jA<->2 I III I) Ml > PKNNSYLVAMAN - Mond.v. October 10. I9W
Campus Events A listing of University news and events
CAMPUS EVENTS we listed (Wily as a tr»« public same* by The De> ly PetintyKanian Lislings for PREE events o' authorized Univefsity affiliated groups may be mailed or placed in person at The Daily Pennsylvania" Business Ol •ice 4015 Walnut Street from 9 am to5pm Monday througti M Jay Campus Events will not be ac- cepted by phone 25 word limit Due to the volume of listings, there is no guarantee that a listing will appear The Daily Pennsylvania" •^serves the right to edit Campus Events according to space limita
ALL HILLEL MEMBERS Please rneke sure we have your current campus address and phone number Stop in or call i739l to- day'
ATTEND THE meeting ol the Moderate Party with the Liberal Party Elections start at 700 pm Monday in 286 McNeil Then hear an American Indian Speaker
CELEBRATE COLUMBUS DAY by celebrating Native American rights Liberal Party with Moderate Party tonight 7 30 2B6 McNeil Speakers — lawyer and members of American Indian group
COLLEGE DEMOCRATS presents Candidates Night for City Council Meet the Democratic and Republican Candidates tonight at 1 30 in Room 350. Steinberg/Dietrich
EAGLE SCOUTS interested in |Oin inq Penn Eagle Scout Society - activities will include outdoor, community sen/ice and scouting events Contact Mark at 387 8389
FOLKLORE COLLOOUIUM Dr Nal ' "■ Davis i author of Return of Martin Guerrp 1 on The Gift in 16th Century F-ance October 10. 400 Van Pell Library Conference RoomiRM I2H
i"i AND LESBIAN Peer Counseling provides Iree. con hdential counseling Questions0
Call 8984888 or 3866H0 Monday Thursday 4 001O00 or slop by the C A . Room 4
GRADUATE AND PROFES SIONAL Students - How can Penn Newman better serve you'' Socials'' Discussions9 Retreats'" Bring your ideas' Organizational meeting Mon 10/10 8-9pm Oues hons ' Call 8967575
MANDARIN CONVERSATION Hour All Mandarin speakers welcome 800 2nd floor lounge. Hiqh Rise South Refreshments will be served
MEDIEVIL FIGHTING PRACTICE Modievil fighting weapons and ar- mour making Begins at 7 30 in 'oom 245 of Houston Hall Spon sored by Penn S C A
MEMBERS OF THE New York Giants will be giving an AIA presentation m Mendlesohn Room on Monday thp tenth at 8 p m All intercollegiate athletes welcome
NAVIGATORS CHRISTIAN Fellowship large group meeting Time 7 00 pm Place Williams Han 204 Subiect Timeless pnn ciples from the devotional life of David
ATTEND PENN debate councils 2nd novice workshop on Mon. Oct 10 in HRN lobby at 7 30 p m No •«- penence neeesaary'
NEED HELP with calculus' PI Mu EptHon sponsors free mathematics tutoring every Mon- day and Thursday. 7 9 p m in Wms 319
OSBORNE USER GROUP Mealing Monday October 10 al 6 00. Vance Hall B-3 Even/one is welcome Public Domain software available
PHYSICS ISO REVIEW Workshop sponsored by The Tutonng Center every Monday in DRL 204 from 7 30 pm to830pm
PI MU EPSILON. the Math Honor Society, holds its first meeting Nonday Oct 10. 3 p m. DRL A-1 Please attend if you wish to torn Further information 222-2752
REGISTER FOR LISHMA (non- credit courses) today al Hlllel 202 S 36tn St or call 806-7391 for infor- mation
SEEKING SCIENTIFIC EMPLOY MENT Graduate student career seminar Bell Labs and Merck representatives discuss RAD career ladders October 10. 4.30 p m. Ben Franklin Room. Houston Hall Sign up 896 7530
SEMINAR on nonviolent alter natives to war Video program and discussion on history of non violence Mon Oct 10 730 pm Room 309 Houston Hall
STUDY ABROAD SEMINAR Learn about study abroad programs Med students who recently return ed Monday. October 10. 4 00 p m. Room 305 Houston Hall Spon sored by IRUSA
THE LIBERTARIAN CLUB will discuss civil liberties. Monday at 7 30 m Room 305. Houston Hall The right to sell pornography pro stitution or drugs will be discuss ed
THE TABLE TENNIS Club will meet 8 30 Monday night at Gimbel Gvm. as usual Bring your own bat it possible Call 387 7103 lor more information
UNDERGRAOUATE ACCOUN TING SOCIETY will have Mr Michael Todres. of Main Hurdman NY speak on Accounting Services 4 306 X HSP Houston Hall
WHERE S A GOOD Study Place0 Quiet library great study break options HBO ping-pong, pool, snack, soda machines! M-Th 9am - 11 pm. f—S—Su 9am - 6pm Newman Center 3720
Chestnut
WOMEN S VARSITY Squash Team practice begins Monday October 10 al 4 p m at the Ringes Squash Courts Players of all levels welcome Call Gaylene McCabe IM7 4I M
BUSINESS MAGA21NE Wharton Account introductory. Tuesday Oct 11.9pm Room351 Steinberg Dertnch Hall Writers and all others welcome
CHEMISTRY 1 Review Workshop Sponsored by The Tutonng Gaoler Every Tuesday in Chem Bldg 117 from700pm to 8:00 pm
CREDIT CARO SIGNUPS lor up perclaasmen. faculty, staff Tues- day. 10*11 and Wednesday 10*12 from 10 am. ■ Spin on Locus! Walk near Dietrich Rain Location Houston Hall Lobby
FALLOUT NEW Fiction Magazine on campus All Interested come by 410 Warwick on Tuesday. Oct. 11 at 8 p m. or call 2220221 Need writers, artists editors, etc
GENERAL MEETING ol the Penn Student Donor Club on October 11th at 7:30 pm In the Bishop White Room — second floor ol Houston Hall
GSAC WILL MEET Tuesday. Oc lober 11 at 11 a m in the Benjamin Franklin Room of Houston Hall Each graduate group should send a representative
ASSIST IN conducting youth con ferences. must be available periodically from Thursday until Sunday Stipend Sponsored by Freedoms Foundation. Valley Forge Details CPPS
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES In Foreign Service'' presented by the Slate Department. Oct. 13 4 JO — 6 00 p m Houston Hall/Ben Franklin Room All are invited to atlend ^
CONTROLLING TEST ANXIETY and stress workshop starts Tues- day October 11, 3pm relaxation through hypnosis workshop starts Friday October 14. 3 pm 3611 Locust Walk 2nd floor
PENN OTHELLO CLUB - in troductory meeting - 700 p.m. Room 303, Houston Hail Players of all abilities welcome
PHYSICS 1 Review Workshop Sponsored by The Tutoring Center Every Tuesday in DRL 2C4 from 700 pm to 8 00 pm.
PI SIGMA ALPHA (National Political Science Honor Society) Meetings In Stettler Hall Current Members Tuesday October 11 4 X pm
PROGRESSIVE STUDENT ALLIANCE general meeting. Educational on military build-up's social costs by representative from Jobs with Peace Campaing. Room 304 Williams Hall 800 pm
TOMORROW 11. ■ ■ i ■!
ALIYAH .s up ».IJ' alley- Telem the movement for Zionist fulfill men! is having its introductory meeting Oct 11 500 pm Hlllel foundation 202 S 36th More Infor mation'3866277
MARKETING ASSOCIATION presents Larry Roberts Director Wharton Communications Pro gram Topic "Effective Presents lions and interviewing Styles'' Tuesday Oct 11 DH 105 4 30 p m Reception lo lollow New members welcome
ACCOUNTING 1A Review Workshop Sponsored by The Tutonng Center Every Wednesday in DH/SH 204 from 700 p m to 800 pm
ARE YOU WELL CONNECTED'' Seniors II you know someone or know someone who knows so- meone who might be a possible Ivy Day speaker, please call David 3875519
ASBURY CHURCH Fall Retreat to be held Saturday. October 15th on
Prayer and Spintuality." 500-930 pm Dr Raymond Barber will facilitate For more into, call 386 0724
CHEMISTRY 143 Review Workshop Sponsored by The Tutonng Center Every Wednesday in Chem Bldg 117 from 700pm lo 800 pm
DAVID YETTER - When A or not A isnt quite always true Geometric Logic 'or Laymen" Thursday October 13. 12:15 Graduate Lounge Houston Hall. Room 233 ^^^^^^
U A LEGAL SERVICES Free legal consultations on Thursday. Oc- tober 20 To schedule appoint ments. sign up in U A olfice. first floor Houston Hall
UTV SPORTSeOWL Sign up quickly to enter teams in televised sports Imna show Call Andy at 662 1783 or Paul at 3874523
COOPER BIOMEOICAL INC Intern-search lor research papers Work primarily on campus for Malvern PA firm Interest and background in health sciences See CPPS Hies
THE FEMININE BIND A group for women to explore concerns related to personal and profes sional life: in- dependence/dependence, tear of being alone, women and power Call 8967021
DECISION SCIENCE review workshop sponsored by The Tutor ing Center Every Monday at DHrSH310lrom9pm to 10pm
MATHEMATICS 2nd year review workshop sponsored by The Tutor- ing Center Every Monday in DH/SH 209 trom 4:30 p m to 5:30 p m
DENMARK S INTL STUDY PRO GRAM oilers courses in Liberal Arts. Communications. Business. Architecture. Language ol In- struction English Info and ap- plications in 133 Bennett Hall.
ECONOMICS 1A review workshop sponsored by Tne Tuloring Center every Monday in Stiteler Hall B6 from 7.00 p.m. to 900 p.m
GRADUATE AND PROFES SIONAL SCHOOL FORUM Meet representatives Irom Law. Business and other graduate schools October 13th. 10 am — 4 p.m. Bode* Lounge. Houston Hall More information available 8865261
GRADUATE AND PROFES- SIONAL School Forum Meet representatives from Law. Business and other graduate schools. October 13th. 10—4 pm Bodek Lounge Houston Hall, more information available 896 5261
MAIN HURDMAN will present Marketing CPA Services" Oct 10.
4 306 30 p m Houston Hall HSP Room Open to all Accounting ma- KXS
MATHEMATICS 1st year review workshop sponsered by The Tutor- ing Center Every Monday in DH/SH 200 Irom 5:30 pm to 6:30 p.m
MAY DEPARTMENT STORES In- formation bneling session open to all and interviewers Oct 12.7 00 — 1000p m HRN Rooltop Lounge
PENN/NYU PROGRAM IN MADRID information meeting. Oc tober 17, 3 4 p m.. West Lounge. Williams Four semesters ol Spanish required All maiors welcome
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News In Brief Compiled from Associated Press dispatches
Watt resigns under Senate pressure WASHINGTON - Interior
Secretary Jame-. Wall, embattled for nearly three weeks over his remark aboul a federal advisory panel, resigned yesterday but will remain in office until President Reagan names his successor
Watt made the announcement in ft cow pasture al a ranch where he has been vacationing near Sania Barbara. Calif., telling reporlcrs "the lime has come"to step down.
Reagan accepted ihe resignation and said Wan had done "an outstanding job as a member of my Cabinet and in his stewardship of the natural resources of the nation."
Reagan said Walt "has initialed a careful balance between ihe needs of people and Ihe importance of prolcc- ling the environment. His dedication 10 public service and his ac- complishments as secretary of the in- terior will long be remembered."
Reagan said Wan informed him of his decision lo resign during a telephone call shortly after 5 p.m. f-asiern Daylighi Time.
There was no immediaie word on Watt's successor. Bui While House aides have said for I he past several days thai candidates included former Sen. Clifford Hanscn. R-Wyoming; J. Simmons, a black Democrat, who works al Inferior: and Energy Secretary Donald Hodel. a former In- terior Department official.
Forum to focus on rights of Indians By CLAIM BKRKOWITZ
The rights of native American In- dians will be the topic of a Penn Political Union forum tonight.
Datryl Jordan, coordinator for the American Indians of (he Delaware Valley, will give Ihe keynote speech in the program, which is set for 7:30 p.m. in Room 286 of Ihe McNeil Building. A lawyer who has represented American Indians and other members ol ihe organization also arc scheduled 10 address problems of American Indians.
