2Ibe Bailu llemtstjtaaman - Penn Libraries · THIS HORSE was spotted eating his rider's head...

8
2Ibe Bailu llemtstjtaaman > V_ T9 U T5 founded 1885 VOL.JCVNO.84 PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY. OCTOBER 8.1979 Copyright 1979 Th« Dally Pannayl.anlm Freshmen Vie For UA Seats Nine Spots A vailable By RANDY MAI .A.Mr I) Thirty-six freshmen will be vying for nine available seats in the Un- dergraduate Assembly in elections tomorrow and Wednesday. Voting will take place from 9:00 to 6:30 p.m. both days, at specified polling places in the Quad, Hill House, King's Court, Stouffer, and Harnwell and Harrison Houses. Freshmen can vote for candidates in the Quad, Hill, or North Campus parties, which are fielding slates of three candidates each. Each voter casts a ballot for up to nine can- didates. Tin- number of candidates is "a little smaller than last year," ac- cording to Nominations and Elections Committee chairman Jodi Schwartz, but it is "a manageable number, since freshmen will be voting for one in four." The campaigning so far has been "basically door-to-door," according to Schwartz. Candidates had the opportunity to appear on UTV, the University's cable TV station, last week, and were able to state their platforms in a full page ad in today's Daily Pennsvfvanian. paid for by the NEC Freshman reaction to the elections and candidates has been generally low-key. "Overall, it hasn't been given too much publicity," said FAS freshman Hob Citronberg. "I don't think there will be a very heavy voting turnout because nobody knows what anybody stands for." Citronberg added that he would probably not vote, since "you're obviously not going to vote for somebody you don't know." "I haven't got the slightest idea what's going on," commented another freshmen who wished to remain nameless. "How are you supposed to know anything about the candidates? They come around saying, 'Vote for me.'" A public hearing on election violations wdl be conducted Thursday at 7:00 p.m. if violations are reported by 7:00 p.m. Wednesday. Ballots will not be counted until after this hearing. It is not known when the vote will be counted if mi improprieties are reported. THIS HORSE was spotted eating his rider's head recently, claiming, "It's better than fast-food chain hamburgers." Seriously, though this policeman's head seems to have disappeared inside his Owen lampe Jr horses mouth, we all know that horses have yet to acquire a taste lor policemen. Maybe the policeman was checking his horse's tonsils. Health Care Unaffected by PGH dosing By RICH RAB1NOFF The 1977 closing of Philadelphia General Hospital (PGH) has resulted in "few reductions" in availability of medical services for city residents, a report issued yesterday by the Fellowship Commission states. The report also adds that "tens of thousands of financially needy and or medically undeserved Philadelphians did not have their health needs met" by combined private and public care facilities even before the closing of PGH, located less than a block from the University's medical complex. Those needs, the commission added, are still not being met today. As a part of an effort to assure uninterrupted provision of health care, the commission, a private human rights agent y. contracted with the Virginia-based JRB Associates, a medical management consulting firm. 'Ilie study is the only study comparing PGH's services and patients with those currently provided and served by the city. The report stated that between February 1976 and June 1977 the city "endeavored to strengthen or establish facilites or services that it believed would be equal to or better than those offered by PGH and would be less costly to Philadelphia taxpayers," the commission wrote. TTie consultants' study indicates that services such as primary and general secondary care are as adequately provided as they were before the PGH closing, although the city's Family Medical Care Program facilities are under- used and under-publicized. Care for city employees, acute cases, emergencies, prisoners and rape victims are adequately covered, as well, the report says. Rate of use by the poor and near-poor, as well as the city's homeless "street" people are much lower at existing care facilities than they were at PGH. As a result of this drop, tlie report recommends the need to "identify and track" former PGH users to find out where they are currently receiving attention. The study adds, however, that the findings they reacln"l I Continued oo page S) Mayoral Candidates Debate School Policies By JIM PERRY As in previous mayoral debates, the candidates had little difficulty agreeing with one another. But in Friday night's debate on education, the fourth of five scheduled debates, they at least found some things to squabble about. After being denied the opportunity of participating in the other three debates, Socialist Workers Party candidate Nora Danielson finally got her chance in this debate, concerning education. She wasn't the least bit timid in the face of the more popular candidates. Consumer Party choice I .in'leu Blackwell, Democrat William Green, and Republican David Mar- ston. "Contrary to what the other can- didates say,'' said Danielson, "there is no common ground between big business and workers. Every dime of profit they and the government take from our pockets they want to spend on bombs, nukes, and cops." All four candidates were agreed on one point: the state of the Philadelphia school system is disastrous. "There's almost an $8O0 million school budget now," said Blackwell, "but every year we graduate func- tional illiteracy." Green and Marston both stressed the need for the cutting of "waste and fat" within the Board of Education, and a back to basics move in the schools themselves. Blackwell called for cooperation between the banks, business, and the city to help ease the financial woes of the school system. Danielson called for an immediate tax to be levied against the banks, and the formation of a delegation to demand money for education from Washington. "Ten percent of our school budget is debt service to the banks," said Danielson. "We should tax them, it shouldn't be the other way around. There's also plenty of money in the war budget that should be directed towards education, not war games for Carter and his friends." Just prior to the debate, about 20 demonstrators gathered outside the Sheraton Hotel, the site of the debate, calling for the construction of a new I Continued on page SI Voter Deadline Set Tomorrow Midnight All voter registration ap- plications, whether in person or by mail, for the November city tin tions must be received at the Registration Commission Office in the City Hall Annex, Juniper and Filbert Sts., by midnight tomorrow. Mail applications have been available at stands on locust Walk and other parts of campus. Karyn Rolkcr John Coyne and colleague gain real-world experience. Humanists Receive On-the-Job Training By RANDY MAI AMI I) Nobody has to tell John Coyne that it's hard to find a job. Coyne is a Ph.D. candidate at Temple University, getting his degree in history, concentrating in urban and ethnic studies. A lot of people with comparable education are driving cabs or tending bar. But John Coyne is out working in the community, as a "humanist-in- residence," gaining real-world experience and exploring his career opportunities in a program spon- sored by the University's Center for Philadelphia Studies. The center, part of the School of Public and Urban Policy, is designed to deal with key issues in Philadelphia and the region. Coyne and nine other unemployed people with graduate degrees in fields such as anthropology, American civilization and sociology, were placed in non-profit organizations in the community last month to complete a project that utilizes their educational training while providing a service to the community. Coyne, for example, works at the United Communities Southwark Home in Queen's Village, "a place that would not normally consider hiring someone with a masters in history." according to Nancy Moses, organizer of the humanist-in- residence program. Coyne's major project involves genealogical studies of the kindship networks of the community, traced back through three generations of four families. The project involves an in-depth study of life-styles, traditions, and culture. The history of the community is brought into focus." said Coyne. "They learn their roots." The project is symbolic of 'climbing out of our ivory tower- s."Coyne said. "We're thrilled with the opportunity to work in a setting outside of teaching." I Continued on page Si Political Factions Trap Blackwell By APHRODITE VALLERAS I .in leu Blackwell is walking a tightrope. But if he manages to keep his balance from here until November, he just may win the mayoral election. Blackwell, a former City Coun- cilman from the University's district, resigned his seat last July when he was drafted by a black political caucus to run for mayor after his fellow black leader, attorney Charles Bowser, lost to William Green in the Democratic primary in May. Blackwell is running on the Con- sumer Party ticket. The party is slowly gaining strength in over- whelmingly Democratic Philadelphia among liberals dissatisfied with the Democratic Party. The race issue may prove to be both his most important assest as well as his biggest drawback. In a vote that could possibly be polarized by race - CAMPAIGN '79 TTiis is (he last of a four-part series on the city mayoral candidates. Bowser got 90 percent of the black vote in last May's primary - Blackwell's strength in black wards in unmatched. But, in a year in which Mayor Frank Rizzo urged voters to "vote white", predominately white wards in the Northeast and South Philadelphia went almost exclusively to Green in the primary. In addition, Blackwell is caught between two factions of black political leaders - one which is more radical than Blackwell and one which In- cludes more conservative, old-party politicians and ward leaders. If Blackwell manages to keep both factions in line and if Green and Republican David Marston split the city's white vote, Blackwell could win a close race. In a recent interview, Blackwell claimed that rank-and-file blacks arc supporting him. "Black officials didn't support Charles Bowser," Blackwell said. "They have never supported a black independent candidate 1 before me)." One of the most important black leaders in the city- U.S. Rep. William Gray - has pledged, however, to support Green in the general election, after endorsing Bowser in the primary. Although Gray's lukewarm endorsement of Bowser last May (he gave no speeches for Bowser, and only weeks before the election did he I Continued on page 3) ft LUCIEN BLACKWKIX 'I'm a big boy' John Paul Completes U.S. Tour; Blesses U.S.. Condemns Abortion Weather Costly sunny today with highs in the low (ill's In- creasingly cloudy tonight with a chance of rain and lows in the nuiMO's Chance of rain tomorrow with highs in the mid 60's Inside •Protesters at the Seabrook nuclear power plant are turned back bj polite using a variety of weapons. Page 1 •In news from other college*, Columbia balances its budget and searches fur a new president. Page .The football and soccer teams both came up short in New York. Page 8. By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Bidding America a fond farewell. Pope John Paul II completed his extraordinary pilgrimage yesterday, unyielding in his condemnation of abortion and in his insistence that women have no place in the priesthood. "God bless America! God bless America!" were his final words to a country that turned out in record numbers to embrace him. The only disappointing crowd of his tour was on the final day. Instead of the million people predicted for the pontifical Mass on the mall of the capital, police said there were no more than 475.000. But millions of people, perhaps 10 million or more, saw John Paul on his six-city tour of America, the first by any pope. For many, it was a brief glimpse - the pontiff speeding by in a motorcade, standing up through the sunroof of his limousine. Others saw him from afar; a distant, small figure behind an altar. last night at Andrews Air Force Base, with the pope's airplane war- ming up behind him. Vice President Walter Mondalesaid, "The moment of your stay will live in our memory for years, but these thoughts you kindle will live forever." Then, with a bright, orange, harvest moon rising on the horizon, the pope boarded his aircraft, dubbed Shepherd I. With a final blessing and a little wave, he was off for Rome He had been in the United States for six days and six hours. A chilly breeze ruffled the pope's green and white vestments as he celebrated Mass yesterday. Wor- shipers shivered in blankets under rain-threatening skies as the mercury dropped into the low 60s. In a dramatic moment earlier in the day, John Paul heard the challenge of a nun who urged that women be allowed to become priests. He did not depart from prepared remarks to respond to her, thus un- derscoring his continued opposition. In his farewell remarks, the pope thanked President Carter, the first president to officially receive the supreme pastor of 700 million Roman Catholics. And he thanked the American people, declaring, "Your hospitality has been warm and filled with love. All of you will constantly be remembered in my prayers...' "Today, therefore, my final prayM is this: that God will bless Amerh that she may increasingly become - and truly be and long remain nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all." And then he MCtaimed God bless America! God bles in

Transcript of 2Ibe Bailu llemtstjtaaman - Penn Libraries · THIS HORSE was spotted eating his rider's head...

2Ibe Bailu llemtstjtaaman > V_ T9 U T5 founded 1885

VOL.JCVNO.84 PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY. OCTOBER 8.1979 Copyright 1979 Th« Dally Pannayl.anlm

Freshmen Vie For UA Seats Nine Spots A vailable

By RANDY MAI .A.Mr I) Thirty-six freshmen will be vying

for nine available seats in the Un- dergraduate Assembly in elections tomorrow and Wednesday.

