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**"f Ul. ftp ©Ire Batltr fflamstflfrantan ' v_ ^ JJ 3> fiumbeb 1885 \.M\ < IV. No 76 "Mil \l)l I PHIA, WrHnrsd.,, September 2«. I9RJ '•> . ..|l.l IIIHR tlin Daily t'niin'iylv.i RAs upset in role as policemen Alcohol policy redefines job Ms III I IN MM < unpui ii-Miii-nii.il idvlion met nrfih members oi the administration vrstrnlas 10 VOtot liusti.iiions .mil i onfutton iboui enforcameni "i the I inivrisiiv's iii» .ili nlml polit *. whu li main lakI li.r. placed ilii-m in a procarioui poaitiofi iii I'i'iii HIVIMM .mil polk mtan tpproxlmatel) io K \-. ittetidad Iha private Mafl meeting, whit ii one id sisni trim | .rssnm." || pran concern! thai Univtrilt) guidelines .iii- plat ln| "undui raapon ilbllily" on HAS MII-I in-.iiin,i iii.- complaint*, Residential Living DIrectoi < arol Kontoi i ohen latd thai ihe would bllth .i lubcommliiee composed ni HAv io loot Into luggsttions ol dealini with iiu-1 Inlvardly'i nr» law In .iililiiinii in Ki'iilov ( nlim, Vice Provost foi University i Ifi Kim Mm rlsaon, .mil iniiiii.il Inquiry Offlcei Constance Qoodman listenad to ttu linn input inn often < ould in» an (picsiions concerning ho* io handle potential iltuationi in addition, man) RAi Mid thai the) had noticed Increajed drag UM mi thru noon i- i M Mill ••! ihc Unlvertity'i Hrictei alcohol pollc) i htj nld lhal the poHc) allows im .•H iu-1 lubstance abusi bet tuse the iiniii \ does um ipei iiu all) tai |ei dragi "I It.i : smelted MI much in i in mi Ufa," .mi oat H v during iiu- maetlni "Thart'i |uat to much pot Someone «nil cell, 'Hey, thure'i ntdjl' ind the wholl flow »iii tear down |he Imll 10 ill.II Also, .HI unidentified male Mudeni IIMIIII in MIKII Misr Snuiii received i nil warning Irllci Im \million ol iitc- i Inlversity'i alcohol polk s I nllimnif iiii|i|i-iiii-iii,iiniii ni Ihe polil s. i iiiiuliii.iii ..ml thai HUM linn-. im sminii nun- offender! probabr) would IIMIMSI ol .i SI004200 inn i probationar) term ud MUM type ol m anda toi y i d uce11 •• n i1 pmgiaiuiiiiiiK. i bra) time offendars raoarve warn uiK letter ami a yellou i.iul. which lines OH lile Bl li"' imlii lal ol Iii I Hut during yattarday'i mawlng, Ooodman MM that she did not know how ihe would penalise ihe viotaton oi whethet hat office ot Ftasklantlal iivinn would adjudicate Ihe aaaas She ailcleil that 20 finl OffCOM viols lions have alrrads l>een dot iiiuriiii-il According IO Maim I Iiu.i Vina Bianco, .1 West Campus scnioi id Please see RAs. page 5 Face-off nnaylvlinil Pcnn At kido ohlb mi-nil ' i | mill kjrii Iff) i"d loin I ;iiM>n demonstrate martini ;iri sclf-delctiM- uMhiqUM to studtntl during the Public Safely fair on College Circcn yesterday. Page 7. Supreme Court asked to review U. tenure case By HUM I'ARKIH In wliHI COUld ptOVC to lie n land marl Pint AnHndneat caw, the I hiivetsitv has asked Ihe I lulled Stales Siipieme Court 10 deckle whether ionfiilrnii.il pan rtvhrWl Of a tenure apphi .im in in- in,nil- pubhV I ait week, the University tiled a petition riquasllni the court 10 i im i ii old ' asr Involving liiiinri WII.IIIIUI fjulllanl Piofessot Rosalie IUIIK who claims she was denied tenure because Of her sex and (tiliMM origin When IUIIK Iilccl charges with Ihe Equal Employment Opportunity t ommlsslon (EBOC) In IW5, the pirsted that Ihe University hand over Ilu- i milulential rtVliWI ie|Kiii\ which «ie in sliunienlal in Ihe lenuie review prot - Ihe University has fought these re quasti in federal and appesli ourtSi uivokIIIV ,i I usi Amendment right In i iiliini lieednm If the Supreme i nun igresi in iii-.ii iti<-1 ate, H would he ihe first nine that the IIIRII mini would decide the issue ol releasing. .iiiliileiihal |ieer leview materials on faculty. Attorney Alan Herkowil/, who is handUDI <l"- I BM for the Univri ..ml yesienlav thai a Supreme (nun In ISIIIII woiilil set a precedent Im liihiir iHses While several lederal "ins have ruled on the Ihe release ol in li iilrs. ihe various ruling* have millicting. "The Siipi'inc i nun would establish a uniform national policy mi how in handle ilus issue." Herkowil/ said. "They have not decided the question of whethei peer review material* are protected by the I ft Nun nilmrnl " Ihe I imversilv's |ietition also alludes |o Ih* iiinliisinii over Ihe release ul confidential materials "Ihe ninllut nsell. which is clear and intiai table, has been tinted .mil lamented by virtuall in and i ommentatt it that I ed thi the dot iiiiH-iii n I amunt White, in I I ' « ittoi n*) . said thai tin t I 'i-partmtnl has until OctOOCI ' I III oppoal iion in the i Inlvt in " 11 I hr I InK I I n' iiin-il III.II allowing ,II COM I" ilu- I mil materials would destiny the isnun tcviev. i" niveriity A ' "imsel Neil Hamburg said restei la) that the i Inivtrsity d, feel lhal it shOttld nun 0 lulriilial ii-. ' llrlm , 111. I I I II .1, III.IIIII iii.n .iK confidential and privileged iiki- Hi.ii are m- requcstini that they mil. i i pn im"" n\ ihowing that they ni-i-ii iiu ii-. mil', .mil can get in in no other wi] ild " i he Supreme < mill has nevei laced this issue " During the ongoing battle. Ihe MIHII ty of deietmu certain portions ol ihe confidential documeni which Identlf) the authors of ihe pen revirws. The i i , however, has maintained lhal with portloni blotted out in Often useless iin- i iiiivnsiiv ii.i-. provided lonv information as a result ol 'In- EBOt I in hand "ver the nnliilential documents A lederal jttdgl In I'lnladelphia this ummei ordered the University to release ilu confidential Iilrs A three |ud|tc panel ol tin Muni ( Irciltt I Our! Of Apiieals upheld that decision and refused Io allow all the judges Io hear - .- i.'.ini Mir Irdrral COttTt Ifl l'liil.iilrl|ihi.i has mil yrt ilrinlril I In | allnwing the records to lx- IIUKIIIH I U .' fofC*S Ihe I Iniversity in nun ovet ioniiiiruti.il materlali A distrk I I'lcase-.r 11-MIKK. page 2 Refugees struggle to adapt to West Philadelphia Hi DAVID IMIKCI Ml III Mosl students moving off campus foi the lusi lime ihsnisri lhal finding a desk and hook nig up a telephone line lank as somr ol thru inosi pressing problems llui in.ins people who make West Philadelphia a home have some mote immediate , mill-Ills One K><"*"ig segment oi the population, Southeast Asian refugees, iiuisi iopc with p.is IIIK im grooving) landing i iob. enrolling children in schools, and buying clothing In addition, finding a prrmanenl place to sleep and inrspeiiMsc housing is a serious pro blem. All ibis without a firm grasf "I the English language. Also, lelugees inusi nuilend with the basi, struggle foi iniiimiiniu ,u i epiim e mil try to adjust to a foreign culture Harts im' "I, in nlI lie Spruce Hill Community \seoclatlon, one "i several iii'iiin/atioiis working lo alleviate Ihc refugees' plight, said last week that Ihe main problem is Hue ni readjustment. ''Coming tO America requues a cultural leonentalion." (irossback said, adding that for cotnplele success in the new country both Asians and nun Asian must live and work in harmony. SoatheaSI Asian refugees in West I'lnladelphia include < amhodians, Vietnamese and I aoltans. as well as ethnic Chinese limn each of Ihc above immiiirs Ai.orcluiK IO city officials, most refugees live in the area I torn 42nd to 63fd between Walnut and Chestnut .nerts Immigration began in Ihe mid 1970s and i rd in Ihe lalter part ol the decade as well as IhrOUghOUl the IVHO*. And aiionliiiK 10 I nnsshaik. "|The Asians| in BM living in an Integrated t.ishinn (irossback added however that although the Southeast Asians arc not well integrated social- ly, they have worked Ihctr way into the business community, opening up a variety Ol gTOOST) stores reatauranls .lores in I hi Hut David Shen. a member of Asian Americans United, an org ration which works primarily with Asian youth, said this week that the problem may be mon draatfc then 'iack suggested "There is a lot of tension in West Philadelphia between Asians and nun.Asians," Shen said. Me added lhal coming to the I Iniled Slates re ipnres not )utt a cultural reorientation but s Please see KH I GEES, page 3 V •• f Clarification: bagels, not toast, are unsafe Hy HKKI I'AKkhK amJGUCSTONI ll.ii'i I ni mast Which sounds more dangcious? lusi lnrcau.se alcohol is less ol a danger lo underage drinkers and Public Salely olhccrs are back on their heats doesn't mean thsl administrators have WOpped wot king ai increasing campus safety. Ycslerday. the University clarified its polu v aboul the caiivuignl mast into I ratlklin field, deciding that while bread is acceptable, ihe more portly and dense bagel may create a risk for spcctaims Although the University did not specify, toast is assumed to be a four-sided slice of bread (hat has been slightly cooked. A bagel, on the other hand, is a round, slightly denser yeast-based substance with a hole al its center Assistant to the President William Epstein tai I lerday that ihe University will allow students to bring toast into l-ranklin Field for football games At last week's home football game against Bucknell, security guards confiscated toast. Since 1984, fans have thrown toast al a crucial moment of "Drink a Highball " Please sec BAt.KI.S, page 7 Veteran TV journalist to examine '88 election By MATT IIII.K Seasoned broadcast journalist I rn Sevareid, who has covered seven presidential campaigns over his SO year career, will speak tonight about Ihe role that Ihe media will play In Ihc upcoming election. Best known for his years as a com- mentator for Ihe CBS Ivtiunn Htm, Sevareid is one of the few "household names" in television journalism. Sevareid's colorful career began when he joined CBS in 1939 Al a war correspondent, his first scoop came when he was ihe first lo broadcast lhal France had been overrun by the Ciermans in 1940. Dining his coverage of the China Burma-India conflict in 1943, a plane crash forced Sevareid and l9others in bail out in the jungle and live with head-hunting savages for a month before finding their way back to civilization. Between the end of World War II and his retirement in 1977, Sevareid covered some of television's biggest news stones, including ihe founding of Ihe United Nations, ihe Vietnam Wai and the Watergate scandal. In Kric Sevareid To tpeak on e/ccfum addition to being known for his haid hitting analytic ability and dry wit, Sevareid is also remembered lor his series Vietnam Perspective and his coverage of America's early space program. Please sec SK.VAKKID. page 7 Computer Both Wharton and the Medical School have set up electronic bulletin boards on the PennNet computer system. Page 2. Program University radio station WQHS begins broadcasting a new talk show this week and interviews IFC President John Budd. Page 4. Saved Eleventh-ranked field hockey came from be- hind yesterday to tie the 16th-ranked Lafay- ette Lady Leopards, 2-2. Back Page. it
Transcript

**"f Ul. ftp

©Ire Batltr fflamstflfrantan ' v_ ^ JJ 3> fiumbeb 1885

\.M\ < IV. No 76 • "Mil \l)l I PHIA, WrHnrsd.,, September 2«. I9RJ

'•>

. ..|l.l IIIHR tlin Daily t'niin'iylv.i

RAs upset in role as policemen Alcohol policy redefines job Ms III I IN MM

< unpui ii-Miii-nii.il idvlion met nrfih members oi the administration vrstrnlas 10 VOtot liusti.iiions .mil i onfutton iboui enforcameni "i the I inivrisiiv's iii» .ili nlml polit *. whu li main lakI li.r. placed ilii-m in a procarioui poaitiofi iii I'i'iii HIVIMM .mil polk mtan

tpproxlmatel) io K \-. ittetidad Iha private Mafl meeting, whit ii one id sisni trim | .rssnm." || pran concern! thai Univtrilt) guidelines .iii- plat ln| "undui raapon ilbllily" on HAS

MII-I in-.iiin,i iii.- complaint*, Residential Living DIrectoi < arol Kontoi i ohen latd thai ihe would

bllth .i lubcommliiee composed ni HAv io loot Into luggsttions ol dealini with iiu-1 Inlvardly'i nr» law

In .iililiiinii in Ki'iilov ( nlim, Vice Provost foi University i Ifi Kim Mm rlsaon, .mil iniiiii.il Inquiry Offlcei Constance Qoodman listenad to ttu linn input inn often < ould in» an (picsiions concerning ho* io handle potential iltuationi

in addition, man) RAi Mid thai the) had noticed Increajed drag UM mi thru noon i- i M Mill ••! ihc Unlvertity'i Hrictei alcohol pollc) i htj nld lhal the poHc) allows im .•H iu-1 lubstance abusi bet tuse the iiniii \ does um ipei iiu all) tai |ei dragi

"I It.i : smelted MI much in i in mi Ufa," .mi oat H v during

iiu- maetlni "Thart'i |uat to much pot Someone «nil cell, 'Hey, thure'i ntdjl' ind the wholl flow »iii tear down |he Imll 10 ill.II

Also, .HI unidentified male Mudeni IIMIIII in MIKII Misr Snuiii received i

nil warning Irllci Im \million ol iitc- i Inlversity'i alcohol polk s

I nllimnif iiii|i|i-iiii-iii,iiniii ni Ihe polil s. i iiiiuliii.iii ..ml thai HUM linn-. im sminii nun- offender! probabr) would IIMIMSI ol .i SI004200 inn i probationar) term ud MUM type ol m anda toi y i d uce11 •• n i1 pmgiaiuiiiiiiK.

i bra) time offendars raoarve ■ warn uiK letter ami a yellou i.iul. which lines OH lile Bl li"' imlii lal ol Iii I

Hut during yattarday'i mawlng, Ooodman MM that she did not know how ihe would penalise ihe viotaton oi whethet hat office ot Ftasklantlal iivinn would adjudicate Ihe aaaas She ailcleil that 20 finl OffCOM viols lions have alrrads l>een dot iiiuriiii-il

According IO Maim I Iiu.i Vina Bianco, .1 West Campus scnioi id

Please see RAs. page 5

Face-off

nnaylvlinil

Pcnn At kido ohlb mi-nil ' i | mill kjrii Iff) i"d loin I ;iiM>n demonstrate martini ;iri sclf-delctiM- uMhiqUM to studtntl during the Public Safely fair on College Circcn yesterday. Page 7.

Supreme Court asked to review U. tenure case By HUM I'ARKIH

In wliHI COUld ptOVC to lie n land marl Pint AnHndneat caw, the I hiivetsitv has asked Ihe I lulled Stales Siipieme Court 10 deckle whether ionfiilrnii.il pan rtvhrWl Of a tenure apphi .im in in- in,nil- pubhV

I ait week, the University tiled a petition riquasllni the court 10 i im

i ii old ' asr Involving liiiinri WII.IIIIUI fjulllanl Piofessot Rosalie IUIIK who claims she was denied tenure because Of her sex and (tiliMM origin

When IUIIK Iilccl charges with Ihe Equal Employment Opportunity t ommlsslon (EBOC) In IW5, the

pirsted that Ihe University hand over Ilu- i milulential rtVliWI ie|Kiii\ which «ie in sliunienlal in Ihe lenuie review prot -

Ihe University has fought these re quasti in federal and appesli ourtSi uivokIIIV ,i I usi Amendment right In i iiliini lieednm If the Supreme

i nun igresi in iii-.ii iti<-1 ate, H would he ihe first nine that the IIIRII mini would decide the issue ol releasing. .iiiliileiihal |ieer leview materials on

faculty. Attorney Alan Herkowil/, who is

handUDI <l"- I BM for the Univri ..ml yesienlav thai a Supreme (nun

■ In ISIIIII woiilil set a precedent Im liihiir iHses While several lederal

"ins have ruled on the Ihe release ol in li iilrs. ihe various ruling* have

millicting. "The Siipi'inc i nun would

establish a uniform national policy mi how in handle ilus issue." Herkowil/ said. "They have not decided the question of whethei peer review material* are protected by the I ft Nun nilmrnl "

Ihe I imversilv's |ietition also alludes |o Ih* iiinliisinii over Ihe release ul confidential materials

"Ihe ninllut nsell. which is clear

and intiai table, has been tinted .mil lamented by virtuall in and i ommentatt it that I ed thi

the dot iiiiH-iii n I amunt White, in I I ' « ittoi n*) .

said thai tin t I 'i-partmtnl has until OctOOCI ' I III oppoal iion in the i Inlvt in • " 11

I hr I InK I I n' iiin-il III.II allowing ,II COM I" ilu- I mil materials would destiny the isnun tcviev. i" niveriity A

' "imsel Neil Hamburg said restei la) that the i Inivtrsity d, ■ feel lhal it shOttld nun 0 lulriilial ii-.

' llrlm , 111. I I I II .1, III.IIIII iii.n .iK confidential and

privileged iiki- Hi.ii are m- requcstini that they mil. i i pn ■im"" n\ ihowing that they ni-i-ii iiu ii-. mil', .mil can get ■ in in no other wi] ild " i he Supreme < mill has nevei laced this issue "

During the ongoing battle. Ihe ■ MIHII

ty of deietmu certain portions ol ihe confidential documeni which Identlf) the authors of ihe pen revirws. The i i <» , however, has maintained lhal

with portloni blotted out in Often useless

iin- i iiiivnsiiv ii.i-. provided lonv information as a result ol 'In- EBOt

I in hand "ver the ■ nnliilential documents

A lederal jttdgl In I'lnladelphia this ■ummei ordered the University to release ilu confidential Iilrs A three |ud|tc panel ol tin Muni ( Irciltt I Our! Of Apiieals upheld that decision and refused Io allow all the judges Io hear

- .- i.'.ini

Mir Irdrral COttTt Ifl l'liil.iilrl|ihi.i has mil yrt ilrinlril I In | allnwing the records to lx- IIUKIIIH I U

.' fofC*S Ihe I Iniversity in nun ovet ioniiiiruti.il materlali A distrk I

I'lcase-.r 11-MIKK. page 2

Refugees struggle to adapt to West Philadelphia Hi DAVID IMIKCI Ml III

Mosl students moving off campus foi the lusi lime ihsnisri lhal finding a desk and hook nig up a telephone line lank as somr ol thru inosi pressing problems

llui in.ins people who make West Philadelphia a home have some mote immediate , mill-Ills

One K><"*"ig segment oi the population, Southeast Asian refugees, iiuisi iopc with p.is IIIK im grooving) landing i iob. enrolling children in schools, and buying clothing

In addition, finding a prrmanenl place to sleep and inrspeiiMsc housing is a serious pro

blem. All ibis without a firm grasf "I the English language.

Also, lelugees inusi nuilend with the basi, struggle foi iniiimiiniu ,u i epiim e mil try to adjust to a foreign culture

Harts im' "I, in nlI lie Spruce Hill Community \seoclatlon, one "i several iii'iiin/atioiis working lo alleviate Ihc refugees'

plight, said last week that Ihe main problem is Hue ni readjustment.

''Coming tO America requues a cultural leonentalion." (irossback said, adding that for cotnplele success in the new country both Asians and nun Asian must live and work in harmony.

