dartmouth said last night that one factor in Freedman's selection was that he committed himself to staying for at least a decade to oversee the drafting and implementing of a comprehensive 15-year plan for the school. Several University law school professors praised their former colleague last night, expressing confidence that Freedman will be successful in his new position. "He was a superb administrator and he did a splendid job," Emeritus Law Professor John Honnold said. "We were sorry to see him go to Iowa.
Twelve cars stolen from University lots this year By DALE MAZER It's 11 o'clock. Do you know where your car is? • University Police Lieutenant Joseph Weaver said this week that 12 cars have been stolen off University lots in 1987 — II since the beginning of February. According to Weaver, two of the cars have been recovered. But the high number of thefts is matched by city-wide statistics. According to the Philadelphia Police, 13,094 cars were reported stolen in Philadelphia in 1980, the most recent year for which figures are available. Of those, 460 were taken from the University City area. University Police Detective Larry Singer said last week that the lots in the east and south parts of the University have been the most affected by car thefts, notably the Palestra lot and the Civic Center lot. "There's not much trouble north of Walnut Street or west of 38th Street," he said. University Public Relations Officer Sylvia Canada explained yesterday that the cars in the eastern and southern ends of the campus are the most susceptible to theft because they are the most secluded and the most accessible from center city Philadelphia. "Off-campus traffic is able to get onto these lots," Canada said. "There's always traffic back there and that's where the problems come in." Singer said that the police sometimes find stolen cars "dumped" but undamaged, indicating that the thief probably took the car for a "joyride." Other cars have been
found "stripped" of their body parts. He added that most of the cars stolen for parts are American cars, because American car parts are the biggest sellers on the black market. "Frequently the cars stolen are GM cars, Buicks and Olds," he said. "Among professional car thieves, these American cars are more popular nationally, so they need the parts." And Canada said that American cars are the most frequently stolen because they are more easily broken into. "Foreign cars have mechanical locks," she said. "They are harder to slip hangers inside of to unlock than the American cars are." Singer said last week that even though two have been recovered, "there's not a lot we can do" to recover stolen cars. "If we don't find it within the first week, the odds of finding it at all drop significantly," he said. Canada said that car thieves are "opportunists" and stressed that car owners should not leave valuables inside their cars. "Oftentimes, a person is just looking to steal five dollars he sees on the dashboard," she said. "Stealing the whole car occurs only as an afterthought." Singer noted that the owners of the cars stolen from University lots had all locked their car doors. "Mostly, the thieves break the vent window, or the wind wing, to gam en trance to the car," he said. "Even if there is no forced entry, the thief usually must break the steering column in order to break the ignition lock," he added.
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(Continued from page I) She added that the award reflects student affirmation of her teaching ability. Tyson, who is in his fifth year at the University, also said yesterday that he is unconcerned about the tenure issue. "I honestly think that it doesn't hurt to get the Lindback," Tyson said. "I don't think it's the 'Kiss of Death,' though I've heard people tell me that." Tyson was praised for his coherent teaching style and student accessibility in written evaluations by his students and colleagues. The assistant professor said that he knows all of his 165 students by name. Pica, who is also a junior faculty member at the University, said that she is not worried about not receiving tenure due to the award. She added that her work in the Graduate School of Education integrates both teaching and research. Pica, known for incorporating her research developments into lectures, was strongly praised by one student as "the most conscientious professor I have ever met with respect to both research and teaching." Jaggard said yesterday that he was delighted to learn of his selection, adding that he feels it shows the University's commitment to teaching. One student praised Jaggard's performance in a letter, noting that his teaching ability is "the ideal by which I evaluate all other professors." Thompson said yesterday that her teaching style embodies the philosophy that "adults learn differently than children." She explained that with the health industry's rapidly changing technology, it is important to help students learn to think in ■ream e terms and address problems with new approaches. ! Thompson said that receiving the Lindback is "one of the greatest thrills of my life."
Assistant to the Vice Provost for University Life Barbara Cassel, who coordinated the selection committee for the non-health fields, said yesterday that nominations for the nonhealth areas are made by faculty, administrators and students. The nominees are reviewed by a committee composed of previous Lindback winners, two undergraduate students and two graduate students. She added that after the non-health committee completes their review and ranking of the top eight candidates, the list is referred to the Provost's Staff Conference which makes the final decision. None of the four award recipients in the non-health fields were from the School of Arts and Sciences, although last year all the recipients were SAS professors. Executive Assistant to the VicePresident of Health Affairs Mary Jo Ambrose said yesterday that a similar selection process determines the recipients in the health fields. Each recipient will receive a $500 check and a scroll. The award winners will be honored in a reception Thursday to be held in the Lower Egyptian Gallery at the University Museum.
^%~» * I'm just delighted that he'll be back on the BM coast." "I think it's splendid for him and splendid for Dartmouth," Emeritus Law Professor Noyes Leech said. "He is a very fine scholar." Several administrators at the Universin ol Iowa said last night that they were sorry to sec Freedman leave Iowa. "I think it is an excellent opportunity for him, and Dartmouth should be congratulated for chooi ing him," Vice President for Finance and Univer-ity Services Dorsey Ellis said. "He has made a tremendous contribution to the university. He will leave a legacy behind him that will endure." "We are awfully sorry to see him leave," Vice President for Academic Affairs Richard Remington said. "It's a gain for Dartmouth." According to an editor at The Daily lowan. Freedman was selected from an original pool of 615 applicants for his new position. A graduate of Harvard University and Yale Law School. Freedman worked as a law clerk for Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall and for a New York law firm before joining the law faculty at the University.
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THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN — Tuesday. April 14. 1987
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04/11/87. 5:45 p.m.. Class of 28 Dorm. Radio taken from unlocked room. 30th lo 34lh / Walnut lo Market (3) 04/06/87, 2:52 p.m.. Hill House. Unsecured room entered; personal items taken. 04/07/87, 3:11 p.m.. Hill House. Jewelry stolen and recovered; suspect-JIO. 04/10/87. 12:56 pm.. Hill House. Cash taken from unattended room. fih lo tnili Spruce lo Locust (2) 04/09/87, 11:49 a.m., Van Pelt House, Secured Ross 10-speed bike taken from rack. 04/12/87, 9:07 p.m.. Van Pelt House. Cash taken from unattended wallet. 34th lo 36th Locust lo Walnut (2) 04/08/87, 6:45 p.m.. Van Pelt Library, Wallet taken from unattended jacket pocket. 04/09/87, 5:22 p.m.. Van Pelt Library. Wallet and contents taken from unattended bookbag.