PPU Liberal Parly Chairman Rohcri Speel said he feels it is ironic that the speech is scheduled on Col- umbus Day.
"The American Indians' political rights have been ignored for loo long." said Spcel. a College senior.
Speel said Indians feel the govern- ment has curbed their righls. and that the policies of Reagan ad- ministration have furthered their people's economic problems. . The panel of speakers will address ihrce main issues: irealy and land righls, sovereignly on Indian rcsci valions and economic problems.
PPU liberal Party Vice Chairman Eric freed, an Engineering School senior, said he feels ihe validity of UX)-ycar-old treaties between the federal government and American Indians is in question. Many were nevci upheld, he said, and many arc no longer practical. The speakers will discuss whether the irealics still apply and whether Indians arc heinj: cheated out of their own land.
The panel is also scheduled lo discuss ihe political power of In- dians on reservations, and the im- pact of increased uncmploymcnl and decreased welfare benefits.
Forum probes African development (( miliniieil from page I)
Kojo also blasted the apartheid policies of South Africa, saying con- tinued indifference lowards Soulh Africa on the part of American leadership could jocpardi/c long-term relations between the United Stales and African nations.
"The impact of the United States in Africa will always be minor," Kojo said, "unless there is a fundamental change in United Stales policy lowards South Africa."
Kojo said that Africa is unique in its resources and its strategic location, and said that international stability may hinge on its future.
"It is in everyone's interest, par- ticularly the United States, that the African development processes be understood and encouraged in order to preserve world peace." he said.
Kojo added thai ihe conlient "should use ils immense resources IO
IMC) ihe needs of its people." "Il is becoming more and more ob-
vious that we have lo refocus our economics." Kojo said. "We must rely on our strcnglhs lo a greater extent."
"Africa cannot expect lo make a huge leap forward unless il is prepared lo make a huge effort," he said. "But anything is possible, and the hesi years are still lo come."
Palmer reaffirmed Ihe importance of the issues at hand, and called the potential for fulurc growth in developing African nalions "truly ercal."
Parkway party packed with people « tmtimied from page I)
could challenge a Philadelphia Stars football player to a friendly wristwresiling match.
Free hugs were available for those less athletically-inclined.
Almost everyone al Super Sunday was prone to gorging on the interna- tional gourmet fare, food trucks and street vendors provided Mex- ican. Middle Eastern, Italian. Ukrai- nian. Japanese and Chinese foods, as well as the old Philly favorites, cheesestcaks and soft pretzels.
Super Sunday Publicity Director Nancy Kullman said, "You can eat your way down the Parkway."
Bui I aSallc College junior Rose McNamara found a different way lo describe the delicacy-ridden road- way.
"It's fattening!" she said with a sugar-powdered funnel cake in her hand.
Super Sunday, which first began as an open house of museums, drawing aboul 16.(MX) people the first lime, has grown in si/e each
year. Despite this growth, the event has
remained a non-profit enterprise, with all proceeds going lo Ihe Philadelphia Art Museum and the Academy of Natural Sciences, l.asi year the Art Museum alone look in S20.000, according lo Kullman.
The Women's Committees of the Academy of Natural Sciences and An Museum, which sponsor and organize the event, faced only one disappointment in planning this year's Sunday. They were hoping lo hold a special observation lo honor Philadelphia's year-long Cierman-
Amcrican triccntcnnial celebration, but were unable lo coordinate a pro- gram with the city's German organizations.
A main reason for Super Sunday's continued success is the high return rale. Philadclphians who were there for the first lime said ihcy will relurn. And the altitude of Super Sunday regulars was probably best expressed by one Drcxcl student who was making his third visit to Super Sunday.
"Hey. we're here every year!" he said.
Hackney limits spending t< imiiimril Irom page h
programs - ii will certainly allow money to be spent in ihe schools."
"I think the effort is a genuine ef- fort io economize Ihe costs of the ad- ministration," he added.
U'l-s
A >lISII \ A A DAY
11:55 AM in front of Steinberg Dietrich
Fake a short talmud break"
Hackney has called lor each of the live administrative units to submit an outline lo Ihe Budget Office by- November I. Hackney has also established an Adminstralivc Review" Board chaired by Senior Vice Presi- dent Helen O'Bannon which will monitor spending and decide whether to fill vacant positions in the five ad- ministrative units.
The members of the board are: Si inc. Vice Provost for University Life James Bishop, Vice President for finance Paul dazzerro. Vice Presi- dent for Human Resources (iarv Posner, Vice President for Opera- tional Services Arthur Hirsch. Denial School Associate Dean for Resource Management James Galbally and Medical School Associate IX-an for Resource Management Harry Halley.
If you've majored in
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It has taken the combined efforts of a highly motivated, forward think- ing, talented group of professionals that have brought us to the forefront of our industry. It will take similar minded people to lead us in- to the future. If you set high goals and achieve them and nave a solid aca- demic background, you should know more about us and we about you.
Our Representative will be on Campus
November 15,1983 Please submit your resume to the Placement Office at
4025 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, PA 19104
National Starch and Chemical Corporation An Affirmative Action Employer M/F
I III I) \in PENNSYLVANIA!* - Mondtj, October 10. I98J PAGEJ
B> OWEN I DMONMON With the discovery of insulin in
1921, the length and quality of the life Of the diabetic increased dramatical- ly. ! Shortly thereafter, scientists developed long-lasting forms of in- sulin, which allowed diabetics to cut Ihe number of daily insulin injections in half.
\ Now a major study is underway to determine if that change was a mistake.
According to doctors at the Hospital of the University oi Penn- sylvania and the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, several new report! suggest that stricter control of a diabetic's blood-sugar level - achievable through multiple injec- tions of insulin staggered throughout Ihe day - may reduce the incidence and severity of complications arising Irom the disease,
Though diabetes, an insulin defc- ciency caused by a malfunctioning of the pancreas, can be com rolled through the use ol insulin, standard treatments for the disease cannot pre- vent the devejopmeni of debilitating eye, kidney, nerve and blood vessel diseases associated with diabetes. As a result of these complications, diabetics have an increased risk of heart attacks and strokes, and may suffer from kidney failure, impaired eyesight and loss of feeling in the hands and feel.
Under the normal treatment pro- gram for Ihe disease, insulin - which controls ihe utilization of glucose b\ the liver, muscles and Lit tissue — is used 10 maintain the amount of sugar in the bloodstream ai levels that make the patient feel good, or- dinarily levels much higher than the blood-sugar levels ol non-diabetics.
But, using technologies that have Only become available over the pasi two 10 three years, some physicians have begun treating their patients under a radically different iherapj aimed at holding blood-sugai level- to those lound in non-diabetics.
Seth Braunstein, director of ihe Diabetes Clinic ai HUP. said a multimillion-dollar study funded b\ the National Institutes of Health call- ed ihe Diabetes Control and Com- plications I rial, is geared IO deter- mine the effect ol ihe new therapy on the incidence and severity ol the com- plications ol the disease I he study is bcinc conducted toinllv bv physicians at 21 research centers across America and Canada.
"Before we say to all out patients this is what von should do, we want to know that this is the thing to do." he said. "We aren't sure, it may not be the best thing lor ihcin."
II maintaining the level of sugar in the bloodstream at the levels of non- d tabetics proves important. Braunstein said he feels the treatment
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of the disease would undergo a com- plete transformation.
"I think physicians would then adopt a more stringent stance in terms of treating diabetes in general." he said. "The types of therapies used lor gelling good control in the lest would be widely adopted throughout the- world."
"It would require more effort by the patient than most now put into the care of their diabetes," he added.
Using a formal lor the study winch will be duplicated at each center. researchers working jointly at HUP. (HOP and the SchciC Eye Institute al Presbyterian Hospital will attempt to keep the blood-sugar levels of si\ diabetics as close to normal levels as possible. The patients will be required to test their own^lood-sugar levels two to three limes a day with a home testing apparatus and space out their insulin intake through either multiple injections QI use of an insulin pump, ,i device worn on the abdomen which keep- a constant supply ol insulin flowing into the patient.
A patient being treated bv conven- tion iherapy does not have to monitor his own blood sugar levels.
Over the initial two-year run of the study, the patients will be compared to a second group of six patients be- ing treated through the convention therapy to see iI either group develops more or less eye disease. Braunstein said eye disease was chosen as the locus of the study because of the ease ol measuring it and comparing one case to another.
"The development ol eve disease is an easier end point." he said. "You can lake photos of it. you can see changes, and there ate ways to quan- titate it. You can quantitale kidney disease, but we think thai takes longer to develop."
Io insure the uniformity of the study across the 21 research centers and the approximately 250 patients involved, all information is being col levied and analyzed in a central com- puter and all lab work is being done in a central laboratory. Researchers from Ihe different centers are also meeting every month to discuss the progress ol the study.
"A greal deal of effort has been spent in this study to make sure that all centers in this study do everything exactly the same." Braunstein said. "Information i~ being statistically analyzed in one central area and all lab work goes to one central area so that despite the tact that blood comes from all over the country, all values .ire equivalent and standardized."
"Ihe reason lor so manv centers was to make sure we had enough pa- tients to make the study Statistically meaningful." Braunstein said. "You could never in terms of manpower or patients recruit enough from one or iwo centers to make the studv mean
The new diabetes question is, are more insulin shots better?
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Seth Braunstein. director of Ihe HIP Diabetes Clinic, which is parl of a mitllimillion-dollar research effort on insulin
ingful." I hough the researchers at HUP
and (HOP have been screening potential applicants since May, ihey have not'vel found suitable patients for the study. All center- are impos- ing strict standards on participation, demanding that the diabetic be between 13 and 39 years old. have no medical or psychological problems that would interfere with ihe study and have had insulin-dependent diabetes for al least one year hut less than IS years. Ihe length of lime the patient has had Ihe disease is impor- tant because the pancreas sometimes work- on and off during the first year, supplying a limited amount ol insulin lo the body. Researchers want to control strictly the patient's insulin intake.
Patients must also be willing to undergo either the standard or ex- perimental therapy and make a com nutiin-iii to stay,With Ihe study tot two veil-. Women involved in the
stud) must agree not to become preg- nant during Ihe two-year period.
"The nature of diabetes is that the complications take place over a long peroid of time, so ihe patients have to he followed lor a long period of time." Braunstein said. "Patients have to be willing lo go whichever way the Hip of Ihe coin sends them, and, once that's been decided by the flip of the coin, lo feel they'll be willing to con linue in that iherapy for two years."
"Every time a patient drops out of the sunk along that two year period, it dilutes the statistical significance of ihe study." Braunstein added.
The HUP/CHOP center has reeciv ed over MX) applicants for participa- tion in the study, which offers the pa- tients free diabetes care, and expects 10 have its first three patients assigned 10 treatment groups by next month. Researchers in ihe iwo hospitals presently have patients al each stage of Ihe five-level battery of eligibility
tests a patient must pass before becoming part of the study.
Though some research centers have begun working with several patients, most are al ihe same Stage as HUP/CHOP. Braunstein said Ihe reseach centers plan to begin working with each palicni as he oi she clears ihe quallflng tests, and follow them lot a two-year period alter that
Braunstein said the Study may serve as a trial period fOI a It) year studv ol the influence Of blood sugar which would be conducted with 1000 to 2tXK) patients.
"The iwo-year part is going to ask, 'Do we need more lime to studv it? Does it lake more time to answer the questions we're asking? And does it take more patients?' " Braunstein said.
Patricia llvcs-Corressel. ad minlstrative coordinator tor the pro ject and a (HOP nurse, added that il the study unexpectedly shows positive
results in either direction before the end ol the two veil trial period, it will he halted
"If il becomes vciv clear that one group is developing more complica- tions, everyone will be notified and the studv will end." she said. "V\e don't want to tisk someone's health foi Ihe sake ol a research protect "
llves( orressel said that whethei the studv proves oi disproves the im- portance oi controlling a patient's blood-sugai levels, she feels the tesulls will have a IMJOI effect on the treatment ol diabetics, li the study shows control ol the patianll blood glucose level is unimportant, lives ( oircsscl said patients will probably nisi maintain levels at "whaievei level thev feel good al."