SoatheaSI Asian refugees in West I'lnladelphia include < amhodians, Vietnamese and I aoltans. as well as ethnic Chinese limn each of Ihc above immiiirs Ai.orcluiK IO city officials, most refugees live in the area I torn 42nd to 63fd between Walnut and Chestnut .nerts Immigration began in Ihe mid 1970s and

i rd in Ihe lalter part ol the decade as well as IhrOUghOUl the IVHO*.

And aiionliiiK 10 I nnsshaik. "|The Asians| in BM living in an Integrated t.ishinn

(irossback added however that although the Southeast Asians arc not well integrated social- ly, they have worked Ihctr way into the business

community, opening up a variety Ol gTOOST) stores reatauranls .lores in I hi

Hut David Shen. a member of Asian Americans United, an org ration which works primarily with Asian youth, said this week that the problem may be mon draatfc then

'iack suggested "There is a lot of tension in West

Philadelphia between Asians and nun.Asians," Shen said.

Me added lhal coming to the I Iniled Slates re ipnres not )utt a cultural reorientation but s

Please see KH I GEES, page 3

V •• f

Clarification: bagels, not toast, are unsafe

Hy HKKI I'AKkhK amJGUCSTONI

ll.ii'i I ni mast Which sounds more dangcious? lusi lnrcau.se alcohol is less ol a danger lo underage

drinkers and Public Salely olhccrs are back on their heats doesn't mean thsl administrators have WOpped wot king ai increasing campus safety.

Ycslerday. the University clarified its polu v aboul the caiivuignl mast into I ratlklin field, deciding that while bread is acceptable, ihe more portly and dense bagel may create a risk for spcctaims

Although the University did not specify, toast is assumed to be a four-sided slice of bread (hat has been slightly cooked. A bagel, on the other hand, is a round, slightly denser yeast-based substance with a hole al its center

Assistant to the President William Epstein tai I lerday that ihe University will allow students to bring toast into l-ranklin Field for football games

At last week's home football game against Bucknell, security guards confiscated toast. Since 1984, fans have thrown toast al a crucial moment of "Drink a Highball "

Please sec BAt.KI.S, page 7

Veteran TV journalist to examine '88 election By MATT IIII.K

Seasoned broadcast journalist I rn Sevareid, who has covered seven presidential campaigns over his SO year career, will speak tonight about Ihe role that Ihe media will play In Ihc upcoming election.

Best known for his years as a com- mentator for Ihe CBS Ivtiunn Htm, Sevareid is one of the few "household names" in television journalism.

Sevareid's colorful career began when he joined CBS in 1939 Al a war correspondent, his first scoop came when he was ihe first lo broadcast lhal France had been overrun by the Ciermans in 1940.

Dining his coverage of the China Burma-India conflict in 1943, a plane crash forced Sevareid and l9others in bail out in the jungle and live with head-hunting savages for a month before finding their way back to civilization.

Between the end of World War II and his retirement in 1977, Sevareid covered some of television's biggest news stones, including ihe founding of Ihe United Nations, ihe Vietnam Wai and the Watergate scandal. In

Kric Sevareid To tpeak on e/ccfum

addition to being known for his haid hitting analytic ability and dry wit, Sevareid is also remembered lor his series Vietnam Perspective and his coverage of America's early space program.

Please sec SK.VAKKID. page 7

Computer Both Wharton and the Medical School have set up electronic bulletin boards on the PennNet computer system. Page 2.

Program University radio station WQHS begins broadcasting a new talk show this week and interviews IFC President John Budd. Page 4.

Saved Eleventh-ranked field hockey came from be- hind yesterday to tie the 16th-ranked Lafay- ette Lady Leopards, 2-2. Back Page.

it

P»|tr 2 I'hr ■>»••> Prnnstlsanian Walnrs.l.is. Vpleinhei it, l*»KK

ARE YOU... Disappointed with LONG DELAYS?

Tired of "BULKY" Bulk Packets?

JOIN THE SWITCH TO...

3736 Walnut St 3907 Walnut St 386-6114 386-6410

University Plaza Next to Baskin Robbins

OVERNIGHT SERVICE GUARANTEED!!!!!

Electronic bulletin boards unused by students, despite start-up efforts

SH III I \ BRITAIN

Spend a term or year at a Hriiish university through Beaver College. If you arc Interested in learning more, come meet our program representative.

Dale: Thursday, September 89 Time: 4:00 p.m. Phut-: 888 Bennett Mall

Beaver College Center for Education Abroad Glenalde, PA l!X>:*8 (815)878-4901

ll> ( III KM I Will \ The lusi Him- mori students MC ■' bulletin board is in

kindergarten ii uenall) baa Ion ol colorful construction papei end ilnns that as) "i ool botli ways before crossingl"

NOW hllllrllll l»UI.|v .IK' IM.lkllll' .1 ,.MIH'lMvk .11 I lie i Iniveriii)

Blectronk ones, 1I1.11 It Currenthj the School <>i Medicine, the Medical Ceniei

.iii.i (in- Wnarton School have eiectronk bulletin boardi accaiiiblc through the PennNet compute! lystetn Mean While, (III I llllllsllv IV WOlklllp lOWaills \rllill|l lip .1 board which laform men ol curreni events around , ampui

iiui due i" difficulties in accessing ihe lyiiem, few uudeoti .in makini use ol the ne* Informative addition. Currently, Students cithci have in own .1 loinpiitri mortem 01 have ICOMI 10 the PennNel system,

" 1 ins idea 1- relative!) new," add Albert Shar, .1 ipokemtan let the Medical School "It's act reaHj ■ hullcliii hoard 111 dial anyone can't nisi pul soineihinr on to 11 1 in- entries must be iiiii-u-ii first

1 in- Medical School and Medical Center't bulletin board containi .1 directory ol the differeni departments in ihe school and center, an events calendai ol monthly hap penines, Hudani dndDnai and btomedlcal Hbrarj Infm matlon In sddilion, il will soon conlain research IM.UII

information Wharion's i-iivnonu hiiiieiui hoard began ove .1 M-.II

ago u in asptilUMiil Wharton Com puling Diiivtrn I 0111 Kiihn s.iul I Ins week

llial Whaiton's system is iliffcrciu hecausc users have ihe il in rente computci conferencei

"Someone can type la, 'I'm having trouble doing sues .mil smii.' and gel .1 reply." be laid

••iin- Medical School has •> video tan syatam," Kuhn explained "Instead of a directory 01 papa, it's on a com puii-i icreen It'i reallj ■ one »-i\ system m thai the uan can't add anythini

According 10 Vice Provost foi Computing David Stonehill, i" ordei to access ate bulletin boards, itudenii haveonl) twooptions rhej caaeiiha use one ol the con puiiis in the 1 10 aeademk buildings, which currently air connected 10 the PennN* ryetam, H have ■ telephone modem In theli dormltorj room

"Because ol ihe relative difficult) in accessing the system. It's no) 'in- majorkj ol itudenii who an rain) us mc in.- lyslem," Stonehill said "We're hoping lo improve tin- access so thai Mudenti can use u rroen theii dorm looms without ■ modem

" iii,- problem is thai snything we do coats tnonej." hi added

Whirton'i Kuhn and ihe Medical School'i Shai both s.iul ihiv hope dorm accesi will be completed soon

"We absoluirls want the ilorni room access." kulin s.iul "We've found that oui board is practicalb nevat us ,-ii it's at .11. ii'.' If students check the system one time and don'l find snything, Ihen they'll non use 11 anam, because It's not ill dial easy to UM "

Vice ProvoM foi Universlt) Life Kim Morrisson nid ih.ii .1 meeting is scheduled lot the end ol tins week 10 con sniri iceem in tin- dormitorj

1 he School ol Nits and Sdenca is working on .1 con puti-i bulletin board which officials hope will be read) b) iiu- end oi Deiembei

Court asked to review U. tenure case •"ENURE, lion, paae 1 ludge could decide tins issue at 1 law date

t noi-isiu ailiiiinisiiators hail .111 tuipateil ihe I lot's ease, ami therefore filed sun In Washington, i>( . before the organization pui sued legal action in Philadelphia

Each side had hoped that the precedent! established in the local jurisdiction wouM convince ihe courl

to rule in thru l.ooi \ iriiuir related lawsuit involving franklin and Mai shall College, which ».is handled in the sppeali courl located in Philadelphia, resulted in the school'i handini ovei confidential records

Howevei. courts In the District ol ( oiuini'i.i have come oui In hrvoi ol universities In iiich matten

The University protested the lawsuit in I'lulailelphia In .uteiiipiinr

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to use "the lust Piled rule" which would .iiiow iiu- tusi court presented with .in Issue 10 hoar iiu- case ihe i i in protested the lawsuit m Washington, ilaiming thai the conn there did not have jurisdiction ova tin- case

Despite tin- i.i,i thai il ».is riled rim, ihe case In Washington hai stall ad inuii ihe court battle in Philadelphia coododaa n until both casei can be combined.

Quotation of the Day 'We Intended to stop people From bringlrsj Frozen bead can't have people throwuj fro /en bageta from those kmdi ol distance] '

Assistant In the- President William rpslrin, on Ihr rrernl . l-.iiilu .mini uf Ihr |lnivrrsil>'s pulirs on toast throwing

Assistant Ecfttors ( III KM rAMII.Y NIGEL 1 HSIIMAN Nighi BaYron

ARNOLD H-IHMAN Kr'VIN KASSOVKR KIIHIKI KM II KM AN ll-KKMV SKI.WVN Issetswi i bpj Dasl Bksmxs III \\M KIM Photo Night Battoi <.ARY KIHII ANDKKW RAGLE Art Night BlfHrj < VNTkUA PARKAS III It II SMII IIIN GILUAN IIKWrXT AdProducDVei Assaeaasl

Corrections n is tie intenton ol The Oatry Pennsytva n* «W » "•*• noons be <m and ooroct m awry respect H you have a commenl or r»iealioii about Iha tasnees 01 accuracy ol a «xy. cad David Laako. Associate Ed** at 8884)585 tiniween 4 pm and 9 pm Sundays Ihroooh Thursdays

The Daily Pennsylvania.!

The Daay Pannaytvantan a an mda- psndanl. sludanl wfman and tludanl managad nawspapar pubhahad by Tha Oa*y FnnrsyyVsnsvi. Inc lor Ihe Urmsnaty ot Pannaytyana commurHy

Tha Eascutim Board ol Tha Daly Parwv syrvaman lias sols autrnrty lor ma cornanl ol tw nss-psr.ni No new parMs an m any »ay rasponwu. lor iha nawspapar's oonlam, and al xqianaa or cunvUmu oonomsng thai comant should ba dncssd to iha Enacutvs Board al iha address beta*

Ths Daay Parmaylwiaaii is pubashad Monday Ihrough Friday in PIMarJatDhw PA during Iha M and upmg MmisMH. and swsWy during summsr saasions. a> ospt during auntnaton and vacason par- iods No pan lhanol may ba isproduoad m •nylorm. n *hd* or m pan. Mtfiout iha •»r*»n conaani ol Is. Esacukva Edsor

0«ea 4 Mating Addraas: 4015 Waksm Sirasi Phasdatiras. PA 19104

Husinssa,'Adv»n>a»ig (?i5| 8BSe6fll

rsssra/asaaonal: (21S| 88843686

OlspWy and OaaaMad AdHnnMng may ba paosd at Ihe abova addnas Orfca hours Monday^nday. 9am 5pm

^isasKispMuisi may ba ordarad kx S46 par acadamic yaar TNrd daas posiaga paid d PnascaHphia. PA

ISM Tha Daty PannayS-an*,. Inc.

Wednesday. Septcmbct U, I9M I he l>*il> r<nn»l«annn I'air .1

City Limits THE GREAT FOOD THROWAWAY

By DAVID BORGENICHi I u-sli. Up .|ll.lIII\ I noil is ;i label

Buran KIM,' likes 10 attach to iti product

Mm mil nil patrons gel to r.H tire rood Iri-sli nil the null

I'vrrydav .is homeless |ieoplc si-.u.h in ir.ish > .ins rot Irllow: loo,I

IISII.IIK hours oi iwil il.lss ol,l

McDonald'i, Roy Roaar'i uid Hutgri king icst.iui.inis lonlinelv ills, ,n,l loo.l islriili h.is l>eeii on I In-

herit i.i, Vs loi over 10 miniiles

i he three i ompanics' food quality statements dJcUUC that food which has been sitting on the- rackl tor

more than 10 tnlnuM li no kmajM what a Burgtl King spokesman referred 10 as lush, lop quality

Food •• Most, il not .ill. I.isl looil

restaurant! hava ■ rimilai food (|iialitv si,m,I.inl

Inn llameling. spokesman loi

the national Hiugri K11I>• organlzs lion, explained l.isi watt that restaurants do not donate expired food to tin- homeless lic( arise of the

poniMHty linn the Dood may he

ipoOad, "YOU do not want to he |ivin|

Ihcm contaminated IIHUI." he

explained. While llerineling .iiknowleilgeil

that the lood Straight tioin ihe Hash

can is more , oiii.iininatcd than when it OOBM directly from Ihe lacks. In-

said that once piodiu is are thrown out. the restaurant cannot he held

reiponiibtl tor what happens to .iiivoni' who Mtl il

"We don't have COOtTOl OVM I IH-ison that's going to l<c looking through garbage cans," Kenneling

said Vcrnetle McDaniels. a manager

lor Ihe Roy Rogers liKaled .il l'»tli and Walnut streets, gave an inul.-r |y

ing rcusoii lot this IOIKI disposal pollC) loinp.inn-s leal lawsuits

"If I were to give von .i MUfji |loi I ree| and the next thing I know you conn-hack and tell mi- von r.-m

rood poisoning,, the company is legally responsible in,I ion didn't

•van bus the product," McDanMi explained.

Sbc granted that while the pollt | is rr.isotuhii I-,mi iin- company'i

MaBdpoint, the lood disposal is lutiie ii homeless people go through the trash

"| I o ihe >oinpanv| the poll, \ docs make sense, then again, there

arc people that are going hungry that we could ins,- lood to." McDaniels said l.isi week

Actually, most last lood restaurants do not tluow awas large

.un,mnts oi lood tvery 10 minuter today's cooking systems aie so

well on lir-slrated thai very little II

wasted compared to the unoum sold

Hut ( lovil Wallace, manager ol Ihe Roy Rogers at I ighth and

Market stieels. said that on a daily

basis. Ins icslauiant lluows out lood

worth |5010 l«V) m sales.

ii these nunbtn ire ladk Hive ol ihe siiu.nion s it v mde. and -.i-w-r.rl otlici managers said that they are. this amounts to somewhere between

»S450 and t6S40 worth of food thrown away daily in 1'lnl.idclplna

hv the llitee restaurant chains

When translated into national proportions, between two chains Burger King's MM2 restaurants ami Mi I >onalil's 'M4 lestauranls

roughly S614.MX) to $761,16(1 worth ol lood goes to waste every day.

Neither Murgcr King's piibhi n-l.i

lions lirm nor McDonald's media illations office would release the of- Inial si.uisin s on daily lood WattS

Itul Muiger King spokesman llerincl hal no accurate lood wasie ligiues ,an IN- given l»'i ause disposal amounts s.uv Irom

HOrl 10 store.

Despite the official |>nliiv. some iestaiii.ini rnan.igeis do slip lood to

Ihe homeless Auoiding to some

managers, however, this too can lead lo problems

A manager at the 19th and Chestnut streets lliugei King said that from time 10 tune "I will give

|lhe homeless] the old lood. but once one Ihomeless peison| hears

about it. iiianv more , nine, and that hulls business "

And even il a restaurant would lie

willing lo give awav expired food, lew franchises may offer to distnhiile the food.

A McDonald's manager who u- ipiesled that neilhei his name nor los

inn- IK- released said last week that Ins restaurant "did try to arrange something with Si lohn's Hn

but Ihey wanted us lo deliver the lood

Anne lolle. a media relation'

its tor Mel kmald'i I orpon lion, said thai McDonald's li.is

"done restart h on the possibility ol ..ibagmg IIHMI win, h has expired, and we have had quite a few requests asking us 10 donate out ill-

products Mill lolle explained last week thai

llieie is "|iisl no existing Iccliiinlni'y

thai can guarantee sale slot age and consumption tttm the illotad IIBM

period " "she also poniled 10 other i o in in ri mi v related programs Mi Donald's sup|iorts a pi

shared by several last food , | I isa < lambardclla. coordinator of

'he People's linergnuv < enlri

s.iliinieei prograrrr Im iomnuinity

outreach, sakl that her organi/.unui

hat approached fail rood restaurants mound i ampus loi lood

donations, ■ddhUJ that she has been told ih.n ihe restaurant! cannot par impair due 10 liabilris

i nnhaidella said last week that obtaining donations liom the re

.Mutants is "piobably feasible," but ail,led that it would not lie easy.

"Maybe ihe students COttld organize some kind of coalition l,.r ippro.i, lung the restaurants

suggested

"Mill I don't think the restaurants

are realiv too Interested in providing that kind of service basically

iintlnirii m il loi them

Ity "

Refugees struggle to adapt to life in West Philadelphia REFUGEES, from page •

tolerance loi both physical and mental abuse

" There is a high amount of anti- Asian violence natron wide, and 1'hiladclplua is pist about par for the course. Shen said.

"Almost every Asian youth gets harassed in sonic form." he added, asserting that Asians under en more

abuse than white ethnic groups "because you can identify Asians "

But nevertheless, Shen said that rumbles between rival

Asian gangs occur more frequently than confrontations between Asians and other ethnic groups.

A recent step the community took to relieve the situa-

tion was to lobby for the opening of the police "mini- station" al 44th and Walnul streets

Mini -stations have had numeioiis successes in othei neighborhoods both in reducing enure rales and building

community cohesion, a.miding IO 'Miner I lavitl Van.

"We're hoping to solve some ol the Asian problem In the area, most of which result from the need for more in

formation |aboul Ihe law|," Van Mid

He explained that since most Southeast Asians come Irom countries where people who are atrested are deemed "guilty until proven innocent," they m reluctant lo get

involved in the criminal justice process Van said that Ihe Southeast Asian loiiunirniiy does not

report crimes as frequently as they should " lie also sard that compared to the United Stales, the refugees' native oiinities have very different legal systems

"lor example, battered |Asian| women don'l know

where they can nun." Van said, explaining Oral in Iheir Iniiner , niinlnes many Asians have no social suppm!

systems, and thev assume the situation to be the same in

I limed Mates And Van said I hal As relu, lam e in lepmt ( nines and

Ihe commiiiuiaiinn gap makes refugees partkularl)

susceptible to con games According 10 Philadelphia Pulue Department

spokesman and Detective I ilwanl leniiln. mine r.iies

have sie.ulily risen in Ihe area of 4Ird and 46th stieels In i ween Spruce and Markel over the past two years, although

this in, lease cannot lie attributed In the ml lux ol

SOUlhSlll Asian lelugees Both (unsshaik and Mien agreed thai the Southeast

Asians are more likely to be the victim Ol mine ami nor

the pei |M-naims. although Shen said that many Asian

youths who drop nut oi school turn to delinquent Iw-h.rvioi

"Most people don'l realize that about hall of all Asian students dlOpOUl Of piiblu schiMil id "No one writes about the forgotten segment, thev only Incus on

nail part thai is doing well I ike in any |elhnn| gioup, |ieople who drop out of

II hool often cause trouble." Shen sard I hey aie known

10 hang out in the street |in groups| and get involved in various types of petty crime."