This report contains tallies of Part I Crimes Against Persons and Summaries of Part I Crimes in the five busiest areas on campus where two or more incidents were reported between April 6 and April 12, 1987.
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TOTAL CRIMES BY CATEGORY: Crimes Against the Person 0 Burglary 3 Theft 17 Theft of Auto 0 DETAIL LISTINGS BY AREA Number after location reports number of incidents in that area, listings include only areas where two or more crimes were reported. 33rd lo 34th / Spruce to Walnut (3> 04/08/87, 4:42 p.m.. Smith Hall. Unattended wallet taken from room. 04/09/87, 9:31 a.m., Towne Building, Coat and three figurines taken from office. 04/10/87, 11:19 a.m., Moore School, Secured SAFETY TIP Schwinn 12-speed bicycle taken. The success of a community crime prevention effort is 36th to 37th ) Hamilton to Spruce (3) 04/10/87, 4:08 p.m.. Lower Quad, Unattended predicated on close interaction with the community. The Public Safety Department asks the Penn community to cameras taken from grass area. 04/10/87. 10:30 p.m.. Lower Quad, Unattended be its "eyes and ears." Report suspicious circumstances immediately by dialing 511 or 898-7333. knapsack taken
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(Continued from page I) vative and a moderate were all elected. "I don't understand it," Delluva said. "I can't explain why what happened happened." Ross estimated that 700 of the approximately 1850 faculty members voted in the election. While he said that the turnout was strong, he said he did not understand why the election was contested. "I didn't know what people were making an issue about," Ross said. Associate Education Professor Michelle Fine explained last night that the electorate may have voted for ex-
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"Adelaide Delluva certainly brings a lot of experience," Fine said. "It is very inspiring that she will be serving on the Senate Committee on Academic Freedom and Responsibility despite the conservative backlash on campus." Faculty Senate Chairman Roger Soloway declined to comment yesterday on the election results. But he said last month that SCAFR "is the cornerstone of academic freedom and responsibility." "It's the committee we rely on," he added.
Delluva and Ross were both nominated by the Senate Nominating Committee, along with Fine. Kors was nominated by a challenge petition signed by at least 25 faculty members, as was Political Science Professor Henry Teune. Delluva and Fine are well-known campus liberals who have shown strong support of sexual harassment issues. Kors described himself as a libertarian, while Teune adopted a conservative viewpoint on open expression. Ross has said that he agrees with many of the points that both his conservative and liberal opponents have represented.
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The ombudsman's report would also include the name of the school, administrative unit or department in which the incident occurred. "This approach will enable the ombudsman to identify patterns in the location and frequency of such incidents, and to inform the appropriate dean or administrative supervisor about the existence of such patterns," Hackney said in the guidelines. "It also will enable the ombudsman to act on behalf of the community to conduct whatever investigation he or she deems necessary to determine if University regulations are being violated," the draft states. Cases brought to one of the three formal panels would be recorded in the ombudsman's office as well, and the ombudsman would submit a summary report of all complaints to the president every year. Hackney's policy stresses the resources available throughout the University to help mediate and counsel harassment claims informally. Included in this proposal is the formation of special advisers who would be designated by the deans of individual schools. If the incident will be pursued through formal channels, the complainant will be urged to seek out a dean or department chair responsible for pursuing the matter. The dean or the department chair is charged with insuring that the incident is investigated. He may then consult with the accused, keeping the confidentiality of the complainant. If the matter is deemed serious enough, the dean or department chairman then turns the matter over to the appropriate judiciary board. Physics Professor Michael Cohen, who was an active participant in the University Council debates, said yesterday that he generally approves of the proposal, but he added that he did not feel that the University-wide debate on the issue was necessary. "[Hackney's policies) look pretty good to me," Cohen said, but added that "we could have arrived at the guidelines with a lot less sound and fury." "I still don't understand why we needed to work our way through a series of extreme proposals in order to finally arrive at a moderate decision," he added. "If that is someone's idea of the political process, I think it is downright silly and a waste of many people's time and energy." Assistant to the President Barbara Stevens said yesterday that the three hearing boards will provide many channels for people to file grievances. "There are multiple entry points," Stevens said.
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THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIA^ — lur-xU). April 14, 1987
Hwt. Crew beatTColumbia, Princeton (Continued from back page)
been going through all year. They went through a lot of hard work this past week." It seems quite apparent that the Quakers may very well be back again on the right track for a successful season. Bergman seemed very concerned, however, with his team worrying too much about the future and not
taking the season one week at a time. While Penn may be worrying about the Eastern Sprints final on May 10, a tough race is coming up on the Housatonic River near New Haven. Conn., this week, where the Quakers will take on Yale and Columbia in an atlempt to capture the Blackwell Cup. "Yale is going to be real tough next week, and although we just beat Col-
umbia, they'll be gunning even harder for us this time," Bergman said. "The key to the season, however, is taking it one race at a time. We can't get ahead of ourselves." Bergman can only hope that the Quakers heed his advice as well as it did this weekend. If they do. then the; could be on the road for a championship season, even when taken one week at a time.
Softball drops three in hard weekend (Continued from back page) in two with a triple. Lee Polikoff struck out four and allowed only two hits to Penn left fielder Dee Bowser over seven innings. Algerio felt that this past weekend was merely a case of running into powerful opponents. "Both of the teams we played were really strong," the sophomore pitcher said. "They were pood offensively.
They had big girls who were strong hitters. "Plus we made a lot of mistakes. We weren't executing routine plays." Algerio also had a simple explanation for the hit columns in her linescore. "I started to groove a lot of pitches, and they started clocking them." Gardiner agreed with her batterymate's self-assessment.
"Linda's pitches weren't working as well. She wasn't hitting the corners. So she did what she could, or else she would have walked a lot of people. She was making them hit the ball, and they did." Penn travels to Villanova tomorrow for a makeup of a rainout on March 30, and the Quakers will be looking to once again inch up the hole that (hey are stuck in.
W. Track romps at Penn Invitational (Continued from back page! and distances. Both the 4x100- and 4x400-meter relay teams ran their best times of the season, turning in marks of 47.7 and 3:52.0, respectively. Also showing improvement were senior Tracy Charles and junior tri-captain Courtney Callahan, who ran their best times of the season in the 400-meter intermediate hurdles. As in last week's Penn Invitational.
this was an open meet, and the Quakers took advantage of that format to show that they are not going to relinquish their Heptagonal championship easily. If they continue to improve, they should become very difficult to defeat by the end of the season. Penn will test its Heptagonal lineup this week when it hosts Cornell. The
meet with the Big Red will give the Quakers a chance to get their between-eveni timing down. It will also give them an idea of the effort required in a scored meet. Hopefully for Penn, the meet will be a preview of the Heps. "We are going to run the same team against Cornell that we will run at the Heps," Costanza said.