"It lakes a lot ol work to keep so- meone's blood sugar al a normal level." she said "Il there's no poinl lo doing that, you don't have lo do all that work."
Ill 11 All EN (the half lime Celebrity)
HAPPY 19th We decided to give you an extra fear to live
it up... or I'm it down!
love,
Betsy. Lisa. Debbie and all your fans
Monday Night Football 7 Foot Screen
Steelers vs. Bengals
*£ .9
J« •4,
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** »
[WO) POINT 10UNGI
To Chris, Happy Birthday to my favorite
camper... Here's to
pitching tents.
me.
• $.25 Hoi | • Pree Po|
LfivesJ
• 2 for 1 St. Paul.
DogS • $.50 Muy,s icorn • No Cover drink prices in University City
/'(igono's. are (il '
WORK STUDY POSITION AVAILABLE OFFICE OF HUMAN RESOURCES
Several positions involving Ihe tallowing duties
Light typing tiling xeroxing delivering materials Opportunity to learn about the Human Resources function
Call Erceiie Ridley HI 898-5249 tor an appointment
HONORARY DEGREE NOMINATIONS REQUESTED
The University Council Committee on Honorary Degrees welcomes suggestions for recipients of honorary degrees for Commencement on May 21, 1984. Nominations (including background biographical information) should be submitted in writing to any member of the committee, or to Lynne Perryman, office of the Secretary. 121 College Hall/CO. The deadline is October 31.
Committee members include: Marvin Wolfgang, chair. 289 McNeil/CR; Philip M. Cohen. 3965 Baltimore Avenue. Philadelphia, PA 19104; Robert F. Engs. 207 College Hall/CO; Elizabeth Flower. 307 Logan Hali/CN; Peter J. Freyd. 4N38 DRL/EL; Benjamin F. Hammond. Dental School/Al; David K. Hildebrand. Suite 3000 SH- DH/CC; Kathleen Kelly, Pathology and Laboratory Medicine. 34th and Hamilton Walk; Arthur J. Lawrence. 8 Fern Road. Turnersville. NJ 08012; Robert J. Rutman. 148 Vet Schooi/Hl; Eliot Stellar 243 Anat- Chem/G3; Edward J. Strong, Box 268, 711 HRS, 3901 Spruce/BB.
Juniors, Seniors, Graduate Students, Faculty, Staff
*AO s\© <cd td
ta\©s
no**? oro etf
Credit Card Sign Tuesday, October 11 Wednesday, October 12
10 am - 5 pm
*e Or*
8. Qf»*
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Locust Walk Outside Dietrich Hall Rain Location: Houston Hall Lobby
Establish your credit rating Now!!
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The Newspaper hf%h_
TODAY REVISITED/David Cqlton sv.• .''}■■• j TODAY Ke.VIOII.giaJ/LAJViu ^nun
(The Bailtllilnsulimntatt Credit Where Credit Is Due rv/Vv «/' Pennsylvania
Monday. October 10. 1983
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M l»... I\ Isjn.jo .* pi.r-li-hcO M.-"idjfc rhr.'.ifh lfij») at Phila.lrlphia. PA icMw ■». cwpi du*w»f wwilw md waaHoa peiMaS
. . RaaMMM «,TIV jml .,nc iv>nr piihli.h«l m th* summer | . ,! ii HnlaJtlpliU IVnn.vlvjniJ iVItM
i .1 tli, MI, ,.t \u no pel turn. VCW Jl *H* W jlnul . i \ i ,||M II. i ■ ■ ' • ■■•■ M*l New ph.mc« (21*1
i ■. jntt tla^ilieil aJtciuwej ma) lx rij"«l ■ lla »aiae jdtiics. . ,, ..i ,idOfc>« nixili. jtion il li-j*i ihire wcvk* in jj.jri.1
Save 'Almanac' 1 he Universil) administration has become a iwo
newspaper town this \ear. as the "good-news" con
seious Penn Paper has joined ihe faculty-oriented
■Vim/tun .is ,i weekl) information organ. The ad-
minisiration has decided 10 tund both this year, then
decide whether to eliminate one at Ihe end of the
year. FacultJ members, with good reason, worry
that it is Mmanai that will be eliminated. And while
there may well be a need for an image-boosting
p.ipei at the University, il should not come at the ex
Dense of the more serious, discussion-oriented
Almanac.
The /'run Paper and Almanac have covered many
of the same issues in their first few issues of the
semester. Ihe difference is that only Almanac has a
column like "Speaking Out," which seeks comment
on policy issues Irom members of ihe Univcrsit)
community, or "From the (hair." which is a weekly
column on faculty concerns hv the leader of the
' policy Facult) Senate, or the many "For the Record'
statements by University administrators.
The Penn Pa/ter is published by the Office of
University Relations specifically to present the ad-
minisiralion's side of disputes. Almanac is under the
guidance of a faculty advisory committee, and is
designed to provide a neutral forum for the ex-
change of ideas.
Facult) members, the primary Almanac con-
stituency, base expressed time and again Iheir over-
whelming satisfaction with both ihe newspaper and
Ihe tenure of editor Karen (iaines. They have dubb-
ed The Penn Paper "The Pee Pee" or 'The Presi-
dent's Pravda." Thai may be loo severe. The Penn
Paper should be given a chance 10 do what il is sup-
posed 10 do: show the University in a good light 10
iis employees. Hut there can be no question thai
Almanac should remain the central focus of internal
connminicat ion at ihe University.
Letters to the Editor Editorial Missed the Point
I o the Editor: I asi Wednesday's editorial in this paper sccnis to draw
an inieresiinj conclusion. First u agrees with Ihe state-
menl that porn lilnis motivate rape. Then il states that
those who tear this damage "should stay linnu." Does this
mean silling al home last Friday night guaranteed lifetime
protection against sexual assault? Perhaps ii meant that
those who fear rape "should stay home" lor ihe rest of
iheir lives Bin studies show that man) rapes occur at
home Maybe just being at home Isn't enough - perhaps
10 stav safe von should hide in the closet, or under the
bed
li pom films cause rape, theii potential victims will not
be protected hv merel) avoiding these films Whether these movies ictuall) cause rape is ,i question lor scientists
10 answei If pom lilms do. whether Ihe) should be b.inn
cd i- .i question foi the legislatures and conns to decide.
\nd banning some forms ot expression does have iis
precedents I or example, u is illegal 10 make threats, or 10
Incite a rioi. Until the courts provide an answer (if, indeed, they do),
we will have to decide this one ourselves. Perhaps an
analog) will help clarify what it is we are deciding. If a
film glorified racial violence, and it was justly feaicd thai showing this film on campus would lead 10 racial violence
here, would we want 10 show u'.' Should the potential vic-
tims ot such v iolence have to pfl) indirectly, through their tuition, lor ihe facilities used 10 promote and show this
film? Currently, sexual violence seems more popular than
racial violence. Does this make il .inv less of an evil?
I he question is noi whether one segment of this campus
should dictate Ihe tastes of another. The question is
wheiher a segment of this campus will be endangered by
showing porn films. And this is a question thai has vet lo
be addressed.
JUD% SHAPIRO
College '84
Let's Have the Names lo ihe I ditoi
Dcai Nancy I unk. Re youi column, "What is This. ATO?" tOctobei 'i I,
loo, Mould have experienced "angci and fear" had I found nivseli in voui frightening situation.
You si.ue. "It i*extreme!) disappointing tl would have used a stronger word) that nianv students on this canpus
who are intelligent and well educated find abusing women
an acceptable sport...|that| women must realize that it is to their advantage to repoii any incidents ol abuse so thai
those men who harass women will le.itn to think twice
before doing so. once they realize then actions will not In-
endorsed ." Nancv. whose actions' You haven't told us
who these people are. Isn't thai a kind ol endorsement?
"ion merel) describe "a supposedl) class) fraternity." Un-
til these men are identified bv name, lorcine recognition
ol their own behavior, forcing reaction to friends' sur- prise, disin.iv and disgust, will thev icallv he likelv to
change' Yes. vou ma) lose friends in that fraternity, oi at least
the one Iriend von stopped hv to see. yes, you'll make
waves.inn vou'll also make this campusa little safci foi all
the iesi ol us.
I hank vou lot voui article. DANA PORTKR
\nncnheru '84
Imagine waking up three times a
week for a mandatory 8 a.m. class
that requires a 10-pagc paper, three
midterms, a class presentation and a
final. Il is a grim prospect, but many
prc-med and engineering students
have faced and survived worse. Now imagine that the University
refuses to grant academic credit for
that course or for ihe other seven re-
quired by ihe major. A sick joke? Nol for Naval ROTC students in
the College, who must take eight courses in addition to the required 32.
vet receive no credit for any ol the
eight. It was not always this way. for the
College extended credit to ROTC
courses through Ihe late 1960S, but
eventually withdrew those credits in
the face of anti-Vietnam student
agitation. This year. College junior Mark
Montgomery and other NROTC
students have begun the overdue
struggle to restore the credits by peti-
tioning the school to grant credit for
five out of ihe eight NROTC core
courses. The NROTC students claim Ihe
College should follow ihe Wharlon
and Engineering Schools; Wharlon
grants credit for two courses, SEAS
for five. In addition. Montgomery
and supporters point lo Mil. Duke
and ihe University of Virginia as
other institutions which credit
NROTC courses. The objections thai Monigomery
faces can be separated into two
distinct categories. The most
legitimate is the concern that ihe technical emphasis in some courses is
nol suited for College recognition.
Reading the syllabi submitted by
the NROTC students to the College
might resolve this concern. One ex-
ample is the Naval Science 202
syllabus, which states the course will
examine U.S. naval history and the
"role and function of Ihe Navy in the
nation's defense." The course requirements are str-
ingent: a reading list devoted lo U.S.
history, such as works hv Samuel
Morrison, three midterms, a 10-page
paper and a class presentation. With a
class si/e of 20. attendance is man-
datory. Ihe emphasis on U.S. history and
the role of naval activity in making
that history is perfect!) compatible
with College requirements for course
recognition. Several political science
and history courses have a similar ap-
proach and are recognized. In tact,
the NROK work load appears
heavier than several accredited Col-
lege courses. While ihis course may satisfy
academic requirements, each of Ihe
petitioned NROTC courses should he
individually evaluated before a vole
can be expected by the Faculty
Senate. Unfortunately, some oppose this
serious evaluation solcv because of its
association with the ROTC program. Ihis is essentially an anti-military
bias thai is truly emotional and hearl-
lelt. but not necessarily rational and
i u st i lied. Montgomery said Associate Col-
lege Dean lor Undergraduate Studies
Quotation ot the Day ')HII tlan'i find people like ihe '>»cv we've />»/ undei every
iHilm nvc n .■ feel that the department has fallen behind m main
laining the sun a) facult\ a \lmnlil have." -Fnglish Department Chairman Rnheri I ueid
■■ml Jt_u~« lOli tm Immr vail is*a bilncwi II SlctelM ■• Mgftf W*
TI—.i factlM «i «/»/» t*00
■aetioa HI SVWF OSW)
Tour
(1)
***>*• n» gaaaatsa *i tat*
gH al **• SO"** —1 nU —d faction of tba policy, tbo n«u)d
to •B * roconiaj
«-. U it •Ul ptOTlao Otoh »t JO» *
U) Driw*—<l»i m Igll i. palldo*
Hat tr- ead tM rolo of
(J) iaalrnai tto tojw M« (*; ■—|ggj|| t»a role of rJ>
■J,, »Ult«rr auitara
13) Halm I Mill ttaa aajor ttal MTatlac taaa to cat
(*) WNOoatU. aa aoacaclatl to aa laluraae a
aaaicta to tortjaaaraa laalaaa'. Bat
tSnV oapoalat totaaai asa iiuniitlaaal aUltar? haw aMaetoa atxat«a0| t
Peter Conn told him he "would op-
pose the NROTC drive because in
world history the worst thing to hap
pen is U.S. militarism." Though
Conn was not available lo verify Ihis.
another student leader present States
Conn added he would resign before
NROTC credit was re-Instated. If true, this reaction is unfortunate,
for a refusal to examine the courses on Ihe basis of academic merit will
obscure the issue in a fog of emo-
tionalism. This tendency already ap-
peared at the October 7
Undergraduate Assembly meeting.