Voting will take place from 9:00 to 6:30 p.m. both days, at specified polling places in the Quad, Hill House, King's Court, Stouffer, and Harnwell and Harrison Houses.

Freshmen can vote for candidates in the Quad, Hill, or North Campus parties, which are fielding slates of three candidates each. Each voter casts a ballot for up to nine can- didates.

Tin- number of candidates is "a little smaller than last year," ac- cording to Nominations and Elections Committee chairman Jodi Schwartz, but it is "a manageable number, since freshmen will be voting for one in four."

The campaigning so far has been "basically door-to-door," according to Schwartz. Candidates had the opportunity to appear on UTV, the University's cable TV station, last week, and were able to state their platforms in a full page ad in today's

Daily Pennsvfvanian. paid for by the NEC

Freshman reaction to the elections and candidates has been generally low-key. "Overall, it hasn't been given too much publicity," said FAS freshman Hob Citronberg. "I don't think there will be a very heavy voting turnout because nobody knows what anybody stands for." Citronberg added that he would probably not vote, since "you're obviously not going to vote for somebody you don't know."

"I haven't got the slightest idea what's going on," commented another freshmen who wished to remain nameless. "How are you supposed to know anything about the candidates? They come around saying, 'Vote for me.'"

A public hearing on election violations wdl be conducted Thursday at 7:00 p.m. if violations are reported by 7:00 p.m. Wednesday.

Ballots will not be counted until after this hearing. It is not known when the vote will be counted if mi improprieties are reported.

THIS HORSE was spotted eating his rider's head recently, claiming, "It's better than fast-food chain hamburgers." Seriously, though this policeman's head seems to have disappeared inside his

Owen lampe Jr

horses mouth, we all know that horses have yet to acquire a taste lor policemen. Maybe the policeman was checking his horse's tonsils.

Health Care Unaffected by PGH dosing

By RICH RAB1NOFF The 1977 closing of Philadelphia General Hospital (PGH)

has resulted in "few reductions" in availability of medical services for city residents, a report issued yesterday by the Fellowship Commission states.

The report also adds that "tens of thousands of financially needy and — or medically undeserved Philadelphians did not have their health needs met" by combined private and public care facilities even before the closing of PGH, located less than a block from the University's medical complex. Those needs, the commission added, are still not being met today.

As a part of an effort to assure uninterrupted provision of health care, the commission, a private human rights agent y. contracted with the Virginia-based JRB Associates, a medical management consulting firm. 'Ilie study is the only study comparing PGH's services and patients with those currently provided and served by the city.

The report stated that between February 1976 and June 1977 the city "endeavored to strengthen or establish facilites or services that it believed would be equal to or better than those offered by PGH and would be less costly to Philadelphia taxpayers," the commission wrote.

TTie consultants' study indicates that services such as primary and general secondary care are as adequately provided as they were before the PGH closing, although the city's Family Medical Care Program facilities are under- used and under-publicized. Care for city employees, acute cases, emergencies, prisoners and rape victims are adequately covered, as well, the report says.

Rate of use by the poor and near-poor, as well as the city's homeless "street" people are much lower at existing care facilities than they were at PGH. As a result of this drop, tlie report recommends the need to "identify and track" former PGH users to find out where they are currently receiving attention.

The study adds, however, that the findings they reacln"l I Continued oo page S)

Mayoral Candidates Debate School Policies By JIM PERRY

As in previous mayoral debates, the candidates had little difficulty agreeing with one another. But in Friday night's debate on education, the fourth of five scheduled debates, they at least found some things to squabble about.

After being denied the opportunity of participating in the other three debates, Socialist Workers Party candidate Nora Danielson finally got her chance in this debate, concerning education. She wasn't the least bit timid in the face of the more popular

candidates. Consumer Party choice I .in'leu Blackwell, Democrat William Green, and Republican David Mar- ston.

"Contrary to what the other can- didates say,'' said Danielson, "there is no common ground between big business and workers. Every dime of profit they and the government take from our pockets they want to spend on bombs, nukes, and cops."

All four candidates were agreed on one point: the state of the Philadelphia school system is disastrous.

"There's almost an $8O0 million school budget now," said Blackwell, "but every year we graduate func- tional illiteracy."

Green and Marston both stressed the need for the cutting of "waste and fat" within the Board of Education, and a back to basics move in the schools themselves.

Blackwell called for cooperation between the banks, business, and the city to help ease the financial woes of the school system. Danielson called for an immediate tax to be levied against the banks, and the formation

of a delegation to demand money for education from Washington.

"Ten percent of our school budget is debt service to the banks," said Danielson. "We should tax them, it shouldn't be the other way around. There's also plenty of money in the war budget that should be directed towards education, not war games for Carter and his friends."

Just prior to the debate, about 20 demonstrators gathered outside the Sheraton Hotel, the site of the debate, calling for the construction of a new

I Continued on page SI

Voter Deadline Set Tomorrow Midnight

All voter registration ap- plications, whether in person or by mail, for the November city tin tions must be received at the Registration Commission Office in the City Hall Annex, Juniper and Filbert Sts., by midnight tomorrow. Mail applications have been available at stands on locust Walk and other parts of campus.

Karyn Rolkcr John Coyne and colleague gain real-world experience.

Humanists Receive On-the-Job Training

By RANDY MAI AMI I) Nobody has to tell John Coyne that

it's hard to find a job. Coyne is a Ph.D. candidate at

Temple University, getting his degree in history, concentrating in urban and ethnic studies. A lot of people with comparable education are driving cabs or tending bar.

But John Coyne is out working in the community, as a "humanist-in- residence," gaining real-world experience and exploring his career opportunities in a program spon- sored by the University's Center for Philadelphia Studies.

The center, part of the School of Public and Urban Policy, is designed to deal with key issues in Philadelphia and the region. Coyne and nine other unemployed people with graduate degrees in fields such as anthropology, American civilization and sociology, were placed in non-profit organizations in the community last month to complete a project that utilizes their

educational training while providing a service to the community.

Coyne, for example, works at the United Communities Southwark Home in Queen's Village, "a place that would not normally consider hiring someone with a masters in history." according to Nancy Moses, organizer of the humanist-in- residence program. Coyne's major project involves genealogical studies of the kindship networks of the community, traced back through three generations of four families. The project involves an in-depth study of life-styles, traditions, and culture.

The history of the community is brought into focus." said Coyne. "They learn their roots."

The project is symbolic of 'climbing out of our ivory tower- s."Coyne said. "We're thrilled with the opportunity to work in a setting outside of teaching."

I Continued on page Si

Political Factions Trap Blackwell By APHRODITE VALLERAS

I .in leu Blackwell is walking a tightrope.

But if he manages to keep his balance from here until November, he just may win the mayoral election.

Blackwell, a former City Coun- cilman from the University's district, resigned his seat last July when he was drafted by a black political caucus to run for mayor after his fellow black leader, attorney Charles Bowser, lost to William Green in the Democratic primary in May.

Blackwell is running on the Con- sumer Party ticket. The party is slowly gaining strength in over- whelmingly Democratic Philadelphia among liberals dissatisfied with the Democratic Party.

The race issue may prove to be both his most important assest as well as his biggest drawback. In a vote that could possibly be polarized by race -

CAMPAIGN '79

TTiis is (he last of a four-part series on the city mayoral candidates.

Bowser got 90 percent of the black vote in last May's primary - Blackwell's strength in black wards in unmatched. But, in a year in which Mayor Frank Rizzo urged voters to "vote white", predominately white

wards in the Northeast and South Philadelphia went almost exclusively to Green in the primary.

In addition, Blackwell is caught between two factions of black political leaders - one which is more radical than Blackwell and one which In-

cludes more conservative, old-party politicians and ward leaders.

If Blackwell manages to keep both factions in line and if Green and Republican David Marston split the city's white vote, Blackwell could win a close race.

In a recent interview, Blackwell claimed that rank-and-file blacks arc supporting him.

"Black officials didn't support Charles Bowser," Blackwell said. "They have never supported a black independent candidate 1 before me)."

One of the most important black leaders in the city- U.S. Rep. William Gray - has pledged, however, to support Green in the general election, after endorsing Bowser in the primary. Although Gray's lukewarm endorsement of Bowser last May (he gave no speeches for Bowser, and only weeks before the election did he

I Continued on page 3)

ft LUCIEN BLACKWKIX

'I'm a big boy'

John Paul Completes U.S. Tour; Blesses U.S.. Condemns Abortion

Weather Costly sunny today with highs in the low (ill's In- creasingly cloudy tonight with a chance of rain and lows in the nuiMO's Chance of rain tomorrow with highs in the mid 60's

Inside •Protesters at the Seabrook

nuclear power plant are turned back bj polite using a variety of weapons. Page 1

•In news from other college*, Columbia balances its budget and searches fur a new president. Page

.The football and soccer teams both came up short in New York. Page 8.

By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Bidding America a

fond farewell. Pope John Paul II completed his extraordinary pilgrimage yesterday, unyielding in his condemnation of abortion and in his insistence that women have no place in the priesthood.

"God bless America! God bless America!" were his final words to a country that turned out in record numbers to embrace him.

The only disappointing crowd of his tour was on the final day. Instead of the million people predicted for the pontifical Mass on the mall of the capital, police said there were no more than 475.000.

But millions of people, perhaps 10 million or more, saw John Paul on his six-city tour of America, the first by any pope. For many, it was a brief glimpse - the pontiff speeding by in a

motorcade, standing up through the sunroof of his limousine. Others saw him from afar; a distant, small figure behind an altar.

last night at Andrews Air Force Base, with the pope's airplane war- ming up behind him. Vice President Walter Mondalesaid, "The moment of your stay will live in our memory for years, but these thoughts you kindle will live forever."

Then, with a bright, orange, harvest moon rising on the horizon, the pope boarded his aircraft, dubbed Shepherd I. With a final blessing and a little wave, he was off for Rome

He had been in the United States for six days and six hours.

A chilly breeze ruffled the pope's green and white vestments as he celebrated Mass yesterday. Wor- shipers shivered in blankets under rain-threatening skies as the mercury

dropped into the low 60s. In a dramatic moment earlier in the

day, John Paul heard the challenge of a nun who urged that women be allowed to become priests.

He did not depart from prepared remarks to respond to her, thus un- derscoring his continued opposition.

In his farewell remarks, the pope thanked President Carter, the first president to officially receive the supreme pastor of 700 million Roman Catholics. And he thanked the American people, declaring, "Your hospitality has been warm and filled with love. All of you will constantly be remembered in my prayers...'

"Today, therefore, my final prayM is this: that God will bless Amerh that she may increasingly become - and truly be and long remain nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all."

And then he MCtaimed God bless America! God bles in

PAGE 2 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANUN-Mondsy, October 8,1978

NO NUKES1 A mMling ol Students Against Nuclear Development at 7 30 p m in the Houston Hall West Lounge

LESLIE GELB. arms control expert, will speak today in the Franklin Room of Houston Hall The program is sponsored Oy the Penn Political Union.

GAY PEER COUNSELING Call 243 - BUS or visit Room 4 ol the Christian Association (or supportive, confidential counseling, Monday through Thursday. 4 - 10 p.m

OBSERVATORY OPEN See the moon, star clusters, nebulae, tonight and every Monday and Thursday night (IP THE SKY IS MOSTLY CLOUDLESS) DHL rooltop, 33rd and Walnut St . 9 -10 30 p m

THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION at Penn meets Monday evenings al 6 30 p m in the CA, second Moor Included in the meetings are readings Irom the Bible and the Christian Science textbook, and sharing of thoughts All are welcome.