M. Tennis swept by Green, Crimson (Continued from back page) first victory over Penn since 1977. "It was a very good match against Dartmouth," Molloy said. "I knew going in that it would be close. We lost some matches with two tiebreakers in them. It was just a close, tough match. I was not disappointed at all with our effort. I was just disappointed with the result." "Dartmouth was just on fire," Shaffer said. "They were psyched up because they hadn't beaten us in 10
years. They had a big crowd, and they just outplayed us." Going into the weekend, the Quakers had felt that a win in Hanover, N.H., would be necessary to establish enough momentum to compete at Harvard. However, the loss Friday did not seem to affect Penn, whose third, fourth and fifth singles players were combative enough to win at Harvard. Freeman, playing in the fourth spot, rallied to
Union to appeal Faculty Club decision (Continued from page 1) Club's unionization bid. He added that the decision does not give Local 274 exclusive jurisdiction over the employees. "The arbitrator did not rule jurisdiction to the other local or to Local 54," Muhammad said yesterday. "He had no authority to decide which union will represent the workers." "Any union can still represent the people," he added. Muhammad also said that Local 54 still has an outstanding arbitration case against the University yet to be heard. Muhammad contends that the University violated an accretion clause in its collective bargaining agreement. "We believe the University violated the collective bargaining agreement when they took over the operation of
the Faculty Club and took the position that our contract did not cover the Faculty Club workers," Muhammad said. "But in our contract with the University, it was stated that any
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win in three sets, 4-6, 6-3, 6-1, as did the number-five player, Surgent, 2-6. 7-6, 6-1. Shaffer won, 7-6, 7-6, to capture the sixth position. However, all three doubles teams were beaten to dispatch the upstart Quakers. "Against Harvard," Molloy said, "we didn't get it together in the doubles matches. We did not play the way we are capable of in those matches. We just didn't have the momentum to pull it off."
PAGE »
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PAGE 10
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Nicklas carries on family tradition for M. Lacrosse
(Continued from back page) cracks were my way of getting back at (Rick). Bui we outgrew it. You reach a certain age when you're just too big to fight." Lacrosse was not the only sport discussed at the Nicklas dinner table. They are the prototypical sportsoriented family. Although Rich and Jeff excelled at lacrosse. Rick loved soccer and Kevin adored hockey. "It was my favorite sport from seventh grade on," Kevin said. "In other sports, they always had that extra year or two (Rick being one year older than Kevin and Jeff two) that made them a little stronger and a little better. But we all started skating at the same time, and I look to it better than they did. "But Long Island hockey is not that competitive and doesn't give you the opportunity that northern kids get. And because I couldn't get into a top-flight school for hockey, I went with lacrosse." How has the pressure of being the fourth Nicklas to play lacrosse affected Kevin? "I tend to put pressure on myself," he explained. "Everyone in the family is a high achiever. The pressure was never spoken, but you could feel it. It has made me more competitive. My brothers set standards, they were the role models for me." "Being third in the ladder put enormous pressure on him," Rich said. "It caused him to want to do well. Whether that was good or bad is hard to say." But when it came lime to choose a college, Kevin severed the family ties.
With Jeff and Rick both playing at Virginia, he opted for Penn. "Dad gave me the freedom to do what I wanted. The fact that my brothers got partial scholarships opened things up for me. I liked everything about U. Va., but later on I realized that the thing that was stopping me from going there was that my brothers were there. I wanted to get out on my own. If I had gone there, I would have been labeled 'a Nicklas' immediately. There are pros and cons to that, but I wanted to do my own thing." e
Offensively for the Penn lacrosse
team, John Shoemaker is the ends and Nicklas is the means. Shoemaker, with 27 goals and one assist this season, is the effect, and Nicklas, with nine goals and a team-high 16 assists, is the cause. It is a role Nicklas enjoys. "At 6-4 and 220, |Shoemaker] is the ideal guy to feed. He's impossible to stop when he gets the ball in the crease," Nicklas explained. "But he needs someone to feed him. 1 have good eyes and see the field well. Ron Smolokoff filled that role last year, and I scored 14 goals. I think this year's stats are more indicative of the type of game I play. "Sometimes, you can make a pass
so good that all the guy has to do is catch it and toss it in the open net. I like making that pass as much as scoring goals." Nicklas feels the responsibility that comes with being a senior. This is his year, his team. With Penn already eliminated from the Ivy League race, Nicklas has turned to his family for needed support. "My dad has come to a lot of games, and I talked to him after the Cornell game (which Penn lost, 14-9). My brothers are always positive. The competitiveness between us plays second fiddle to the support we give each other."
W. Lacrosse ready to battle Lehigh (Continued from back page) we all began to wonder," Penn head coach Anne Sage said. "1 think that we cured any self-doubt on this team." The Quakers are not satisfied with just ending a losing streak, however. Tonight Penn (3-4, 1-3 Ivy League) will attempt to methodically build a winning streak as it takes on Lehigh (Franklin Field, 7 p.m.). "We have a chance to get back on track with two non-league games," said Karen McFadden, who leads Penn in scoring with 16 goals and six assists. "At this point in the season, we have to take it one game at a time. We can't look beyond ourselves." Lehigh (5-3) is a team that, much like Penn, has struggled this season. Although the Engineers hold a winn-
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ing record, their play in recent games has been plagued by inconsistency and the suicide of sports — turnovers. "I think that our season has been characterized by the three losses we have," Lehigh head coach Mary Beth Holder said. "In those games we turned the ball over too much. If we avoid making mistakes, we'll be all right." Lehigh is led by senior attack Sue Van Wagenen. The Engineers, however, do not rely on one player. Instead, their entire attack is based on players complementing each other. Although Lehigh is a well-balanced team, the Quakers will look to exploit the Engineers both physically and mentally. Confidence, which took a hiatus during the Quakers' losing streak, is presently represented in full force. Nowhere was that confidence more apparent than in Penn senior cocaptain Terri Norpel and the entire Quaker defensive unit. Norpel admittedly has struggled this year. It has been Penn's other cocaptain, Patty Kennedy (nine goals, seven assists), that has taken much of the spotlight. But Norpel, with two scores and one assist against Yale, feels that her game is coming around.