One UA member urged student op-
position to NROTC courses which, in
his words, "teach militarism." He
also argued lhal ROTC students
should nol receive credit "because
they receive payment for their college
work." These arguments arc unfounded
and are the direct outgrowth of emo-
tional over-react ion to ihe concept of
ROTC . I irsl, though related lo the military. NRO'IC study ol history is
nol militarism. This examination is inherent to
political science, history and even
peace science. Before protesting,
those opposed to NROTC credit
should examine Ihe courses under
pctilon. Some may be found to be
"militaristic" and undesirable, but
Others may not. Whatever the verdict.
the courses should be judged on
academic merit. Opposition to NROIC credit
because of payment demonstrates a
shallow understanding of the ROTC
program. NROIC students receive
monies because they are on a scholar-
ship program, whether lull ot limited
riot* _ Waclanal aofai
Using this logic, this complaint would
apply 10 National Merit finalist win- ners. University scholarships and
even, hv indirection, work-studv
grams. I lie obligation 10 serve alter
school is the only difference with
ROTC grants. To combat these
misunderstandings, Montgomery and
NROK students must define the
issue as academic and then maintain
this focus.
It is possible llus locus has alrcadv
been lost, but the student referendum
on the issue scheduled for this rues-
da) and Wednesday offers a chance
to redirect attention on academic issues, should the referendum -up
port ihe NROIC proposal, ihe UA
would then be faced with a mandate
from the student bod) Ihe NROH supporters see UA en-
dorsement as necessary lor the
NROIC to gain support from ihe
University Council in November.
Lven with this support. Montgomery must then convince ihe I acull) Senate to gel the credit ihe group seeks.
Tver the oplimisl. Monlgoinerv
notes lhal the issue only narrow K
failed two years ago in Ihe senate and
said he hopes to reverse lhal decision.
The NROIC" students have forced
the University coniiiiunuv to decide if
courses will be evaluated on the basis
ol academic merit or emotional bias.
I hose who seek objective and tail
analysis should support the NROK
drive and let the I -acuity Senate
decide ihe issue before ihe watchful
eve ol ihe entire i inlversit).
David ( olton n a senior /» ihe Col- lege, lodav Revisited appears alter-
nate \l(lllll(l\ v
BLOOM COUNTY/Berke Breathed
WM'bTHZ (tClU0KV\l\ FOR OPUS.'
flES6flR0f. IV M YOU
TOrWUHflr THTr'K <XT UNP&R -fwrn:
\
PWeuiN: A SMAU- OClfiti WD THAT 5MEU-S OF (M. WET HUSHPUPPieS ANP WHICH HAS A NOSE -me size OF MASSACHUSETTS...
Restating the University.Policy ojj^exual Harassment By Thomas Ehrlich
It is ihe purpose oi this statement to reiterate |he I niveisiis's pohev on sexual harassment and 10 idcnlilv
the resources av.nl.ihle to individual- who believe thev
have been subjected to such coercion. ProvosiS
Memorandum 13 HO. issued on Ma) 6. 1980, defines the
University's responsibilit) in matters ol sexual harass
mem " \- an employer, the University seeks |o ensure lhal
• ihe workplace is free from harassment. \s an educational
institution, ihe University's commitment to eradicating
■ exiial harassment goes beyond the Equal Opportunit)
( omnnssion guidelines."
sexual harassment in an) context is reprehensible, and i- a
mallei Ol narticulai concern to an academic communitv in
■ which students, lacull) and stall are related by Strong
I bonds ol intellectual dependence and trust. Sexual hartfss-
l menl most frequcntl) occurs when one person has some
power and aulhorilv over another. For purposes ol
i inversiiy policy, the term "sexual harassment" refers to
anv unwanted sexual attention lhal: (I) involves a staled
' or implicit threat lo the victim's academic or employinent
j status; (2) has the purpose or effect of Interfering with an • individual's academic oi work performance; or ()] creates
• an intimidating or offensive academic, living or work cn-
". vironmenl. Ihe University regards such behavior as a
! violation of the Standards of conduct required of all per
: sons associated with the institution. Accordingly, those
• inflicting such behavior on others within the University k selling arc subject to the full range of internal disciplinary
• action, including separation from the institution. L" Any student, faculty member or other employee who
; believes he or she is a victim of sexual harassment may
report the complain! tr his or her advisor or supervisor or
to the superior ol the person who is behaving objec-
tionably; the individual who receives such a complaint has
the responsibilit) lO pursue the mailer and may draw upon I niversiiv resources' Ihe person receiving the com-
plaint must treat it as confidential, to be communicated
onlv to the appropriate authorities. In addition, all per-
sons who believe they are victims of harassment, including
those who are reluctant to raise the matter with a super-
visor, arc encouraged to use the other avenues within the
University through which guidance and counseling can be
obtained, formal and informal complaints can be made,
and corrective action, as appropriate, can be taken.
The following Universil) resources and grievance
mechanism'* are available:
\ General Resources
DThe Women's I enter will aid students, faculty and
stall with counseling, advocacy, advice and referral con- cerning formal and informal avenues of redress in mailers
ol sexual harassment. The Women's Center does nol con-
duct investigations, and will keep all information con-
fidential. 2)The Office of the Ombudsman exists to help resolve
grievances of all members of Ihe University community -
students, faculty and staff - on a confidential and infor- mal basis, and can assist persons with complaints about
KXual harassment to decide on the course of action that
they want to take. The office is independent of the Univer- sity's formal admistralive structure and grievance
mechanisms. The Office of the Ombudsman may also be
requested bv the Office of Student Fife to undertake a for-
mal investigation of charges ol sexual harassment of
Students (see HI a below).
li. Additional Resources \)Stutlents: in additon lo the General Resources listed
ill Section \ above, students niav call upon the billowing
resour.es:
a)The Director of the Office oj Student Life is
responsible for dealing with student grievances arising
under title l\ of the Educational Amendments ol 1972. .which prohibits sex discrunuiat ton in education.
Grievances associated with student employment ma) also
fall within the Director's put view. Complaints bv students
ot sexual harassment niav be made lo the Director, who
will supervise, or delegate 10 the Ombudsman, an In-
vestigation into the mattei b) Student complaints Ol sexual harassment by facul-
ty may be brought by the Student or an advocate on behall
of Ihe student lo the department chair or dean ol ihe
faculty member. Die appropriate School Committee on
Academic freedom and Responsibility may investigate
the case, either on its own Initiative 01 Bl the request of an
academic administrator. C) Victims ol harassment niav seek assistance from
the University Counseling Scrvuc. </./> and i esbian Peer
( ounseling and the psycluativ section of Ihe Student
Health Service. Contacts with these services are strictly
confidential and may be particularly helpful to students
desiring assistance in dealing with their feelings about
iheir experience with sexual harassment. 2) The University Stall and I acuity: In addition to the
General Resources listed in Section A above, nonacademic
staff may utilize the formal grievance mechanism describ-
ed in Personnel Policy (801. Faculty may utilize the
Faculty Grievance Procedure described in the Handbook
for Faculty and Administration. Thomas Thrlich i\ provost oj the <- mversin.
Drama Guild charms with steamy 'Teibele9
By ROBKRT I. A I. AS/ In a word, enchanting. The Philadelphia Drama Guild's
current production of Teibele and Her Demon at the Annenberg Center's Zcllerbach Theatre comes at you like a cute kid with a question. Charming yet not cloying, engross- ing yet not didactic, the Drama Guild's rendering of Issac Bashes is Singer and Eve Friedman's drama seduces the audience with guts and warmth while subtlely mocking its
Review Ncnsibililies at every turn. It's meaty Muff, and it's what good theater is •all about.
Singer, winner of the Nobel Pri/c lor Literature in 1978, is one of our quintessential storytellers - and one ol our more heavy-handed. While his prose is spiritual to the point of rjiysticism. it's also lendentiously rjioralistic. dropping anvils on the
^reader's head every third page or so. lAnd Teibele anil Her Demon is no Exception despite co-writer Eve I riedman's mitigating grip on Singer's near-rabbinical aphorisms. 5 Hut Teibele, like all of Singer's writings, is also universal and com- plex in all its simple Yiddish provin- cialism. And this, the story ol I Schizophrenic tutor's aide in rural Wth century Poland who by day repulses Teibele with diffidence and bs night charms and discourses his way into her bed under the guise of an omnipotent demon. Teibele slyly confronts issues like the nature ol love, the circumvention of custom and the effect of disguise upon one's essence, among other things. Good literature, sure — but it presents an immense problem lor anyone who tries to portray so much ethos and
pathos on one stage. It's a problem thai the Drama
Guild has handled deftly, to say the least. Without leaning on one or two spectacular performances, director Stesen Schacter has woven a fabric of players, set and lighting that's warm enough to wear yet flashy enough to keep your attention - cast members listen to one another instead of simply waiting for their cues.
Timothy Landficld as the tutor's aide Alchonon docs a great Clark Kent/Superman impression; his shaking callowness as the original character is almost as impressive as his slithery, half-naked presence between the sheets. When I andfield philosophically flies on his own. he doesn't give away the ending with solemnity - instead, he casually understates, refusing to weigh down Treihele\ dialogue with dense pro- nouncements.
Such foreshadowing, however, is left to C ristine Rose as Teibele. Hers is an odd character: the wile aban- doned by her husband who cannot remarry under Jewish law. Rose plays it to the hilt, walking the tightrope between sexual aversion and relish with a hint of innocence and a whole lot of sly, earthy wisdom.
All this is aided by William Arm- strong's superb lighting, which creates magical blue and red moods over Harry Robinson's dusty, for- midable setting. And the small touches, such as the ambient original compositions by Richard Peaslee, transform this version of Icibclc from simple entertainment to an emotional statement of high value.
Icibclv anil Her Demon will play at the /ellcrbach Thcatie through October 2.'.
TH€RAP€UTIC SWCDISH MASSAGC RUTH HOSKINS M.S.UJ.
certified therapist I.R.M.S. Relaxation 61 Re-integration
Body Mind Si Spint
coll day or eve for art appointment (215) 687 3539 Reasonable Rotes
Students '/« Price off wt this od ujill come to your home
LUMr/ITCH HOUSE 4032 SPRUCE
222-3130 CWSBES MON. I"11 Mynlli ism SHABBOS- i i„|,u nilm |i In-, uflni
SIIMlllIU 111
ii urn Inii'i in Talmud Onux ami IIIM IISSIOM
nruii|i u |ini hiwiiih Klhii •- .i Clown Iwimkl) ill |Mirtl»n|
TOES 1 |.m Inlm in 1 HMI-.II SHABBOS AFTERNOON- I pin ,, .„ C'hnsHhlii iliiiindii 4 inn ■ '"" IVurmnK \a m t; p Kaxhriw
WED 7 piH HiijiinninM lluhrmi : in u in s irnhh i tin nun
s. imhi> Mrs
IIIMI iilli'ii'il AIKniu ml Tiilmuil ntwl AIIVIIIM ml
llubruw 11IIAi
See your Jostens' representative for a complete selection of rings and details of Jostens' Creative Financing Plans.
Date:
Time: Place: Deposit:
Oct. 10-14 Mon. - Fri. 10 AM-6:00 PM U of P Bookstore $20.00
Jostens* college rings offered daily at your bookstore.
h~ =,
THE DAILY PF.NNSYLVANIAN - Monday. October 10. 1983
Sleep In Them Contact Lenses
Farsighted Nearsighted
Astigmatism
\^\v*\ Continuous Wear "v 10% Discount with student ID
Dr L Schwartz Dr. I. Zeitlin 393b Chestnut St.
386-6200 Eye Exams-Fashion Eyewear-Optical Repairs
PAC.K 5
Welcome To
abner's • cheesesteaks •
hoagies • meatballs
38th & Chestnut Sts.
for fast pick-up, call
662-0100
I I A.M. - 3 AM - Mon. - Thurs
II A.M. -4 AM - Fri. - Sat.