GAYS AT PENN: Mondays 8 - 10 p.m., Christian Association. Room E All gay men welcome

QUALIFIED STUDENTS urged to apply to Reid Hall program in Pans. France for Spring Semester. 1980 Deadline Oct 30

from 2 00-3 00 pnv. West Lounge. Williams Hall

ATTENTION SENIORS Are you planning a career in college teaching or research' Contact Or Karen Miselis in Room 117. Logan Hall for information about the Danforth Graduate fellowships lor 1980-81 Deadline is Oct 11. NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW: Recruiters will speak with all interested seniors on Thursday, Oct 11 Please make appointments at the University Career Placement Service Office. Houston Hall, aecondlloor. INTERNSHIPS Journalism / Com- munications Students WIFI Interships. interviews begin week ol Oct 8 Contact Jo Porter, 243-4827

ECONOMICS MAJORS One Internship with Pa Area Council Economic Education Contact Jo Porter 243-4827

STUDENT ACTIVITIES COUNCIL FINANCE COMMITTEE ELECTIONS Undergraduates sign up for interview in Student Life Office by Oct 15 Seniors are not eligible.

GERMAN CLUB meets at 11 0Q in Williams 741 on Thursday New members welcome For more information call 382-4813. THE PRE-VET SOCIETY will nave an organizational meeting Wednesday. Oct 10 at 8 00 p m on the 3rd floor of Houston Hall, Room 10.

SOC'E'v FOR TREAT.VE ANACHRONISM Dance practice Tuesday mghi and Fighting lessons Thursday night Both at 7 30 Houston Hall Come discover the Current Middle Ages'

THE LEON LECTURE SERIES presents Prol Gerald Holton of the Harvard Physics Department to speak on a topic associated with Einstein. Tuesday at 4p m m Annenberg Auditorium

CAREERS IN ARCHITECTURE: Hughes Caulfman. center city architect discusses architectural careers Placement Oflice library. Houston Hall. Thursday from 7-9 p m. Call 243-4381 to sign up

MARKETING CAREERS Steven Adler Sandier Shoes. Houston Hall Room 8 (therj floor). Tuesday from 4-6 p.m

STRESS MANAGEMENT Workshop designed to help participants handle stress by using relaxation, time-management and other strategies. Three 2-hour sessions. Wednesday 3-5 p m Call 243-7022

OUTING CLUB MEETS TOMORROW NIGHT 8.00 p m. Franklin Room. Houston Hall Back-packing, climbing, cycling, canoeing, and day-hiking trips planned Slide show

PHYSICAL PLANT DEPARTMENT Residence section Our service desk will be at Stouffer Dining Commons on Tuesday Irom 1 1 30 a m to 1 2 30 p m If you live in University residence and have any problems in your apartment we want to know about it.

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The Amos Tuck School of Business Administration

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MCII.UHI women seeking EDUCATION FOR MANAGEMENT

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Monday, October 15 Houston Hall

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**-£ NEWS IN BRIEF pns Compiled From Associated_Press_Dispatch"s

inTgRnflTionm <^& .hipit n Changes Trade Policy

WASHINGTON-A Congressional report released yesterday said that Japan, which has the world's third largest economy, is dismantling trade barriers that protected its industries from foreign competition.

The General Accounting Office, a watchdog for Congress, noted however, that there are major ex- ceptions to the new policy and that the impact of the change has been delayed because attitudes on both sides of the Pacific have been slow to adjust to the policy.

The policy includes a substantial reduction of tariffs and the lowering of many non-tariff barriers.

Funds for World Hank Urged

WASHINGTON - U.S. relations with allies and developing nations could be damaged if Congress fails to approve funds for international development banks without restriction, Carter Administration, officialssaid yesterday.

The Senate will consider a bill passed by the House last month which would give $3.2 billion to the World Bank and development banks of Asia, Latin America and Africa.

The House has said the funds could not be used for Angola, the Central African Empire, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, or Cuba.

Plane Crashes in Greece ATHENS GREECE - At least seven people were killed

last night when fire engulfed a Swissair DC-8 jet liner after the plan skidded on landing at Athens International Airport.

Civil Aviation Authority officials reported that of the 142 passengers and 12 crewmen on board the plane, three were in serious condition and an unknown amount were being treated at area hospitals.

Rain covering the runway caused the plane to skid to a stop. Passengers and crew escaped via emergency chutes seconds before the plane burst into flames.

nATIOnAl £2 Hank Lending Kate Raised

WASHINGTON-The Federal Reserve Board's anti- inflation initiative—increasing its bank lending rate a percentage point on Saturday and altering the way it controls the availability of credit—is an effort to slow rising prices without causing a severe economic slowdown.

The moves, endorsed quickly by President Carter, should make it more difficult for banks to lend and more expensive for people, especially businessmen, to borrow, thus furthering slowing down economic ex- pansion.

Gas Shortage Predicted

LOS ANGELES-Another nationwide gasoline shortage is due this month according to a respected industry analyst who predicted last spring's shortage.

Dan I.undberg, publisher of the "Lundberg Letter ", said yesterday that October gas suppUes could faU as much as five percent below demand.

Ijjndberg added that a new shortage could extend into the winter and cause worse hardships this time around.

JTATE/lOCftl E3 TM1 Could Hare Killed 23,000

PRINCETON-Two Princeton University scientists said yesterday that as many as 23,000 people living outside a 50-mile radius of Three Mile Island nuclear plant could have died if the worst possible accident had oceurred.

Jan Beyea and Frank Von Hippel, who have been studying the possible hazards of nuclear power plant accidents said that complete core meltdown would have meant that people living in an area slightly larger than Rhode Island could have faced long-term evacuation from their homes.

Anti-Nuclear Protesters Thwarted At Seabrook, N,H. Power Plant

By The Associated Press SEABROOK. N.H. - Hundreds of

anti-nuclear protesters repeatedly assaulted the Seabrook atomic power plant yesterday but were repulsed by state troopers and National Guard- smen using Tire hoses, Mace and a smoke-spewing generator.

Waves of demonstrators twice assaulted the fence surrounding the construction site and ripped down whole sections of it with ropes. Troopers and Guardsmen surged through the gap, spraying Mace and driving the protesters back along an access road.

But more than 1,000 of them quickly regrouped and marched a mile in the rain to the plant entrance, where they were met by troopers and guardsmen

standing shoulder—to—shoulder behind the main gate. Fire hoses were turned on the crowd and a stream of smoke was unleashed from a generator.

But the chanting protesters, clad in rain slickers and plastic sheets, put their backs against the chain link gate and defied authorities to move them. Utility workers then emptied two water trucks onto the crowd but were unable to disperse them immediately.

The demonstrators eventually backed off but continued to mill about in front of the gate. Some returned to campsites in the nearby woods.

Police reinforcements from other sections of the construction site were brought to the main gate. Traffic was blocked on busy U.S. Highway 1, the

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Ten people were arrested yester- day, bringing to 19 the number arrested on criminal tresspassing charges in the two-day attempt to occupy the Seabrook site, long a focal point for demonstrations against the use of nuclear power. One other demonstrator was arrested on a charge of criminal mischief. Officers also confiscated gas masks and other gear from protesters.

Earlier, the demonstrators at- tempted to enter the facility at separate sites along the chain link fence surrounding the 140-acre site. The first assault, by about 75 protesters, fizzled after a squad of troopers moved from behind the fence and sprayed them with Mace and smoke bombs.

Other officers in boats used jackknives to slash truck tire inner tubes the protesters were using as a makeshift pontoon bridge across a tidal inlet in the marshland.

A few hours later, about 500 demonstrators returned in two groups and managed to bring down sections of the fence before being turned back.

The early skirmishes at first ap- peared to dim the spirits of demon- strators who had camped in the rain overnight in the marshland, after an attempt to take over the plant failed Saturday.

On Saturday, about 1,500 protesters failed to force their way through the 8- foot-high fence along the south perimeter of the sprawling plant. They were repelled by more than 500 state troopers and National Guards men using fires hoses, Mace, tear gas and riot batons.

Departing demonstrators com- plained that the takeover attempt was too disorganized and said there were notenought protesters.

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LEON LECTURE

SERIES PRESENTS Gerald Holton

Professor of Physics Harvard University

Topic Associated with EINSTEIN

Tuesday, October 9, 4:00 P.M. Annenberg Auditorium

Free Admission

THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIA!*. Mossday. October 1,1I7J PACE 3

Columbia U. Budget Is Balanced For First Time in Twelve Years

ByRICHRABCSOFF Columbia University has approved

its first balanced budget in twelve years, and at the same time has begun a search to find a successor to university President William McGUl, who wul leave his post at the end of the academic year.

This year's $290.6 million budget, a 7.1 increase over last year, was partially made possible by a 9.5 percent increase in tuition, rein- vestment of endowment funds, and the creation of a physical plant maintenance endowment fund. Columbia also began a program to replace some $85 million in en- dowment funds that were used to support the institution's policy of deficit spending.

Both McGUl and Vice President for Finance Anthony D. Knorr were optimistic about the budget, although other administrators were not so hopeful.

McGill announced early last June his decision to resign his post at the end of this academic year. The leading candidate for the post is Michael I. Sovern, provost and executive vice president for academic affairs. Sovern had formerly been the

i< iin11iiiiid from page 11 announce his support) seemed to have no effect on blacks, his enthusiastic support of Green may draw black votes from Blackwell.

In addition, Charles Bowser has yet to endorse anyone for mayor, and may not endorse Blackwell because of a political rift between the two.

Caliming that Gray's endorsement does not disappoint him, Blackwell said, "I'm a big boy." But Bowser's silence may prove more harmful to Blackwell than Gray's endorsement of Green.

Bowser, who called a press con- ference last June, reportedly to an-

[ nounce his support for Green, backed | out at the last moment without ex-

planation. Blackwell announced his mayoral candidacy later that month.

Bowser said he was double-crossed by Blackwell la charge which Black- well denied), claiming that he was led to believe that Blackwell would not run, leaving Bowser -free to endorse either Green or Republican candidate David Marston.

Perhaps because of Blackwell's possible candidacy, however, Bowser

' decided he could not wholeheartedly endorse Green - although he had already indicated he would do so - for fear of angering black Blackwell supporters.

Blackwell claimed that he did not tell Bowser to support anyone, but whether he can overcome the lack of support from Bowser one of the city's most influencial black politicians, remains to be seen.

Blackwell's problems may be compounded by the racial climate in the city, a climate which may not be Mpful to him despite the increased power of the black vote after last November's defeat of a proposed City □tarter amendment which would have allowed Mayor Rizzo to run for a third term -a defeat largely attributed to the high black vote turnout against it.

Mayor Kizzo's still-strong influence lies in the white, blue-collar areas of South Philadelphia and the Northeast. Blackwell, who is supported by black iK'tivists such as State Sen. Milton Street his brother, City Council candidate John Street, and State Rep. David Richardson, may not be able to overcome the perception that he is from the same mold as some of his more radical backers.

Blackwell said he believed he could win without the white vote, but that he expects to win "15 to 20 percent of the vote - Charles Bowser got less than nine percent even with all his liberal friends."

Gaiming that his involvement as president of l«cal 1332 of the In- ternational Longshoreman's Association (II.A) resulted in his

Other Colleges

dean of Columbia's law school. McGill took charge in 1970 with the

appointed task of restructuring Columbia's administration and balancing the university's budget. His original agreement was to leave after five years. With the tasks still in- complete after that time, McGill stayed on to continue his work.