"(Yale) was a big confidence builder for both me and the team," Norpel said. "The team hadn't been playing well, and neither had I. 1 have been working on my game; we all have. It just felt good to get another win after the teamwork we put in." The fundamental aspect of any sport is teamwork, and even though Penn's victory over Yale was an offensive barrage, Lehigh will have to contend with a Quaker defense whose strength is manifested in a multitude of ways. "Our defense is a strong unit, but against Yale [the defense] showed tremendous intelligence," Sage said. "In the second half, they read the shots and protected [goalie] Wendy [DiDomenico] like a defense should. Hopefully, they can continue the play against Lehigh." For Penn, the victory over Yale was a panacea. But now that the Quakers are cured of their woes, they want to thrive. If confidence is the barometer that measures wins and losses, then Lehigh's hopes for engineering a victory may be slim. But confidence is only effective when it evolves into on-the-field production. The Quakers still must play the game — and play it well.
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42nd ANO CHESTNUT Large 1 bedroom. Tile bath Newly painted Available June $345/mo 222-4416 44TH AND CHESTNUT Huge 3 bedroom totally renovated bilevel apartment with dishwasher, tile kitchen, tile bath, private washer/ dryer and parking Available September $750 222-4416 44TH ANO WALNUT two bedroom total renovation Tile bath, tile kitchen, new windows, hardwood floors from $475/mo Available June and September 222-4416.
4200 BLOCK OSAQE One bedroom loft Large kitchen W/D S400/mo Available May/June 387-9593
45TH ANO SPRUCE two Penn Law students seek roommate for modern townhouse Washer/ dryer, dishwasher, A/C, yard, fireplace $325 Call 474-6853
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HOUSES AVAILABLE 4.5,6 bedrooms, washer dryers oftstreet, parking. Within walking distance to campus. $1100 to $1600 3876100 LARGE SELECTION Eff-1 Bd. 2-3 BDR available for rental. Some renovated w/w carpet elevators, LDY. etc call 382-1300
PINE A 42N0 One bedroom modern baths & kitchens, washer dryers, excellent building. Stephen Herman Real Estate. 222-5500 PRIVATE ROOMS in comfortable home. Washer/dryer. Summer/ Fall 387-5364
ON PENN CAMPUS Various sin apartments, newly decorated. Convenient public transportation. Weisenthal Properties 386-2380. 4029 Spruce Mon. thru Sat. 9 to 4; TOWNHOUSES 2. 3, 4. 6 bedrooms Penn, Drexel areas close to campus renovated reasonable rents June 1st. Washing machines, yards 3496981
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■v THK DAILY PINNSYLVANIAN _ Tuesday. April 14. 1987
PAGE II
Mantle condition fair
SCOREBOARD BASEBALL
Ex-Yankee slugger in Dallas hospital IRVING. Texas (AP) — Baseball Hall of Famer Mickey Mantle was m fair condition yesterday after being hospitalized for chest pains, a hospital spokeswoman said. Mantle's condition was upgiudcJ from serious to fair early yestcrdas. said Sharon Peters, spokeswoman for Irving Community Hospital, She Mid Mantle was in the intermediate coronary care unit. The former New York Yankees
NHL STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS (all series best-ot-seveni
NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Div W St Louis 4 New York 3 Chicago 3 Pittsburgh 2 Philadelphia 1 Montreal 0
sion L Pet 2 667 2 .600 3 500 4 .333 5 .167 5 000
OR W 1
? 3 3Vi
WALES CONFERENCE PATRICK DIVISION
Western Division W L Houston 6 1 Cincinnati 5 1 San Francisco 6 2 Atlanta 4 2 Los Angeles 3 5 San Diego 1 6
Today's Games
Pet GB 857 833 Vj750 667 1V» 375 3Vi 143 5
St Louis 8. Pittsburgh 4 Cincinnati 7. Atlanta 2 Chicago 5, Philadelphia 2 San Francisco 13, San Diego 6 Los Angeles 4. Houston 2
ADAMS DIVISION SERIES C
Tomorrow's Games
Hartford vs. Quebec (Series tied 2-2) Tonight: Quebec at Hartford Thu. Apr. 16 Hartford at Quebec x-Sat Apr 18 Quebec at Hartford Apr 8 Hartford 3. Quebec 2. OT Apr 9 Hartford 5. Quebec 4 Apr. 11: Quebec 5, Hartford 1 Apr 12 Quebec 4, Hartford 1
Pittsburgh at Chicago New York at Philadelphia, (n) Cincinnati at Atlanta, (n) Houston at Los Angeles, (n) San Francisco at San Diego, (n)
Apr Apr Apr Apr.
AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Division Milwaukee Baltimore Detroit New York Toronto Boston Cleveland
W 7 5 4 4 3 2 1
SERIES A Philadelphia vs. NY Rangers (Series tied. 2-2) Tonight NY Rangers at Philadelphia Thu Apr 16 Philadelphia at NY Rangers x-Sat Apr 18 NY Rangers at Philadelphia Apr 8 NY Rangers 3. Philadelphia 0 Apr. 9' Philadelphia 8. NY Rangers 3 Apr. 11 Philadelphia 3. NY Rangers 0 Apr 12 NY Rangers 6. Philadelphia 3 SERIES B Washington vs. NY Islanders (Washington leads series, 3-1) Apr 8 Washington 4. NY Islanders 3 Apr 9 NY Islanders 3. Washington 1 Apr 11 Washington 2. NY Islanders 0 Apr 12 Washington 4. NY Islanders 1 Tonight NY Islanders at Washington x-Thu Apr 16 Washington at NY Islanders x-Sat Apr 18: NY Islanders at Washington
Yesterday's Games
New York (Darling 0-0) at Philadelphia (Ruttin 0-0). (n) Cincinnati (Power 0-1) at Atlanta (Palmer 0-1). (n) Montreal (Tibbs 0-1) at St Louis (Mathews 0-0). (n) San Francisco (Davis 0-1) at San Diego (Wojna 00). (n) Houston (Darwin 1-0) at Los Angeles (Welch 0-1). (n)
CAMPBELL CONFERENCE NORRIS DIVISION SERIES E St. Louis vs. Toronto (Series tied, 2-2) Tonight Toronto at St Louis Thu Apr 16 St Louis at Toronto x-Sat Apr 18 Toronto at St Louis Apr 8 St Louis 3, Toronto 1 Apr 9 Toronto 3. St Louis 2. OT Apr 11 St Louis 5. Toronto 3 Apr 12 Toronto 2. St Louis 1
Apr Apr Apr Apr
great released a brief statement through hospital officials "I'm tired, but I'm feeling fine," he said. Peters said Mantle indicated he would have no other comment. Mantle, who lives in Dallas. «/ai stricken late Sunday on a Delta Airlines flight bound for Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport, said Ramona Bcvir. a hospital
SERIES F Detroit vs. Chicago (Detroit wins series. 40) 8 Detroit 3. Chicago 1 9 Detroit 5. Chicago 1 11 Detroit 4. Chicago 3. OT 12 Detroit 3. Chicago 1
SERIES G Edmonton vs. Los Angeles (Edmonton leads series. 3-1) Tonight Los Angeles at Edmonton x-Thu Apr 16 Edmonton at Los Angeles x-Sat Apr 18 Los Angeles at Edmonton Apr 8 Los Angeles 5 Edmonton 2 Apr 9 Edmonton 13. Los Angeles 3 Apr 11 Edmonton 6. Los Angeles 5 Apr 12 Edmonton 6. Los Angeles 3
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Pittsburgh Penguins Coach Bob Berry was fired yesterday because of "the exhausting and continual frustration" of missing the NHI. playoffs. Penguins executive vice president Paul Martha said. Berry and assistant coach Jim Roberts were dismissed with one veai remaining on their contracts, but General Manager Fddie Johnston will keep his job "to maintain the continuity in our front office," Martha said.