2 P.M. - Midnite - Sun
rnijflll I 'i'tt"i>'
CAREER
CAREERS IN SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH Representatives from:
-Smith Kline & French Laboratories -Campbells Soup and -the Sun Company
will discuss career opportunities, job responsibilities, career paths and much more.
Wednesday, October 12 7:00 to 9:00 P.M.
Ben Franklin Room Houston Hall
To sign up call 898-7529
Licensed Professional
Right On Campus
Member of Large Discount Firm
Stocks- Bonds-Options New Commodities Fund
Free Daily Quotes
Coll for Info 066-4956
Convenient Discounted Commissions
LAST DAYS TO €NROLL
The Reading and Study Improvement Course teoches strategies for...
-coping with heavy reading and research assignments
-concentrating and remembering -taking notes -managing time -preparing for examinations
Vou can choose to take the course on Wednesdays, 6:45-8:45 p.m. October 12 to November 16,
or on Thursdays, 12-2 p.m., October 13 - November 17. Both sections will meet In Suite fi-10 of the education Building, 3700 UJolnut Street.
Vou may also attend two guided -practice sessions. Call the University Reading Study Improvement Service, 898-8434, for an interview to discuss the course and your reading and study needs.
Interview ond course ore free to Penn students, enrollment limited.
HILLEL AT PENN LISHMA is Hillel's offering of classes, seminars and workshops. These quality programs are designed to be of maximum value and interest to assist you in attaining skills knowledge and enjoyment. LISHMA is a good place to meet others and to share your ideas and feelings. Everyone is welcome.
Monday
6 15 i 30 pm
I 00-8 00 pm (4 sessions)
Tuesday
4 30b 15 pm
5 15 6 15 pm
7 30 pm
T0RAH STUDY Insliuclor Raobi
Lerb Tropper
Survey ol Jewish Humor Instructor Rabbi Michael Swarttz
Basic Laws ol Shabbal instructor Rabbi Yosi
Heber
YOREH DEAH Instructor Rabbi vosr Heber
Jews * Christianity A response to evangelical missionaries Instructor Michael Skooac
Wednesday
6 00-7 15 pm Bar/Bat Mitzvah Class instructor Cheryl Skoinick
Designed tor those who want to study the Torah and traditional commentaries No previous experience required
Surveys Ihe role ol humor in Jewish life wilh emphasis on the Modern American Jewish community Examples Irom classical Jewish texts as well as modern Jewish writers and entertainers will be examined
An overview ol basic laws ol Shabbat observance as lound in the Shuichan Aruch including Meiachol Muktzah etc m English lor students ol a" levels
Basic concepts intermixed with Melorshim This course is designed lor those with advanced level Talmud knowledge A discussion ot the underlying theology and philosophy ol ihose who aggessively try to convert Jews lo Chrisliamly and lalaciously posl thai one can embrace both Judaism and belief m Jesus The
arguments ol the Christian missionaries will be presented analyzed and reiuted on ihe basis ol accurate readings ol Sciolural citations history and comparative theology
For ihose who never had the opportunity or inclination belore this course will teach basic areas ol Judaism History Shabbat Kashrut Prayer Lite Cycle At the completion ot the course and alter proper preparation a Bar/Bat Milzvah
6 00-7 00 pm
7 15-8 15 pm
7 30 8 30 pm
6 15-7 15 pm 7 30-10 30 pm
Thursday
4 00-5 00 pm
5 00-6 00 pm
MODERN HEBREW Intermediates instructor Smadar Barber
Beginners
Instructor
Smadar Barber
YIDDISH Instructor Annetle Schwartz
Israeli Folk Dancing Coordinator Steve Schwartz
Beginners lat HHleli Teaching & Requests
Introductory to Judaism Instructor Rabbi Mort Levme
TFILIAH Prayer and Praying
ceremony will be ce • ■: student will need to study towards Hebrew reading lluency belore ceremonial preparation can begin
Vocabulary and simple sentences lor conversation will be stressed
Recognition ol letters vowels and
beqmner s level readinq will be
laugnt
Basic introduction to Yiddish language We will be learning both conversationa and written Yiddish No previous knowledge necessary Kumtun lernl zikh'
I no registration required)
in Houston Han Hiilel Members 50c Non-members S'
A survey ol Jewish practices & observances Emphases win be on what a Jew does that is Jewish intended lor Ihose who would like to strengthen their knowledge as wen as 'or ihose who n^ve never been exposed lo Judaism Reading ksl wwin be discussed at first class
What is it that we 00 when we pray' An analysis ol Biblical & Rabbinic sources concerning the meaning & purpose ol prayer & how these related to Jewish law & custroms
Contact the Hiilel Office to register.
All classes at Hiilel unless otherwise noted.
imiaii
mmmmmmm wmmmm wmmmmmmmm wmmmmm mm
PAGF.6 THK DAILY fKNNSYLVANIAN - Monday. October 10. 1983
OP'Barry Friedman
Smoke anil flame* from Ihe gasoline Iruek explosion on Ihe Schuslkill Kxpresswas I ri«I;i\
Expressway blast forces detour
SSSJ holds 'Run for Leonid' Hackney pledges support for Brailovsky
<( imilnurd irimi page h Maintenance crew toiled to jackham- o)c> through the highway. \ small
id ol tnotii-htcrs loitered neat a fcliian pumpct truck outside MMh Itreet Station, waiting rot an oppor- Iinit) to i slinguish the blaze.
\ pot check on streets neai the ex- ■rcsswa) last night found most of mem seriousl) congested, rhelongest Icla) was on the expresswaj itself, a . motorists waited as long as 90 liinutes to exit the highway 'or the ■etoui Ira flu conditions whiclf were I last night will likely worsen dur- lie lodav's tush hours.
\ five-mile trail ol cars filled both pines ol the cxprcsswaj east ol ihe g ! Street exit. Motorists leaving Ihe highwa) said ihcy had waited up to ,ni lioui anda hall in the exit line.
I he slow rate at which drivers left ■he highwa) at South Street kepi tral JK on 13rd Street moving without Belays But the South Street Bridge Ivas backed up in both directions as
police held hack traffic 10 allow Ihe detoured vehicles to entei the bridge.
The Kenned) Boulevard was closed between 22nd and Jtith Streets to MI veas .in access route fot emergency vehicles to the accident scene. Ihe boulevard remains closed today.
Market Street last night was ex- tremely congested in both directions between I5ih and 30th Streets .is motorists sought other routes in and out ol the city. Westbound traffic on Market Street was tied up between '0th and 34th Streets
Ihe crash occurred around 11:30 a in. Friday. fwo initial explosions turned the highwa) into a field of rag- ing flames. Secondar) explosions caused bj fumes igniting in storm sewers more than an hour later spew- ed concrete onto the road and gasoline into the Schuylkill River as rescue workers scrambled for safety.
Officials from the National I lansportation Safety Hoard, which is investigating the crash, said
temperatures in the fireballs may have reached 1000 degrees, melting the truck's aluminum lank. I arge clouds ol black smoke drifted over Center ( nv after the explosions.
The initial blasts engulfed a car driven by John Minter, 55, of Philadelphia and a lunch truck driven by Patrick Swint. 17, also of Philadelphia. Minter was killed in the fire while Swint was listed in critical but stable condition last night at the Si Agnes Hospital. Hospital officials said Swint has burns over 27 percent of his bod)
The driver of the tanker truck. David Smith. 29. of Vincland. N.J.. was also killed In Ihe accident.
Safely board officials said Satur- day they do not believe Smith was speeding before the crash, and blam- ed structural failure of the truck for the accident.
The Associated Press contributed lo this storv.
By CRAIG COOPF.RSMITH President Sheldon Hackney yester-
day pledged that the University will continue to fight for (he release of refusenik Leonid Brailovsky, who was admitted as a member of the Class of 1985 but has been unable to gain an exit visa from the Soviet Union.
Hackney made the comment, then ran five kilometers in 21:22 to finish in 27th place in the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry-sponsored "Run for Leonid."
The president, who is chairman of the Pcnn for Brailovsky Committee, discussed Brailovksy's plight at Franklin Field before the start of the race.
"We must continue to stand strong together to get Leonid out of the Soviet Union," Hackney said. "I think the cause for the race is superb, and I admire Ihe people who've been at ihis persistently for a number of years. I only wish their efforts could be rewarded by having Leonid come join us here."
Brailovsky has twice been denied an exit visa by Ihe Russian govern- ment. A published mathmetician, Brailovsky was prohibited from stu- dying at a Soviet university for refus- ing to join the Young Communist League. He is currently attending a trade school.
Also speaking before the race was Social Systems Science Professor Aron Katsenelinboigen, a personal friend of the Brailovsky family. He commended tie 99 runners who par- ticipated in the race.
"Your contribution is enormous in encouraging rcfuscniks to fight, sur- vive and excel in the Soviet Union," Katsenelinboigen said. "This will show them that the people of the west care about them."
In the men's division of the race, Willcm Vcrbcke, a graduate student in psychology and management from Belgium, took first place with a time of 17:03.
After ihe race. Verbekc said: "Be- ing from Belgium. I'm very sym- pathetic to Brailovsky's plight, and I understand it very well. The only way
- .__■■_ _ DP'Dan Schmuller,
President Sheldon Hackney and SSSJ Co-chairman Mark Kaplan at
yesterday's 'Hun for Leonid'
to get him here is to do something about it, and this is a country of doers in which the people are very motivated."
In the women's division, College sophomore Lisa Kinsilingcr finished first with a time of 23:11. "We definitely helped Leonid indirectly through this race because with today's fitness cra/e, a race like this attracts attention," she said after the race. "It's also a fun thing to do on a Sun- day afternoon."
Bob Moss, an administrative assis- tant to U.S. Sen. Arlcn Specter, prais- ed the participants in the race,
especially Hackney. "(an you imagine the president ol
the University of Moscow doing* this?" said Moss, who spoke alter this race at a reception at Franklin Field.
"It really shows the difference in philosophies between the two coun] tries on human rights."
City Solicitor Mark Aronchik presented the victors with miniature liberty Hells, saying, "The real hlehlood of this movement is you. I can't think of anything more ap- propriaie to give than the symbol of freedom."
English Department plagued by loss of faculty K mimmcd from page 11
nrolessoi rot each one who has left "There is no such thing as automatic replacement,"
< nnarroc said recently, "But positions fot winch an im- l nil case can be made will he likely to he authorized."
"It i- unrealistic at this point rot an) department to ■link that it will grow dramatically," ihe dean continued. y, I don't iiimk ii will happen lothel nghsh Department."
"It's a good department with a good reputation and t\cryonc intends fot it tosta) that »a>." he added. » I ueid -aid he knew it would have been more realistic 10 »sk lor three authorizations than seven, bin added thai he flecls the present request is "the lip of the iceberg."
Iliere ccrtainl) is a need for an increase target than Jero," I ucid said "But that can be negotiated in light ol ■he needs ol thcothci parts ol ihe school."
He said the department will also ask for an authoriza- tion ii> hue one associate professor. '. I ucid added that ihe final decision lo hue new faculty members will be made in December, when ihe University Snidgcl is approved In the liusiccs. I Hui even it the department is given permission to hire *1111>ic lacully members, it-, problems still are not over Sucid saui ihe search pious- tor three candidates ol
imilai stature to those professors who have left would ake al least three scars.
■ I nglish Department I ndergraduate Chairman Alice ftscllv s.ud she rears there will he a decline in educational
tins ii the facult) members are not replaced, since
departures have left holes in certain scholarly periods. "For a well-rounded cducaiion in I nghsh. you need to
otter courses in all ihe areas," she said. "We are not dropping al all in the number of students
we teach, bin we are dropping in faculty," she continued, "If we are supposed to administer more and more students with fewer faculty. I think some faculty would leave because llies would feel lhey can't leach here."
Kelly added that she feels some faculty would consider leaving the department because of a change in the In- tellectual climate.
"II we don't hire new senior faculty members, the others will feel thai ihey won't have peers to work with," she said. "I hey might begin lo look for a place with a communif) of scholars on their own level."
Probably the group that is most affected by the faculty turnover is ihe approximately ISO students enrolled in the department's graduate program, while spot lecturers can be hired to cover undergraduate classes, graduate students depend on one member of the department for their dissertations. The loss of a single faculty member, therefore, can cause major disruptions in their planned academic careers.