Shen blames inadequacy in (he public school system for instances of Asian youths' delinquent v

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On Campus Events

NOTICE TODAY TOMORROW TOMORROW . \M'" . ' .' V ■ ■ <"' n>'v

■ pyBn ajMa Umaraay at iNawa»a,aiaa. ami *«■ xtiaaafc-tai «« »«, llnaamaV by IV ft* >>.v««*»«r«avi Thara ». i«. itagi m nufvnml Unaraaaav

afatata.1 untupa *a aat««ja d ' •*' Mi* liaarHja may l» maaail .»

inini * "*• lt»*i r*mvnftom**n laaanaaa IH1H*I

40i» Wakmi saaai. Ian •, p in M»«M> lm.ua>! ' ""v

wiii niit ba

•ilM in phoni " *»»'• •"'"• rv iwi i\«»im^i«*i nwnii Bw iighl K> aiM CjneNI rw»n»

'.j hi up** tMiAMmiw

TODAY All VS:

Ion Woman ■ am general .iwaang In lm liakt Wmlna-..' ooi .-n .«i r 00 i- HI HI VM ii 11 N** mambai

UNIT) CONCCT1 INSII ftO HI highiviii' Cmon wi

no to meeang nun Madneaday I I«I p m «tii

aMaa hi to kxgnrari

BOll LAO«K; Malai aa* MBOl t«aaa.at WiaM IWiota.li Hagadnli Yom llavtaa llaaanm Vaahrmaia

baahaa Stwva VaiM/i LaMtaoK

Mn

CMUO VUJIMI M MOV* NaMI Join ua Hi* li*hi Summar Wiiaa*' a larilHc laraaa moirta' I Ma) iaa« alyta ramaahmanta tonajhl

iai i oungi caiiaon rail

COM i"i »i wmi Niinsi m VIM

itaroainar* 11.'.1 ;*V"il at an al

tarnat". '•" 10 IVnn M II

MMC3I

•i in LMMO praiants noardman I eoluesa

MOB Ii Chrtatian Aaaor-ialmn *,K1itoriiini

.i,.iii

OROOS OUNg UNO "il CIA thaHriajWarandllwIUa.'.

VKJao and apaahn Wa.1

•MMdav mghi Sat* ?«h H 01 H.union Hall

Spn»»a<1 hy tha PSA

CIIAIHIAII SHIM N'' Him I I aaowahi|> maata 1 30 p m room

303 Houaaon Hal

HK'iHIIAI I PI NN | .vil, H oui humoi maoa/ina haa la aral marMing nol iHl'log amrvaaly Wr-1 •MHulay Sapi » r a m inn ".«•. kMinga MHS trm. • OM

"Mil III -;il I) IN IIHHAO IU IPRtNG? Now ra »» law In apply Moal pnaNlona raqua* a am monlh i-ommitnwnt IV-~i l «aM> Contact Pa" III

Houalon Mall _______

JO JEWISH OHAFITIO N*»

maoa/lna Hwnang maataig an anyona inlarailad in

iHiainaaa i» layout Wail naadav Sal" M A 00 pm M*kM oread Aiua 3* J mn

LtOHTB .AMI MA A. II,IN laarnhimahayoiKOwnlilma Th*

Pann Film Co-op rnaatu again Wad H All PINNI FOIINIW iiH AIK^N.M.KWVI

I .Mill AIINIH i A|l| III I ' llli.ik.i wanl'

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na AaaociaHiHi m itt^aalvH*!' viMVaa phoning aurvay «.• danli ami racordaaai .ii , ITS inlaiuahiiM araa

PI NN I QUI '.I HIAN II AM mrMrtllHJ HHi MtH IHaaaili,'* .1,1.1 ojapj •aaaon aMrtarJ I p m IVnmni.il, BjQOffl HiMiaHm H«H

IM NN IIIIANi.M I NlilNI I IIINt. MAi,A/iNi InaoducaMY Mi SapaMni I am Noom

'*na Naar and nHI niani ■otooma vva na<».i »

l. ii, 'nl htiainaai and plMMa

l»«Hil»

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paopra Ihara tail H , .initial wtH ha anHwrao '- pan

MMII ii i i ,'u Pan , Imu RDOHI .WI Houalon 11 p iM HaHi us gal Ih* wind ihil

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PUNCH IK'wi liaiwiai Stan i] Wlhlihud.ti I

llmi.il .■!•. MOUaMlHtf "..ii... ar» waH-oma yvniars I naaa paotiia i,*-. a touOh liaahmanla door prl/aa

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HQM al H30 I"" ■■!' I

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■ .1' leg i "manga Han Wavmvim lapaimbai II Ipm

Mil II WISH SlVIAI A Una will ha inanl.ng Imlay

BO ii MM Na» nauM t-ximm Tm iiiraalNiim ,-ali MMCM Mil III AMI MCHII I HAN <H MHNi.'. !.■ m. in Imaal Ihia ynnr1

I III.I iiui aoniii wii-v Iravai ("ail Han. al u An manweij nil BTU0I NI in NNI AMP

ii NII ii «,n baopan '^in ?«h Sai« .''lli SaiM .lllli IM.I

|...i Si l.'IA. ,-MOI Wai" MWTSaB

VIS" .ammo ol lha UndnrgrniHiata CM Anyona in

laraalaii in aniNnpnlogy wnfc-oma v Ijjaji

..vnraily rmiaaiim MUdinl hmnqa

JuMOHRuW AII'Al 'I'lA, "'HI SI N" i AM PAWN 80 ami uunal HapraaaHila MM hom AiPAT and Iha pnaa Hlanlial lampmona wl« dnrnaa Iha larHlhhUaa <nm on Iha MHI

•p n. Inrnoirnw Hillnl An.Min.iHi.

ANA1HIIAN riVIII/AMON:

danra horn p«4 an.1 inwaai P. Mary V.agt Naai taal Sa."l«i.i llnivaraHy Moaaimi 4 01) claaann i iinivnraiiy Muaaum (Palhi i-nHiHVMNlraa taal Caotar)

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maatatv) I hm 00 i .n* 'J" -nil 100 AllamHNWa ■ inamlalmy ami lia pfOTCfl 01 I"" •,hta.a.l ahaanl

DATA MANII'IU All,IN IN A apraaMhaal nnvirnnmani Mala anlry ami lianahamaK',.'. K L0 in:, rietaba 1 iv

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I HHIINI I IIS A I II NHON I I

liaiin. ,«i and Eafctronica I mr* naara nainlhly innnhng Ihmailay

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■MM I II | I MOW MIAN ,..•-« I.'... ....

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■ 'I NNSVI VANIA INVISIMIN1 AIIIANl'l sophiimniaa and Iraahman Imm all «ahm.K aia tl vila.1 li> .ni. .nlrodtKiory maahnu Thuiadav naplambai ."« »m' |i in IfOI Sllllll IVvahip invnfl manl aawy m raal linamn aia with faOow alialanli

I'HHlVMAMII AN I ACIII n III

llllll S»ia»a Morality Aailha OBI ami IViamialily piananlail by Pfolaaaoi Sahm. Miuraday '".ai^amlM-i .M. 4pm hinil' I'nrlail* Hall

lllli ANM llllll inlimlm lory inaat.ng Thura Snpl*mlM*i

V.IM, .. n ni I laahman

and anphomoraa nm^ouiaoail In ■ a»|i*ii*m a n*aiH"i1

MHHAHIi i IX1PFR Of Coopar Nan Aaaivialaa iwaaanla Oya Vaai Alia. OoMMl '» l» lhara a I uliira in 1 rading' Vanca Hall II 8. I no llnoaro«a<1iial» Flnanra

Hud) ikJM aaniaiai .». I n*i l.va •.ii.i, -.I..II...II.-. i ■. -.day Sap tambar ?UII. ' iv r .» m "... il."

CoHaga IHKIK* H»."i OSSWll mil si.am

.11 WISH C.HAIHIAH PM Nil

12 00pm I nla nl hhhl. wHayoal.

MiMam MaM • do Mb .nV VWl.'.n ulnphy 11.11*1 WI Waknui d«e /.WI

AIMS l«l|i::| I'lhUlHIIIAI'MS

COURSI I iiaadoya t « p "• SiarH OotOM < Hagialai in Aria Houaa iniH-n (ii|ii»" LaMj ol High Ilia* I nail

AIMS ii, nisi DHAWMQ daaa DdMftBJ I""" li'a WaiHiaailava ■ 'I | '..|»i | llagi" la. in Aril Hnua* IWIK* (IKipai I oMj •" High Ikaa I aall

("ITS IINIV l» WASIIINl.l.iN ,WAI S. ..... ..' I ..« » •. mil .... campurj Thura Od a A.. argn upa irMiuural Sa* Sun, SuM ,>0 h>w» havnl MrNail llhH]

, Pp| U8C .-.IIAI-IIMI '.i| ,.l ■uaMOM Aitmii. will

ni. i,nl .... , .intpun Ihuia I Aitva.n a ^HJII H"i ,a.|,i.ia.1 Sa*

■,. low*. I*v*l MiNa.l

Mg il IHIIAHUN m ii WISH agan

cam aaaha MudM wilh aiurng wnling ahata hi aaaial parl Mai w.lh VHH^' i>..ii... i...i. nm1 hna; prapaia prfjM ialaa«aa Saa

CPP8 im.i*. oonanun

I I I I INi. I'.iil AM P" W.imlaiing .1 thai* .in. ,'llini kiilirtnl'.ni'ii.rl woman al I'm... ' Sitini"! (]'.'U|.

ni In mfclraa* an" naailay conoarna fall IKS nl imu

K"l AMI I III'AS Will 111 holding an npan infiwmalhin aaaamn aboul than ("iiipmala Managamanl

Wailnaiilav pm Smith

I'anii.mari Honni in llmmlnn Hall

tia.n.ng l»iogiam 1 Sapi fn 4 H I K'

I'HIIIH N1IAI I1AI Ml SI I Hill

HI'. i'A« np*ning for arnlor or aonva to pnrfnrm alm-h maikal/ rlianl iHiillolh. analyala and rhant ■MM Dab* I'I'I'S larhhri mill*, I inam.al Sanrtma "

Hi Mil lit MANI1 ASSlK' Snalu parl lima I'anaain Arrimntant Piapara Hnam Ml alalamanla An

aal raronrilinlinn* and govam manl Minga Minimiin. M A.

...w* rarMjirnd Sna , I'I'S hooka iinon I

SHIin AHIIOAI1 InlmmalKin maatmg h~ II NN SI AS a. changa program wilh iha Univa, aNy d* TnchrHangha d* Ooff |nagna Inal.ialavi m I ian. I.

Uiinaday Saptambai ?9th, i*>4 » pm mam toa Tnwna llnrhhiMJ

lore Ih*. . .

CITY LIMITS A i ook .ii Issuos III Philadelphia

. Wodnesday

TONITE AT

MUG NITE - 2 FOR 1 Hot and cold Hors D'oeuvres daily at the bar

4-6 PM

Steaks-Burgers-Deli Sandwiches-Hoagies-Pizza 3608 CHESTNUT ST.

(UNDER GRAD TOWERS) 382-7400

presents

ERIC SEVAREID CBS New* CommenUlur

"Presidents, Power, and The Press"

Wednesday, September 28, 1988 Irvine Auditorium

7:30 P.M. FREE

SAC Funded

New WQHS talk show to focus on major campus-related issues H. I MJREN SHAHAM

Wl.UIS nisi .l.l.lr.l M'lii. M"" 10 111'' Minli-iH .liiin.'i

limit Stafttai tonlfhi, I'.ini i .iiKs." .i wtekl*, houi loin

IHUI ,.ii,in.-,i i.ill iho» mil Ml tin Unlvetiky'i ■Irwavo ,.n WQHS .ii i' i' ni . »iili I HI t-i 11 .tiii mi \ i nun. ii 1'UM

,l,lll liilltl llllilil iv '111" lltM I'm '•I

i olkgc ii.^iiniiii ivmB Randill, Ih* ihow'i trail ind produce). tdapied IIM Idaj ifm i ihon thai ht workod M .ii .i pii'ii'vMnii.il radio Maiion In Boalon

Randall, thtiali ducilbad "dtvU'i advocate," wW lhai ha win dtbau witn Budd fen UM tlM •'" mlnuiai ol iW* slum i in- iiiii.iiiniH' ni mbuHH "i ii"" program adll con dil ni 'MI.IIIIIII convtraiilon ' In addition, ii' Ruah Via I'tiMiirni Ion vi.in.'ii «iii ippaai on ii»' '•i",»

Randall •""•i lauM watt thai ha prelaw i "Boh < oatni uylc ,,i vajrj direct, prectac queatkmi " H« MM i" plani to .i\k Ilinl,I .in,l \i.<ii.ilI abOUl II" Mi 'l pOaltkM .'ii 'I" inn campui ahohol polh)

• iiw in.mi poini ,ii iin- ihovi i- to txpreu both ildai ol iiir iriument," i"" explained Ian waal "I Ihlnk lonn llllllll llllll I «lll ll.lir .in llllrirslllll' . oiiM't ■..lli.nl

iimiii nM thai hi wanted to appeal on thi radio ihon lo njtlaln whai the IP! la." Hi laid ihal he

\>.IIU% to addraai <u<-111 'i raaolutton atalnil Iha embattl ni iii mi- \ iimiii. iiiu-i i.H ni the Office ol Fraternltj and Sororlt) \i Lm■■. in.i iha councll'i attampti to i hanaa itn- . urrtni alcohol polh •

wii.iiiiin Mipiiiiiii,.!. David Parker, the radio itailon'i

profrarn director, MM thai ai i" ai he kaowi, "Pann I .ills'' iv ill, IMM |iiihli, .illatis vliiiw nl its liml to .in Ofl

WQHS "I think it's a irally (irat iliing Ihal |Randall| hi do

I'.iii.i MM "iin- mbjesl Ihh waa Ii lopkal ami intemtlnj

H.nni.ill laid in hopai to brln| ■< vaflat) ol |w Hi to tha slum. Including admlniitralori, profcuon and othei vm .inn laaden

I tic ■econd ihoa m" Da panel ol ihrai horaoaa* II.ii ,n blaexual nudenii repracntlni i atblani and I ..■> al I'liiii Miiinncii iin- lelephoiH tinea »iii not ba optn foi tin-111 vi ihow, Randall mM iht) ihould ba read) la tlim i,.i i .iiii-is in i iii in tin- 11IAP |i.nii"i

Randall arid tic would aln iiir to bivha admluioni iiiiiii\<-iiii\ in addreu the Unlvenlty'n dei lining iiatui in tin "Barron'i ProlHai to •.merican Colleaaa" from i

111,11.1 competitive" ichool lo i "highly competitive" •.. in...i MI ..i iha .niii'i Ivy League collaiaa arecaletorli

"moat. ompetltlve," he an dad "HooafUlty, ii"- thou aril i«ii ap wtth -i broad aa

dlencc and »iii maybe even go beyond thi Pann i ommunl ly in Interviewing Pann profanon aboul newiworthj na lional iuuei," he mid

WQHS 'in ,'u iii* \M •ii.it IHIK IKIH ai Pann'i ilternatlve" radio Halloa ii i1. completely itudcni run

.in,i offen i II." wave" formal WQHS uaed to in- w KPN'i VM affiliate, but broka oil aboul 10 yi M lllllllUK llv Mllill.iv .lllll .lllll|Hlt1|l .1 lll« llHIII.ll

Speaker calls for end to violations of animal rights at sparsely-attended talk Hi l»\N si HW \HI/

I Hill M'.ll v .ten. .1 Binup nl .inini.il

actlvliu Mob '■<• houn ol videotape ir..in ,i i Inlverih) laboratoi > whh h iii, i,tiviiu ^iini ihowed iIniveriit) icienllMi . .Htiiiii nni' rtaearch which violated itati and Manl animal iiiihiv lawi

lit,- thefti iparked protean, widapread newi coverap and in In tonal UnJveralt] Invauigaibin ol the laboratoi)

\ii. when Reverend Andrea i in/rv from ihr UnJverrit} ol i ue» apoki on animal tIghli •" ''■'" 'lull II.in \vs.i, i. n yaaterday, only fmu peopta .iti.ii.i.'.i

Hm hr Mrenad iiir bnportanot ol ihr bane ol animal rlghd

M , .iv ,i MII lei), in many wny% ii.ti. iii'iiiiiii/i'.i animal abuie," I IntC) '••nil "i liiv v|i,i-, h "I ml.iv . in

.iir mi longer allowed to avoid the iwiir \\ r .lie in .1 iiiniill iiirsv "

Llnrey, who Ii tha directot ol Iha Cental lot the Stud) ol rheotoaj and the chaplain ol tha Unlvaratt) ol t svev in England, Ii In ii» midst ol hii i da] imii ni tha anal coaM i ba low in,iinii'v ipaaklng angagamanu at

Harvard Unlvanltj and N.MIII i arollna Stale I Intvenll}

i ha iinn iv part ol hti attempt to llllll,' vlllililltv .111,1 till- lllllllll .lll.lli • n I

wii.it i inn) . .iiii-ii tnormouj rlghti Mniiitiniiv taking placa m ilaughtei iimivrv .nni iiiiint.iii.iiiv hare In iha United Sum and around t lie- world

i ,t, ii win. ovai i"" million animab an uaad foi laborator) put poaaa." hi laid " rhaj an kepi In ,i.ii i. age*, with no room to move and iiuic niinii in breathe Vou naad to na it "

I Ii. iiintniil itiililv .uiiMvi, who

wean plailk vin>rv Inttead nl Irnihri.

■aid in- Ii trying to ipraad tha word to Mudanta thai ai many anbnata ai iniwidir ihoaM in' iparad

i i, h ni nv ii.iv .i .inn to extra ate

OUnarvaa fiom .m uiiun in .ininiiilv."

I Intty aaM "Whrir *r linvr llllll

, h,»t. e, we ihould do ii Linae) uaad compariioni i" blacl

vi.i\i-i\ and i.iiiniiv torture taati on humana, Including Nail experimenti, In lit|ilili)'lit wli.it In- Ideal II Imnit

dom !•• animal •llllll- wi- tlliilliilll IllUI Hi , milil

nevei dleaobe oui bomb lo ilavary,"

I m/cv Mid "Wr h;i\r Mini wr . Ofl

lemplated using the raanhi ol lean ii,.in- in humana i ihlnk noa wr an ,,.until' io i period whan an naad in .ivi ourservea, 'An ihaai ill goiieri .■.mi. •

Hm. although i iii"\ am making ivvi-iiintiv about iiii" mlatreatmeni ol niiiiiiiiv in .in .1,.i,iinn, letting, no Hudenti atlandad iiir qpaach

lliiwi-ii-t. Diana I'ml. .1 ^ ■ i

Philadelphia renldant, 'i"i attend "l found imu vary arth ulata," On-

vaul " In mr. H'v miiir nl .1 quaMlon

iha [sanctity) ol nil iiir |Wa aead to havc| a fundamental ihlP. In out patnet

IIIIIM'IVIIN I |iivni|i.iliaii 1 linplain

inini Scot) Mini iinn Lbtaey'i ptai inini puti animal rights, imiii m iha laboratory and in ao.iniiiiiit.il Imvinrvvrv. nn BOjUaJ liailinn with

human MI-IHV

"Allii ti-.iiliiiH Ins lunik. Caafb

limit) a 11 (11 hi- RlgMti "I \niiinil\. Till

vinr he wanlv In Ml iha I inilril Na

tintiv ii,-.1,11.in.HI inn human MBIH%|

in- continued to animab,*' Scott mid 1,'Vlil il.IV

Ride a Lucky Streak to the casinos.

Greyhound's Lucky Streak to Atlantic City 5 times a day. $11.50

It' you're tot-ding io the cuinoi, Greyhound's lucky Streak can lake you there. And. if you're 21 or over, you'll get big casino eash bonuses when you arrive.