Besides seeking a new president, Columbia still has to resolve problems in its relationship with Barnard College. McGill said.

A spokesman for Columbia said recently that the Presidential Search Committee has set no deadline for the completion of its search and has no idea when the search will end. it would in general be desirable to have President McGill's successor named before his retirement," she said.

originally slated to finish in three years. I.loyd Cutler, the campaign's i hairman, said that even without the program, the university would have received $100 to $150 million from alumni wills alone. A total of 80 percent of all collected funds came from Yale alumni.

Yale University has recently completed a five-year struggle to raise $370 million for the university The campaign began in 1974 and was

University graduate Bobby Weinstein was arrested in mid- September at Dartmouth University when he demonstrated the use of "whippets" -nitrous oxide canisters- - to a Hanover undercover policeman.

Weinstein operated a firm with two other partners, one a recent graduate of Dartmouth. Their firm, G & W School Supplies, sold school supplies and bongs as well as the nitrous oxide containers.

G & W Vice President, Dave It- zkowitz, said that the company plans to operate at Drexel College following its visit at Dartmouth, and reported to the Dartmouth that business is "booming."

Weinstein was one of the founders of Box of Rain, a head shop in Houston Hall whose lease was not renewed because of orders from former Vice Provost Phillip Mechanick.

Blackwell- meetuig with both blacks and whites, Blackwell said he didn't think whites saw him as a radical.

His involvement with the II.A, Blackwell said, has resulted in his naming jobs for the city as his top priority should he be elected mayor.

"There are jobs you can have for the asking," Blackwell claimed, saying that the city was eligible for many federal job grants that the Rizzo administration could not get, including construction job grants held up because of the city's opposition to the Whitman Park project, low-cost housing proposed for a predominantly white South Philadelphia neigh- borhood.

Blackwell added that "we need help from the private sector as well as the government. We could create jobs just by revitalizing the poor areas of the city."

Citing the federal government's civil rights law suit against the city. which alleges widespread police

brutality. Blackwell said that ending the brutality problem would also be a major concern with his ad- ministration.

"I wouldn't encourage the govern- ment to drop its lawsuit," Blackwell said "I feel that the lawsuit is a deterrant."

He added that although the city solicitor in his administration would have to defend the city, he thought the suit could be handled fairly.

APHRODITE VALLERAS Night Editor

BOB BENJAMIN ROBERT WOJTOWICZ

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Mon., Oct. 8th 2:30-4

Franklin Room Houston Hall

FUNDED BY SAC

A National Invitational Conference on

PUBLIC VIEWS OF DOCTORS AND LAWYERS

Media, /mages, and the Professions

October 18-19, 1979

The Annenberg School of Communications University of Pennsylvania

3620 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa.

Major topics include the historical develop- ment of public images and perceptions; media portrayals; professional selfperceptions; practices and informational activities affecting media and the public; the role of government and self-regulation; reform movements; and studies of the nature and validity of public perceptions. After sharing information and applying specialized knowledge to the issues presented, participants will meet in in- terdisciplinary task groups to develop policy recommendations.

There is no conference fee but preregistration is necessary to attend any or all sessions. For further information call [215] 243-7053 or 243-7037 or come to The Annen- berg School, Room G-36.

Eh* Hailu B«iui»otoantan. Affirmative Action: Making It Work " ' '*' .. r\t_i. c._. I—^W^—^—t^^M I I reuret even having to expre

/ /n \l"M l/W/DTM/ ''li ( lliu > w(l »/ /VllMll/llillM

GREG MANNING. EXECUTIVE EDITOR

RICHARD E. GORDON. MANAGING EDITOR I HIC D.JACOBS. MANAGING EDITO*

DAVID L GOLDSTEIN. BUSINESS MANAGE*

W7 ( OOPERSMITH EoROBIAl PAGE EDITOR

JOAN I. GRECO NtWi EOITOI

Hit H HOI MANN SPOHIS I-niioR

IINDA M HENRY PlATUM EDITOR

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II 111 IH WOLF PRODUC TION MANAI.ER

SIIIAR1 IEII. 34TH STREET EDITOR

MICHAEL W. JABLANSKY Assoc. BUSINESS MANAGER

DOMINIC F. MANNO NEWS EDITOR

TOW Pi ii.RS SPORTS EDITOR

DA VID B. COHEN Or» EDITOR

BOBBY POLSKY PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

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BARBARA J. SHULMAN 34TH STREET EDITOR

I'AGK ! Monday, October 8,1979

A Run Through Shoes

By John Reiss In the past three years the sport of

running has crown from a hertical activity which few participated in to ■ sport characterized by its massive appeal to wide-cross-sections of our Imputation. Sitting on I-ocust Walk for M| period uf time one will observe iiiiincrous runners determinedly i'balking up the mileage. An observer -v ill immediately notice one thing- their shoes, They may not be the

brand or tin- same color, but

CAVEAT EMPTOR lllj all Uie shoes are expensive,

\. ill-made, and carefully selected objects.

Any inilividu;il who decides to 1 his body to the stress inherent

in long distance running should IM'IN evaluate that product which

i lining to protect him from these potential problems. Shoes are a i miner's best protection against injurj I'IH'V guard against the in- juries |jroduceil by the shock when

feet hit the ground over 800 I lines a mile (and each impact

luces forces equivalent to three linn's the person's weight). For i miners who experience shin splints ami stress fractures, this is one of the most important qualities of a shoe. Other runners may place particular i inpliasis on a shoe's flexibility, which if missing, results in difficult, I lAi'iitually painful running. Other Important criteria are weight, (the lighter the shoe the easier the run, except svlien impact protection is ii Head in pursuit of a lighter shoe)

ami sole wear (when an athlete pays upuaids of $.30 for a shoe, be does not want tn have to replace them one month later). Finally, rearfoot control is important to the runner. He doesn't want his heel shifting in his SIKIC as he runs.

Ilic running boom has spawned a n U illel boom in the running shoe industry. In 1967 there were 16 shoes M tin1 market that could safely be called running shoes. There were two major manufacturers. Today there are at least 178 models and 34 manufacturers. Most of the major brands are stocked in I'hilly. Here on i-ampus there are two stores which I,II i■> running shoes. Clog and Jog in the basement of Houston Hall stocks Brooks. Snucuny, and New Balance at incredible prices, i The owner goes -ii ngbt to the factories, and some of his shoes are cosmetically defective meaning they have a glue stain). Athletic Attic stocks Brooks, Nike. New Balance, and Ktonic.

Almost all of tlie Brooks shoes are highly rated. The Brooks Vantage for men is an especially good shoe. It has excellent sole wear and is especially strong m protecting ■gainst front and rearfoot impact However it is weak in rearfoot control. Its suggested list in II e is tttM while Clog and Jog only charges $22 ami The Atic charges $28.93. Oilier strong Brooks shoes are

Hugger C.T. 1 its list is $39.95i. the Super Viilanova which has better Qexibilit) than the others,. Vantage Supreme which is about the best

you can buy for impact of"; Ion), .mil The Brooks Lad*

nova (for a list price of can't go wrong with

I

Alan Gordon

The best men's Saucony is the 1980 Trainer. It gets very high ratings for flexibility, but one can find better rearfoot protection. The 1980 Trainer for women is rated highly in impact protection and sole wear. The Saucony Hornet for men rates a little below these two others, its most notable deficiency being in impact protection.

The F.tonic crew have two strong shoes which rate at about the same level as the aforementioned Hornet: the Men's Stabilizer is notable for a revolutionary lacing system which is really only constructive if you have different size heels, and the Street- fighter, probably the most popular shoe around. This shoe offers ex- ceptional protection against rearfoot impact, but is lacking in protection for the forefeet. The women's models have essentially the same charac- teristics.

New Balance's 620 is an incredibly light shoe for a training flat. It offers good forefoot protection but has dismal sole wear. It also lists for $50. This company is one of the very few to offer various width < AA-EE).

There are many brands of shoes which don't rate as high as the ones mentioned. Nike's whole line, except for the Daybreak (strong in the flexibility department) is rather weak, especially the Nylon Cortez and the Roadrunner.

No consumer can be told what product is best for him. All the tests in the world con be overruled by- individual preferences. Examine your running and determine which qualities in a shoe you most desire. On examining a shoe, look for cushioning that is firm, but that gives a little. Bend the shoe at the ball of the foot, to gauge its flexibility. Look for a stable heel, one that is wide enough to provide a good foundation when your foot lands. If you choose a nylon shoe, be sure it is firm where it grips your heel; that's when support and rigidity are particularly necessary.

Some last words of advice. Don't use your running shoes for anything but running, and try wearing them without socks. This combination leads to a noticable increase in one's initial desire to run. and the hardest part of running is getting started. John Reiss ( )isa member of the Perm Consumer Board.

By Dick Stevenson Affirmative action is not working

properly at the University of Penn- sylvania. But slowly, ever so slowly, that may change because of the leadership of one man.

That the system is currently abused is not a truth readily apparent. As a whole, the University tends to do pretty well in meeting the goals set for it by the government. Figures will be released soon, for example, that show the University meeting hiring goals through July 1 for women and

~FAIR GAME minority faculty in all but one or two schools.

The problem lies at a different level, the level of the individual. It's the department chairman who continues to hire through the old boy network, the guy in the Franklin Building who sees affirmative action as a game to be beat, the administrator who believes that affirmative action is meant to apply to others, not to him.

The abuses are real, but not always easy to see. The last affirmative action audit almost included data about men who were listed as women and faculty members who were dead. The story is told about the highly- qualified black professor who was turned down for a job by a department chairman in Wharton. A white male was hired for the position. The black professor was immediately snapped up by Harvard. Or consider the two supervisors who hire each others' wives, and then determine their salaries over the Friday night bridge game.

These things happen, and every step in the affirmative action process can be beat in a series of ways.

Nick Constan, the University's personnel administrator and a man who knows the ins and outs of hiring procedures as well as anyone, thinks that not only are there huge loopholes in hiring regulations, but that they are often taken advantage of.

Madeleine Joullie, who chairs the University's Council on Equal Opportunity and who has developed a reputation as a tough cookie as the affirmative action officer in FAS, says her work is impeded by the secrecy of the administration about the ongoing affirmative action audit.

Carol Tracy, director of the Perm Women's Center, and one who keeps a

'Affirmative action commitment is not merely a legal matter. The University must have its own commitment.'

close watch on the subject sees a general lack of commitment.

Affirmative action this is not. Not by the letter of the law, not by the spirit of the law.

That's something that many people forget. Affirmative action is the law. It's not just a moral obligation; it's a requirement. If the requirement isn't met, it could cost the University millions of dollars and its high standing in the academic world.

There are indications, though, that things are slowly changing. And it's mostly the work of one man.

In the nine months he has been Provost, Vartan Gregorian has proven that his leadership in af- firmative action does not mean empty words, it means action.

He has proven that with a little effort, not only can qualified women and minorities be found to fill

positions, but that they are often the most qualified or enlightened choices.

Take Janis Sommerville for in- stance. As Gregorian's Vice Provost for University Life, she is developing a reputation as more than just hard- working and competent. Joullie calls her "an outstanding choice."

Or Joyce Randolph, Gregorian's new executive assistant, who seems open and sensitive to the needs of the University community, and professes a strong commitment to making af- firmative action work. Or Herbert Nickens, a black doctor appointed as a special faculty assistant to Gregorian and President Meyerson.

Affirmative action watchers are unanimous in their praise of Gregorian. They say he not only ex- presses a commitment, but has set an active example.

"I regret even having to express my commitment," says Gregorian. "It's something I've always felt strongly about."