English Department Graduate Chairman Wendy Siciner said she feels the vacancies in the dcpartmcnl have been fell acutely in ihe graduate division.
"More than anyone else, grad students need continous contact with their professor." she said.
Siemer said the turnover has caused a severe problem
in staffing the different topic areas necessary for a degree.
"The biggest problem is covering the curriculum," she said. "We go scrounging around looking for anyone who knows anything about It. So far we've been lucky."
She said graduate students will not get the breadth in a topic area they need if they are "exposed to only one pro- fessor, in one area."
"I know there's a general dissatisfaction about the general amount of coverage between Milton and Eliot," she added.
Siciner said she feels unrcplaccd vacancies could lead to a diminishing of the department's reputation, and ultimately, to a lowering in the number and quality of the graduate applicant pool.
"To get the authorization for three professors is a good step - but it doesn't amount to the whole thing," she said. "After a few years, it really amounts to something."
"When a student applies to an institution, they ask who's teaching there," Stciner continued. "I can sec [the unrcplaccd vacancies) as a lowering of the general level, and if it continues, it will lead to a lowering of applica- tions from good students."
Celeste Langan, the president of the University's Graduate English Association, said the faculty turnover has caused some students to rely on retired faculty members to complete their dissertations.
"When you have to send him a chapter in the mail, you're obviously losing a lot of interaction and advice a
Insatiable OP Ch'is Barnes
Midi I 190(1 I'Mil'l L SHOW I |i I p ai i,MM, Auditorium Friday night lor Pi-nn I ninn ( oiiniil's controversial showing of Ihe Vraled film Insatiable. Pt C member Cent I Smith said there were no protests at the film, hut thai Ihe Penn Women's Mliance distributed fliers on the effects on pornography. Ihe turn nut was "a little larger" than for an average PI (film. Smith said.
Terminal fever
professor here could have provided," she said. "It's bad' Tor the professors still here loo - because they're over burdened with dissertation students."
langan said ihe vacancies have also caused an over- cnrollment in some of the seminar classes graduate students are required to lake.
The problem has been particularly acute for students ol the Rcnaissaince. Two Renaissance professors have' departed, and two arc on leave - which has left the burden on the shoulders of a visiting scholar.
"If you're a Renaissance scholar and you need lo take a Renaissance seminar, chances are everyone else in Renaissance studies will be Irving 10 lake il too," she said, adding thai the first seminar on Milton to be offered in several years was extremely overcrowded.
Langan said the vacancies have forced some graduate Students lO leave the University. "Those who would be most upset arc no longer here," she said.
The loss has also led to insufficient offerings in areas other than the Renaissance. English Graduate Fellow, Linda Troost said she has seen the depth of coverage in her specialty field - IKth Century drama - change since her arrival at the University five years ago.
"When I came here, there were three professors with a big name - now there's only one." she said. "For this year, in particular, things have fallen lo pieces for people: starting their dissertation."
"But there just don't seem lo be enough big people to; replace them." she added. »
r I l ' l I
Hundreds join 'Lisa' at computer fair K> IHHK /II I
Over 2(KH) students, faculty and members of the Philadelphia small business community punched keyboards, twirled joysticks, entered dala and read print-outs at the third annual Wharton Microcomputer lair on Friday.
Ihe fair was held in Vance Hall, where representatives of local com- puter retailers and national firms such as IBM and Hewlett-Packard manned approximately 30display tables.
Strolling about the fair, it was dif- ficult lo avoid being struck by some of ihe computer talk that has become a pan of 1983 society.
"And if they find a bug in the chip, they may not change it." said one young computerphile dressed in a three-piece suit.
"If you fire the cross-terminal, you mess up the pivot." said a man spor- ting Western headgear.
And in one corner, a group of men representing Apple Computer nervously discussed the possibility of IBM introducing a competitor for "Lisa." the computer thai may have been (he hit of ihe fair.
Bui it was all lost amid the energy and bustle that characterized the event,
Thomas Dolby, a salesman for the Jonathan's Apple chain of computer retailers who bears no relation to the singer, was busily demonstrating "I isa" to a group of students.
"We've been here every year," Dolby said. "The fair is getting bigger and better each year."
Dolby added that he feels the University is an excellent environment
in which to gain exposure. "Most of the people in attendance are students," he said. "And 40 percent of all students are considering buying a microcomputer sometime in the next two years."
Bill Wagner, a representative of Hewlett-Packard, was discussing graphics capabilities with several faculty members. He said he thought the fair was "just excellent."
"We've been to a lot of different personal computer expositions," he said. "This is probably the best as far as the level of intelligence of those in attendance."
Wagner, whose company paid $125 for its display space, said the fair is an "integral part" of Hewlett-Packard's marketing strategy in southeastern Pennsylvania.
"We like to make a showing at all the shows." he said. "But some of ihcm arc more effort than they're worth. This fair is definitely wor- thwhile for us."
Conrad Boyse, a Wharton School graduate who now works for the firm Computers for Professionals, said that his day at the fair had been plea- sant and — potentially - very pro- fitable.
"We have 60 to 70 people 'in- terested," he said. "It's been excellent. I've never seen such good attendance. We've been busy non-stop all day."
Engineering School senior Ned Bat- chelder said he spent most of Friday at the fair, sampling the various wares on display. But the machine he felt was most interesting was the new Apple "Lisa," which can be com-
(Continued on page 7)
OP/Keith Bickel
A Hewlett-Packard salesman al the Wharton Microcomputer Fair
V
I III DM I ^ PKNINSYLVANIAN - Monda>. October 10. I9M3 PA<;i: 7
Enthusiasts flock to computer fair (Continued from page 61
mandcd by using a visual pointer. • "It's an amazing computer, because for the first time it provides a unified software package for everything you heed at the office," he said. ; Batchelder added that he has at- )ended all three of the Wharton fairs, and that he feels this year's was the most exciting in both its scope an in ihc technological advancements on 'display. ; Engineering School senior Dan Kir-
chheimer said that he is in the market for a terminal, adding that his lime at the fair was informative and well- spent .
"It's a great idea, and I hope it con- tinues," he said. "Ttm was much more interesting than last year. The vendors seemed to be better inform- ed. The technology presented was much more interesting."
Kirchheimer added that he has at- tended many similar fairs, but that they were presented in much larger
environments - such as New York's Madison Square Garden. He said the smaller area made for greater in- timacy, and for him. made the fair more enjoyable.
"The small area lends a certain per- sonality to the fair," he said. "You're less intimidated by the vendors, you're freer and more comfortable asking questions, and you're not afraid that you'll get a hard sell from the vendors."
U. accreditation to be reevaluated (( onlinneil from page I)
■ "Wc are inherently going to ask them, midway through the implemen- tation of our five-year plan, do they Nee some vital connection amid and amongst out schools that we're overlooking." Zcmsky said. "It gives us an audience outside ourselves that 'will still be concerned with what we're doing."
/cmsky said the committee will .work closely with administrators. "It will help us test our planning assump- tions," he said.
Associate Provost Marion Oliver said last week that there is little or no
chance that the University's accredita- tion will not be renewed.
"An institution of the caliber of Penn would be able to decide how the committee can best serve the purpose of the University," Oliver said.
Middle States is a private, non- profit organization comprising elementary, secondary school., and higher education institutions. Col- leges and universities belong to the body on a voluntary basis, and each pays a fee to maintain operating costs.
The committee will receive the I niversity's report, a compilation of
the five-year plans, about a month before it arrives at the University. It then will issue an oral report while on campus from February 26-29. to be followed by a formal report later in the spring.
iDUC ] Exclusive Area Engagement
Friday, Oct. 14 - 8 PM Jubilation!
Dance Company "A unique blend of modern, ethnic,
jazz and classical ballet techniques,
rooted in traditional African dance."
Harrison Auditorium, University Museum 33rd & Spruce Streets
Tix: s8 public, s6 with Penn ID on sale at Annenberg Box Office
for more info., call 898-4444
t Eat a 12" "Uno" pizza
and don't pay! Monday is Contest Night. If yon win, your pizza is FREE. Your opponent is Uno's Original Deep Dish Pizza filled with deleetahlc ingredients. To Win, simply eat the whole thing by yourself (Time limit — 30 minutes).
So hring your friends to cheer you
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P.S. If you win, your name will be recorded on our walls for posterity as a truly GREAT PIZZA EATER
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Appointment infnrrrution rruy hrohtainrtJ bv tuntauins-
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PM.r.H THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIA!* - Monday. October 10. 1983
Undergraduate Accounting Society
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Mike Todres of Main Hurdman Topic: what the CPA's Role
is in Marketing Professional Services
Today 4:30-6:30 Houston Hall - HSP Room
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TELEM The Movement lor Zionist Fulfillment
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Freshman football falls to Brown, 10-2 First loss in ten games for Don Dobes' team
Hi KICK RKSMC K There were many errors com-
mitted during I-riday's Ircshman football game between Pcnn and Brown at Franklin Field. But the costliest mistake for the Quaker* was made by the Bruins.
In Penn's 10-2 loss - its first m ten games - the key plav was I 55-yard touchdown run by Bruin quarterback Michael Pisani early in the second quarter.
"Vmally it was a mistake," Pisani explained. "I should have given the hall 10 the fullback, but I missed the handolT. So I started to run. I lotind daylight, and that was it."
Brown's other points were SCOrcd with OIH minute left in the game on a '4 yard field goal b> kicker-punter William Hayes.
The Quakers' only points BIM
involved Haves. After Brown's lust drive ol the day siallcd. he prepared 10 punt. But the snap from center was too high, and the ball rolled into the end /one Hans »as forced to MiMMhei ihe ball, giving I'enn a safely.
I hese two points were all I'enn recorded, however, because the offense struggled throughout. John Shapiro started the game at quarterback, but was ineffective
(2-7, 28 yards, one interception). Shapiro, in his first starting assignment, was heavily rushed. And many of his hurried passes were thrown into heavy coverage.
Shapiro was replaced early in the second quarter by Scott Mor- cott (8-2346, two), who played the rest of Ihe game. And he also failed to move Penn into the end, /one. But Pcnn coach IX>n Dobes said Morcott would start al quarterback next week at Kut/- town.
"The quarterbacks and Ihe receivers just couldn't get together." Pcnn receiver Don Wilson said
I he only offensive player lo perform well was Rich Comi/io. who gained 115 yards on 20 car- ries. He accounted for 70 percent of Penn's rushing yardage. But he fumbled twice, loo, in a game marked by turnovers - six by I'enn. two by Brown.
Despite the poor showing by the offense. Comi/io was not discouraged.
"The offense was a lot more confident this week," he said. "We gained a lol of yardage |28l total yards), but we've got lo Man getting more points on the board."
"We'd miss one block," he con- tinued, "or I'd get tripped up by the last guy. We should have had a couple of touchdowns."
Added Quaker coach Don Dobes: "I was extremely disap- pointed with the turnovers, our problem offensively was that we couldn't sustain anything. We had too may mental breakdowns. We missed assignments, our backs
weren't hilling Ihe holes and our quarterbacks were ofl ■ "
While the offense struggled, the defense was outstanding for the second consecutive week. Brown totalled just 148 yards against the I'enn defense, which was led bv Jeff FOfllna. He had two sacks and several outstanding tackles Defensive back I'll. Franklin also played well.
OP'Allissa Ehrenkr
The Penn freshman football team lost lo Brown rriday
Soccer loses to Brown in overtime (( imlimu-il Irimi hack panel
post. Ihe goal was the lirst ol I'rl- ici\ careet.
Ihe Quakers' lying goal came with lust over seven minutes remain ing in Ihe game. Mike (ialoppo knocked down a corner kick that overshot the Brown goal, and sent it back toward the middle. O'Donovan charged m Irom the cduc ol the
pen.ills area and scored on a knee- high voile) from six yards.
In the overtime. Brown quickly regained momentum, less than three minutes into the first period. I red < oons lolled a free kick into the penalty area. It proceeded to bounce over ihe heads ol I'aggi and Gordon (lark. And then, as I'enn goalkeeper Brian Belancourl - who
W. Cross Country K tutlinued from hack page)
covered the biggct holes, v a result, several I'enn runners had difficult) .il the beginning ol the race.