Western Division
L Pet 0 1.000 2 .714
GB — 2
2 3 3 4 6
2Vi 3 3'^ 4V4 6
667 .571 .500 .333 .143
California Minnesota Kansas City Chicago Oakland Seattle
Texas
Today's Games
W 5 5 3 2 2 2 1
L 2 2
Pet GB .714 — .714—
3 4 5 5 5
500 .333 286 .286 167
NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
Midwest Division
y-Boston x-Philadelphia x-Washington New Jersey New York
Yesterday's Games
Texas (Mason 0-1) at Boston (Sellers 0-0) Cleveland (P. Niekro 1-0) at New York (Hudson 1-0), (n) Milwaukee (Ciardi 00) at Baltimore (Dixon 1-0). (n) Chicago (Bannister 1-0) at Toronto (Johnson 0-1). (n) Detroit (Petry 0-0) at Kansas City (Gubicza 0-1), (n) Minnesota (Portugal 0-0) at Oakland (Codiroli 0-0), (n) California (Sutton 0-1) at Seattle (Bankhead '-0), (n)
(x-lf necessary)
Vft 2V4 3 3 V/2
New York 11. Cleveland 3 Texas at Boston, ppd. rain Milwaukee 6, Baltimore 3 Oakland 6, Minnesota 3 California 5, Seattle 3. 10 inn.
W 56 44 40 24 24
L 23 35 39 54 55
Central Division W L y-Atlanta 55 24 x-Detroit 50 29 x-Milwaukee 48 32 x-Chicago 40 40 x-lndiana 39 40 Cleveland 29 50
Tomorrow's Games Texas at Boston Minnesota at Oakland California at Seattle Cleveland at New York, (n) Milwaukee at Baltimore, (n) Chicago at Toronto, (n) Detroit at Kansas City, (n)
Pet 709 .557 .506 .308 .304
GB — 12 16 31 Vi 32
Pet 696 633 600 500 494 .367
GB 5 7V2 15'/2 16 26
y-Dallas x-Utah x-Houston Denver Sacramento San Antonio
W 53 44 41 35 28 26
L 26 35 38 44 51 53
Pacific Division W L y-L.A. Lakers 64 15 x-Portland 47 31 x-Golden State 39 39 x-Seattle 36 42 Phoenix 33 46 LA. Clippers 12 66 x-clinched playoff berth y-clinched division title
Pet 671 557 .519 .443 354 329
GB
Pet 810 603 500 462 418 154
GB
Tonight's Games
Yesterday's Games Philadelphia 113. Washington 105 Atlanta 102. Indiana 101 Detroit 120. New York 100 Milwaukee 114. Chicago 107 Sacramento 123, San Antonio 118
New Jersey at Cleveland Portland at Denver Sacramento at Phoenix Golden State at LA Clippers Utah at Seattle
9 12 18 25 27
Despite fielding talent "in the middle of the NHL." Martha said, the Penguins missed the NHI playoffs in all three of Berry's seasons as coach. "I realized I had lost confidence in their ability to get the team in the playoffs next season." Martha said at a Civic Arena news conference. "I don't want to get specific, but it got to the point at the end of the season where the coaching staff lost the team, and the team sensed that." After a 7-0 start that was the besi m their 20-year history, the Penguins won only seven Patrick Division games the rest of the 1986-87 season and failed to qualify for the playoffs for the fifth year in a row. They finished 30-38-12 and never won more than two in a row after their breakaway start. i
16% 24'/! 27Vl 31 51 Vi
"The worst thing that happened to this franchise was winning seven games in a row," Martha said. "It created expectations wild the tans ih.n were unrealistic ... it didn't help our franchise at all." Martha said no players came to him and asked for Berry's dismissal. But all-star center Mario I emieux — whose 53 assists were 40 fewer than last season — expressed growing frustration late in the season with the Penguins' less-than-physical style of play under Berry. Johnston and club owner bdward J. DeBartolo Sr. approved his decision, but the final word on the firings
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Mantle did not suffer a heart attack. In December, Mantle ended his association with Del Webb's C'laridge Hotel Casino in Atlantic City, N.J., where he was director of sports promotions, primarily handling public relations and playing golf with casino
customers. Mantle. 55, was inducted into the Baseball Hall ol lame in 1974. Mantle broke in with the Yankees in 1951, replacing Joe DiMaggio in center field. He won the American League Itiple ( rown in 1956 with 52 home runs, 130 runs batted in and a .353 bating average. He won three Most Valuable I'l.iui Awards and four American league home run lilies.