"I don't think I even have to worry about it (his commitment)." said Randolph. "He is so aware, and so conscientious about that."

Gregorian is quick to point out that in five years as dean of FAS he never over-ruled Joullie in her capacity as affirmative action officer. He is proud of the advances made in FAS, especially in the number of women hired.

"The main thing not to forget is that I take this seriously," says Gregorian. "My commitment is not just s legal thing.

"Affirmative action commitment Is not merely a legal matter. The University must have its own com- mitment. It'sthe right thing todo."

He responds to those who criticize administrators for conducting the current government audit in secrecy by saying that it is best to finish discussions with the labor Depart- ment before involving the rest of the University. But he stresses that once negotiations are completed, all in- terested parties will have their say.

"We were legally advised to do it this way," he says. "We didn't want to have discussions on three levels. First we'll clear up the legal issues, and agree on a general format. But this Is not just a legal matter. The University must go beyond that and have its own commitment."

Gregorian acknowledges that there are problems with commitment and with looseness in hiring regulations and procedures. He points out specific problems in the correlation between job advertising and hiring, and in the regulation of search committees. Recently, he asked Jon Strauss, Vice President for Budget, to look into tightening hiring procedures.

"Universities until recent years had worked as collegial, ad hoc systems. They're all now trying to develop and adapt to regulations. I don't want certain loopholes to be the rule, but the exception. Yes, if someone does not believe, he can always bypass a system. So you set an example, tighten loopholes."

And prove that it can work. Die* Stevenson (FAS '80) is a staff memberof the Daily Pennsylvanian. Fair Game appears fortnightly on this page.

Putting Sensitivity Above Politics By John DiLulio

I am a Roman Catholic. I am proud of my religion and of the Pope who is now its foremost representative. His "journey of understanding" has shown him to be perhaps the most important moral land political) force in the world today. Needless to say, I am grateful that he honored Philadelphia with his presence, and I seriously question the rationality of any resident of our region who does not, regardless of religion, national origin .etc.. feel likewise.

However, I also question and am concerned about the conflicts which arose in preparation for the Pope's visit. There are multiple and con- flicting criteria involved in deciding on whether or not to let Nazis march or whether or not to build a platform at taxpayers expense for an Inter- national symbol of faith. It is a shame that in attempting to draw the fine lines between liberty and enforcing social contracts, between the separation of church and state, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and others have seen fit to let sloganeering take the place of thinking.

I do not totally disagree with their stands on these matters, (I agree on the latter case), but rather I object to the ostensible manner in which they go about formulating their positions. Their mindless lack of sensitivity engenders a similar response from their opponents. No Catholic, if he or she has reverence for others, would insist that non-Catholics foot the bill for their worship. And yet, out of spite, this is exactly what many were in- sisting at the start of the platform controversy. At best, the ACLU has been guilty of poor judgement and bad strategy; at worst, it has been guilty of decrepit logic and a total inability to deal with social complexity.

As soon as the costs and benefits of any action public or private fall on different persons or groups in society, you have a political matter, which can only be properly settled by a political

process involving struggle, discussion, arbitration (and hopefully 1 some measure of con- sensus; e.g. voting. In such matters, religious, economic or other such doctrines cannot take precedence. Forces on either side of a social problem which seek to protect one value at the expense of all others, diminish the possibilities for fruitful human interaction and discourse. They prevent us from moving through conflict and towards accomodation and cooperation.

Governments in their element of coercion act as our chief social "referee." Groups like the ACLU, although they may lack direct coercive power, may nonetheless serve as authoratative "linesmen" in making sure that people live up to their social contracts. With every right there is a corresponding duty not to interfere with the same right of others. But both the "referee" and the "linesmen" lose all socially bestowed legitamacy when they take a personal rather than an impartial interest in the scuffle, holding one combatant while the other is free to have his way. Having aborted their primary mission, they procede to widen the gulf between private and social costs and benefits rather than closing it. (This, essentially, is the problem of modern American bureaucracy, as publically-funded agencies are in- creasingly "captured" by the groups they were created to regulate, promoting rather than checking their actions).

Many University faculty members, staff and students were recently the object of such Illegitimate actions on the part of our local government. On the morning of the Papal mass at the Civic Center, they were denied parking spaces in order to secure places for the influx of priests and nuns. Even as early as6:00 A.M. they were told by attendents that the City Commissioner had ordered that none but religious figures or others directly associated with the mass were to be given access to the lots.

Those (I among them) who questioned the policy were laughingly baited to "go and argue with the Com- missioner." Holders of permanent parking stickers for which they have already paid had their "privilege" arbitrarily revoked on that day.

This is one area, in which an ACLU - type group would be well-moved to enter the political arena in order to redress grievences. No person can (in this country) be denied entrance to a public or private facility on the basis of race, sex, national origin or religion. Yet this is exactly what happened this past Thursday mor- ning. Neither the City Commissioner, Mayor or anyone else in our society has the right to assert their re- ferences over others in such matters, to illegally (and Immorally) impose costs on others without their consent. 1 Consent is not equivalent to putting people on notice on the day before the event, which is what the University did).

TOPAy WE RE GOING TO PISCU6S THE PETTy e0U(?GEOISlE

IN AFRICA . . .

•Young Americans#Georqe Maschmeyer

But perhaps all of this is em- blematic of a larger disease of our age. How many Catholics and non- Catholics alike would have voluntarily given up their parking space in deference to those directly involved in this important one-time celebration? No longer (correctly I am afraid) trusting each others' good will, we violate each others' rights at every turn in order to insure our own. Governments and self-appointed social agents make matters worse by creating or fueling situations where this occurs.

My Jewish friends have a word for the type of person who embodies the human characteristics of un- derstanding, reverence, concern and willingness to sacrifice for others. As the petty fallout from John-Paul IPs "journey for understanding" bears witness, it is increasingly hard to be "menschly" in an "unmenschly" world. John Difulio is a senior in FAS.

NOW WHAT PIP you ALL THINK OF KlRBYS THESIS ON THIS SUB JECT ? . . . PIP YOU THINK IT WAS OUTLANPISH -3 Pip you THINK IT WAS WELL - SUPPORTED? Pip yOU

THINK IT WAS REASONABLE?

WHO CARES ?// /^OKAV..

/ SUPPOSE AS GOOP

\ ANSWER

THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN-Monday. October 8,1979 PAGES

— i ( nntinui'd [rum page 1)

are "far from definitive." Much of the information gathered in the study, JRB states, may be regarded as "self- serving," and considering the sour- ces, "some of the data is of questionable validity."

Many of the residents formerly served by PGH have little knowledge of existing alternatives offered through the Family Medical Care program, and the commission rec- cbmmends a widespread awareness campaign to publicize the sevices available from the program. The family care system was expanded and

I Continued from page. 11 high school for students of District Five, now split racially between Edison and Kensington High schools.

Edison, whose students are predominately black and Hispanic, is a broken-down school building. Though the issue of its replacement has been a politically touchy one for nearly 20 years, and a city lawsuit has blocked construction on a proposed replacement building for several years now, each candidate strongly favored the building of a new high school to replace Edison.

"Edison is a deplorable school," said (Jreen. "We need a worthy school for all."

"Wed break ground on Edison within 90 days of my taking office,"

—Humanists- (Continued from page 1)

"The whole point of the center is to build a bridge between the academic world and the public," said Joe Holub, formerly a student of Brazilian history, who is now preparing a seminar for the center on the sociological reformation of Philadelphia in the 1950's.

"The humanist-in-residence program involves job training for people with graduate education in the humanities," said Moses. "There are no opportunities due to structural unemployment."

Moses attributed this to massive cutbacks in hiring by universities, ■ ■iiltui.il groups, and research organizations. These groups were, until recently, the only source of employment for people with a humanity-oriented graduate education.

"One of the goals of this program," Moses said, "is to take these people mil augment the skills that they already have with more practical, business-oriented skills." Some of these include project development, project presentations, fundraising, and budgeting.

Tin' basis of the program was the reality of today's employment situation, Moses explained. "These people have recently come to the realization that the straight path to a tenured academic teaching position is not an option." she said.

PGH demolition will soon be complete.

PGH Closing improved when PGH closed.

The study also states that most of the employees of PGH have found jobs elsewhere.

The University's relationship with PGH has been a long and rocky one. In 1974, a study funded by the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare claimed that the University was neglecting an agreement to promote better patient care at PGH. The HEW study charged that the University was transferring patients to the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania in an attempt to gain

■Mayoral Debate-

Randy Anmutn

more public monies. The report stated that the "en-

trepreneurial and financial concerns" of the Medical School faculty would lead to the eventual collapse of PGH, the city's only public hospital.

In late September 1976, the University formally ended its ties with PGH by transferring most of its medical students to other area hospitals.

Most recently, the University has opposed the use of the former PGH site for the location of a low-cost public housing project.

It's never too late to buy

a Meal Contract

prorated weekly Pro-Rated

as of Oct. 8

13 meals- '884 10 meals- '828

University Dining Service 3800 Locust Walk — 243-7585

■ Iff University Dining Service 3800 Locust Walk - 243-7585

said Marston. The subject of integration of the

school system prompted some lively debate. Green felt it would be un- necessary to implement forced busing since, he said, the voluntary in- tegration program was working. Danielson disagreed, and called for a busing program.

"The voluntary plan is a fake," said Danielson. "All that pious talk about desegregation is false."

Marston rebutted Green as well, noting that his Democratic opponent had opposed a bill while in Congress that would allocate $500 million to schools and included a no-busing clause.

"I've repeatedly come out against

AS

forced busing," said Marston. "My opponent has backed it."

"Blacks just as much as whites don't want to see their children transferred across the city," said Blackwell. "But their schools are pig sties. We've got to place our emphasis on quality education for all."

Marston was the lone candidate opposed to direct election of the school board by the public. He favored the present procedure, whereby the mayor appoints the members, and called for the consolidation of the educational and city budgets.

"I'm afraid that an elected school board might not strongly support education because of the polarization and division that might arise," said Marston.

rh» Arthur Hall Afro American Danct l.nsrinlilr in Concert

THK CHURCH OF THE ADVOCATE

l«lh and Diamond Streel

393: That's how many people have rolled up their sleeves so far to give others the chance to live. YOU can help us reach our goal of 3000 by giving blood tomorrow at

HIGH RISE EAST 1 P.M. to 7:00 P.M.

Free refreshments for those who give

October 12. 13, 14, 1979 8:00 P.M.

Children J3 00

The Black Wharton Undergraduate Assoc.

Presents

BLACK BUSINESS DAY Featuring speakers from major

corporations discussing the future of black business

Refreshments will be served Tues. Oct. 9, 1979

10 AM-4 P'M

West Lounge, Houston Hall

Funded by the SAC

'«mv\V, •

SCUE WRITE-UP MEETING

We Need You To Help Us With The

1980 Scue Course Guide. A Little of your time can

make a big difference..

Wednesday, October 10th-8 P.M.

Houston Hall, Franklin Room, 2nd fl. EVERYONE WELCOME!

DO YOU CARE ABOUT PENN'S FUTURE? m come to the introductory meeting of

The Student Committee For University Development

QHELP US RAISE MONEY

Wednesday, Oct. 10 7:30 P.M.