And at the end. Ihe team was not even sine il had won
"Right alter the race we ihoughl we had lost." Mary I inner said. "We were moping around when Betty |I'enn coach ( ostan/a| came running over veiling that we bad won by DM point."
I ckcl's ran the I mile course in 17.01. lurnci. who finished ninth overall, was ncxi fot Pcnn with a lime ol 17.31, Cricket Batz and Damorc finished eleventh and I welt h in 17.34 and 17.41 lane DcMaivo. the final Quaker finisher, ran a 17.50.
With this victory, the Quakers arc undefeated going into the most dii ticult pan ol then schedule.
"Al the beginning, oiu coal was lo
-I.III oil strongly in ihe meets against West Chester and Princeton." I'enn coach Julio Piazza said. "So far, the team has developed as we had hoped. I was glad to see ihe leant improve over the first lime we ran Ihe course. I'm sine we will continue to see im- provement."
Ihe Quakers will have 10 improve then nines lot their next meet - the Big 1 oc Championship. I'enn defeated all of the Big I isc learns in the Invitational except vitlanova, which did not compete. Ihe Wildcats will be the most talented learn the Quakers have faced,
"Villanoia has an outstanding chance lo qualify for the Nationals," Piazza said. "Ibis week, we're going l.i have to work on that first mile We have to be able 10 go out fast and establish out position without hurling out performance in ihe rest oi ihe race."
'HUP IMMUNIZATION SERVICE"
The Immunization Service at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania is available for travel and related immunization services. The service is located off the Silverstein Pavilion lobby and is by appointment only. A physician is available for consultation, if necessary. Fees are reasonable but payment will be expected at the time of service.
For an appointment, call 662-2427
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For seven years. Robert MacNeil ami Jim Lehrar hav* been bringing yon news anal- ysis every weeknight Now, they're going to report the day l news. too On the new Mar Neil I .ehrer Newsl lour
They'll give yon news sum- maries for the i lav .on I then go on to examine stories in depth Si start petting the news where yonve been get- ling the analysis
Major funding is provided bv AT&T, the national corpo- rate underwriter
AT&T
W-l,,,. IIMI IW*rt.WF.TA.WrtimtNl.mrtadM*^'"^^^™'.''''',., !,„. h„„|,.,| In MM Pablr I. l-v n sc«,,..n- ».MI ihr I dfpafflM H.r I IIIIIK Br...cl. ..lin|
TheMacNeil/Lehrer NEWSHOUR
We<-knifdit.s on PBS. ihvvk Imal T% Httfaafa.
was inserted alter Uohner received a yellow card - ran off Ihe goal line to rescue Ihe ball, forward Sev PalydOWyCZ nodded il over Hcl.in court's head and into ihe nel.
"We're a little bit baffled about what we have lo do lo win." co- captain (hiis Van Note said. "When you win it's easv lo win. bin when you're losing, you gel in a nil. The goali we gave up weren't ver> good eoals and we didn't eel inanv
chances. I guess we have 10 open up OUI offense and close up our defense. Maybe we just have 10 get; lucky."
"h's just a mallei ol time," daloppo said.
And because the learn is vonne. I'enn has time time to develop in-, to an Iw champion and maybe even a national contender.
Hut this team, in this season, is nisi about out ol lime.
Quaker Oats STANI.KY tl'P - No bitterness has developed here vcl between the
I lyet faithful and the Ranger rooters, but that's because the season is on Iv three games old. (live it time. I ike I week. Meanwhile, there will be a meeting tomorrow al (lass of '2.1 Rink lor the Men's lliiekev ( lull, lace off is at 7:30. SUPER BOWL - Serious bitterness here aftei yesterday's creative of- ficiating in the Jints-lmslcs game, (.iant tans claiming robbery. Kaftlc fans just keeping quiet - a first in itself. Anyway, one perm of agree inenl. Al leasi the Jets lost. One other peint of agreement, Business put up a fight, but was no match for the Sports Staff. Two tatCTS and a triple for Rif - who wore his #33 Oriole jersey, but it's no indication of things 10 conic - and Scoop got the Whoupie Whopper \«,iul fot his defen- sive play 10 end the game. Ihe Blade got the win he's 2-0. Son of like (arlton. except he talks to the press afterward.
HAPPY HIRIIII1AY - No conloversy here She's out favorite in.in.igci al Slue's, and we do appreciate ihe fact that she takes care of us ever) night. The brunch yesierdav was not 100 shabby, either. Anyway, von can't be 20 on Sugar Mountain, and Kanili reaches that fillh-ccntiuv mark today. \nd we all wish her a very happy biithdav.
Course Changes in Lubavitch House Schedule: Beginning Hebrew - Wednesday 4:30 PM The Book of Samuel - Wednesday 9:00 PM Advanced Talmud begins this week For info, call 222-3130
Mmm
THE DAILY PENNSYI.VANIAN - Monday. October 10. 1983 PACE 9
Quakers tie Brown, 24-24 (Continued from hack page)
was overplaying the pass. Nolan
ihen ran for seven more yards. Wilh
one second left, it was Hail Mary
lime.
Quarterback John McGcchan (16- for-32. 242 yards) threw a bomb to
the end /one. Rich Syrek, Karl Hall
and Steve Oriman all leaped to posi- tion themselves. Syrek. who had his
finest game as a Quaker (seven cat
cries, 127 yards), almost caught the
ball, but it bounced off his
outstetched arms in a crowd in the
front corner of the end /one.
"It was onc-on-one |coverage] and
he let it fly." Syrek said. "Everyone
says it was a Hail Mary, but it's just
a shame I couldn't come up with it.
It just didn't happen."
' Without the miracle, the Quakers
were left wilh a tie. "There was a feeling of relief thai
wc didn't lose," quarterback Jim
Crocicchia said. "But when you look up at the scoreboard and sec 24-24.
iCs a tic. And you can't really accept
thai, either."
Pcnn might not have had to ac- cept it if the offense hadn't made
Tour turnovers - three interceptions
and one fumble. Brown scored after
three of these turnovers. "Those three turnovers in the first
half helped contribute |lo the lie|,"
Hcrndt said. "Especially the one at lhe end of the half."
The turnover at the end of the
half was both unnecessary and unex-
pected. With 48 seconds left, I'cnn
had taken over on its own 44-yard
line after a 12 yard punt return by
Tim Chambers.
Crocicchia. who had entered the
game on the previous series and led
a 73-yard touchdown drive, was try-
ing to get Penn into field goal
range. Seven seconds later. Brown
was trying to get into field goal range - thanks to George Brawley's
second interception of the game.
"It was a curl pass to Karl (wide
receiver Hall]," Bcrndt said. "He thought lhai he could get the ball
over the linebacker and he didn't."
"It was a bad read on my part,"
Crocicchia said. "Wc were really
hurl by mental mistakes and lack of
concentration at times." After ihc interception, which put
Brown on its own 43. Potter went to
work. Quickly, he passed and ran
his way lo the Pcnn six-yard line.
Then, wilh ten seconds left. Potter
faded back and lofted a pass to
Brad McCaullcy in the end /one to gisc Brown a 17-14 halflime lead.
At the end of the third quarter,
the Quakers got a break - and took
advantage of it. The break came when Brown was
penalized 15 yards on a punt by I'cnn's Sam Coroniti. Al first, few
in the stadium were aware of what
the infraction actually was.
Illegal participation was the call.
1 he Bruins had loo many players on
the field. The guilty player was Brown's Chris Good. The
sophomore was coming off an in-
jury from which he lost 35 pounds.
He was a liillc di//y in the heat.
And he was a little confused about
his assignment. So he stayed on the
field.
Two plays later - a 21-yard pasl
from McCicehan to OToole and a 12-yard run by Stan Koss (7-61) —
the Quakers had a 21-17 lead.
Brown struck back when Steve
Heffernan ended a four-and-a-half
minute drive in the fourth quarter
with a one-yard plunge. Then Pcnn
kicker Dave Shulman connected on
his fourth field goal attempt -
earlier, he had missed from 41, 51. and 42 yards. He tied the score al 24
with a 37-yardcr. So for three consecutive years
now, the Quakers have put 24 points
on the board against Brown.
"They're a strong and aggressive
football team." Bcrndt said. It was a
hard-hitling ballgamc wilh a lot of
collisions."
If the Quakers showed one thing,
it's thai they're not quitters. They
bounced back numerous times after
mistakes.
"We found out a lot about this
team's character." Bcrndt said.
"They hung in there and came back a few times. A few years ago. wc
might not have pulled it out." But a few years ago. it didn't mat-
ter as much.
Brown Penn
0 17 0 7 24 7 7 7 3 24
HI SHIM. - BROWN: Hctfcrnan 20-7S. I'.'ikul 14-51. POIICI 19-**. Totals 55-197. PENN: Nolan 12-77. Kov, 7-dl. tinman 11-12. Touk 15-143,
PASSIM; - BROWN: Pontr 1.1-20-157.1. faa* 1.120 157 I. PENN: McCicehan 16-10- 242-2, C'rocK-chia 2-4181. Oriman O-l-O-fl. ToiaK 18 .15-2H0..V
8KIHISI, - BROWN: lidding 1-52. Mc taulcy 4-1*. Chapman 2-28. Totals 11-157. PENN: Syrek 7-129. Oriman 1-11. Mcncgan 2 41). toials 18-280
-A bad bounce is a big break- (( onlinued from hack page)
Maybe luck - or good Ion tine -
has a way of breeding optimism,
last year. Brown quarterback Joe
Potler fell down as he rolled around
right end al Ihc Penn two-yard line-
as time ran out. The Quakers won.
24-21. Later in the season, it look a div-
ing breakup of a six-yard pass in the
end/one for ihc Quakers lo lock up
a 21-13 win over Colgate. And the
next week, the Quakers beat Har-
vard 23-21 in the "Miracle on 33rd
Street" game, in which Dave
Shulman made his second-chance
field goal count alter Pcnn had
blown a 20-0 fourth-quarter lead.
So far in 1983, the Quakers have ■Mien a few more breaks. First,
there is the schedule, which pits
Pcnn against ihc easier Ivy league
opponents in the beginning of the
season, leaving Harvard and Dart- mouth for later. Pcnn has been able
to make mistakes against Cornell
and Columbia and still lead Ihc
league. Then ihcrc was Saturday, a game
thai Pcnn could have won. then
could have lost, then ihoilltt have
lost, and wound up lied.
It is nol that Penn's success is due
entirely to luck. Teams thai count
on luck every Saturday don't
challenge for a league chapionship.
Bui everyone in the Ivy league wants IO bcal Pcnn. and the
Quakers aren't going lo win any championship trophies this year by
waiting for centers to one-hop balls
10 I heir holders on field goal ai-
icmpls.
"When you look at Ihc game as a
whole, we gave il lo them." wrdc
receiver Rich Syrek said. "Wc gave them three scores on turnovers. Wc
were lucky to gel a lie."
"Two key plays," Anderson mus-
ed, referring lo the bad snap and lo
Brown having 12 men on the field
on a Quaker punt, a nenallv which
led to Penn's second touchdown,
"and we blew them both."
"Wc squandered a lot of chances 10 win the game." Syrek said.
And so it ended in a lie — ex-
citing for the fans, but not all thai
productive lor cither learn. Brown
had more lo gain from the lie. but
missed a golden opportunity to
knock oil I defending co-champion.
Pcnn knows it got away wilh some
key mistakes without losing loo
much ground.
"We're still undefeated in Ihc Ivy
league," Bcrndt said. "Three games
in and wc haven't lost ycl.
"I guess we're Mill challenging for
the league title."
The old Bcrndt optimism again.
Jump into fantasy-land for a se-
cond. If thai bounced snap occurs
on Harvard's field goal in llhaca„in-
stead of Ingerslcv's attempt in
Philadelphia. Dartmouth is in first
place in the Ivy league, Brown has
a share of second with Pcnn. and
Harvard is in third.
Back in reality, Pcnn holds on lo
first, while Brown is in fourth place.