So rule a Lucky Streak straight to the casinos Call today lor

tare a.ul schedule Luckigg^^ inlorm.ilion _^MtWii^iMtk

Buses Depart:

10:43 a.m. 12:45 p.m. 2:15 p.m. 5:45 p.m. 6:50 p.m.

COMMUNITY TRAVEL at St. Leonard's Court 39th & Chestnut 215-222-9000

•arthitot ami Kmui .iih-r<' ■" > luiiff »itr««t no(n,(

CO GREYHOUND And leavetne driving to us.

\\,,l, I9H Ihr llall» Prrnitt Ionian Pig* I

New Jersey attorney general outlines the fight against crime H> IMANK MMAMM

Ncv\ Insrv Altniniv OtMnl c ,. , i dwardi «- -i.t .1 JO membei itu I audlenci lu night Hi.H Nn li

am 1 riddtod bj , orraptlofi hai now N-. Him' .1 MIIOMI model tot fighting HI>'.HU.,,1, inn,

In I ,lu .u.lv IDfO li. ajKNUOrcd In Ihr I1-I111 M.u -.lull I',, I |« ■„„ 1, 11 iiu Miomt) general denribed rt<ml

Ifll llir 1 ,.ii,l, 11 "-t -if. Ii.i-. ni.i.lr I,. ■ inn

I liu-l l.nv riiliMirnii'iil ol

111 11 ind principal legal counatl tot ilu- stair. I .lu.mls ..ml I Inn Nr»

lent) hai the itrongi 11 lal .111,1 (nveatigatlvi ,1, i'iimi. in-. ,11 iii, , ounlr)

1 dwardi OM DI lha rea appoimad allot I iln . ,-\ i'i.iini-,11i1.11 .1 com tori hrvaf" M

plan 1 ,,i organiaad 1 rim ietad HI New lent) from the run-. through ihi I'WK During ihb liim Nr« leree) wai conilderedthe' IMMIK .111,1 bedroom" ,'i organized crime In ihr United Siaiei

I lie it oratlni reputation .111*1 in, rcailng polllli -ii ,»" 1 notion prompted lawmakeri 10 paai ii" 1 iiiiiin.ii luath 1 v 1 in 19'i'

1 hr -..mi, \i-.H. New in., \ aiig adopted itandardi which allow ol 11, lali io I" •, lai ii ,1 ,,ii m MI ,,ni\. without 1. aard la pollth -ii afnilatlon

1 dwardi lold hla audiem 1 Ihat wltli theee new meaiurei, Ne« lerat) ii, 1 ■ loped .1 ", nihr ,ii iii, moat i""

HI.,i. 1 mi 111 pet aonnel 111 llll . , Ml 111 I V

Sin,i- iiu- paiiaic ,'i Mi, 1 iiiiiin.ii luatlca \,i. Bdwardi tald thai Nr« lerat) hai had Don than MX)

1 ,ii nidi, imenti and protei utli "I lllllllv lull, M III.II ll' . Il,

■yiteffl iii.n 1 in i', devlied," 1 dw ,„i

1 in- defendant geti ■< mm •> ralni ihaki 1 ■ "in iiu iyiti m in Nc» II

iii.ui anywhan ekaj In ii" 1 ouni in- added "it doaan't MH thai

s,,iir we proaeiuic li |ulhy, bul 1 would 1 Mint in iii 1' ''■, • pan ant an "

No* 1 lid III H Nr„ I

ri',i in ,,iiui itatei .iv iiiiMiin iiu- ni,".i powerful .iii,'in,\ 1 iifflct '"i", he li 11." --iii'ir, 1 i" . 1., lot ii review. 1 dwardi aid la hi power "i'i ordinarily given

1.1 nffii iii 1 h. HI.ninn I'I-II, 1 al abo ii"1 on*

■niii, 1- I," i", 1.in -'11,1.1" ■ 1 i" •ehool, in uld, iraloa OM 10 b> 1 lawyei i" leachlni an appropriati thinking 1 ■ ol looking 11 and

problem 1i» in.vv. MI. dote "1" rn 1 "i" i'1

in 1.. i„ .1 law I,. i„ 11.1

Although itudi> ''ii. 1 llll' I.Ill V, lllHll If, llll , II.'

' Hi.11 iin-1 enjoyi d 1 dwardi' ip

wiiiiii.ii lophomon Sharon Saatow, who plain i" Mland bra ■chool, iald the found 1 .tennis \*<

■ HI ibl< in,1 urn''

III 11 .1'. Mil .1,1,Inl .ilinnl

iwijibing 1 hai In doe In hit |ob," '•.r.ii'ii aid 11, alao gave good In light nun Ilu- IIIIII'I «..i king! Ol '" " I,,I III 1 Ml. 1 "

RAs unhappy with role as policemen

SIGOURNEYWEAVER

She lefi t'wrvlliiiii' sin- knew &\nd entered .1

world few haveeva Men

She risked ha life h 1 gave .1 vvi "ii In 'ii', 1 reature

iiom ilu-1 ruelty >>t nun( .mil went rurtha

ih.m gnyone ever dared,

Son he wen in.. 1.11

H As limn |Ni|tr I

mlnlitrative fellow, the gudgni who received the ie< ond warning lettet wai linlilini' .1 , .111 ..I l„-,-i H'bilr n.11, linn-

teJevttlon when in- wai ipotted b) > restdential adviaot

Vleirt I'II" lid iii" ii" H \ iii ■ urn ui iiii-.i .1 inn report, and ihai iiu- itudent inn "1" in batn contacted b) Ihr III'

According io lha ne» Raaldentlal 1 inni' guhMlnei, ii < raddent ■ itafl metnbet leei an underage itudent In poaanilon ol alcohol, iiu- woritei miatt Mr .111 Minimi Hqinil I nun .mil iiu- Minii-ni mil rat rive i warning Irtln

Mill sonic KAs MII.I IIIIMIII' Ihr mi-,-iiiii' ih." iiu added reiponubillt' hai changed ihelt role fa iiu- worae, predicting thai ftwet Hudenti will 1*.mi to apph ini KA poahloni neon vr.ll

"I ihiiik ihli iv undue mponiihlll IN.'' Hid Nnl ( limv i Wli.iiti.n iiinini ' |i iisii, we didn't even know about" mini in .mi,- bat I ihli yaat .111,1 |v,'l Oil,lll|. H'l ,| Wllllll- lllll

nun MHI'II- .111 HA mil a

policeman "I don't aval in inni urn about ot

bun .IIU alcohol violation," I harr) , niiliiiiiril |Sliuliiils| wouldn't ,1,1 wmii 10 mlli 1.1 nir .if.in,

Mum RAi ii.' iald the) were con IIIM-II ,il„nil lum 1,1 liiinilli- MM

.iln. Ill, HI', ill iv III, Ii ll, iill,'I 1 I,ill'

oheerved 1 >nr K \. iv in, aiked ""'',' be tden

mi,-,1 ...mi that i"- had intered •• room iii,H- approxlmalel) 45 people had iintii.-i. ,i .111,1 wart "" '11111111- ii. .,ii..i

"t mi-Hi. what mi i luppoaad io .ii-"- ihr Quad HA .i"i Should i write up .ill 45 people' 11 an't do iii" S.i I lliiinril in| llir IVVII |>rii|ilr ivlin

iiu,i in the room Mm whan ' want in bgd 'l"'l Illgta, I Irpl iliiiiliiii! Dili I do lha right ihlngT'

llii-v'ir '..nir in lair linn IIHVIIIIIIHIIV urn on us bacaaaa wr'ir ih,- ,,n,v iha) iiu.-1" deal with," ( ol l.-r. si-nun I .IHLI M;i. I iald "II in invii-u .mi. i whenevet i go can

HII itlllV

khhougjt ..i'iii R*J .mi iii'i) iiiuirivi.iiiii itu- Unlvenity'i pollc) nnl ihi-H nitrs ,iv i ni..i., i. iha) iald

lllllt llirv ,liil in" knOW ivli.il io do

whan iii," Mudenti MM ugj dgMl HIV III VV.llll llll-lll IH .IV,H,I ||

whrir i ml.il i,inv wiinlil Iir m i iiiimit. " i iirv iii HI" t want io have to pul mi

in viiM.iiiMM-. ol iiivum iiirm alcohol ii.ii.in,,II. bat auM vvi- both know rakr iiom are going to gat irainad." aid College 'I-""" iirih \iiniiti. .in KA

"Wr'ir ,i.- linn- will "i pea pie here. -• • i-1 lhai'i what'i a U)

• in, .1,1, i ... ii.i thai Mudenti often ..,, doot 'ii II a ",■ no i kola

iiom "'■ ." ■ urring in iiir room I hi r Intanded io Inform iiir H A

not io ' MI. i iii. in. in, H \ aid knothet i' A i'ii' in . i.ini|iir whan

idem would i mat ike adviaot ■■ room. ■ I"-, ih.- 'inni. and I H \ but) iv in1

■ M iii. hall Man) itudent i ileo voiced irm

ih.II itu- t inlvenlt)' ■ new ak ,'ii"i pOlk V tun .'. Ilivlllliril oil .llll|iliv |0

dangeroui lot atk \iii.ilil -..nil ih II |aw i il ni tin

IMVIMIIIII Mm,ini.II i II ih,

i leal week'i ihooting m IIOMI ,.| '.Ml,.I, v Ini-'v

"ll in.ik, I in. HUM nil,, .ilil

. aee," \inniii .mi i mean, ihrv are fmhmen .i",i ■'>.-% ,i,,ni iuivran< i.i.-.i 1.1 vvii.ii'-. .inMiM,i hen ""I

I liking ill il" iv iv up In 44th ni 4'th Street |fot ■ party] t don't even go up ihnr

\ ft t M.iiiivviin . iplalnad 'ii" •ini, h ni iiu imMgult) ol ihr law

I,- ini IIMMI iiu i.i. i ,,i IUIII, lal ii In,II III" III." llll' ill'., I|,|lll,ll V I I II

..| iln- nrw IHSV WHS .HI ivsur 11■. i.l iniiiivii.iiinii was vuii working

iiiiniiHh

GORILLAS IN THE MIST The Adventure ofDlan Fossey

wMNfRMK .. IMVUMIfinillh, i,IBIRPITIR>- >«VHI'iJlwHHl v|t/K«\n»WII -i^llUMMIIIMI''; i wwm imASmm-sniiiHAMIS-'K<m-ARTMiin*fi- ".v.'i".Mivuv!*m-."-.'-'H!'' iiinuni mrsiiA.-flWKwwi

.'■raMAIMrlAWIKW.'ii'rTnimi. RiNRTO ..XV,. ■ HMIITINflfflAS.-. MNIIMHT ■ I:,.«-,...—..— - .inminisniH'' num.- TIRI'. ir

lWli«llllOTMtaiUll< ' ' ,

NOW PLAYING IN SELECT AREAS. ((>MiN(;sirriMHKR K>IUIt)ATlLEATRENKARYOU

UNIVERSITY CITY IS THE PLACE TO EAT ON WEDNESDAY NITESI

SMOKEY JOE'S Wednesday Nite Specials

Create Your Own Burger Nite

All Toppings Free! $1.50 L.I. Ice Teas Live Entertainment

Ahmet Sabri DJ & Dancing

marfariTA m|ht

eve«.r wepNEJOAV

mo OJ«.

PTcxictv. Burger *m

* Cup of 0.i.i & Cornrtdv B"er 6pKi4l

rHWOOWSAME

C0UE6E NIQHT5 FCATUfurtQ leiMMMlt ^

liveeiit«rri».nrn«fitorftJ. nmn*.

—OHARAS—

Cavanaugh's

MEW

f) 10 PM r.r.t.i .inf) Gourmet P\zza

half price

11 PM till close Reggae Sunsplash

y '30 Tropical DrlnKs 10 till Mldnilc

MIMf Hi,ill twci •.!«•( Ml', rill (I. Iv/1

HJV WAINUI 11*111/ Ml llll

1988 FALL LINEUP

* BBQ'd Ribs & Rib Combos from $5.50

*3T.V.S

THE NEW

XOORS SILVERBULLET BASKETBALL GAME

* LIVE ENTERTAINMENT THURS & SAT

CSBG 2*u Qjearnur Sfnaet ZMHZSO

AHOY COLLEGE STUDENTS/

i^edncsday Specuils

C0UE6IAN5 Ofir 50V. OFF YOUR FOOP CHECK.'*

aaj ... BACK By ftpuiar VemanA..

190 NIOHF FW)^q»

/!>-■* ft »

FISH MOUSE

J»TM « CHESTNUT STREETS / 149-9000

marsaritas; UN* MtMICAN tOOO » DKIMK

40Oi CHESTNUT 387 4477 FaiHa* < hkalckaagai

GuKafDolc "v^.tin* SiiprcaM I fi.lillada* Mr.li 411 cl//j

DRiNK SPECIALS

Monday geae

I mrm^my mpori*

Veaewaelaf M.,M,»II«»

lh»r»«Ur

FOR FOOD, FOR FUN, FOR SINGING, FOR DANCING FOR SAVINGS... IT'S THE EXCITING SIDE OF CAMPUS!!

Pact 6 Ihcllaili Pennsylvania!! Wednesday. Scplcinhci 28. I'HiS

®ljp Jicrilg ^ejtnsylltmtian r/k- imk'perkicnt Ncwspapei ol the Uttlvank) of PuuuylvaniM

KUlh Yc;u ot I'ubhaition

KHIIIKI PASNM BXECI nvi I PH.* CHARLES < ('III N >W«IIII hiuiiu linmt

y<) «/ 1.7 \ M is S..IS.. I mil* / I 1,7 M V. II (i/.I Ml MSI ss MANAOHI

IMDJtEN i HAUUVSKX EDxraaiAl P*a EDrros I IV///K \w« 111 SISI V. M \SM.I K

i DOUGLAS KKEMEK SALES MANAGED

./I "HA PI I fW \m DUtBCTO* JO\ UII.SIK SISIKIsl I0IOK WSA/t C( VDFRSl N rii.HK.KM'm EDITOR l\l'HI » KU\S M>\l KIISISiUlKI. IIIK

GMECSTONl NrwsEMTOS (/ IS (\//K<>/> lisss. I MANAOei HOHIMIHI'S UlllMKII I t IHIOK

DAVIDLASKO, fkssoi IAT1 l piiot Kiumi i cm Bom*

i;/ \<\niK\I iic\ PHorooRAnn Bomni /•.<!'/. IIWMAS COTI 10 SK I I0IOK

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The Burnout of Raoul Duke "Scicw ill, i',.01 hook1 Wc ..in

figure iIns siull mil .oi oui ownl I St's blow this flcshpit!'' Student ingst sets in already, poor hasiaids, I thought .is

I watched the iwo young men battle (heir way past a grail student and

toward the exit lines of the Uimcisus

Book Store.

Just the Facts, Ma'am

Ross * Kerber

I iu- riot spread, huge Macks ol cak books falling on (he looms \ work

mg pro i.oiin.iiis, anywhere oka would'vc had his Rokn oil Ins wnsi

and in a pocket by now. I dunk, «rtt ching (he cashiers swing baseball bais

and a ccriain Wharton dean MUMIH

baa "The safe, Jesus, watch (he safe!" It was only by chance ius( (hen ih.n

my associate tackled me to dodge the flying "U. of P." beer mugs, and I

lound myself face to face with the original pro. Dr. Hunter S. Thomp-

son. His drug-scarred jaw stared fiom a post-nuclear sunscl off (he cover ol

ins an book. (fcjaapat ion "' Sussse, and I knew I hadn't come to (he Book Store for a new Garficld windshield

shade •

"In the '60s, I learned ii had lo be done. You really have to parlicipatc in

your life. Thai was (he mosl powerful (hing abou( the '60s. If you wanted to run a president out of office, you could do it. Bui (his generation todav

near college age — I miss in them the

sense of possibility." — Hunter S. Thompson 10 imitator

P.J. O'Rourke in Rolling Slum-. November 10th, 1987.

I hate to make this precious, but I think lhal onl\ ambitious young

political types who grew up reading Hunter Thompson can understand the disappoint menl upor. reading his

latest book. Genera/ion of Swim1

An era ago Hunter Thompson, the

high priesi of gon/o journalism, stood for everything fierce and unforgiving in the hearts of young reporters and

journalism-school undergrads. Here was a warrior. In his work loi

Rolling Stone, and in books like Fear anil I oathmg On Ihe ( ampaign Trail

'72. Thompson chewed up (he illu sions of the American dream like no

CBS commentator could ever hope I imagined the from pages of major daily papers changed for net b] Thompson's licicc BTOM "Ijniim

Bakker stomped in crack brawl. . million-pound shithammcr

deep-sixes lee Alwater So if Thompson says ihai siudenis

IO.I.IN lack -i sens. Ol possilohu. who could -ii»• in ' \' long as (hen- wa- gi«Hl and evil, Mdiovern and Nixon.

(here would ho I plan- loi Hunlei S s.i wh.u's ilu- I'viiisi- loi rhOflip

son's ciirienl hesls.-lli-i . ( fcWMNftM •>' S.wi.-. a lollivluoi Ol his columns

iiom ilu- Saa Frmtcheo BxwmhMri Whci.as his prtvious solliviions had guls 10 Iheiii. like I'hi- iirtal Shark Hum. Swim- is mi I.SIMI.IU-II and in

venle.l BOaalp, ■ awk von oi I could li.isi- wniien in a summci vacation

with ihici- national newspaper siihs.npuons

rhompaorj lacks ins prcvkiui sense of political adventuring. In "Cam paign Trail." written I? years ago. he churned oui passaaei hk.-

■•so iii. niin.o n.oss im ike McOov , .impaii'iii .li.ln'i inalli-i I hell ol a MM || was die Bl| One Ike Hum

phtcv Suii-winiiii thai bkra hair the

spine Mil ol McQoVOTB'l .anipai.'n stralegv I he one thing lhal apparent ly nevei niiiiricil tO eiihci Han H I nalk Maiikiewuv n SO me eithei.

SSSaa-^^SSTp^o—T

S^i..""-0"

Vlmm" ,»*CLi""""S_!_

for (hal mailer, despite my rancid contempt lor the Humphrey'Mc.ins axis and everything it stood for — was the ominous (vosslbilitv that those evil

bastards would refuse to close ranks.

behind McGovern once he had the nomination

In \Him\ though, we gel gems like "The I'lioenix Suns will win the NBA

title before any of these (Irangatc) criminal swine will go home again. Miisc will put his fingerprints on

more license plates than Caryl

< hissinan before he slinks back home 10 Oakland."

Does he really believe in these rav-

ing hopes for social decency? Even if Dukakis pulls it off, Argentina's

president Alfonsin will have better lu.k piosiiutuig the low-rent thugs

who raped his country loi the decade before he came to power than will the Demoei.iis

• I h.oupson was never the David

I eiicinian of the printed wind

The Question of Alcohol I asi week Kevin Blaiim. the slate

representative who wrote the ad which has resulted In a reMrictive net alcohol policy, drove two hours Iiom Wilkes Barre. Pennsylvania to la..' ■ roomful ol hissing Fratcrnlt) brothers who wanted lo know how anyone is

supposed io have fun without alcohol al I'liin

■■ i ins plea is not a run plan-10 go to school anymore," imeffHsternhy Council President lohn Build poinird

Out Of Kansas

Sarah Fremerman

Beneath the posturing is Ins profes- sional secret that above all, he was a solid reporter. Thompson's books iioin.aiK follow inebeel traditionso< hard-boiled cm rapoftlraj Campaign trail, and before that In Hrll\ Angel', win- both full of what in the business is called "altributioii

Perhaps wa ate pnet the times ol good and evil that fired Thompson's si vl<- President Keagan may have done more serious .1 oui COUOtry than Nixon could evei hope, vet he continues io siiikc everybody as an intensely decent person I.olav's Republicans arc driven mioc b\ u than lust foi powci. Is there still a place for the gon/.o style'.'