Dietrich Hall W231

For more info:

David Goss 387-8646

Corinne Loria 386-9074

1'A<;K6 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN-Monday, October 8,1979

FRESHMEN-VOTE CHOOSE YOUR U.A. REPRESENTATIVES Elections will be held October 9th & 10th

Candidate Statements:

I, Michael LU»: The Undergraduate Assembly Is the place where we-the students- can take action. As your UA Representative I will take the initiative to lind out what you want, so together, we can take action and get results. I can't promise anything except that III do the best |ob I can to represent you Working together, we can make it Vote Michael Liss for UA Representative. Your voice will be heard

2 Charlene lie: Hello. I'm Charlene Ise and number 2 on the ballot lor Un- dergraduate Assembly I wish I could make lots ol big promises to you. but like most ol us I don t know too much about this campus. However through the U.A., I will learn more and . in turn, become your voice to the administration Your thoughts and ideas will be heard So. lor an interested and hard working representative, vote No 2, Charlene Ise.

I, Joanne K Llnevsky.

4. David A. Cohen: My piatlorm in this campaign is to "represent the views ol the class ol '83 ' I have no other position or platform for two reasons. First I feel that It is my rob to exercise Ihe will ol my class, not my own. Second I feel that it Is too early yet to know what the real issues facing the freshman class are. What I do have is the experience, the desire to represent my class and the personal knowledge that I can do it best

5,Phil "Hill" Sturges: It says in the bulletin that was given to all us candidates that we shall be allowed, but not required to submit a statement of position lor publication " I have plenty ol opinions, but when It cornea to the Important issues lhat deal directly with the University, I'm still busy learning all I can. I've only been here lor a lew weeks and I want to know a little more before I start crusading on any magnificent quests III use this space though, so that I can tell you Ihe one thing that I am sure ol; I will try to help the students, and particularly the Ireshmen. in every way that I can.

6 Maxwell Stearns-. I have always participated in a wide variety ol activities which have enabled me to contribute to the causes I care about most That Is why I have chosen to run lor the Undergraduate Assembly. My primary interest Is government and politics Focusing on the U A will further enable me to make a strong contribution to an essential organisation while learning what Is Involved In representing Ihe diverse student body here at Penn

As your representative to the Undergraduate Assembly, I will always be open minded and will make a serious ellort to hear your criticisms, complaints and ideas lor improvements. I will also be strong minded and push hard on Issues which I leel are important I (eel that it is this balance which best qualifies me to be your representative Thank you.

7 Beth FInlay.

8 John Gallop: I'm sure by now lhat many ol you have read hundreds of words, and none of you have any trouble distinguishing the valuable words from the crap. The valuable words are proper nouns such as Joe Schmo, and the crap Is

■mg between the top and Ihe sincerely I leel that If I were to list ten ob- leclivesol my term. I would be cheating both you and myself, for I know little more

. ii about the issues concerning the U A I am a minority student, lor I am not M East Coast, yet I consider myself at this point in time, a freshmen first

and a St. Loutsan second. I am running to represent your views and not mine. I am ne in approx 2000. and how I leel may be totally dlflerent Irom the vast

minority. Therelore. lo assure that your voice is heard In U A , please vote for me. John Gallop

9 Sarah "NCP" Qalvarro: There's very little to be said at this point We're Fresh- nijii. we're interested, and were ready to listen The talking Is up to you. What you. as the Class of '63, think is what matters In this election. That you have someone to listen lo yon end see that your voice is heard is what matters to us

no doubt the issues are there What we. as Freshman, need to do Is become aware ol them and let our opinions be known. This we promise along with

■ igtit years ol experience, to back us. in our respective student govern- ments Make sure we. and Ihe University of Pennsylvania, as a whole, hear from you1 Vote for the North Campus Partyi (Sarah Galvarro. Ellen Goodman, and Roy Jutabhal

10 Mlndy Herman: Okay, so how do you catch the attention ol a Penn Ireshman in one hundred and hlty words or less?

I would olfer you Iree beer but Ihese pages would stick together I would print one ol those revealing.' pictures, but a picture is worth a thousand words and I'd overexlend my limit. Instead. I'll catch your attention the same way I'll catch it during the course ol my

term as aU A representative by telling it like it is: First pause in silence lor approximately 270 days. Are you llnished pausing'' Now. that's what a lot of people do AFTER they're

ek* Md I WON'Ti (And that's telling it like It is I

VOTE FOR MINDY HERMAN

11 Bill Way: Hello! My name is Bill Way. You've probably heard or seen my "Way (or UA" campaign

I live in Hill House, so I've probably met many ol you in Ihe dining hall I know a lot ol you are dissatisfied with the Dining Service either because ol lines, the service, or the lood Its time there is something done about it II elected. I will propose a complete

change in the food services administration Quick, courteous service, and good appetising meals will be expected ol the new management, as well as a higher degree of input in its ma|or decisions. Wove all paid enough to get better service that we're getting at Ihe present time I am dedicated lo Ihe service and representation ol the Class ol 83 I hope you wilt

vole lor me. Bill Way, lor your Ireshman Undergraduate Assembly representative on election day

12.Robert Shepard: The success ol Undergraduate Assembly legislation depends on Ihe interest and commitment ol Us members. As a member. I intend to deal with the issues which allect the rights ol Ihe students Any decision which has a negative eltect on ihe rest ol the student body will have the same elfect on me

am irterested in seeing that the J8600 we pay per year Is put to good use. such as improving eating and living conditions, rather than being used lo prim nonsense publications and lo perpetuate programs we don't need In other words, belore we're lorced lo take dining contracts, an unfair practice at best we should know what we will be eating Confidence is Ihe key lo continued UA success Because my interests are yours I

am confident that I can represent you well Support from you will spark new ideas in the student body and allow continued performance in areas already beino ex- plored ■

13 Marcla Brody.

14 Mark "Hill'' OeMuro: iAn Interview! What makes you dilferent Irom the rest? I love activism, and feel I can genuinely make a dillerence on this years student government Well, what type ol experience have you had? I ve been in the student government for lour years, was elected my high school president, and my county regional president What will be your responsibility lo us. Ihs students? I'll represent the Ireshman class effectively open mindedly. and honestly My door will always be open lo your questions or concerns Do you have any goals or direction to pursue' Yes Freshmen need more ol a voice m the Undergraduate Assembly and should become more involved m committee decisions I m going to personally work to become that voice, and I'm going to encourage lellow Ireshmen to get involved That all sounds great! I hope you get elected I hope so also iMore questions' visit 438 Hill, or call 349-7882 I

IS.EIIItta Shaw: The Stoufler situation must be cleared up. and quickly. On many Mondays and Wednesdays, by 1 10. lood and drink is nearly gone For the student with class Irom 12 to 1. someaccomodallon must be made.

There should not be enforced meal contracts for students living in the Quad Already, supplies are short, and Ihe dining centers are crowded McClelland Hall, supposedly a student study center, is inaccessible during much

ol the day It should be unlocked to facilitate student use. Dogs should be leashed around the Quad More bike racks should be provided throughout the campus. Channels ol communication • especially between students and administration -

must be opened. Discrimination should not be exercised when It comes to funding student-

organised activities such as NORML

1(.Ellen "NCP" Goodman: There's very ntl'e to be said at this point We're Fresh- man, were interested, and were ready to listen Tha talking Is up to you What you, as the Class ol 83. think is what matters in this election That you have someone to listen to you and see thai your voice is heard Is what matters to us There's no doubt the issues are there What we. as Freshman, need to do is become aware of them and let our opinions be known. This we promise along with about eight years ol experience, to back us. in our respective student govern- ments Make sure we. and the University of Pennsylvania, as a whole, hear Irom youi Vole lor Ihe North Campus Partyi iSarah Galvarro, Ellen Goodman, and Roy Jutabhal.

17.Scott Turner: The average independent freshman will benelit most from my election. I am experienced and responsible and I leel that my attitudes and values are consistent with the needs and desires ol most freshment I am a hard worker and will do a good |ob

11.Rodger Krouse: To me government ol all levels is important and interesting I have had much experience in both student and local government and I have always en|oyed working for the people I represented

I have enjoyed the positions of president or vice-president for seven years in student government and three years in a youth group I believe that my record of re- election speaks lor my ability, dedication, and interest.

My qualifications may be lurther exemplified by my work in local politics. I presently have the responsibility ol coordinating the Philadelphia Neighborhood Research elforts lor mayoral candidate David Marston, and I had clerked for six months for Federal Magistrate Edwin Naythons.

I now wish lo represent and work for the freshmen students of this university. I would greatly appreciate your vote.

19 Mark Schoeppner: As a candidate lor Freshman Undergraduate Assembly. I am concerned with some of the policies we, the students, are sub|ect to. At present, the move-in and drop-add periods are extremely inefficient. For freshmen. I advocate separate, mandatory move In days (Upper Quad one day, Lower Quad another day) to avoid the confusion of first day move-In. Also, an earlier start to the drop-add period would ease the day before classes rush.

Another subject ol concern is the residential charging policy at Ihe close of the school year Overcharging for minor room defects Is prevalent now Another problem with the residential policy is the limited availability of on campus housing. Conversion of some lobbies and lounges Into housing would reduce the costs of additional housing to students who desire it.

Finally, there Is the important subject ol tuition We must have a committee which carelully scrutinizes each tuition increase, never allowing an increase ex- ceeding the inllatlon rate ol costs to the University. Thank you. Mark Schoeppner

20.Roy "N C.P." Julobha: There's very little to be said at this point We're Fresh- man, we're interested, and we're ready to listen. The talking is up lo you Whal you, as the Class ol 83, think is what mailers in this election That you have someone to listen to you and see lhat your voice is heard is what matters lo us. There's no doubt the Issues are there What we, as Freshman, need to do Is become aware of them and let our opinions be known This we promise along with about eight years ol experience, to back us. in our respective student govern- ments Make sure we. and the University of Pennsylvania, as a whole, hear Irom youl Vole for North Campus Parly! (Sarah Galvarro. Ellen Goodman and Roy Jutaeha)

21 Msrtln "MJ" SegahFellow 83ers I am a competent, honest candidate I have much high school student government experience I am a good debator and will use these skills to protect Ireshmen Irom the "Upperclasa menace". Lets make sure that we get our "piece of the $250,000 UA Budget! Remember, on Election Day It's MJ" for UAH!

22.Ed Tepllti: As a member of the Undergraduate Assembly, I plan to improve school lile for freshman as well as upper-classmen The condition ol many rooms in the Quad is poor, and the UA should work lor the distribution of money towards the renovation ol these rooms. There are also many problems with Ihe dining service. The quality of the food Is olten poor, and the money put into this lood should be allocated towards purchasing ingredients for more appetizing dishes Therelore student committees, that could discuss Ihese problems with the dining service, should be lormed There should alto be more student input into Ihe quality control ol professors, courses and also towards Teaching Assistants. Because many professors and TA's are poor teachers, and thus make course more difficult than they actually are. In conclusion, I leel thai I have much to offer towards Ihe betterment of student life, and I hope thai I am given a chance to do to.

23.Michael Schnitier: I leel that student opinion should play a large part in Ihe determination of University policy, Iherefore. I'm very interested in taking an active role on our Undergraduate Assembly I hope lo adequately express Ihe diverse views and valid concerns ol students in the Freshman Class

24.Ben Oeratzou: Frankly, I can't give you any campaign promises or great projections for the freshman class. I'm starting out In this University like anyone else, and I can only guarantee that I have the interest to Improve student life and correct problems Ihe best I can at they ante. The experience I have Irom high school combined with my desire to help and work for the University of Penn- sylvania make me hope you will give me a chance to be on the Undergraduate Assembly.