Penguins dismiss Berry
SMYTHE DIVISION
SERIES H Calgary vs. Winnipeg (Winnipeg leads series 3-1) Tonight Winnipeg at Calgary x-Thu Apr 16 Calgary at Winnipeg x-Sat Apr 18 Winnipeg at Calgary Apr 8 Winnipeg 4. Calgary 2 Apr 9 Winnipeg 3. Calgary 2 Apr 11 Calgary 3. Winnipeg 2, OT Apr 12 Winnipeg 4. Calgary 3
SERIES D Montreal vs. Bostoi. (Montreal wins series. 4-0) 8: Montreal 6, Boston 2 9: Montreal 4, Boston 3. OT 11: Montreal 5. Boston 4 12: Montreal 4, Boston 2
spokeswoman Paramedics met the flight. She said doctors confirmed that
was his. said Maitha. the former University of Pittsburgh and Pittsburgh Steelers defensive back "The exhausting frustration of trying to reach the playoffs and not sucCCedini has a way of working on people." Manila said "We need an infusion of new spirit and direction. We made progress the last three seasons but not enough to maintain the status quo." Johnston, the team's former coach, will be retained because "there is a continuity in the franchise you want 10 maintain. He's not mortgaged our future. He's brought in good young players; we jus) need more of them, lies made some bad deals, but he's made some good ones, too," Martha said. Berry, who had a seven-year NHI. playing career, previously was fired as coach of the I M Anneles kings and Montreal Canadicns He has an NHL career coaching record of 311-292 100. including an 88-127-25 record in Pittsburgh. The Penguins were coming off a 38-poinl season when Berry was hired before the 1984-85 season. They had point totals of 53, 76 and 72 under Berry and increased iheir average attendance from 6,839 10 14,96V "It's been disappointing that with the work that's been done on and off the ice. that Jimmy and I will not really be part of that when it does turn around," Berry told The Pittsburgh Press. "I feel like someone who has gone outside and chopped down a tree, cut the logs, built a fire and then been told to wait outside." The firings are expected to cost the Penguins about $150,000 since both Berry and Roberts had one year remaining on iheir contracts. Martha said he will "proceed with haste to hire a new coach" so he may have input into the team's June 13 NHL draft selections
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CHATTERBOXERS People who love to talk on the phone are wanted to answer calls for our busy talk communications center $5 per hour, no selling involved. 24 hour shifts, all open full time,
part time. Can 331-6459. CHILD CARE for 19 month old daughter of Penn Faculty 12-20 hrs/wk. (3-4) mornings in Narberlh home (2 blocks from train) Reterences caS 064-6822.
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Restaurant Manager Limited menu; fast. friendly and fun. We are expanding. Great opportunity.
Send resume to Saladalley.
117 South 17th St.. Suite 711, Philadelphia. PA 19103
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MALES, 21 YEARS or older and in good health, wanted to participate in clinical pharmacological studies. Please call 662-8766 for details. MARKET RESEARCH ANALYST part-time to conduct telephone interviews, secondary research and data analysis and evaluation Experience preferred. Contact: Michael BJumberg, 634-9060 MODELS NEEDED immediatelycompany wants new spokesperson for product line. Car needed, portfolio desired. For interview 722-7636. POLITICAL FUNDRAISER "Nobody wins, unless everybody wins1" Get active. Work tor social and economic justice and get paid. Telephone canvass. HRS. 5:30- 9:30 salary $8/hr Call PennPIC at 568-0832 STUDENT ACTIVIST Wont this summer to change the world. Learn electoral, political professionalism while working with Pa.'s largest citizen lobby. Help build a national progressive movement. Develop communication, training, anbalytical skills. Earn $3k this summer. Call PennPIC 568-3813. SUMMER INTERNSHIPS Institute of Contemporary Art, U ol P. Bring resume to ICA. 115 Meyerson by May 1. 888-7108. SUMMER JOB (40 hour week) tor Penn student- inspect fire extinguishers in campus buildings. Contact Safety Office Bid De Luca 8988921 or John Cook. WAITER/WAITRESS/ BARTENDER/ Host- experienced tor full- service reataurant in Okie City Gnfe's. 132 Market St. 9254590.
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22ND AND SANSOM Spacious summer sublet, option for next year. Modern with kitchen, washer/dryer, ac, 4695 Available May 23-Sept 1 561-0328 2301 LOCUST 2 Bedrooms available in large 3 BR apartment 24 hour doorman. 2 blocks from Rittenhouse Square, W/D in building. $300/month 963-0159/ 823^)166 3, 2, OR 1 BEDROOM AVAILABLE FOR SUMMER SUBLET in spacious, inexpensive 3-bedrrom apartment on 40th and Spruce Please call Eve 662-0809 3946 DELANCEV (Behind Allegro's) 3 BR. 2 1/2 baths AC. Sundeck $200/mo ea 386-3920 39th AN0 PINE One bedroom in beautiful two bedroom apartment Call 387-4579_
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a
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Call 222-9365. 387-9567
40TH 8 SPRUCE summer sublet 1 bedroom available in 2 bedroom apt Inexpensive and close to campus Call Eric. 387-4078 41ST AND LOCUST summer sublet, 4-6 rooms available, 3 bath, fully equipped kitchen, price negotiable: call 243-8731 or 386*708 42ND ANO SPRUCE summer sublet spacious bright cool inexpensive studio 387-9334 46TH PINE Spacious bedroom in beautiful apartment available 5/22 Walk-in closet. W/D. DW, AC $275/mo Evelyn (215) 747-1585. ABSOLUTELY INCREDIBLE ROOMS for sublet 41XX Locust Come see for yourself1 Prices dates extremely negotiable Don't miss opportunity lor lavish summer home 2434863. AVAIL 5/17 Large 2 rm. efficiency. 43rd & Spruce. $210/mo plus elec. Steve 825-4422 (0). 222-0710 (E). BEAUTIFUL ONE-BEDROOM well-furnished, newly painted, hardwood floors, dean, sunny. 4 blocks from campus. May 27/ Auguat31. $289/Month, call 386-2286 a*er 8 p.m.
HAMILTON COURT 2BR sublet Fully furnished, equipped kitchen w/dishwasher. spacious rooms Available 5/12-8/31 Call 3875582 HAMILTON COURT 3818 Chest nut Summer sublet 5 bedrooms 2 full bathrooms Huge livingroom and kitchen Furnished Elevator Balcony $1807month/person Call 222-5253 HAMILTON COURT Air conditioned, furnished, one of three bedrooms available $175. Call 222-5955.
LARGE 1 BEDROOM 44th Locust $350/mo. includes heal Available 5/1. 222-0752 lease option tor year A/c
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NYC SUMMER Sublet Female Roommate $311/month (212) 866*608
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EFFICIENCY TO SUBLET May through August Large, beautiful and new on 41st and Spruce Call 2222436.
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SUBLET/RENT 1 BR Apt 1st floor inc. off st pking. heat, hot water Avail June, rent negotiable Call Andy 662-1937. SUMMER SUBLET two rooms in three bedroom, breezy modem apartment 4300 Spruce Rent $150 Chris 386-2648.