It just so happens that one Ol Thompson's lellow columnists at the S,;>, / M'li /si II / DSMtftSS* is Hill

Mandcl. University class ol '(•', an.l

founder of 34th Street. We gave him a call.

Kk "So Bill, tell us about hie on the West i oasi "

M.uidel: "Well I've got dinner guests over so I don't really have time to talk. I don': see Thompson that much anyway, he writes most ol his

stnil out of whcrcvei he lives in

Colorado.'' Kk "Wood) Crank?" Mandcl: "Yeah, that's " I ike I

say. I wouldn't say we had a working professional relationship."

Rk "WhM about Ins uputation

around the newsroom? You've seen him a lew tunes, at least7"

Mandcl: "Well, sometimes he doesn't file his column, and he runs

up a lot of expenses •

Hmm. Maybe Ihocnpsoa's lust up

to old reporter's tricks after all. But partying it up on speaking fees and

royalties for crummy books is a dif- ferent kind ol living than lighting the good fight against greed and power. Are all the heroes dead 1 Thompson's Dooncsbury alter ego Uncle Duke

has, of course, been a /ombie for

several years. Now we know how Dylan's fans

felt when he went electric We all want to live hard and die young, and Thompson once brought us that life as no other journalist could. Why bother writing hard news I mm one's

imagination? Carl Bernstein was

played by Dastin Hoffman in All the

President's Men, but Thompson used lo get acton like Bill Murray, who played him in Where the Buffalo Roam. Which sort of reporting was fiercer and more lasting' lake VOW

pick, wc all grow old and so do our heroes. But no movies will be made of

Generation of Swine.

Ross kertHt u .' I allege senior. Just The Pacts, Ma'am SMSDOM regularly on the editorial pave

out. and the angry audience agreed. "What are we supposed to do to

have fun''' one biothei wanted to

know "BectBltC there aic no bowling alleys around.

Someone asked Bii.l.l. Hlaiini. and

theothet speakers on the panel io sug- gest some social alternatives to dunking.

"Wc could all go play Twister on

College Green M something I don"! know what we .oiiM do." Build

answered. i he rraternh) brotnen took nuns

making angry declarations about how

III.- law is l.o.ing students to go oil campus looking loi alcohol, and how

they're mining to hard Bejna now winch is more dangerous, and how ihe real problem is not In reel underage drinking but drunk driving, and how people are going 10 find alcohol anvwav. because Ihev always do.

Maun laughed ■ lot, bai ha dkta'i answci man) ol theli questions direct lv He sounded nervous

M one point he said, sure, he.I

probabb go home and have a bcci later on "I'll need It, aliei this," he

joked "I'm trying very haul not to he lo

sou 04 deceive yon." he said. He said he is MM I l.rlotaler He likes a beer.

He didn't answer the question of how

10 have hill wirhoui alcohol •

i ..on i freshman's corunw winch appeared in the /»/' on Monday,

September i*> "I applied heie because having a

good nine means a lot to me "The bottom line luie is that life

here so far has been ridiculously hot ing and the University's attempt lo

alleviate tins b) sponsoring ail these •psmtlo-piirliev' has made it worse

Don't huinoi us just becauSC win freshmen. I've had better partial in

my bathroom We know k*i boring

here "

I de. idc.l 10 ask some othei people how the) think we're supposed to have fun without alcohol al Penn, but

they couldn't tell DM either Well, I asked them, what do you like about drinking? What is this indispensable element of social life? How docs II

feel to drink? Why exactly do you

drink? We came up with a lot of reasons to

dunk 1. "I don't know, it drops your

inhibitions

2. "It relaxes me." J, "It gives you courage." 4. "It gives me this tingling sensa-

tion, in my face." 5. "It lowers your inhibitions." 6 "It makes you less inhibited." 7. It gives you a purpose and .Im.

tion in the first minutes after arriving

at a party

8 It's something to do H the IM menl a conversation ends, when v.oi

or ihe other person walk away an.l sou lind vouisell alone Ihe keg in the kitchen is a place where von can

Stud unobtrusively by yourself in line for a few minutes. You have a ii-as.oi

to Hthere. 9. It acts as a catalyst foi

, oover saiton io. "it's pest piessun i, us definite

ly peei pressure I don'i .are whut age

MuMranon By Oary doth/Daily Pnoniyiy.nun

mg around scan hing and vou can'i turd VOW pock* light away it's really uncomfortable, ind leant poekau an too nghi. and sumeHnms von don'i has.- po. kels at all

14. It's something to do when the

other person is talking is 'Tbere'l •' physiological

explanation 16 "TO let go." 17. High school lias nided too

recently for a pans that serves only

iWell, I asked (hem, what do you like about drinking? What is this indispensable element of sixial life? How does it feel to drink? Why exactly do you drink?9

you an TspcnalK il vou'ie a guv II A scniiil said she nor mails

dunks,oils socially, bill one night she

was going over to have dinner with her boyfriend and his five roommates.

and she knew they were going to be judging her the whole tune, so she had a few drinks before she went.

12. If you want to meet men, or women, you are more likely to make contact with them and have a decent

..oiieisation il both arc al least tips) than if both are sober

13. It's something to do with your bands. (When thescnioi drinks social l\ she usually muses one drink in her hand all evening She said she likes to

be holding something.) Othcrwisc your arms hang there, loosely, un- naturally; and you become conscious

of them when you're having a conver-

sation and they're just hanging there. Sometimes sou KM\ put them in your pockets, but if your hands are sneak

soda (oi "walci and pOOCOrfl is .me

freshman was inssjJtad u> be offered last week al a rush event) not 10 resemble •■ pans supervised by parents, howevci subtly. Alcohol

lends a pasty sophistication, Drugs, t greater sophistication.

18. A sense of routine A senior

s.ml he wailed in line al one party lor

a half houi for a cup ol li'ci which he knew wasn't going lo affect him at all Then he and everyone else left within a few minutes alter ihe beat ran out

19 Habit.

20 "People have been drinking lot thousands and ihous.iiids.il years.''

21. Alcohol has always been a ma- jor part of I'enn's social scene.

22. "I don't really know 23. "A feeling ol happiness."

24. "I don't know."

Sarah I'renterman is a College junior Out ol k.insas H/I/I.'UM

II tdlMtda) s

Letter to the Editor

Bloom County/Berke Breathed ime t/mmes. LAKH. cm***,. muMArams 6#b eiAr smr otxwseo mpfxntwus wnup

Ltmnom

xutmamm H0U.VWOOP IMXtarXMO MX lines

^^

What's a UA? To the Editor:

After spending a lew days on I ,» ust Walk talking to students. I

am under the impression that a

great many of you do not know what the Undergraduate Assembly

is. As Chairman of the UA, I lind that disheartening and seek to i K tils (Ins situation. We set up a ..oiiiuuiii.aiioiis ..oininmcc 10 helj>

get our message out. I ct me begin by explaining what

the U A is all about. The UA has si

representatives: 15 from the i ol lege, five from Wharton, three from Engineering, and one from Nursing Nine freshmen will be elected in mid-October lo round

out the 33 These elected represen- tatives work to serve student in sda

and give student opinion, especial- ly to the administration. To ex- pedite the process of getting ac- curate student opinion', we have set up a committee whose sole purpose is to ask students questions concer-

ning current undergraduate issues If you feel your opinion is not be-

ing heard or just wish to talk to I

UA member, call the oil ice at I9M9M,

But how does the UA help students?

The U A forms committees to ex-

amine student concerns some of our committees are Athletics. Din

ing Services, Residential I ivhuj and Minority Issues I hese COB)

notices are made up of UA members and other UUCMMSUCd students. Non-UA members can, in some cases, chair one of these commit ices. The Assembly meets

every Wednesday at 9:00 p.m. to discuss siuuciii issues and make

resolutions which reflect student mads, Everyone is welcome to at- tend our meetings.

The resolutions we pass are of

three types. The resolution mas slate an opinion ("Wc do not like

ihe alcohol policy"). They may support an action ol a student

group. ("We declare October 3-10 Voter Registration Week"). They may support an action of a UA committee ("We support the security committee's recommenda-

tion ol urging the police to patrol 4 0 th and Walnut more

frequently"). Ihe tesolutions we pass usually

arc printed in The Daily Penn- sylvaman the lollowuig day. The UA leaders then meet with ad- ministrators to discuss the resolu-

tion.. Frequently the UA lakes

resolutions to the UnivcnkyCoun cil. If the UC also passes our resolution, hopefully it will

become policy When the UA is la sensitise u. student needs, the UA organizes pi,.tests and rattles

The UA also acts as a resource

lot students and a means for students to speak to "unap

proachablc" administrators. The UA aso employs an attorney to

give free legal advice to students If you want lo get involved.

Ties I ions for freshmen represen- tatives arc the second week of Oc-

tober. You can also call the UA to be on any of our committees.

KEITH WASSERSTROM Chairman.

Undergraduate Assembly

Polk) on Submissions The Dt hrtuiion welcomes eonuneni from the l niversil) communits in

the form ol columns and letters 10 the editor. All columns, letters and cartoons appearing on this page represent the opini

of the authors and do not ncccssaruj represent the opinions ol Pennsylvania!!.

Submissions should be typed double s; hould be no longer than two pages. TheDail) Ptnnsylvanian reserves the righi to condense all letters an I umns. Send submissions to Andrew Chaikivsky, I ditorial Page i Dalh Pennsylvanian, 4015 Walnut Street. Philadelphia. PA 19104.

Wednesday, Sepiembet :x. ISWX ihr Dtfe Prnns>iv»man Page 7

Steady stream of onlookers visit Public Safety information fair B» GEOFF I At HMAN

Anyone who walked down I OCUM Walk ywttrdtj noticed ihM than wen -HI IIIMIMI.IIU large numbti ol Public Safety offlcen on the i lirivci llly'l main dra| .iiomul luiuIlium-

Ami Ihcic wasn't even .1 clinic i he i nlvcrsii) poMca held .1 Fail 10

help acquaint the communHy with the various rtaourcM whit ii PuMk Safety offeri

rhr fair Included Information bootha Hninj the «.iik .in.i taemben ol 1 in- I'c-nii \ 1 IcIcJo Club demonstrating thaji ikllli on CoHeat 1 .ii-.-ii

And Hudenti could peel the itn looi llainry Battery who welcomed them with 1 I'll// anil .1 COfflpUltlCn (arv hiiiul .ml

But, whethei by 1 hoiceoi INM BUM II « is on 1 he way in llu-n m-xl class. .1 continuous How ol Mminus attended the event, called "Safety I el's Do It ronethei "

SI-MI. il organizations, ranging hoin the Department of Risk Management to Women Against Abuse, had repiesentalives ready to discuss various security related topics. distribute pamphlets and handout free items

One ol lire most populai guc IWBJ items was tlie led ami blue alcil wins tie provldad by PubHe Safttj

\dditionallv. sesci.il oi the gioups showed videos 111 then hoolhs ami there were dcmonstiations ol .11 kulo and sell .lelense techniques tot the diiabwd

Police ( ommiiiionei Willie Williams spoke at the I.111 about the success ni "community policing."

which involves police a nil neighborhood cooperation lot pntt oil

Wilhami continued thai while the Phlladeiphii Police an Faced »nii In

log demands lot iheu seiviccs. ihev , an .nil meet the needs ol the community despite budget cutbacks

In an intcisicw altci ihe speech, w llliami s.mi ih.it 1 Inivenrit) students should takl tune out to learn about ihe citv m oidei 10 net a better understandbig ol the environment la ssins ii they live

"Doni live within ihe will ol tbe campus." Williams said " I ake .1 tide and sec MRM Ol the fa lotncis of the , us scnliuc OUt."

Wliliami s.mi tint community and volunteei work would lltO add to Ihe Student'l knowledge ol Philadelphia.

"I know that college wotk is demanding, bul gel Involved In some volunteei and community work. son'ii gel ,1 different view of the d tv." Ihe police commissionet said

Aftct the speech, scseial simleiils approached Williams and handed him a lettet criticizing the BCtiOfM ol several Phlladeiphii Police offlcen M ihe scene ol i hH and run accident which Claimed the hie ol one UflJvtl sitv student Saturday night.

Othei speakets addressed CamOUl security lew to i crowd oi approi imaicls IJ people, made up almosi en urelv of University stall

I'uhh. Safety Dlractoi lohn I ogan, who was the first of many to speak, discussed the need for students to DC mote careful with then |«>ssessions

"The munlH-i one piohlein is theft." I ogan iaM "Use caution

don't leave voui pro|ierty unattended II then- is no Opportunity fOI crime. HO . 1110111.1N would come to Pent) "

Piesident Sheldon Haikncs spoke ol the need to use good sense and take Individual lesponsihihtv Hackney ad ded that when students and staff act, the) must lemetnhet 10 take othei , 0 in in units in | 111 bets inin consideration

there were additional speeches made by Microbiology I'rofessoi Helen Dnviag, who is the chairman of the University Council's Safety and Security I onunittee, A i Assembly ( li.utman Valerie I'ena. and A I \s\citihls ( h.niiuan Russell Muth

Altogether, the six speeches lasted appioximately tl) minutes

Most students attending the Public salctv Ian said that they were im- piessed with the event and had stop ped at the inloimation booths

s,-, ond year medical student Amiel Bethel said yesterday that the fair pro sided him the Opportunity to learn 11101c about the University's security lesoutces.

Bethel added that he was impressed with Barney Battery, the six loot smil mg battery walking down I ocust Walk, advising students that "safely is ■ burning issue." Belhel, however, had other uses for Barnes

"I'd like to borrow |Barney| to charge up my car," Belhel said

College sophomore Philip Sussei said thai while the booths provided Inm with a lol of information, he is disappointed that students were not provided with an outlet to present theit opinions on sci unts problems.

"It's great thai I can learn all of tins stuff, but there's not much

Joanna Rim.Only Panntyt

College sophomore Marnl t.oldman rrcrives a few salelv lips from S/ahl Ishti/re and Michael Kinehrew sal yesterday's Public Safety fair on College (ireen.

discussion." Susser said "They're just telling you l.i

Despite Sussei's . oinplaiul, their

wa. .1 Piihhi i-cstion bos al iih and one office! said mans

ItlOM were henu

Bagels banned, but fans free to toss toast at football games ^"-"^ ..... < 1 ._ _. I. ...Ill I . . ^i.__ _ga ..II <.'«_.,- Ur.rlk.il mmUt umlnrrliu lll'tl IvV I llC , I il I tiSs .11 II HI I >1 ttt.lSl il 11(1

HA*.UN. from page I Bpetetn Mid tlMI security guards

were not supposed to , oiiliscilc loasi ami should not have Inskcd students at Ihe weekend's game

"It appears thai there was a ,0111 iminic.itions lailure." In- said "We have no intent to tr\ 10 stop the toast tradition

I Detain IflVlad that Ihe guards were instructed to seize items which could be dangerous when thrown

"We intended to stop pBOpIl frOB

brmguig liozcn bagels," he said. B/e oan'l have people throwing fro-

zen baaeti from Ihoai kinds of distances

College senioi and inalhetnalics inaioi Oary Wainatein explained yes teulav thai the bagel is more harmful than toast baoauM its weight, and therefore momentum, is greater He also said that a Iro/en bagel piUMIM an additional threat because BJ rounded edges break down the wind resistance,

"And if the bagel is frozen, the

peison stiuck will have 10 absorb all the momentum upon impact." Weinstein said. "The toast is softer, so it will absorb some of Ihe impact."

Hie math major also reasoned that the shape of a hagel, called a lorus, may also add to the potential danger of a hurled bagel.

In addition 10 the toast conlisia nous, the Penn Band did not play Ihe traditional "lield Cry of Penn, .oinmonly known as "Hang Jeff Da- vit," after Ihe Quakers scored.

Director oi sports Information

Local Asian refugees struggle to adapt

Steve Hurlbiil said yesterday thai loasi will l>e allowed bill added that large packages of bread or bagels could be .onlis, ated il ihev appeal 10 pose a possible threat to crowds He said Ihe decision would IK- up to the guards' "own disunion "

"We don't want anyone gelling wacked with a whole loal," Hutlhui said

He said thai the guards may have searched fans because ilu-n company works at othet arenas, such as the Spectrum, where frisking is ,1 oat train policy.

(ollege semoi Dan (ueenbautn said yesterday thai he was Infuriated

by tin .,mils, anon oi toast and added ih.it in had planned to ori t Iniseisity wide boyCOtl Oi Sal 111 day's game When informed ol tin poke) , l.ii ih, lllon, lie laid lie was ovei joyed

"ii's ,1 si,ton ioi domot may, ha ..Mil

< ,n-ni..nun taid ihM i" had ahn considered gelling .1 group ol friends

- putting 011 ski hats and lilonl llack-

iics with ' 11, iKo said be was ilunking ol

Handing outride ol < "iicgc Hall and "singing Hang let I Dasis " for ,In,in

Eric Sev.aiieid to speak on election '88 si \ AW-ID iiom page I

Al one of thtee journalists to be ,1 to the IV Hall Ol I '"" -id hat had a profouad la

fluanei on Ihe development ol televt lion news

In Ins new hook. II ho A ///■-./ ' /'•> '. limin : i Hover constd Sevareul ,in,l otlieis to IM- the loun ! ol telesision news

"In the CBS legend |sevcral ters including Sevareid| had

,lom- nothing less thai Invent l.io.ul .iiin.thsm." Ilovei writes 'And

the legend was not far from Ihe I Mil I, "

In a ic, cut interview, Sevareul -wledged that he quickly ascend- popularity m broadcasting's ear-

ly days It was a marvelous way to begin a i." Sevareid said "We became

household words, far loo young and iindeseising. BUI thai was the nature ol II "

Ihe veteran broadcaster continues to iiave an impact on today's TV news ( uiieiit I IIS I vrnmx News an- , hoi Dan Kalher refers to Sevareid as "his guru

vareid has also wniten several hooks and appeared in several movies, im hiding a ihOfl MjMM in which he portrayed himself in Ihr Right Siull

I onnaissame ( haiiinrrn David Raphael, whose group organized Ihe evaat, said that membets chose

neid to piesenl an alternative viewpoint on the upcoming pre.' iial aha Iton

"(onnuissamc wanted som>I who wasn't biased and who wasn't af- Itliated with a political parly." Raphael said lasl night. "We wanted someone who wasn't going to give a campaign speech

According to Raphael, Sevareid will receive approximately JH000 for the appearance. Because Sevareid has been covering both party conventions, tonight will mark one ol Sevareid's lew appearances on a college campus in recent months.

Raphael said that he expects the event. I ailed "I'testdenls, Cower, and ihe Press," 10 be well attended.

"I know thai there are a lot ol students interested in Ihe presidential

li i turn." he said. "If you want your cpicstions answered, this is the man lo ask "

I he speeeh will begin at ?! 10 p.m in Irvine Auditorium, following the I (teeth, an informal reception will be held in the Hill House I ibrary.

KM-i ens. from page3 "The s,hooi distil,i is not providing enough remedial

lervicee," Shan said, explaining that a basu understanding ol l-nglisli is i cinial 10 ilicsc students' academic and social success

"What ihev do piovidc is inadequate," he continued Shcn added thai a recent lawsuit has put pressure on the school district, and lhal the district is now working on a pto.css to improve remedial programs

While that process is being linalized. Asian Americans United and othei organizations are taking up some ol the

slack.