25.Andy Goldstein: BEER. SEX i FUN. AN0Y GOLDSTEIN wants lo represent you! While not negating Ihe importance of these three basic necessities, there are other aspects of University life As the freshman class, we. the Class of 1983 must work Irom the start to build our reputation. The fresh men In Butcher have already started working on their reputation; now it Is time for the Class of 1983 to pull together and make our voice heard. Andy Goldstein Is a willlngrepresentative I am willing to make a dillerence. and lo do whatever is needed to represent you, both individually and collectively as a class Mine is a campaign ol participation, and I invite each one ol you to participate with me. Our class Is bursting with talent and it is my intention to be a sounding board (or that talent Maks the Ireshman voice heard' Vote lor ANDY GOLDSTEIN

28.Thomas Dully: Most Ireshmen still have a pristine picture ol our University, to a large degree this Is justified Yet. disputes will undoubtedly arise between you and the University As your representative on the Undergraduate Assembly, I would be glad to discuss any problem with you and actively pursue a solution on your behall.

However. Ihe best way to "solve" a controverty It to prtvent It Irom happening To this end. I wilt join the Residence Committee which has two maior issues belore il this year Firstly, we are investigating ways to curb vandalism and thus, lower the exorbitant vandalism lee. Secondly, we are looking for an equitable method lo nearly guarantee on-campus housing to anyone desiring it by eliminating emply apartments.

Also. I would like to bring into discussion the topic ol degree requirements which seem lo be a major stumbling black lor freshmen exploring the University"! dlf- lerent schools. Lastly, should you wish to discuss Ihese or any issues, please leel Iree lo call me

al 386-7558 or stop by at 237 Cleeman

27.Art "Hill" Goldberger: Who hot time to read a 150 word statement? No bull, .st Aclioni

An Goldberger-Undergraduate Assembly. 441 Hill House 349-8498

21 Mark "Quad" Rodlno: Europe I spenl IS years there before returning to the United Statea It made me appreciate what an excellent learning experience the University ol Pennsylvania is. While we are all very proud ol Penn and IIS ac- complishments, there are many areas where it could be improved upon. I am running lor UA member so I can help improve upon three areas. Are you lor a decreased roleol Ihe TA's in the classroom and a decrease In the vandalism charge levied against us at Ihe end ol the year? Well I am and I Intend to light for It. My third issue is. "Where does our J470 General Fee go every year?" I want lo lind out and report my findings back lo you These are three issues thai involve us on a day- to-day basis that I am determined to bring to a satisfactory conclusion. II elected

29Cindy "Quad" Brach: Non UA members may do anything UA members may do except vote on UA matters. You should look lor people who will best represent you on University-wide issues, who have common sense, and who will attend meetings.

I have attended all UA meetings held this year. I also serve on the UA Dining Service and Judiciary committees.

I am a FAS student who lives in Community House We try lo make the place In which we live more habitable, just as the UA Irys to make the University more pleasant I am a person who will spend time on the UA, a person who would well use the power lo vote I have the interest, energy and devotion to work lor you In the UA, as I am already doing through my committee work. You will lind lhat I am available and willing lo listen to you I will attend the meeting! and vote in your best Interests.

30.Lisa Blumenleld: Are you satisfied lhat your tuition and lees are being spent lor your best interests? As a student at one of the country's most expensive universities. I am convinced that our interest are too often ignored when important policies are lormed II we sil back and say nothing this will continue to happen My name is Lisa Blumenleld and I want to represent our class as a member of the UA because changes won't occur without action. I want lo try to help change policies concerning unfair room damage assessments and prevent future ones like the possibility of mandatory meals. I want to be taught by professors and not by their TA's We students are the lifeline of this university and I want lo see thai we are recognized I, Lisa Blumenleld, am a student lor students.

31. Donald Watnlck: The Undergraduate Assembly is the official student government, and It accordingly has the potential to Influence many ol the academic and social aspects ol our lives here at Penn Whether or not we as students have input into the woikings ol our educations is directly dependent on the ways the members ol this assembly assert themselves.

I believe that it is imperative lor students to collectively mobilize our viewpoints and leelings In a cohesive manner so thai we can determine what our educations will consisl ol One way to do this is through the Undergraduate Assembly.

I wish lo be a member of the Undergraduate Assembly - as your representative - to work towards accomplishing these objectives by encouraging increased com- munication and cooperation between all lacels of this unversily community Upon accomplishing this, we will have taken the first step towards making this university more responsive to our needs

32.Mark Coogan: I ask you to support my candidacy lor Ihese reasons: Firsl. the duty ol the lacutty and administration is to serve us By and large, they perform this duty well. However, sometimes; il "slips their minds". As a UA member. I would see mysell in a position to |Ob their memories when their duty to us "slips their minds". Second, through the UA, dozens ol students serve on university committees up lo and including the Board ol Trustees Yet, very little is heard from these students. As a UA member, I would work to make them more responsive Im us. the students, whom they represent Finally, I would look into residence Issues like personal room damage assessments, which oan run Into hundreds ol dollars, and common vandalism fees which ran to nearly fourteen dollars per person in the Quad alone last year Think about it Then Vole. COOGAN for Freshman UA.

33 Stephanie "AJ" Dangel: My name is Stephanie Dangel. and I would like to be your Freshman Undergraduate Assembly representative I was Student Council President and school board representative in high school along with various other ollices. but I don't consider my experience lo be as Important as my enthusiasm. I have always enjoyed working as a link between the students and administration. Though I have always tried to work with the administration lor the good of the student body. I have never been alraid to speak out for student rights I don't want lo stale specillc points I plan lo light lor, because these Issues are lor you the students to decide The one promise I will make is that I will always to totally open lo student ideas. I am in 345 Cleeman in the Quad, and my door is always open.

34.Larry "Quad" Lesslg: I am one of many freshman vying for your support. However, as the election progresses. I would suggest two criterion by which lo evaluate candidates: 1. what they have done lo qualify Idem lo represent you on the UA. and 2 , whal Ihey are doing now to show they are Interested in Penn's UA. Over the past lour years. I have been involved In student politics on many levels The climax occurred when I was elected to the highest position available lor a high school student. Youth Governor ol Pennsylvania. In that capacity, I was responsible lor representing beliefs of students from rural and urban areas to the State Government At Penn. I was elected as a Ireshman lo Ihe co-chalrmanship ol the UA's Judiciary committee, a committee to review the honor code and Ihe court system Student government is Important to me, and I ask you give me Ihe op- portunity to work lor you.

35. Mark Czuker: How can I convince people I don't yet know, to vote lor me? Let me start by saying that I am concerned In whal goes on In our class and in our school Honestly, since I am not yet fully laminar with Ihe myriad ol opportunities available. I will not try to predict what I will do II elected However, to belter represent our class, I would, once elected, try lo print a survey that would elicit freshman attitudes and directions I will pursue and try to solve all issues that you. the Ireshman class, deem important I will also try lo organize better inter-class activities, to help maintain class spirit and pride. In conclusion, I am told that I have the potential and proper facilities that will enable me lo achieve OUR ends So il you vote lor me. Mark Czuker, you will be voting lor an ellective representative ol you and your ideas

36.Lee Brown: This is what I wish to accompllah as your Undergraduate Assembly Representative It is also what I will be able to do. with your help -Clear the air and decide what should be done about cheating Perhaps there is a better alternative than placing a mark ol "X" on a student's transcript. The present policy is both unfair and poorly enforced -Arouse campus opinion to Ihe fact that the University is being harassed by the Federal Government over the University s aflumalive action plan for faculty hiring -Actively participate In the selection process of the successor to President Meyerson. who will leave office in 1981 The student body must select and make known its choice lor Ihe University's highest position As your elected UA Representalive. I will lead Ihe light on these and all other importani matters lhat come belore Ihe UA this year.

Polls will be open at the following times and locations/ Quad gate 9-5 Stouffer Commons 11:30-1:30 & 5-6:30 Hill House 9-6:30 Kings Court & English House 1-6

High Rise South 11-2 (Tuesday only) 5-6:30 (Wednesday only)

High Rise East 11-2 (Tuesday only) 5-6:30 (Wednesday only)

I.D. & Bursar's Receipt Needed To Vote Administered by the N.E.C. Funded by the U.A.

DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN-Monday, October 8, 1975

Late Touchdown Gives Frosh Win in Opener

By MARK WEBER Yes, Virginia, there is a winning

Quaker football team. But barely. The freshman gridders

(1-0) had to rely on a last-minute touchdown run by quarterback Dan Hurwitz^ to defeat West Chester State's JV team 14-7 in the opening game of the season Saturday af- ternoon at Franklin Field. "This is a good way to start off," said split end Vahe Gregorian. "We're very pleased. Our hard work paid off."

Things didn't look bright for the little Quakers for a good part of the afternoon. Hurwitz couldn't get the offensive unit moving during the first 20 minutes of the first half, as the Quakers were plagued by poor field position and penalties. Hurwitz ex- plained that when the ball is con- stantly deep in your own zone, "you can't open up the offense. Still, we weren't taking charge. We were slowing down."

"I was disappointed in the offense because they had been looking so good up until this point," said head coach John Lyons. "We just had no con- sistency. We made too many mistakes."

The Quaker defense held tough throughout the first half, holding the Rams scoreless. "I thought we did awful good," said lineman Chris Bodnar. "We stopped them up the middle, stopped them around the

-end." •Overall, we did well," said

linebacker George Providence. "The

defense shut them out. I was sur- prised they were not better. To be honest, they really weren't that tough. They didn't use their experience as an advantage. I think they choked up a bit during the first half."

The Quakers finally put some of- fense together in the second quarter. Hurwitz connected with Gregorian for two quick passes, and running back John Shirk carried the ball for 18 yards into the end zone for a touch- down. Placekicker John Joseph's extra-point attempt was wide, leaving the score at 6-0.

In the third quarter, Shirk fumbled a punt and West Chester State returned it for its only score of the afternoon. The Rams led 7-6 after the conversion.

"We broke down in the kicking game," Lyons reflected. "That (Shirk's fumble) was a big play. I don't think we punted like we're capable of doing, either."

Lyons then changed quarterbacks, bringing in backup Gary Vura. "We just kept looking for consistency and we weren't getting it," explained Lyons. "We kept hoping it would come along and it did at the end, but we still didn't get what we would have liked."

The score remained the same throughout the rest of the quarter and most of the fourth until the Quakers got the ball on their own 20-yard line with 5:45 left to play in the game. Lyons put Hurwitz back in the game.

"At the end, we went with the best because we wanted to give it one shot

PAGE 7

Nothing Goes Right, Johns Top Stickers

Lawrence borzelnick

Frosh quarterback Dan Hurwitz 1101 scored in the last minute to lift the Quakers to a win in their opener.

to win the game," I.yonssaicr. "That's why we put Danny back. Still, Vura's going to be seeing a lot more playing time, as will (third quarterback John I Sylva."

Hurwitz rose to the occasion. He passed, handed off and ran the team down the field until it was fourth and goal at the one.

Hurwitz rolled right and carried it in himself with 0:58 left in the game.

"Hurwitz showed a lot of class and guts getting it in there," Lyons remarked.

When it counted, we moved the ball 80 yards," said Lyons. "The big thing is we won and I'm really pleased with that because I know we're going to get a lot better than what we showed today. There's a lot of room for improvement.

"We won the game and that's what it's all about."

By CINDY SHMERLER "Show me the way to go home,"

lamented the Quaker women's Field Hockey team, as they lost their bearings in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and fell 2-1 to Har- vard Saturday morning.

On a slick field, the Quakers lost what should have been just one more win en route to the Ivy league championship.

While the Red and Blue stickwomen dominated play, especially in the second half, and had 17 corners compared to Harvard's 10, they could not take advantage of their op- portunities, and were forced to play catch-up hockey throughout much of the game.