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SUBLET large room in sunny 3 BR apt 44th and Pine W/D Rent negotiable Edwin 898-4230 or 387-6852.
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DUPLEX two bedroom, two bath, sundeck. enormous, bright. 3936 Pine. $650/mo 662-1833.
IF YOU'RE Going away first semester (fall '87)7 And need a place to live second semester Large room available in seven bedroom house Call Michael 2438883.
SPACIOUS SUMMER Sublet. Hamilton Court. 38th and Chest nut Three large bedrooms, living room, full kitchen with dishwasher, garbage disposal All rooms fuMy furnished Csll 222-0064
SUMMER SUBLET Hamilton Court 2 bedrooms. June thru August Csll George or Doug 387-9392. SUMMER SUBLET Option to renew. Huge 2 bedroom apt on top floor Partially furnished. 44th & Pine 387-9104
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Page 12 The Daily Pennsylvanian Tuesday, April 14, 1987
Abysmal hitting strangles Softball in empty weekend
Hotchkiss HR downs Cornell, 5-4 Damon goes route as Baseball rallies By DAN BOLLF.RMAN Going into yesterday's game with Cornell, the Penn baseball team could have been considered to be in critical condition, as two of the essential facets of the game had deserted the Quakers. Although their pitching has been consistently healthy, the defense was coping with a recent bout of errors, and the hitting had been suffering with a chronic, season-long case of invisibilitis. This past weekend was no exception, as Penn dropped a doubleheader to Princeton and a single game to the Big Red, scoring two runs and banging out only 14 hits in the three games, while putting itself in the emergency room. The Quakers saw their overall record fall to 7-15, while their mark in the Eastern Intercollegiate Baseball League plunged to 1-6. It was almost time to pull the blanket over Penn for another EIBL season. Although the Quakers had 11 games left with EIBL foes, it was not the easiest of schedules since Penn still had to face championship-contenders Brown, Harvard and Navy. A loss to Cornell could prove fatal. But the Quakers roared to life against the Big Red yesterday at Hoy Field, winning 5-4 on Gordie Hotchkiss' solo home run in the top of the eighth. It was an improbable win for Penn (8-15, 2-6 EIBL), as Cornell scored four runs in the bottom of the first inning on four singles, an error, a passed ball and a groundout, countering a single Quaker tally in the top of the frame. All this damage came against freshman righthander Jud Damon, who earned his fourth win against two losses by pitching the eight-inning distance, allowing seven hits and five walks while striking out seven.
C«r1 Gotdtmlth/Daily Pennsylvanian
Deanne Gordon was one of three Quakers to gel a hil this weekend
After plating two runs in the third and chasing Cornell starter Chris Reading, the Quakers remained runless until the seventh inning. On the day, Penn belted 14 hits — five of them for extra bases. This prowess at the plate forced Big Red coach Ted Thoren to use five pitchers. •'We were hoping to get seven innings from the two freshmen (Reading and Dave Owens), but they were constantly behind batters," Thoren told The Cornell Daily Sun. "Penn's a good team, but not a great team. You can't win when you're behind batters." The Quakers knotted the score at four in the top of the seventh. Outfielder Tom Charters (2-for-4) led off the frame with a triple. Brian Shortell quickly drove in Charters with a double, notching his second hit in four trips to the plate. Hotchkiss then put Penn ahead to stay by cracking his second homer of the season, leading off the eighth inning. Hotchkiss' day at the plate — 2-for-2, three walks, two runs scored, the home run and a double — may signal his return to the form he exhibited in the Quakers' early-season contests in Florida. It was enough to pull Penn from the respirator.
By JAY SE1.IBER The Penn softball team has played the part of the inchworm trying to climb out of its hole so far this season. The Quakers lose a few games and slip down, then win one to climb a little higher, and then lose again to fall back. Penn had won its previous game, 2-1 against La Salic last Tuesday. So according to the inchworm plot, the Quakers had to lose this weekend. And staying with the script, Penn was defeated three times, first losing to St. Joseph's on Friday, and then dropping both games of a doubleheader at Harvard on Sunday. The Quakers (2-8. 0-2 Ivy League) had a rough day at St. Joe's. They scored a run in the first inning, but barely had time to enjoy the lead, as the Hawks exploded for four in their half of the inning on the way to a 13-1 victory that was called after 4'A innings. Things looked good for Penn when third baseman Donna Berk led off with a walk and went to second on a passed ball. After a strikeout, catcher Natalie Gardiner sacrificed Berk to third, and she scored four pitches later when St. Joseph's catcher Maggie Troman could not hold on to winning pitcher Dawn Mycock's called strike for her second passed ball of the inning. However, things went from good to grim when the Hawks came to bat. St. Joe's parlayed three hits and two
Quaker errors into four runs, highlighted by the first of two home runs by left fielder Linda Buonanno and a triple by first baseman Maria Shepard. Three runs in the second, and six in the third iced the game for the home team. Deanne Gordon had Penn's only hit of the game with a fourth inning single. Linda Algerio took the loss on the mound for the Quakers. Against Harvard, Penn did not fare any better, as the Quakers were shut out twice, 11-0 and 9-0. Their bats continued to be silent, as they could muster only two hits in each game. Seven Penn errors led to nine unearned runs, and fourteen walks did not help the Quakers' cause. Catcher Gia Baressi did much of the damage for Harvard in the first game, going 3-for-4 with two doubles and two RBI. Pitcher Lora Browning went the distance for the Crimson, striking out one and yielding two walks to earn the win. Harvard banged out 11 hits off of Algerio, who took the complete game loss and saw her record dip to 2-5. In the second game, Quaker starting pitcher Chris Pantelias was the victim of seven unearned runs in the first inning. Pantelias was relieved by Claire Sales, who allowed five hits and two runs over the remaining 5'/i innings. Harvard third baseman Lisa Rowning went 2-for-3 and drove in three runs, while left fielder Nancy Prior knocked (Please turn to page 9)
Stepping from the Shadows Nicklas leaves mark on Quakers' offense By JON WILNER Rich Nicklas' dog was his best friend — no questions asked. As he tells it. Muffin, who redefined the name "golden retriever," chopped a few thousand dollars off his children's college tuition bills. Nicklas has sent three sons to college — Jeff and Rick to the University of Virginia and Kevin to Penn — all to play lacrosse, and Muffin helped Jeff and Rick earn partial scholarships. What was the canine budget-cutter's role? "I really believe that she had a lot to do with their success in lacrosse," Rich explained. "They trained her to fetch the ball. Whenever they went out to the driveway to practice, they didn't have to worry about retrieving the ball, and that encouraged them to play more often. She certainly helped me financially." "She knew that every time we picked up the lacrosse ball, it was time to play," Kevin said. "She helped so much because when we would miss the goal, we'd never feel like walking for the ball, because those things can roll a long way." Muffin died last January, but not before completing her work. The endless hours of practice she encouraged in the driveway of their Syossct, N.Y. home paid big dividends, as Jeff, Rick and Kevin have each gone on to play lacrosse at top-notch schools. In doing so, the brothers followed a tradition started by their father, who earned third-team ail-American honors in his senior year at Rutgers. • Kevin Nicklas is the youngest of the three brothers who have played college lacrosse. Growing up, he wasn't just following footsteps, he was following footsteps and footsteps and footsteps. "We had some personality clashes," Kevin recalls. "My dad was always push, push, push; he was happy on the move. Rick is the closest to him in personality. Jeff and I are different from them. Jeff is laid back; nothing ever seems to bother him. I'm a little reckless; I used to always act before thinking. I'm much more impulsive than my dad, and that annoyed him sometimes. "We fought like cats and dogs, especially me and Rick. I used to tease him, and then we'd get into fisticuffs, and he'd beat me up. I'd go crying to my dad and he just said that I deserved it. I felt that the wise(Please turn to page 10)
Tommy Leonardi/Daily Pennsylvanian
Kevin Nicklas (right) has emerged as one of Ihe keys for the Penn lacrosse learn with nine goals and 16 assists
David Patch of The Cornell Daily Sun contributed to this story.