This past summer the AAU held a suminct school to teach basic I-nglish and math lo elementary-aged Southeast Asians Shcn said that the stall for the program was made up of Asian American high school and college students who attended an AAU sponsored leadership program

And Sister ( onstaiice. principal Ol Si, I lUBCM CM Sales.

a private school located at 47th and Springfield streets, is optimism about educating Asian refugees

"We have children |in school| from It countries," she said yesterday. "Very few come ftom any kind of money, but most arc interested in education

I hen parents are making great sacnlices to send them here," she also said, adding that most students make a great effort to learn.

As for dropouts and delinquency. Constance said lhal neither were a problem at her school.

On the other hand. Constance agreed that communica- tion is a problem. "The 535 children in the school speak 19 different languages; there's no way we could learn them all," she said.

( .instance explained thai from lime lo lime, when parents come in and communication problems exist, Ihe s, hool will bring in translators, or use other, multi-lingual children.

"It's not easy, bul somehow we manage lo bridge the gap," Constance said.

Pop it open every Thursday

Hi

Pagr 8 The Daily Pennsylvania!! Wednesday. Seplcmbcr 28. 1988

Off the Wire World

Canada disenchanted with fallen Olympic hero Johnson

TORONTO — Canadians were shamed, angry and saddened yesterday that national hero Ben Johnson was stripped of his Olym- pic gold medal for using drugs to enhance his performance.

"I feel terribly sad for him," said Fergus Kilmartin, 36, of Coquitlam, British Colom- bia. "I don't believe he did it on purpose. He hasn't got the guile to do that."

A disappointed nation awaited (he return of the sprinter after a urine sample was found to contain traces of anabolic steroids. Canada's sole gold medal went to American Carl Lewis, who finished second in the 100-meter dash

"It puts a dent in Canada." said Scott Shaw, a 10th grade student in Calgary, Alberta, said yesterday.

Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. who had thanked the Jamaican-born runner for the "thrill of a lifetime" after his record- breaking 9.79-second performance Satur- day, called the drug scandal "a moment of great sorrow for all Canadians."

Sports Minister Jean Charest. who called the incident "a national embarrassment," Mid Johnson will be banned from Canada's national team for life. Charest said his government accepted the validity of the tests and the suspension would be effective pen- ding an appeal from Johnson.

But Johnson's family was left confused and outraged by the turn of events.

"My brother is not guilty," a distaught Rodney told reporters in her yard in the

Toronto suburb of Rexdale. "If you could cut him into a million pieces and test him over again — my brother is not on drugs."

Outside the townhouse, police were called in to control the crowd and the traffic. Throughout Monday evening, local children attempted to raise a chorus of "Ben! Ben! Ben!" only to give up when the crowd would not respond.

"We've just seen the destruction of a role model." said former downhill skier Ken Read, of Calgary, now Canada's represen- tative on the International Olympic Com- mittee's athletics commission.

Nation Final countdown for shuttle starts today, ship 'ready'

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — A new NASA launch directorate met yesterday to clear the shuttle Discovery for its liftoff tomorrow, hearing an "excellent review" of the $1.5 billion spacecraft's readiness — but holding off giving a go-ahead for the final countdown.

"In general, the whole picture is very good for going flying the day after tomor- row," said former astronaut Robert trip pen yesterday, who heads a launch oversight team created to overcome problems that contributed to the 1986 Challenger disaster

Crippen said the group was focusing on two items and needed to be certain neither would imperil NASA's first manned mission in 32 months.

Launch is scheduled for 9:59 a.m. tomor- row, with the final countdown to begin early this evening. "The weather is probably the

biggest question mark," he said. Across the Kennedy Space Center, NASA

workers fretted over the weather in hopes that after a 32-month hiatus, Discovery would return America to space with a mid- morning launch tomorrow.

The hardware items still in question in- volve an O-ring in a satellite propulsion system, and a small jet thruster aboard the orbiter itself — a component that could be bypassed if need be.

The SlOO-million data-relay nullitc til ting in Discovery's cargo bay had alrcads been checked out and approved for flight, but NASA was checking a problem with similar hardware being prepared for flight next February.

Crippen said a test of the inertial upper stage (US) rocket that boosts the satellite to its final orbit indicated damage in the O-ring that seals the pressure needed to gain thrust for the satellite to move into its proper orbit.

Delivery of the satellite is Discovery's main mission in NASA's long-awaited return to space, and the space agency would not likely launch without being sure there was no problem.

Indictments handed down in private Contra-arms case

MIAMI — Two long-awaited indictments accusing a private network of illegally sup- plying mercenaries and arms to the Contras steered clear of thorny questions about the group's links to the Reagan administration or drug trafficking.

The indictments also left other questions unanswered.

Thirteen men are accused of having violated the U.S. Neutrality Act by moun-

ting an illegal campaign to help the Contras overthrow the Sandinista giucrnment of Nicaragua.

The defendants include the brother of a top Contra leader, the head of the group called Civilian Materiel Assistance, -itul .u least two men reputed to have drug ties.

The latest development in the case is the government's response, filed September 16. to defense contentions that the Neutrality Act does not apply because the United Stales was effectively at war with Nicaragua.

But the U.S. attorney's office avoided confronting that issue directly in ils response, saying the matter should be decJd ed in trial, not during a special hearing re- quested by the defendants.

Other unresolved issues include possible Reagan administration oversight of the il- legal activities, the question of dru^ ins lo the operation, the absence of key figures among those indicted and the sluggish pace of the investigation, which covered events in 1984 and 1985.

City

Bush proposes tax-deferred savings account; one-liners prevail

-V $—

On the >y Campaign Trail

George Bush courted the middle class on yesterday with a modest plan to allow small savers to "put something away for a rainy day" and defer taxes on the interest. Michael Dukakis criticized another Bush tax cut proposal as a "$40 billion giveaway" for the rich.

The vice president got in the snappiest one-liner of the campaign day when he told an audience at Miami University in Ohio that a current television show "reminds me of what interest rates might be if the Democrats get i _ c... AU , a a

back in again. It's called < 'thirtysomelhing.'"

The Democrats ridi- culed right hack.

Asked what a Dan Quayle administration might look like, Democra tic vice presidential candidate Lloyd Bentsen laughed and said, "very exciting." Asked later what he meant, Bentsen laughed again and said, "I'll leave it at that."

Republican vice presidential candidate Dan Quayle campaigned in Bentsen's home state of Texas, where he challenged Dukakis to resign his membership in the American Civil Liberties Union. "Let him today resign from the ACLU. Let him renounce all their bizarre positions. Let him make clear — no more waffling and backsliding — that he no longer supports the outrageous stands that the ACLU takes," Quayle told a Houston rally of Asian- Americans.

The two vice presidential candidates are scheduled to debate on Ocr 5 in Omaha, Neb., and the jockeying for advantage already was well under way.

Democrats have criticized Quayle unsparingly during the

campaign, but in an apparent bid to raise expectations about the Indiana senator's debate performance. Bentsen characterized him as a skillful debater.

"I think Dan Quayle is going to do very well in (he debate." said the Texas senator. He said Quayle loves to debate on the Senate floor and "I'm not so confrontational."

The vice president upgraded his own self-evaluation in last Sunday night's debate with Dukakis. "I feel belter today about the way the debate went than I did the night of the debate." He joked about the "handwringers" on his staff who feared he would "massively foul it up."

Bush outlined his plan for a tax break for low- and middle- income people in a speech in Columbus, Ohio. He called the program an individual savings account and said it would help the nation "gain better control over our long-term economic future" as well as help savers "put something away for a rainy day."

One adviser said the tax deferred on interest the first year on $1,000 would save roughly $12 for a taxpayer in the 15 percent income tax bracket and slightly more in later years.

Bush said the plan would allow many Americans to lock up as much as $1.000 a year — in acounts of five years or more — with federal income tax deferred. When withdrawn, the accumulated interest would be taxed at the saver's income tax rate then in effect.

The tax break would be fully available to taxpayers with adjusted gross income of less than $50,000 a year. It would gradually phase out until it disappeared for someone with adjusted gross income of $60,000.

Bush officials estimated the program would benefit 8 million Americans, at a cost to the Treasury about $70 million in 1989 and $550 million by 1993.

Chinatown questions survival with construction of center

The city's 138-year-old Chinatown lection is facing a new threat from the west.

A proposed convention center thai will form a wall along the western border of the neighborhood of about 4,000 Chinese has community leaders afraid that hotels will replace the restaurants, homes and shops in the three-block square area.

"It's really a fight for survival," said Cecilia Yep, executive director of the Philadelphia Chinatown Development Corp.

In upcoming City Council hearings on (he $478.5 million convention center project, opponents are expected to argue that the convention center will strangle Chinatown with development.

Council leaders have emphasized that they consider saving the community as im- portant as efforts to preserve the Reading Terminal Market, where merchants got what amounts to a $5.2 million government insurance policy to protect their businesses during construction of the center.

Interviews by the Philadelphia Daily News with Chinatown's leaders indicate the community — about half of which speaks English — is divided and unprepared for it v latest challenge

Residents fear the convention center will fuel already escalating real estate prices, traffic jams and parking shortages, even- tuallly driving the Chinese out of Chinatown. Big-money Chinese en- trepreneurs see a potential boom of real estate values and business opportunities.

Both sides, though, recognize that now is the lime to decide Chinatown's destiny.

DOW JONES

AVERAGE

i 2.84

Business Sluggish bond market shadows lowest trading since August

NI w YORK — Stock prices remained ItUCk in a narrow trading range yesterday in the lightest trading since the end of August

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial -rocks fell 2.84 to 2012.33. That marked the average's llth straight finish inside the range of 2080 to 2101 poiuis Trading volume on the New York Stock Ex- change was 113.01 mil- lion shares, down from 116.42 million in the previous session and the lowest since August 30, when 108.72 million shares changed hands.

Analysis and traders I said the market was concerned by sluggish- ness in the bond market, which has failed to respond favorably to falling oil and gold prices and other indications that inflation pres-urc is easing.

Relatively high rates on short-term Trcas ury securities are giving investors an attrac- tive and secure alternative to stocks and longer lerm securities. The three-month T-bill yielded about 7.4 percent yesterday.

Yesterday, inflation signals were mixed Oil prices dropped sharply before rebound- mi; to Finish ihc day only slightly lower, and gold prices rose.

Takeovers, restructurings and a -lock buyback provided much of the interest in the day's session.

The NYSE index fell 0.32 to 151.64. Standard & Poor's industrial index fell

0.95 to 307.45, and S&P's 500-stock compo- site index fell 0.60 to 25' M

At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index tell 0.34 to 298.40. The NASDAQ composite index for the over-the- counter market closed at 382.22, down 0.53.

Weather Todiy: Partly cloudy

this morning becoming sunny in the afternoon. Winds will be out of the north at 10 to 15 mph. High temperatures in the mid-70s. Tonight, lows will approach 50 with patchy fog towards morning.

Tomorrow: Mostly sunny skies with highs in the upper 60s to low 70s.

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Off the Wire Compiled from Associated Press Dispatches

Controversial plastic bullets cause first fatalities in Israel RIMT l:i (V .:j in... n. i ...... M. HI II II . Ocuipied West Hank - Hospital

officials yesterday reported the first deaths of Palestinians from the army's newly introduced plastic bullets, which have stirred controversy and drawn a U.N. protest.

Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin defended the bullets as a useful tool to suppress violent protests in the occupied West Hank and (..I/.I Strip but acknowledged they could increase

U.S. official: Terrorists regaining momentum

WASHINGTON - Abu Nidal. after lying low in 1987. appears to be resuming his terrorist campaign with support from Libya, the top U.S. countei lei i or ism official said yesterday.

Paul Bremer, ambassador at larpe for counterterrorism, also told reporters that the number of terrorist incidents appears to be headed for a record level of 1.000 this year, although the number of Americans killed in such attacks has fallen.

"Any effort to make an assessment of where were are in terrorism leads you to the inevitable good news and bad news." he said.

"The bad news is that terrorism is certainly continuing. According to the figures that we keep. . . . 1987 was the worst year in history. We had 832 recorded incidents in international terrorism" up from 774 in 1986, he said.

For the first six months of 1988, "terrorism is up substantially over last year, perhaps by as much as a third. So it is possible that we will end this year with as many as 1,000 in- cidents, maybe more, which would make 1988 the worst year," he said.

The number of Americans killed in terrorist incidents has fallen from 38 in 1986 to 12 in 1987 and three in the tirst half of 1988. he said.

Most of the increase in terrorism consists of attacks in Pakistan by agents of the Kremlin-backed regime in Afghanistan, he said. He said he had no evidence that the Afghan government was responsible for an airplane disaster (hat claimed the life of Pakistani president Mohammad Zia ill 11.u| and the U.S. ambassador to Pakistan on August 17.

The good news in the battle against terrorism is increased cooperation among the United States and its allies, said Bremer.

"We estimate at least several hun- dred incidents have been stopped by steps that we and our allies have taken over the last three years," he said.

casualties. "The plastic bullet is intended to hit stone-

throwers, organizers and inciters of demonstrations, outside the range of the rock," Rabin told a news conference at a military camp in Beit El. 10 miles north of Jerusalem.

"The growing number of casualties does not indicate an escalation in the events," he

added. "To the contrary, it indicates .lie army's growing ability to achieve its aim, meaning that a riot will be dispersed even if there are casualties among the rioters "

Rabin's comments indicated a change in the army's firing rules. In the past, soldiers were limited to firing tear gas and rubber bullets at protesters unless their lives were threatened. In a life-threatening siiuation. the soldiers could

use regular lead bullets. The introduction last month of the plastic

bullet, which has greater range and impact than rubber, has led to more shooting, sending Arab casualties soaring and drawing protests to limit its use.

The U.N. Relief and Works Agency, which .mis Palestinian refugees, has protested to the army, noting that the number of people

wounded in Gaza alone rose from 19 in July to 130 in the first 25 days of September

Dr. Elias Artin of Gaza City's Ahli Arab Hospital said in an interview the plastic bullets usually do less damage than lead bullets but could kill.

"They can kill if they hit the chest, ab- domen or neck." he said. "If they hit a nerve, they can paralyze."

But Officer. Prospective welfare reform received well

Suun Gund«r»»n/Daily Pennsytvaman

"Officer" Greer Cheeseman, officially the Associate Director of Marching and Pep Bands, slaps the 'cuffs on Penn band leader and Wharton senior Ron Sheklin prior to Saturday's football game against Bucknell at Franklin Field. Sheklin was "arrested" for an underage performance of "Drink a Highball" as a protest against the University's new alcohol policy. Does the $300 fine apply here?

WASHINGTON — The White House joined congressional leaders yesterday to praise a historic, work- oriented welfare bill designed to foster independence and parental respon- sibility among the nation's poor.

The compromise reached by the leaders of House, Senate and White House negotiating teams after three months of work was headed for ap- proval by a House-Senate conference committee yesterday.

Despite some liberal opposition to a work requirement the bill imposes on a small percentage of people, lawmakers anticipated no trouble winning enough support to complete the first major welfare overhaul in 20 years.

"No problem," said Senate Ma- jority Leader Robert Byrd (D-W.Va).

"Landmark legislation," said Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole (R- Kan).

"It will be good for families and good for America," said House Speaker Jim Wright (D-Texas).

President Reagan, returning to the White House from New York, said he was "very happy" with the measure. The remainder of his words were drowned out by his helicopter engine.

The five-year, $3.34 billion cost of the compromise bill is modest but its aims are not. Its architects say they want to move welfare recipients from dependence to independence, to instill a sense of responsibility among parents, to help them get the skills and services they need to support their own families.

A large-scale Job Opportunities and Basic Skills program offering job

training, education and work ex- perience is the focal point of the new plan, which seeks to shift the em- phasis of the welfare system from cash benefits to work. More support also would be collected from non- custodial parents.

The president's chief of staff, Ken- neth Duberstein, told reporters the White House intended to "take a careful look" at the measure.

"We are very encouraged by the provision on workfare," Duberstein said. "Our indications ... are that in fact it is in fact a good, strong

iIt will be good for families and good for America.'

Jim Wright House Speaker

workfare requirement, which would meet the president's lest."

"This package is humane, far- reaching and will improve the lives of those stigmatized by the burden of welfare," said Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D-N.Y.), sponsor of the initial Senate measure and a leader in the drive for welfare reform.

Sen. Lloyd Bentsen (D-Texas) the chairman of the conference commit- tee and the Democratic nominee for vice president, said the bill would im- prove America's economic status as well as people's lives. "You can't be internationally competitive if you have the number of people on welfare that we have today," he said during a campaign slop in Detroit.

Reagan gives farewell speech to U.N., praises world peace efforts UNITED NATIONS — President Reagan

said farewell yesterday to West European and Asian allies with an appeal that they shoulder more of their joint defense burden.

His message, summed up at a news con- ference by Assistant Secretary of State Rozannc Ridgway, was: "More can be done."

But even while praising the president for his commitment to the North Atlantic alliance, (he allies insisted that, for the most part, they were

carrying a fair share. The allies stressed their contributions to

economic development in the Third World. Ridgway said.

The 75-minute session, on the periphery of the United Nations General Assembly meeting, was marked by "a very positive note of con- fidence" and the notion of "staying strong was in common usage," Ridgway added.

Reagan met with the leaders of the 15 U.S.

allies in NATO and of Australia, South Korea and Japan as he wound up a two-day visit to the United Nations, his seventh and last visit to (he world body.

He also held separate sessions with Foreign Ministers Mohammed Yaqub Khan of Pakistan and V ii, is mill, i Rao of India.

Secretary of State George Shull/, meanwhile, called on the Soviet-backed government in Afghanistan to halt its air raids in Pakistan. He

said they violated the Geneva agreements con- cluded last April for the withdrawal of the Soviet army from Afghanistan.

Using Soviet jet fighters, the Afghans have penetrated farther than ever before in trying to interrupt U.S. aid that is channeled to guerrillas through Pakistan.

In at least one instance, U.S. officials said, a Soviet pilot carried out a raid.

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On choosing weight lifting equipment

Department of Religious Studies

CONSEQUENCES: Is AIDS

The Judgement Of ftofS? by

JOHN W. BOWKEK University of Cambridge

Wednesday, 28 September 1988 4:30 P.M.

Christian Association, 8001 Locust Walk 2nd Floor Auditorium

ADMISSION FREE - OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

FITNESS, from page l4

nodal Intersati in the aquipaicnl rhe mull i\ thai ii doetn'i mafia what tool youuse. what is hnpoftani is how you use ihc tool

Thtka) liintensit) the hard* \ou train, lb* more results sou gci. And youi results will dtpeod OH yOUl workoui Intenalty, nutrition, deep andyOUl developing potential the genetics youi parciiii passed on to yOU

The Universal gym was the Art) weight machineol note It was baskall) developed .is .1 relatively cheap and sale was to Iran high school aad college athlete*. Nautilus equlpmeni emerged in the earl) 1970s. andai Nautihu sales increaaod, free weight dJstributon became increai ingl) concerned with the decrease in sales ol then product.

rdingly. man) ol those evei present, low tech muscle magazines (whoso owmn uist happen 10 sell free weight equipment) waged an all out pubUcft) 1 ampaign to denigrate Nautilus machines \lici almost a decade ol futility in this regard, the magazines 1 banged thou philoeoph) and acknowledged thai machines had their place in Ihc gym. hut only as a par) of an indtvidual'i total training program. They contended Nautilus wai pood t'1 supplement free weight, but could not develop si/c and strength when used exclusive!)

In fact. Nautilus equipment is 111st .in improved barbell, The barbell ol iois resistance on!) in .1 vertical straight line I he design of Nautilus eliminated the barbell's limitations b) usinj .in eccentric cam, which gives balance and variable resistance to weight lifting exert Ises

* Unfortunately, many of the myths surrounding weight training still persist today. Some people ac- tually believe machines arc for tuning and definition and free weights for size and bulk.'