It may nol mean much after three
weeks of the season, but don't forget
lhai ihis is the League of the Three-
way Tic. Every lucky bounce of
every game is crucial. And so far.
the Quakers have had several
favorable bounces. Il is cither iusiicc for a decade ol
bad breaks in Pennsylvania football
being served, or a message 10 the
Penn team to stop squandering
chances to lock games up before the
final seconds.
(( onlinued front hack page)
Hul Penn did belter in the second
half. And finally, wilh six minutes re-
maining, senior Judy Sandier drove
ihc hall inio Ihc center circle off I
corner-hit. Donna Berk look ihc pass
and bounced a shoi off Brown
goalkeeper Mara Spauldcr. Pain
Vivial scored on the rebound, and ihc
outcome was decided.
Afterward. I he Quakers
acknowledged lhai il wasn't easy.
"They were good, much better than last year." Pcnn goalkeeper Nancy
Mcisingcr said. "They would go aftCf
everything. I really figured lhai our
defense would gel no action, Brown
had a lot of opporlunties lo score, but
llicy didn't capitalize on ihcni." flic Bruins look 10 shots on goal.
Il was the second highcsi mnnhei ol
shots taken on Mcisingcr this season
Penn's new defensive system, design-
ed lo give Mcisingcr more net sup-
port, was. for the niosi pan. effec-
tive. "Wc changed our defense from two
Field Hockey wins- links, three backs and a sweeper lo
three links and three backs." senior
back Debbie Croarkin explained. "Il
gives us a lot more support. A couple
of limes people were confused with
iheir new position! and roles, bin il
really worked well In the second half.
This system almost gives us iwo
sweepers."
Added Mcisingcr: "Our defense
adapted well. There was always one
or IWO people coming back to help
out - I liked lhai a lot." Bui the negative aspects of Penn's
plus overshadowed the shutout per-
formance bv Mcisingcr and the
defense, "At the beginning of the game. I
really wasn't worried aboul Brown."
Mcisingcr said, "bin I was a liillc con-
cerned when it came lime for us lo
lake free hits, light Brown players
came up on Ihc ball, and with lhai.
it's difficult io get ihc ball through. I
thought we'd go out and dominate. Before every game. I try to guess at
what the score might be. I expected 2-
(lor 3 Q, . ."
The Quakers had 12 corner
chances, and several oilier scoring op-
portunities in the game. But ihc
outstanding play of Brown's defense,
led by captain Callic I aMay.
prevented Penn I'rom scoring more
lban one goal.
"Il was really frustrating," Mcis-
ingcr said. "In a lot of B.l.'s |/cllcrs|
shots. Iheir rusher got down her slick
10 partially block them. Thai put a lot
of pressure on the attack - there
wasn't a lot of lime 10 execute, Iheir
sweeper |l aMay| was really good -
she saved several goals near the post
with her stick. If she hadn'l been
there, the score would have been a lot
higher." One goal per game, however, will
nol carry the Quakers io ihc NCAA
tournament in November.
"Wc need both mental readiness
and physical hustle," Sage said. "Ihc
leant needs to finish play. II we sit
back and wail, we'll gel caught, We
have three weeks to go and sonic
lough games ahead of us."
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DP SPORTS Quakers sporting a Brown tie Late field goal miss keeps it a 24-24 tie
llv in Hi Nil KIN I 01 ihree years, the) had been the
model ol consistency againsl Brown, they scored -•* points in ihe I 9 •I.IMIM ol 1981, and Brown scored In. In iiit championship season ol IVN2. ihe> scored 2-t again, bill held Brown i,i ;i AIKI in iw. .i season Hill .>i questions, the Penn football learn again scored 24
I in-, time, MV Jid the Bruins.
IVY STANDINGS Ivy Overall
PENN 2-0-1 M-1 Dartmoulh 100 1-3-0 Harvard 1-0-1 2-1-1 Princeton 2 10 310 Brown 111 12 1 Cornell 0 1 1 03 1 Yale 0-1-0 0-4-O Columbia 0-3-0 040
"I'm not happy." Penn coach u- r i \ Berndt said aftei the Quakers first tie since an 8 8 game againsl Vale in 1980 "i warn io win Bui ai ihis stage "i ihe season, it's bettei to lie ih.in io lose."
I vpccially since this was .i game
the Quakers almost lost. With 0:IJ left on the clock,
Brown kicker Craig Ingersles readied himseJI at ihe Penn 19-yard line fot what ihe 14.576 al Franklin l ield expected io be the winning neki goal, Quarterback Joe Cotter had moved Brown From in own 27- \,irti line to ihe Pennsylvania II in HIM ovet tour minutes.
Mm ihe snap from tenter bounc- ed, and Ingersles - who had hooted ,i 42-yardcr in the second quarter couldn't recover his rhythm. Ihe kick u.i- wide to ihe right, and the Quakers were assured thai their unbeaten string at Franklin Held — which is now stun — was intact.
rheil 1983 record, however, is now 2-1-1 overall. 2-0-1 in Ihe Is > i cague. Brown is l-2-l and l-l-l.
Penn had a chance IO win alter ihe missed field goal. -\nd since neithei team had assumed control all afternoon, it would not have been surprising it the game had ended on some sort ol miracle.
With (»:I2 lejt and Penn on its own 20. fullback Chuck Nolan (12 carries. 77 yards) ran left for 17 yards againsl ■ Brown defense that
(C oniinneil on page 1>
Bruins' bad bounce is Penn's big break
( hris Ingersles had ihe ball set up iust ihe way he likes it. Nineteen- yard line, loll hash mark ol the field
"Thai's the side he likes io kick from," his coach John Anderson said
"I had a feeling ii would come down to me when I was standing on the sideline." Ingersles added in the
On the Sidelines
Dave Zalesne locka loom "I was thinking, I can 3D it' "
II there was am justice in this In- tellectually Versed Youth league. the Brown placekickei would have placed his kick between the goalposts ,ii ihe cast end ol I ranklin field. Ihe bull would have gone fbrough with considerably more case than the ball he kicked from 42 jaids oui with cighi minutes lefi in iht tirsl hall, a quail that ciawlcd osct I he crossbai and gave Brown a io ~ lead.
I his lime. Ingeislev's kick would have given Brown a 27-24 lead and - with just 0:12 on ihe clock - its second league win of 1983. It would have been I'enn's lust league loss ol 1983.
If there was any justice, lhal is. On a da> that Harvard's Jim
Villanueva kicked a field goal with lime running out to lie Cornell 3-3. the Quakers dodged a bullei - or it dodged them - when the snap front Brown's center bounced up 10 John Monaghan. who was holding.
"I was thinking. 'John, get il down'." Ingersles said. "I was just hoping.
"•<)h bleep' went through my mind [when I saw it miss|."
What was lerry Berndt. Ihe beneficiary ol Brown's misplay, thinking as Ingersles approached the ball?
"I hope we block il." Ihe coach said. "I lurried and told one ol the assisiani coaches, 'Boy, it would be greal il we block it and scoop it up and run it back loi a louchdowm.'
"But maybe Ihal's me. I'm op- timistic about things like lhal."
()bv iousK. I( ntilinitt'il on page V) ruin safely Koss Armstrong puts a hear hiin on Bruin running hack Sieve llcfl'ernan on Saturday
DP F'll/ von Bulow
Bruins beat Soccer, 3-2 in OT Again, team fails to meet challenge
Jon I rflVr <2l bailies Krossn's Krik llolm-Olstn on r'riduy nigh
its MrVh BERKOWITZ It might seem that Ihis is a
rebuilding season lor Penn soccer coach Bob Seddon. There are only two seniors on the team, and eleven players who had little experience as collegiate players.
But after watching the team play, il might seem thai this is a group with the potential to challenge for the Ivy league and Philadelphia Soccer Seven titles now. not just in the future.
Ihe Quakers, however, have been struggling io beat teams they're sup- posed to beat. And they have been unable to beai the teams that pose greater challenges — the teams they must beat to reach their potential.
It happened again Friday night, when Penn fell to one of the challenging teams - I2th-ranked Brown - 3-2 in overtime.
"We've been playing well." Quaker defender Wall Bell ngham
said. "But we have nol been looking as good as we should be. We've lost games we've needed to win. It's nol that we can't play on the same level as these teams. It's been ihe little things."
But those are the ihings that help define the level at which Top 20 teams play.
An example - capitalizing on your opponent's mistakes. All Ihree Ol Brown's goals, and a fourth lhal was nullified by a questionable off- side tall, resulted from breakdowns by the I'enn defense.
The first, which gave ihe Bruins a l-l lie in ihe 25th minute, tame when I'enn goalkeeper Bob Bohner allowed a shot off an indirect kick by Erik Holm-Olscn to trickle beneath Ins body and into the net.
"I should have had it." Hohner said. "Ihe ball came through Ihe wall and I didn't see il until the last second,"
forty seconds later. Colcman O'DonOvan made a run to the endlinc and played a beautiful cross 10 Dave Cardie, who was open in front of the Brown net. Cardie shot wide.
I hen, in the 55th niinuit. Brown went ahead 2-1 on a coiner kick when John Carroll escaped I'enn's man-to-man marking and scored on an easy header.
"Ihe ball floated up." Bohner said, "and I know it sounds stupid, hut I lost il in ihe lighls. I guess it went over my head. I never saw [Carroll] coming from the back side."
Meanwhile, the Quakcis had to make two outstanding offensive plays to store. Iirst( Jon Urffer made a 60-yard overlapping run, look a pass from Chris I'aggi and then heal Brown goalkeeper Hunter Stem with a shoi inside the left
(C onlinued on page H/
W. Cross Country wins Temple Invite
By GAM KOKLKTK1N Oncf again, two West C hester run-
ners finished in the top three in a meet with the Penn women's cross country team Once again, the live Quaker scorers did not.
And Penn defeated West Chester for the second time in three weeks to win the Temple Invitational.
In cross country, il can happen lhal wav.
"Ii's a learn sport." Penn runner Cricket Bat/ said after Saturday's race at Kairmount Park. "West Chester had two girls up from, but our pack carac right after thai."
After the two West Chester runners finished first and third, the Quakers'
Sue Eckel came in fifth. I hen. I'enn runners took lour of the nexi nine places. The Rams were beaten In a point -■ the other 11 teams followed.
"We have a good pack of runners." Penn captain Judy Damorc said. "There's not a lot of pressure on one or two key people. If someone is not feeling in top shape, they know thai someone else will pull through. Also, the sisih and seventh runners' limes (only the top five finishers seore| are really close."
All this happened after the Quakers were given a poor starling position. One of ihe roads on the course was lined with holes. Two-by-fours
' ( "in i na til on page H)
Weekend Scoreboard FOOTBALL
Penn 24, Brown 24
SOCCER B rown 3. Penn 2 (OT)
FIELD HOCKEY Penn 1, Brown 0
M. CROSS COUNTRY Yale 22, Penn 36
W. CROSS COUNTRY 1st Place, Temple Invitational
FRESHMAN FOOTBALL Brown 10, Penn 2
LIGHTWEIGHT FOOTBALL Princeton 27, Penn 20
VOLLEYBALL 5th Place, Princeton Invitational (2-2)
Field Hockey isn't satisfied with 1-0 win
By BTEFANIE KRASNOW The scoreboard doesn't*always tell
the whole story. By noon Saturday, the Penn field
hockey team had defeated Brown, I- 0. But there was more to this game than just a single goal. There was something far less tangible, someihing that wasn't shown in ihe final statistics.
Although the Quakers won ihe game, they were sluggish and flat.
"This is a win with mixed emotion." Penn coach Anne Sage said. "I'll acknowledge a win even when we struggle, but I want my players ready to play. And they weren't jon Satur- day). We need spunk and energy -
we have 10 get things going. We need to play hard for ihe whole game, nol just the last few minutes."
"Brown came on the field with an abundance of enthusiasm — we were flal and tired," Sage added. "In the second half. Penn came back and found ils flow — we must have done something right to win. Bui we need total game consistency - we weren't ready as a team unit."
So in the first half, (he vastly- improved Brown team - undefeated going into ihe game - surprised the listless Quakers. Brow'n's players were more aggressive, and repeatedly beat the Penn players to the ball.
(Continued on page 9)