Weekend sweeps away M. Tennis By GREG BROWN At the end of singles play Saturday at Harvard, the Penn men's tennis team was surprisingly even with the Eastern Intercollegiate Tennis Association leaders. The Crimson, however, swept the usually strong Quaker doubles teams, and ended Penn's hopes for what would have been its biggest win of the season. The 6-3 loss, following a 5-4 defeat at Dartmouth on Friday, dropped the Quakers' record to 8-7 (2-4 EITA). Thus, a weekend
which had held much promise ended in disappointment for Penn, which had the misfortune of finding itself against a riled-up Big Green and a powerful Crimson in succession. "We did the best we could in both matches," Penn head coach Al Molloy said. "It was a good effort by everybody." "In both matches, we definitely played real well," freshman Devin Shaffer concurred. "We just weren't able to win the big points most of the time."
W. Track explodes in Penn Invit.
Against Dartmouth, Penn got singles victories from juniors Craig Freeman, 7-6, 3-6, 6-1, and Bob Surgent, 7-6, 6-0, at the fourth and fifth positions, respectively. The top doubles team of senior captain Paul Settles and Surgent prevailed 7-6, 6-2, and a new doubles team of Shaffer and junior Nick Dubois, playing in the third spot, added a win, 6-4, 3-6, 7-5. These efforts, however, were not enough to hold off the Big Green, who were determined enough to notch their (Please turn to page 9)
Heavyweights tame Lions, Tigers By ERIC SCHNIPPER As the Penn heavyweight crew was stroking its way to victory past Princeton and Columbia in the Childs Cup Challenge on the Schuylkill River on Saturday, the Quakers could only think of the adversity they had overcome since the previous weekend's inauspicious season-opener. Penn's first varsity eight bested Princeton and Columbia with a time of 6:16.8, which was good enough to overcome the Tigers by 1.5 seconds and the Lions by 24.4. Although the victory itself was sweet, the fact that the Quakers had blocked out their failure in San Diego, Cal. was even more impressive. "All of our crews did a really good job," Penn head coach Stan Bergman said. "They rebounded in a fine fashion after last weekend's unfortunate incident." The incident Bergman spoke of was Penn's disqualification from the San Diego Crew
Challenge for locking oars with Stanford. The disqualification prevented the Quakers from defending the championship they had won last year. It also gave Penn a psychological hurdle that it simply had to overcome in order to get on with the season, particularly if it plans on realizing its goal of winning the Eastern Sprints League this year. "I just told them that they can't do anything about what happened," Bergman said. "We then went into our usual routines in practice to get their minds off San Diego." Those routines included over-distance work, which Bergman designed to improve the team's technique and style, and shortdistance work, which fine tunes each boat's race cadence and race speed. "After San Diego, I felt that we needed to continue with variety in our practices," Bergman said. "In this way, the rowers avoid burnout, and we get to touch every facet of
the race." Whatever the Quakers' technique consisted of, it worked. In addition to the varsity boat's triumphant return to the Schuylkill, Penn's second eight was also victorious. In fact the entire heavyweight program seemed to be inundated with a plethora of victories on Saturday, for of the seven races that took place, five tipped the Quakers' way. As for the second boat, Penn topped the Tigers and Lions by 22.8 and 26.7 seconds, respectively, in a race that was decided virtually at the outset. "The second crew shared in some of the first boat's misfortune in San Diego, even though they had performed well," Bergman said. "I had to impress upon them, as well, to keep on improving their technique and keep doing the same stuff in practice that they had (Please turn to page 9)
Tommy Leonardi/Daily Pennsylvanian
Ellen Grove and Penn host Lehigh tonight
W. Lacrosse looks for winning streak By HOWARD ZALKOWITZ The reaction was natural after the Penn women's lacrosse team broke its four-game losing streak with a dynamic 10-6 win over Yale on Saturday. "It feels so great," said Quaker freshman attack Carrie Vesely, who scored a goal. "If there was ever a time where we needed a win, this was it." "After all the almosts the kids had this season, I think (Please turn to page 10)
By ERNIE GOFF The Penn women's track team continued its run of success Friday at Franklin Field. Under ideal conditions, the Quakers added to their achievements of the previous weeks with an afternoon of excellent performances. "We had a great, great meet," Penn head coach Betty Costanza said. "The team really looked good." The meet witnessed two new school records. Junior Jennifer Renne improved upon her own record with a 122-foot effort in the hammer. Senior tri-captain Van Grover set a record in the 400-meters with a time of 56.4 seconds. "I really didn't go out to set the record," Grover said. "I was just trying to better my time from last week." Other members on the Penn team enjoyed the splendid weather on their way to capturing personal records. Junior Jill Delfs set a personal record in the 800-meters with a time of 2:11.3, and sophomore Christelle Williams lowered her time in the 200-meters to 24.7 seconds. An indication that the Quakers are steadily improving is shown by the presence of progressively better times (Please turn to page 9)