I lie N.uiiiliis cam allowed a muscle to be worked haul IhrOUghOUl I lull lango ol motion Miis.los .110 siiongei .11 different |x>ints Have you ever noticed that a barbell curl is very dif- ferent at the extended or starting pot! lion and gets easier the closei vou got toa fulK contracted position? rhat'i ho. BUM yOU Mcep il sonic 40 potcont siiongei In the fully contracted posi tJoO On a Nautilus bleep machine. the weighl changes so the resistance is lighter wheie the muscle is wcakei and heaviet whereit'istronger. Again. this satiable resistance is the icsult ol the am All Nautilus did was make it easiei 10 work harder. Interesting!) enough, those same free weight manufacturers arc now making machine! similar to Nautilus 111 design.

The superstition thai developing the skill necessary to balance .1 barbell during certain free weighl exercktei will help during certain athletic com- petition! Is ehlO absurd flic only spot is 111 wins Ii Ihc skill ol balancing a weight will help arc Olympic and power lifting.

Unfortunately, man) ol themythi surrounding weight training still per- sist today. Some people actually believe machines are for tuning and definition and free weight! lor size and bulk.

Having visited the Washington

Haveyou heard the one about the cow, the l^nchman, and the bottle of Budweiser?

It goes something like this. In 1872, a Frenchman by the name of Louis Pasteur discovered a way of keeping

beer fresh for an indefinite period of time. He called the process "pasteurization." A short time later, an American brewer by the name of Adolphus Busch got wind of the idea And he soon began using it to bottle his own beer.

It all started a revolution in the packaging of fresh goods. In fact, 22 years later, the dairy industry would jump on the wagon. That's where the cow fits in.

It's an old story, but an important one. Because every time you pop open -»j%»C a cold-filtered and pasteurized Bud: you know you can count on a freshi ^ HHU ^ tasting beer. One made with quality in mind. And that's no joke «#W|^ ijCl%

Pasteurization. It's just one of the reasons why Budweiser V*f\0 X^ has remained the King of Beers, for over 110 years. fVI ^

Redskins lummei camp and having known Dan Rilcy. ihcir strength coach, I sail verify that Super How I champs use Nautilus and manual resistance exercises sxdusive- ly in their strength training routines Indeed, the Redskins are acknowledg- ed as one of the biggest, stiongcst and most physical teams in the Nl I

If you were to journey to the loot hall weighi rooms ai Perm State, Rutgers or the University of Michigan, you would notice Ihc absence ol both lice weights and huge mutant like beings using machines in Increase then size and strength foot- ball playei s .ue Usually mesoiiioi phi and have supertoi genetics and developing potential Mcsoniotphs have long-muscle bellies and shot t tendons llicy would grow no matter what type of equipment Ihey used

If you had a cross country iiiiineis using Nautilus ot free weights, they would not substantially increase their inusciilai si/e. because cross country runners are uiuallvectomorphi (short-muscle bellies, long teiulonsl I he) are built to run distance. The spoil sou naturally gravitate to is usual!) determined b) you body lype.

\te some eseicise machines better than Other! ' Absolutely. Nautilus I n I. and I Inivertal are all good tools, with other companies designing bclici equipment all (he time.

I personally recommend using a combination of free weights and machines This will give your program more variat) i be baa) route hi to use whatever tools available to you with as much mtensitv as possible

SI reports that Johnson took steroids in May

SEOUL South Korea (AP) - Sports Illustrated magazine reported this morning that disgraced Canadian splinter Ben Johnson received injec- tions of anabolic tteroidl m late May from a doctor on the ( aribbean island nation of St. Kill's.

The magazine identified the phvsi cian as Jamie Astaplian, from whom lolmson had sought treatment for a hamstring pull suffered 10 days earlier.

Astaphan could not be reached im- mediately for comment. But after he accompanied the expelled Olympic spinner trom Seoul to Toronto yester- day, he told reporters gathered at the airport that, "to my knowledge and to his knowledge, no, he has not taken anything."

"I never gave him any |steroids|.' Astaphan said. "He never told me he took any."

Johnson's mysterious journey lo si Kin's has been the subject of rumor and speculation for some time. Questions resurfaced when he was stripped of his gold medal by the In- ternational Olympic Committee after testing positive for steioul use.

Three days earlier, Johnson had won the premier sprinting event of the Olympics, the 100-meter dash, in I stunning, world-record lime of 9.79 seconds

The Sports Illustrated story said two sources, which il did not identify, had told Ihe magazine thai Johnson was aware that Astaphan was giving him steroids, and spoke of his eagerness to gel off the muscle building drugs after the Olympics.

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Wednesday, September 28. 1988 Ike Itally Pennsylvania Pag* 'I

Constantino finds himself marked man Soccer takes on 1987 city champ in Textile By llFr'ANYSPAHkN

Michael Constantino is .1 wanted man

He il infamous for causing tiouHc. 111 .1 manner of speaking

And .is ,1 result he finds himself constantly taking abuse

While his mug shot UI.IV MM In- hanging up in post offices around the country, it probably is hung up on the walls of those soccer rntdm nd players who are opponents of the IVnn Minn ic.iin ilns year.

He must be on Cornell head coach Jack Writer's "10 Most Wanted" list. Constantino spraihc.idcd the Penn at tack against the Hig Red. scoring two goals in I'enn's 4-0 victory last Saturday.

Today, the job of shutting down Constantino falls upon the defensive unit of Philadelphia Textile as the Quakers (2-1 overall, 1-0 Soccer Seven) travel to meet the defending loeen scvi'ii champion Rim (3 K p.m.).

As a starting forward and the top goal scorer on the Under-20 U.S. Na- tional Team last year, Constantino has a reputation as .1 scoring threat that far precedes him. lo eliminate the threat, he becomes a target.

One that must be shut down. So he draws special coverage, with

defenders physically trying to in- timidate and check him. He'll be trip- ped, shoved, and so on.

"Every team does that to the center person or the one who has a reputa- tion for scoring goals," Constantino explained.

"The reason why Michael Ilka siuh ■ pounding is because he is one of the most dangerous players in col- lege soccer around the 18-yard line," added tri-captain Rich Baruch, who plays forward alongside Constantino

It seems that Constantino should be getting used to the abuse and just come to expect it.

"Michael is able to handle the

W. Soccer CLUBS, from page 14

Towson State (2-0) and Drew llniver sily (2-1. in overtime).

1 oach Barry Fleischer points out that the club has held its own against varsity level squads.

"We outplayed both teams," Fleischer said, referring to the Swar- thmore and Drew University games "The Swarthmore game was close all the way. We should have no trouble competing against other varsity clubs."

And where does the women's soccer club lind the strength to compete against teams with more money, more organization, and more experienced coaching?

"We rely on the love of the game." Gina Prigroff said. She added that nothing is mandatory, and that the players come to practices because they want to be there.

Fleischer likes that aspect of the team.

"They are fun to work with." he said, "because they all want to play."

Today, the women's soccer club plays at Beaver College. Their next home game takes place Saturday mor- ning at 11 a.m., at River Field against St. Joe's.

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NFL reinstates Taylor, Bills' Smith Nl-W YORK (AP) - All-Pros Lawrence Taylor and

Bruce Smith and three other players who were suspended for 30 days when they failed NFI drug tests during the preseason were reinstated by the league yesterday.

NFL spokesman Joe Browne said that Taylor, the star linebacker of the New York Giants, and Buffalo Hills defensive end Smith were reinstated along with linebacker I inaiuiel King and cornerback D.11 vl Smith of the C IIKHI

nati Bengals and receiver John Taylor of the San Fran- cisco 49eis.

All five players were on their teams' non-football illness list and missed the first four games this season. Taylor's suspension was due to end yesteiday. while the other four were allowed to return a few days early "as an accom modation to the players and their teams," Browne said. All of them were eligible to play this weekend once the suspensions were lifted

"I am not saying anything today, I'll talk about il tomorrow," Giants general manager George Young said.

"At this point no one really knows," defensive end Leonard Marshall said of Taylor's return. "I hope he can become a contributor and pick up where he left off. Things would be better for myself and the rest of the team."

Tommy LeonaroVDaily Ptnniytvanian

Michael Constantino will likely draw several Textile defenders today.

abuse he takes because ever since lie's been a kid. he's been the best player," Hunch said. "And we all know the most effective way to mark out the best player is to knock him around."

Yet, thil special coverage may in some way be interpreted as respect. It is a clear acknowledgement of Con siaiitino's obvious talents with the soccer ball.

"Michael Constantino is a very mobile player," Dartmouth head

h Bobb) < 111k said "We warned |our defense] that Michael Constan lino is a good player and to be aware of the that.

"He was very good against us. We have utmost respect for him."

During the game against the Big Green. Constantino found himself falling to the ground an estimated 27 limes. And he isn't clumsy.

While Clark will not say that Ins team directly went after Constantino, St. Joe's head COM'h I Ota Turner will admit that was part of his game plan.

"We pul our quickest, best tackling

back against him," Turner said. "If |our dcfender| couldn't beat him to the ball . . . I told our guy to obstruct him and 10 bump him.

"No normal man draws this special man to man coverage from me."

Despite the fact that Constantino is clearly targeted, he feels that he should be able to avoid some of il.

"I feel some of it can be avoided," COBMantlno explained. "I'm taking too much time. And I'm not getting the ball in places where I can use speed."

"I haven't Figured how lo get away from the fullbacks with the way our team is sel up. It's very different from 1 lie national team. I'm jusl now gel- ling used to the Penn players."

So ii goes. Constantino is stalked, tripped, pushed, elbowed — everything the opponents can get away with and even things they can't. Hut then again, that is to be expected

'i ou have 10 deal with |abtise| as ,1 forward," Constantino said. "Thai's definitely par! of the game "

we»THE MORTON DOWNEY

JR. SHOW

Thurs. Sept. 29 8PM Tickets: $15.00

Tickets at Civic Center Box Office, all Ticketron Locations or call TELETRON: (800) 233-4050. For more information call (215)677-6438.

Philadelphia CIVIC1CENTER

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tJVi'l ( *l WEEKNIGHTS 10PM A Joe Hand Promotion

Mike Brown. Bengals assistant general manager, was pleased but CUItkHH about king .ui.l Smith

■ I hey should be able to help us if they are physically Hi," Hi own said "We'll take a look at them and see how they work, and make a decision on whether they'll go on the roslci and who will go off.

"We aren't sure they will play Sunday but we'll take a look and see." Brown said

Hills coed) Mais I ew was optimism about Smith after visiting with the team's sack leader

Baking with IK) medical background and only pet tonally, as someone who likes Bruce Smith as a person very much, I was encouraged," Levy said. "I saw the Bruce Smith that I know — an upbeat guy who wants to

ICC and wants to be part of thil team and wants to do what he does best."

The respective teams can ask the league for a one-game rosier exemption for the reinstated players. The players will "continue to receive appropriate counseling and treat menl. and reinsiatemcnl is on the condition of their totally refraining from further violations of the NFL substance abuse policy." Browne said.

All five players face a permanent bin from the NIT i' they violate that policy again. They can. however, petition for reinstatement after one year.

Lafleur signs contract with Rangers NEW YORK (AP) - Guy Lafleur.

inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame earlier this month, returned lo the NHL as a player yesterday when he signed a contract with the New York Rangers

Lafleur, who turned 37 on Sept. 20, retired in November, 1984 after 14 seasons with the Montreal Canadiens He was voted into the Hall of Fame in his lust ycat of eligibility and was in

ducted on September 7, three days before he began his comeback bid with the Rangers

"We're very pleased." said Rangers general manager Phil Esposito, who said Lafleur had signed a one-year contract with an option year. "We ihink he's worked his butt off in training camp.

Lafleur has one goal and two assists in five exhibition games

The reason he made the learn was that he was one of our four best right wings, not because he's a Hall of Famer." Coach Michel Bergeron said. "But he's played on five Stanley (up winners, and we hope he'll bring us a winning spirit and attitude."

lafleur mj one of the most feared scorers of the 1970s, when he led the Canadiens to four consecutive Stanley Cups from 1976 79

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»"»»«■ 12 The Dull) P Wednesday. September 28. 1988

Quaker Oats HAMMER — bammer, slammer, jammer. And boy did those Rus-

sians jam all over our good ol' boys on the court. The U.S.S.R. prov- ed it can handle the lock, dish the pill and fill the pail better than the best of our college boys. But, hey. in '92, the NBA will make the U.S.S.R. look like BS. Those from the DPOSTM who watched the game took the loss pretty well, except for Cemenlhead. who lost con- trol of his foot outside of the executive editor's office.

AND — speaking of the DPOSTM, we'd like to introduce Bull. who will be covering freshman football. You see, this quiet, shy, reserved girl from Santa Monica just happens to be a huge fan of Bull Durham. Bull says hi. And the DPOSTM sends its condolences to Manute He lost a friend the other day. Hopefully, he'll find another one. Maybe in Pittsburgh or DC. For now, he has returned to Blue Point to contemplate his future with the folks. On other job-related fronts, Punuy has found a home, albeit where the buffalo roam. To find him on the map, you need a map. No. really, he is enjoying life covering the Yanks. And he hopes to have running water up in his Middletown apartment soon. That's good, after a weekend in the Big City, he needs a shower.

SICKLE — or rather, sick. That's the way we feel about the U.S.A. getting its butt whipped by the Russians. The only thing worse is NHC's coverage of the Games Whoops, that's enough of Carl Lewis trying to break Bob Beamon's long-jump record. We don't want you to get too involved in one event. So here's Bob Costas with a look at ancient Korean folk music.

REHEARSAL & ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING

Gilbert & Sullivan 9g

THE GONDOLIERS presented by

PENN LAW SCHOOL LIGHT OPERA CO.

Chorus, Leads, Orchestra Personnel, Tech/Stage Crew, Business People

Needed!

AND, AS ALWAYS, NO TALENT REQUIRED!

7:30 PM THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 29th

MUSIC ANNEX

34TH & WALNUT BEHIND BENNET HALL

Volleyball travels to Princeton By MARK DRO/.DOWSKI

As the Penn volleyball team travels to Princeton. N.J., this afternoon, the memories of a painful loss, combined with a sense of urgency and intensity, will dominate the Quakers' thoughts.

That the traditional Penn-Princeton rivalry is

a motivating factor for the Quakers is nothing new, but today's match has a special grudge fac- tor built into it.

Last year, Penn swept three straight gan.es from Princeton early in the season. Later, at the Ivy League Championships, the Quakers beat the Tigers 3-2, and then lost to them. 3-2. In a

Tommy LeonenS/Oalty Pennsytvanian

Melissa Ingalls jumps (o block a Princeton spike in last year's regular-season match.

tie-breaking set, Princeton won, 15-5, thus winn- ing the Ivy title.

Before the loss to the Tigers, Penn was undefeated in the Ivy League and a champion- ship seemed imminent. It was, somehow, the one that got away.

Penn head coach Joe Sagula recalled that tournament vividly.

"Princeton had a great weekend," he said. "You can have a great season and a bad weekend and lose, and you can have a fair season and a good weekend and win."

Penn assistant coach Christine Heaphy, co- MVP of last year's tournament as a senior, had other reasons.

"I think we peaked too early last year," she said. "We were a better team than Princeton, but we weren't playing as well as we were earlier in the year."

Sometimes it is important for a team to put a difficult loss in the past, but in this case, Penn can use the revenge factor as the motivation it needs at this crucial point in the season.

Coming off an unsuccessful weekend (0-3). the Quakers' record stands at 1-6. Today's match is Penn's chance not only for revenge, but also for getting on the winning track — especial- ly in the Quakers' first Ivy contest this season.

"This match might turn our season around," junior Pam Von Essen said. "This one match is more important than the whole tournament last weekend."

"We're out to prove something," Sagula said. "Matches like this test our character. In this case, winning is very important, but not critical."

To beat the Tigers, Penn is going to have to play with more consistency and intensity. Con- sistency comes from experience, and intensity comes from attitude.

"We do need to be more motivated," Sagula said, "but I don't think that will be a problem against Princeton. The motivation is not something I can instill into the players; it has to come from within them. They have to fulfill their own desires, not mine."

The venue of today's match also carries significance. The Ivy League Championships are at Princeton this year, and the Tigers' rude fans should provide an interesting backdrop.

"Princeton's fans are obnoxious and ar- rogant," Sagula said. "They will single out a few players and make nasty comments. It's hard to tell whether or not that will work in our favor."

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Scoreboard ■BASEBALL

AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE Eaitern Division Eastern Division

W L Pel G8 W L Pet GB Boston 88 60 561 — x-New York 97 59 622 New York 84 72 538 3VS Pittsburgh 84 72 538 13 Detroit 85 73 538 3VJ Montreal 79 78 503 18Vj Milwaukee 85 73 538 V/I St Louis 75 83 475 23 Toronto 83 75 525 5Vj Chicago 74 83 471 23'* Cleveland 74 83 471 14 Philadelphia 62 95 395 35 Vj Baltimore 53 103 340 34'*

Western Division Western Division

W L Pet GB W L Pel GB x Los Angeles 92 65 586

x-Oakland 100 57 637 — Cincinnati 85 72 541 7 Minnesota 88 69 561 12 Houston 81 76 .516 11 Kansas City 82 75 522 18 San Francisco 81 77 513 11V4 California 75 83 .475 25'/? San Diego 79 78 503 13 Chicago 68 88 436 31 VI Atlanta 52 103 335 39 Texas 68 88 436 31'* x-clinched division title Seattle 66 91 420 34 x-clinched division title Last Night's Games

Last Night's Games Pittsburgh 3. Si Louis 2 Chicago 5. Montreal 3

New York S. Baltimore 1 Philadelphia 5. New York 4 Toronto 15. Boston 9 Houston 3, Atlanta 2. 10 innings Cleveland 4. Detroit 0 San Diego 8, Los Angeles 4 Minnesota 5. Oakland 0 San Francisco 6. Cincinnati 3 Chicago 3. Texas 2 Seattle 10. Kansas City 3 Tonight's Games Milwaukee 6. California 5 St Louis (Magrane 4-9) at Pittsburgh (Drabek

15-6), 7 05pm Tonight's Games Chicago (Maddux 17-8) at Montreal (Dopson

New York (Guetterman Ml at Baltimore 3-10), 7 35pm (Milacki 1-0), 7 35pm New York (Gooden 184) al Philadelphia Toronto (Key 11-5) at Boston (Hursl IS 51. (K Gross 11-14). 7 35pm 735 p.m Houston (Knepper 14-5) at Atlanta (Qlavine Detroit (Terrell 7-15) at Cleveland (Swindoit 7-17), 7 40pm 17-14). 7 35 pm. Los Angeles (Hershisei 23-8) at San Diego Seattle (Moore 9 M) at Kansas City (Hawkins 14-11), 10 05 pm (Saberhagen 14-15), 8 05 p m Cincinnati (D Jackson 23-7) al San Francisco Oakland (Burns 7-2) at Minnesota (Blyleven (Hammaker 8-9). 10 35 p m 10-16). 8 05pm Texas (Hough 15-15) at Chicago (Reuss Tomorrow's Games 12-9), 8:30 pm California (Finley 9-15) at MtWaukee (Nieves

Chicago at Montrs»i ? 35 p.m Houston at Atlanta, 7 40 p m

7-5). 8 35pm Only games scheduled

Tomorrow's Games

Oakland at Minnesota. 1 15 p.m New York at Baltimore. 7 35 p m Boston at Cleveland. 7 35 p.m Chicago at Kansas City. 8 35 p m Texas at Seattle. 10 05 p.m Only games scheduled

Cubs to trade Davis Deal to Atlanta hinges on lockout clause

MONTREAL — The Chicago Cubs have agreed to trade catcher Jody Davis to the Atlanta Braves, but

the deal has been held up by Atlanta's

insistence on a lockout clause in his new contract

Davis and his agent. Jack Sands,

have agreed on a two-year contract that takes him through 1990, the season that the collective-bargaining

agreement between the union and the owners expires. The Braves want to

include a clause that would prohibit Davis from being paid in the event of a lockout.

"If we strike. I don't expect to get paid. But (hey want a lockout clause

and I won't accept that." Davis said.

Bobby Cox, general manager of the Braves, refused to confirm thai a trade had been completed.

"We've talked to them quite a lot in the last two days and we'll continue

talking," Cox said last night during the Braves' game with the Houston Astros.

Davis, who lost his starting job to Damon Berryhill this season, is bat- ting .229 in 249 al-bats with six

homers and 33 runs batted in. He is

earning $1,108,333 this season.

Davis, 32, joined the Cubs in 1980. and became the NL team's starting

catcher in 1981, his first year in the

majors.

"At least I'll be home and I can get some playing time," said Davis, who

is from Georgia. "I haven't been told who are the players in the deal. The

big thing right now is trying to work out a proper contract."

SportsWire Compiled from Associated Press Dispatches

IV (QL YMIPHAUD v.;/:, ;>;.-:;.-;,v. -v"'.;--:-:r- ••;.■'■-•:,:-.:-■■ ••-_

Soviets top M. Basketball, 82-76 Steve Lewis leads American sweep of men's 400-meter race

SEOUL. South Korea - I IK

U.S. basketball team lost the se- cond game in its glorious Olympic history today, bowing in a mad

scramble to the Soviets, 82-76, in a grudge match that brewed for 16 years and three seconds.

Steve Lewis led a U.S. sweep of the 400 meters, just one-hundredth

of a second off a 20-year-old Olym- pic record, and three more U.S. boxers advanced to the semifinals,

assured of at least a bronze medal. Carl Lewis, meanwhile, was on

track for another gold medal in his

revitalized assault on four golds Lewis was awarded the 100-meter

gold when Ben Johnson was strip- ped for taking steroids, and he won the long jump.

Yesterday, Lewis won his

semifinal heat in 20.23. Another American. Joe Del.oach, had the fastest semifinal time, running 20.06 in the other heat.

Johnson, whose guilt-edged gold

in the 100 meters was stripped from him yesterday, arrived home In

Toronto last night, dodging hun- dreds of onlookers and TV cametas at the airport.

A reporter at the airport shouted to his mother. "Did he take

steroids?" Gloria Johnson glared and

replied emphatically, "No!"

But, instead of glory, there was disgrace as Johnson returned to his

adopted Canada. "This will change the history of

the Olympics," American hurdler

Edwin Moses said. "This will change a lot of people's lives."

As it did 16 years ago in Munich,

this U.S.-Soviet matchup came down to the final few seconds I Ml one did not end in controversy, just a loss, and America no longer can claim dominance of international amateur basketball.

The Soviets led 51-37 with 11:13 to play, but the Americans trimmed

it to 79-76 with just three seconds left. After a Soviet free throw and a

mad scramble for a loose ball that wound up in Soviet hands, the Americans were hanging their heads on the bench while the

Soviets exchanged high-fives. Danny Manning, most valuable

player of Kansas' national col-

legiate championship last spring, didn't score a single point, and David Robinson led the Americans with 19 points and 12 rebounds.

Rimas Kourtinaitis led the Soviets with 28 points, while center Arvidas Sabonis, a first-round

draft choice of the NBA's Portland Trail Blazers, had 13 points and 13 rebounds.

The United States went into its semifinal game against the Soviets trying to avenge the only previous

loss on its 85-1 Olympic record, but now the best the Americans can do ll i bronze medal while the Soviets

go for gold. In 1972 at Munich, America met

the Soviet Union for the gold medal, and, after the final three seconds were played twice because

of referee error and a scoreboard malfunction, the Soviets won

51-50. So angered was the U.S. team

that it refused to accept the silver

medal. It won't get the chance, this time.

"Every day Russian people and Russian journalists and TV talk

about historic three seconds in Munich," said Alexander

Gornelsky, who is coaching his sixth Olympics for the Soviets. "This is a good story, and I like it to be same here."

The 19-year-old Steve Lewis won the 400-meter gold in 43.87

seconds, and favored teammate Butch Reynolds, who holds the

world record of 43.29, was second in 43.93. Another American, Dan-

ny Everett, took the bronze in 44.09. Lewis' lime was just .01 seconds off the Olympic mark by Lee Evans of the United States in

Mexico City in 1968. The United States has eight of its

12 boxers still in action, including six in the-semifinals Those advanc-

ing this morning were Kennedy McKinney of Killecn, Texas, and Kenneth (iould of Rockford. III., and Ray Mercer of Jacksonville.

Fla. McKinney scored a 5-0 victory

over Stephen Mwema of Kenya in the 119-pound division, and (iould was a unanimous winner over Joni Nyman of Finland at 147 pounds Mercer knocked down Italian l.uigi

c i,in.Ii,mo and stopped him in the

first round of their 201-pound fight.

"I clearly outboxed the guy for three rounds." McKinney said. "I

don't want a bronze. I want a gold."

In the 12th day of Games, the medals count looked like this: Soviet Union 81 total. 35 gold; last Cicrmany 72 medals, 29 gold;

United States 54 total, 18 gold, and Canada 3 total, no gold.

Debra Flintoff-King of Australia edged Tatiana ledovskaya of the Soviet Union by one one-hundredth of a second in the women's 400-meter hurdles, and Ellen

Fiddler of East Germany took the bronze.

Florence Griffith Joyner, already

a gold medalist at 100 meters, ran the fastest qualifying heat of the morning in the 200 meters in 22.51.

One of the favorites in the

decathlon, Jurgen Hingsen of West < ifrmany, was disqualified from the 100 meters portion for three

false starts, effectively eliminating him from contention. Hingsen's ap- peal was turned down.

Caught cheating with one of the

most dangerous of all anabolic steroids, stanozolol, Johnson was kicked off the Canadian team for

life, and his gold medal in the world's fastest 100-meter dash was

given to arch rival Lewis. Alexander de Merode, chairman

of the International Olympic Com- mittee's medical commission, called Johnson's Olympic ban a sad day,

but added: "We want clarity, and

we want justice." Justice came swiftly and without

mercy: — Not only was Johnson strip-

ped of his medal, but his world- record time of 9.79 in last Satur-

100 metm-was- automatically

erased. He still holds the mark of 9.83 set in Rome at last summer's world championships.

— The Internationial Amateur Athletics Federation banned him

from international competition for two years. Johnson will be 28 before he can compete again on any

meaningful level. — Canadian sports minister Jean

Chares! said Johnson would be pro-

hibited for life from competing on the Canadian team and would lose his monthly government stipend of

$650 — Johnson stood to make as

much as half a million in ap- pearance money in a track meet next week in Tokyo. That's gone. Diodora, an Italian sportswear company, rescinded its $2.5 million, five-year contract with

Johnson. The Kyodo Oil Co., of Japan said it was immediately severing ties with Johnson, remov- ing all his pictures from their gas

stations. They would not reveal how much their deal was worth.

— And there will be no mention in official histories of the 1988 Summer Olympics that Ben

Johnson even took part. On virtually any other day,

Louganis' last-dive victory over

Chinese 14-year-old Xiong Ni would have grabbed most of the at- tention. Unfortunately, it came on the same day Johnson was stripped.

SOVIET UNION (82) Alexandre Volkov 4-6 4-5 12, Tut

Sokk 1-4 3-4 5. Serguei Tarakanov 0-1 0-0 0, Ratmondaa-Char Martchiouienis 5-11 6-8 19. Igor Migliniex 0-0 0-0 0. Valeri Tikhonenko 1-3 1-2 3, Rimas Kourtinaitis 8-16 8-9 28. Arvidas-romas Sabonis 6-12 1-2 13. Victor Pankrachkine MM0, Valdemaras Khomitchious 1-4 0-0 2. Alexandre Belostennyi 0-1M0. Valeri Goborov

°"1 W Totals 26-59 23-30 82.

UNITED STATES (78) Mitch Richmond 1-4 2-2 5, Charles

E Smith 5-9 0-1 11. Vernell Cotes 2-4 2 3 6. Hersey Hawkins 0-0 0O 0, Jet- Irey Grayer 1-31-2 4, Charles D Smith 0-2 2-2 2. WIHe Anderson 3-3 0-0 6, Stacey Augmon 0-0 0-00. Dan Maierle 6-14 2-3 15. Danny Manning 0-4 0-0 0. J.R Raid 3-6 2-2 8. David Robinson

Total* 27-81 18-25 78.

HeHtsme Soviet Union 47. United Slates 37 Three point field goals Soviet Union 7-13 (Martchiouienis 3-3. Kourtinaitis 4 10). United Stales 4-7 (Richmond 1-2. Smith 1-1. Grayer 1-1. Maierle 1-3). Fouled out Mart- chiouienis. Coles. Anderson Re- bounds: Soviet Union 32 (Sabonis 13), United States 31 (Robinson 12). Assists Soviet Union 14 (VcHkov 5). Untied States 4 (Cotes 2) Total fouls Soviet Union 21. United States 33 A 13.000

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Sports Pag* 14 The Dally Pennsylvania!* Wednesday, September 28, 1988

F. Hockey just escapes Lafayette's hit-and-run Quakers come back in 2-2 deadlock By SCOTT WAYNF.BKRN

Yesterday, Ihe Penn field hockey team suffered a hit-and-run accident in Easton, Pa. Fortunately for the Quakers, they survived to tell about it.

The only injuries resulting from the accident were Penn's unblemished 3-0 record and the Quakers' three-game unscored-upon streak.

The cause of the mishap was Lafayette, whose hit-and-run style gave the I Ith-ranked Quakers all they could handle for two halves and 20 minutes of overtime.

After falling behind, 2-1, in the first half, Penn regained its composure in the second and managed a 2-2 tie with the I6th-ranked Leopards.

That outcome is becoming a tradi- tion when the two schools collide, this being the sixth tie in 15 meetings.

"The way we played, we'll settle for a tie," co-captain Wendy

Field Hockey Top 20 Pts

1 Old Dominion 7-0 120 2. North Carolina 6-1 114 3. Delaware 6-0 108 4. UMass 6-0 100 5. Northwestern 6-1-1 114 6. Iowa 7-3 90 7. Penn State 5-1 83 8. Northeastern 3-1-1 78 9 Rutgers 6-1 73

10. Stanford 3-1 66 11. PENN 3-0-1 59 12. Maryland 4-4-1 53 13. Boston U. 4-0-1 50 14. New Hampshire 2-2 37 15. Temple 4-1 36 16. Lafayette 3-1-2 27 17. Duke 2-0-2 23 17. N. Illinois 9-2-1 23 19 Lehigh 4-2-1 15 20. Providence 2-1-1 7

DiDomenico said "It was a good way for us to learn, because we didn't lose."

Head Coach Anne Sage agreed. "This game was definitely a learn-

ing experience in dealing with a dif- ferent style of bockey," she said. "Playing on their home field with their hit-and-run style definitely put us at a disadvantage. But, we were able to maintain our composure and level heads, so we were able to come back

"We had played three near-perfect games. I think this game has brought us down. It has brought us back to reality."

What Penn feels it learned is how to play against a 'hit-and-run' team — one that pushes the ball upfield without much finesse and tries to set the opponents back on its heels.

"They didn't try any fancy stuff, no 'give and go's or complex plays," Donna Mulhern said. "We started off flat, and they just hit the ball through and ran up and played the bounce off of our sticks. Then they picked up the ball and went with it."

In the first half, Lafayette's game plan succeeded, and the Leopards were able to capitalize with two goals off of Quakers' mistakes.

"Sometimes I think we're too nice." Sage said. "And I'm not sure how to teach the aggression and keep up the intensity throughout the whole game.

"We're basically a finesse team. Like it or not, we are going to have to deal with physical teams. We are used to playing on artificial turf, when- Its more of .■ stick game, than on grass which is more of a 'foot game.' That is where the feet have to do the work."

The Quakers opened the scoring with a goal by Kristin Keagy. But for the rest of the first half, the Leopards controlled play with their 'hit-and-

run' style. "After Kirstin scored that first

goal, Lafayette's play really picked up," DiDomenico explained. "They dominated the latter part of the first half."

Penn recovered in the second and began having more success running its set offense, as the Quakers gradually adjusted to Lafayette's style.

Ten minutes into the second half, Penn's patience paid off in the form

* We had played three near-perfect games. I think this game has brought us down. It has brought us back to reality.'

Anne Sage Penn head coach

of a penalty corner for Nicky Hit- chens, who converted what proved to be the final goal of the game.

"The penalty corner came off of a set play," Hitchens explained. "We have six different plays. Coach tells us which one to do. This one worked."

"We didn't get any penalty corners in the first half," DiDomenico added. "In the second half, we were working to get one. We executed well on the play that set up Nicky's corner. Then Nicky made a great shot."

Despite the outcome, the Quakers were pleased with their improved play in the second half and overtime com- pared to their first-half effort.

"We controlled the second half." Sage said. "We played a team with a different style, and we adjusted dur- ing the game."

"I'm not upset with the tie," she continued. "In the first half we didn't adjust quickly enough.

Tommy L»on»rbVDaily Pennsylvanian

Senior back Wendy DiDomenico and the Quakers could not put away the Leopards last night, tying, 2-2.

M. Rugby and W. Soccer have early-season success By FRANK DEVLIN

Welcome to Club Roundup, the weekly review of club sports here at Penn. Although only two club teams were active last week. there is plenty of activity on tap for the weeks to come.

Throughout the fall, you'll see coverage of men's and women's rugby, women's soccer, water polo, men's and women's ice hockey and equestrian.

This week's discussion begins with men's rugby. There are several key questions that will play a major factor in their success tin season.

One. Will the club be able to compete effec-

tively with only six returning starters? Two. Will early season injuries to co-

presidents Mike Foundethekais and Jim Kl- ingbeil affect the morale of the team?

Three. What the hell is a scrummage, anyway?

Four. But most importantly,, the staff of Club Roundup wants to know what it is about playing rugby that makes people want to take their clothes off.

That's right . take their clothes off. There has been talk among the news media of this town for years about (he lurid happenings at Rugby club initiations. So far, everyone has been afraid to touch it, even Howard Eskin.

But here at Club Roundup, you'll read it like it is. Sources say that at nearby West Chester University, initiates must spend 10 minutes sitting naked atop a chilly beer keg.

When interviewed, Jim Klingbeil. co- president of the rugby club, refused to men-

dub Roundup tion specifics. But he did admit that the rites of passage at Penn involve "getting naked and running around."

But don't get Klingbeil wrong. These players can do a lot more than get naked. They know how to win.

On Saturday at Murphy Field, the gritty squad dominated a physically superior Drexel team and won going away, 12-0.

"We started out pretty strong," Klingbeil said. "Matt Wilding's drop kick came in the first two minutes. It was from 30 yards out. It's pretty unusual to get a kick from that far out."

Wilding also had a penalty kick en route to scoring six points on the day.

"As the game went on." Klingbeil added, "we got stronger and they got weaker. In the second half especially, the pack dominated."

Other scoring included a try (rugby's ver- sion of a touchdown) by back Matt Zola and a

conversion by Pete Kastleback. The rugby club is now 1-0. They have a

game this coming Saturday at 12 p.m. at Mur- phy Field. All are welcome.

• Over at River Field, where the women's soc-

cer club practices and plays its home games, the emphasis is on academics and having fun . . . "And winning," co-captain Gina Prigroff added.

The team has played well so far, holding a 2-1 record. A season-opening loss to Swar- thmore (2-1) has been followed bv wins over

Please see CLUBS, page II

Choosing anaerobic equipment Dispelling myths about weight lifting

In last week'sedition of On Filness, t discussed the physiological fact that an exercise must be anaerobic to substantially increase an individual's skeletal strength and muscle tone. Such exercise is commonly known as weight lifting or strength training.

When you perform a weight lifting exercise on a temporarily weak mw cle, you stimulate the muscle to get stronger. Eating and sleeping allows

ft"""

WPI

On Fitness

Charlie Packman

the muscle to get stronger. By increas- ing your strength, you not only look better, you also increase your athletu potential.

Muscles, by stretching and contrac- ting, move your body. When you have a stronger, more flexible muscle, you can move better and generate more force with less chance of injury.

We now come to the focus of this week's article: what is the best method or equipment one should use to pro- duce such results?

Free weights, Nautilus, Universal, etc. are different types of weight training equipment. Most of the con- troversy as to which is best stems from those individuals with vested, com

Please see FITNESS, page 10

Freshman Football seeks unity, looks to improve on '87 record

Robin RoihsteirvOatl, Pennsylvania)

Freshman Malt Gaw'l drop-back style adds to Penn's diversity.

By AMANDA KYKOFF As the season opener for the 1988 Penn freshman

football team approaches, the question remains as to whether the Quakers can improve on last year's disap- pointing (2-4 overall. 0-4 Ivy League) season.

The answer is an emphatic, "maybe," because Penn's attitude this year reflects uncertainty and a desire for unity.

After last Wednesday's 3-0 victory over the jayvee. it is becoming apparent that the unified defense will be a

So—on Preview major factor in the team's success this year, compen- sating for an unpolished offense.

"One of the main strengths of the team so far is the defensive line," Head Coach Dave Rackovan said. "We have some depth there, and there are some kids who can really move. We played hard and are getting the idea of coming together as a team."

Defensive lineman Don Gates agreed. "The defense has come together." he said. "We have

a motto here that we hang our hat on pursuit. We've come together, and we're starting to learn."

The offense has, not surprisingly, been a little slower in "coming together."

"It's a very difficult situation — bringing kids from 55 different programs around Ihe country," Rackovan said "It takes a while for them. The key to any development is continued progress and practice."

After only 10 practices, there are still areas with room for improvement.

"The team does have a long way to go as far as ex- ecution goes in every area — both offense and defense," Rackovan said.

The leadership of the team has not really been established yet. which makes it more difficult for the offense to unite at such an early stage in the season. The team boasts three talented quarterbacks (Matt Gaer. Eric Hull. Fit/ McKinnon). and with them, three dif- ferent styles

"Matt Gaer is more of a drop-back type quarter- back. Eric is a strong-armed kid . . . he does more in the sprint game and can drop back too, and fit/ McKinnon is more of an option, rol'-out type of quarterback," according to Rackovan.

Hull injured his shoulder in practice last week, however, and is questionable for Friday's season opener against Columbia (Franklin Field. 1:15 p.m.). The three of them have all demonstrated talent at the position.

"They're probably all going to play at some time or another. Right now, there is no starting quarterback, per se." Rackovan said.

"Our quarterbacks all look good." wide receiver Damon Young said. "Fiu can come in — he ran the of- fense pretty well (in the scrimmage versus jayvee) ... But our offense needs alot of work. We're still getting used to each other."

Hopefully for Penn. some of the fog enshrouding the team will have lifted and the Quakers will be strong enough to hand the Lions their first defeat since the 1986 season.

"We don't know what they have. We don't know what we have," Rackovan said. "We'll come

'It's a very difficult situation — br- inging kids from 55 different pro- grams around the country. It takes a while for them.'

Dave Rackovan Freshman football head coach

together . . . and it'll be a big guessing game." As the offense unifies and the defense continues to

improve, the Quakers agree that the one thing that can dash their hopes of a successful season is poor health.

"If we get some injuries, I don't know what will hap- pen," Rackovan said. "We only have a squad of 50 kids, and they only play one position. [Lack of] depth can hurt you, injuries can hurt you. Those are the things we're concerned with."

"If we can stay healthy this year, we'll do alot better than the freshman team did last year," said Young, confidently.

The Penn lockerroom is plastered with posters egging the team on towards victory over Columbia, and the hopes are high this year.

"We have a lot of potential," Young said. "And I think we improve every day."

( l


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