After the Crimson scored on a corner shot midway through the first half, the Quakers fought hard and stayed near the Harvard goal through the rest of the half.

• We were barraging the goalie with a whole lot of shots," said forward Lisa Romig, who scored the lone Quaker goal, her first of the season. "We really pressured the goal, and then someone took a shot and Nancy (Lock) and I saw it. I just lifted it up and over."

That goal came with only two minutes left in the half, and although Perm played better in the second half, "the defense was ragged," according to tri-captain Anne Look.

After Harvard scored its winning goal in the second half, Quaker ace

Diane Angstadt put the ball into the net. but was called for a dangerous play, and denied the score.

While Angstadt's hit was knee high and the call was appropriate, the general consensus of the Quakers was that the "officiating was horrible," according to Nancy I-ock.

After the stickers had warmed up for an hour and were ready to play at 11 AM, one of the referees did not show up, and the Harvard assistant coach took over.

"She was just a really inex- perienced official," said Look. "She made calls that weren't on her half of the field. And every time we had a chance to hit out, they called sticks on us, which is a rule they're trying to phase out in Philadelphia, because if no other player is around it's not dangerous to lift the stick above your shoulder. Harvard was only called for that once."

Ever since the team's loss to West Chester last Wednesday,, the morale has been fluctuating. "It wasn't the best of situations," admitted Lock. "We didn't go out there with a bad attitude, but as the game went on, we got really frustrated.

While the team takes to the road again to play Franklin and Marshall Tuesday, I/>ok "just doesn't want to lose anymore. The people on the team just wants to taste victory. We know we have the material to do it, and we just want a few more wins on our side."

Lightweights Self-destruct in Opener

David Gladstone

Mike Busch (21) is outnumbered in this race for the ball-so were the light- weights, to the tune of 47-0.

By GORDON ALTER "It was a horror show out there." That comment by one of the Quaker

players seems to sum up the mood last Friday evening as the Penn light- weight football team (0-1) suffered a crushing defeat at the hands of Army, 47-0.

"I'm very disappointed that the team played so poorly after doing well in practice all week," said Quaker • Coach Bill Wagner. "The game was settled very early in the first quarter. The first series really set the tempo for the game."

It was in that first series that the Quakers fumbled and stumbled their way to several yardage losses,

eventually being forced to punt from near their own goal line. That series was a harbinger of things to come as the Quakers had trouble holding on to the ball all night.

"Their linebackers were stunting," said Quaker quarterback George Pronesti. "We never got the good pass protection that we needed. Once we got behind, the wet playing conditions just never gave us a chance."

The Quakers got behind early as Army, taking advantage of an in- terference call at the Penn 18, ran the ball in from the three-yard line in the person of junior tailback Tony Gates to go up 7-0 with five minutes remaining in the first quarter.

On the next series, the Quakers caused a rather sizable crowd of about 2500 partisans to wrench in agony as they saw punter Tom Plein frantically attempt to fall on an errant snap from center. The Cadets eventually recovered in the end zone to extend their lead to 14-0.

Before the half was over Army had recovered two more Quaker fumbles inside the Penn 30-yard line. Cadet quarterback Rick Farace quickly turned these two opportunities into touchdowns as the half mercifully ended with the Cadets leading, 27-0.

The second half produced more of the same as the Cadets got touch- downs from fullback Jim Petty,

fullback Altrus Campbell, and tight end Tom Economy, who scored on an eight-yard pass from Farace.

The only Quaker scoring op- portunity came early in the third quarter when the Red and Blue recovered an Army fumble at the Cadet 37-yard line. The Quakers, led by the running of Ron Wilson and a crucial connection between Pronesti and Quaker split end Steve McNeal, drove to the Cadet 20 where the drive stalled on a fourth down incompletion.

If the Quakers hope to come back next week at Cornell they will have to shore up their special teams play and their offensive line while trying to forget Friday night's disaster.

Netwomen Successful in Easterns By EDDIE FINKELSTEIN

"The later we come back on Sun- day," stated Quaker women's tennis coach Cissie Collins last week, "the better we will have done in the tournament." Well, the team arrived back very late last night.

The Penn netwomen placed seventh in a field of thirty-nine in the Easterns this past weekend, held in New Paltz. N.Y. The Easterns is the only tour- nament on the team's fall schedule.

The tournament is established on a team point basis, with a double elimination principle.

A player is awarded points for each of her consecutive wins. Upon her first loss, she is placed into a consolation tournament. A second loss, in the consolation draw, eliminates her.

Anne Marie Kleis, a freshman and number one singles player on the

Quakers, was seeded fourth in the tournament. Out of the sixty-four singles players in the Easterns, Kleis finished sixth.

Kleis progressed well in the regular draw. Her first loss, in the quarter finals to Beth Shaefer of Syracuse, automatically placed her into the consolation tournament.

Once in the consolation draw, she rallied hard and achieved a berth in the finals.

Her opponent was, ironically enough, Beth Shaefer.

After a long match, Kleis had again been defeated by Shaefer, 0-6,6-3, 3-6. Princeton won the tournament. Syracuse came in second, and a tough Penn State team took third.

"Anne Marie is a freshman and I wanted her to play well," Collins said. "If she hadn't played well. I wouldn't

have been upset. But she played great."

Second singles player .Lisa Silverstein also played well in the tournament. Silverstein made it to the third round of the regular draw, and then faced a tough opponent - number three seed of the tournament, the number one singles player of William & Mary.

Silverstein played a strong match, but ultimately lost 4-6,1-6. Her second loss in the consolation draw eliminated her.

Captain Maura Williams and Kathy Schwebel, the first doubles team, lost their first round match in the regular draw to Rutgers, 3-6,3-6.

"We weren't rallying deep enough," admitted Williams.

Once in the consolations, they ad- vanced to the quarter finals. Colgate

was the opponent and a long and exciting match ensued.

However, Williams and Schwebel were edged out 6-7,6-3,4-6.

"It was an excellent team effort," commented Collins about her team. "They all really played well."

The second doubles team of Karen Nyman and Allison Accurso lost their first round match as well, to the Colgate team that eliminated the first doubles team. In the consolation draw, they won three consecutive matches before losing to Delaware in straight sets.

"It certainly will help the morale of the team," Collins said. "But Penn State is tough."

And Penn State is the netwomen's next match as the Nittany Uonscome to Ixitt Courts on Saturday.

Weekend Bcoracard

FOOTBALL: Columbia 12, PENN 7. SOCCER: Columbia 5, PENN 0. CROSS COUNTRY: PENN 20, Princeton 38. FIELD HOCKEY: Harvard 2, PENN 1. FROSH FOOTBALL: PENN 14, West Chester JV 7. LIGHTWEIGHT FOOTBALL: Army 47, PENN 0. WOMEN "S TENNIS: Finished 7th out of 39 teams in Easterns.

Women's X-C Runs Best Ever By RICHIE UNTERBERGER

NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J.- "We couldn't have run better," said assistant coach Julio Piazza of the Penn women's cross country team's eighth - place finish in a field of six- teen schools in their second meet of the season at Rutgers on Saturday.

Freshman Susan Osickey paced the Penn squad with a time of 19:00 while finishing 32nd in a field of 114 runners. Surprising Diana Young followed in the 37th spot five seconds later, and Amy Stromberg, Captain Sarah Quinn. and I-ori Veal all broke 20 minutes while finishing 58th, 60th. and 61st respectively.

"Our plan was to run our first mile at least ten seconds slower than we did last week to make our pace more even." Piazza said. Most of the team ran together in groups, as Tracy Kreizinger explained, "to try to keep up with the next person and push each other."

Princeton, the only other Ivy 1-eague team to compete in the in- vatational, finished third behind first- place Maryland. Penn's chief Big Five rival. Villanova. finished sixth, due mainly to the first place finish to their top runner, Brigitte I«ddy.

Although the 5,000 meter Rutgers course was made slower by mud and

Lions Outclass Booters (Continued from page 8)

have Charlie behind them." explained Ficken. "The two forwards would force the opening."

Penn had more than it could handle attempting to defend the lions' leading scorer, clearly the dominant offensive force in the game.

It (covering Charles) was kind of screwed up - there was a mixup between the defense and the mid- fielders." related Pietrowski. who had been shifted back to midf ield from his customary forward slot. "We thought they (Columbia) would send three men up with a trailer but instead they were sending only two up with Charles trailing. I'd let him go and nobody picked him up."

Meanwhile, the Quakers were having all kinds of trouble trying to generate some semblance of an of- fense. All-American sweeperback Barry Nix anchored a virtually air- tight defense. And when Penn did occasionally reach the lions' last line of defense, senior co-captain John McF.laney scooped up everything in

sight while recording his fourth shutout of the young season.

The Quakers did have a golden opportunity in the early going of the

' second half. Midfielder Dave Weignad took a pass right in front of the net. only to see his shot go directly into the hands of the 6-5 McKpaney. After that, the teams played it for the books.

"The kids were losing heart b] then." noted Seddon. "We might have come back if Weigand had scored that point blank shot."

Nevertheless-, the game was academic after that. Charles would later complete his hat trick, finishing off a brilliant day's work for both he and his lion counterparts.

"Columbia is as good a team as I've seen in the Ivies in a lonn time." marvelled Seddon "If 1 had to play than again. I'd mark Charles every inch of the field. You hate to have to play to their team, but he was that awesome."

Awesome was the word-for both Charles and Columbia.

sharp turns, the squad was pleased that as many runners (five) broke the 20-minute mark as in their first race, which was two-tenths of a mile shorter and run in easier conditions.

The women are especially pleased with their progress since the team's inception a year ago. "Last year, we didn't even have a runner who broke twenty minutes," Quinn recalled. "Our top five runners have finished within 42 seconds of each other. l.ast year, they might have been spread over three minutes."

"We've become more than respectable," said coach Betty

•*""**$&

i ..stanza. "We beat teams today like Army and Connecticut that we could have never beaten last year."

The squad will continue its 60-to-80 miles per week training schedule before hosting the thirteen-school lady Owl Invitational at Fairmount Park on Saturday. "We'll have an advantage because we know our course well, and the team will know- where they are in the course," Costanza noted.

"We want to finish in the top four of the Ivy league and win the Big Five," she continued. "We're putting a lot of work in to show how good our program is."

Gridders Lose Third Straight

JEFF ELLIS

(Continued from page 81 The winless Quakers had yet one

more opportunity after Columbia was forced to punt. Starting on the Penn 11. Marzonie began his two-minute drill with a strike to Johnson for a first down on the lion 47. Two plays later, though, a diving Vince Pelini snuffed out all hopes of making the 1000th game a win by catching an over- thrown pass to tight end Jerry Smith.

■ It was my fault." Marzonie lamented.' I'll never throw that bad a pass again."

The failure to make the big play overshadowed Penn's ability to move the ball. The Red and Blue gained 21 first downs as seldom-used Paul Brodsky rushed for 72 yards. Also impressive was Marzonie in his first \arsity start, rifling nine completions in 23 attempts, not to mention that HVWtl throws that were dropped.

Part of Marzonie's success in directing the ground game was due to Tom Roland, last year's signal-caller. "We wanted them to pitch all the time so he couldn't cut back like Roland

did," said safety Mike Brown. "I didn't expect him to play-action

so much," he added, "we looked for rushing, and it took time to adjust."

Before the Lions could adjust, Penn had scored on a 10-play, 59-yard drive helped by a face mask penalty that gave them a first down on the lion eight. Mullowney carried the ball seven yards for the touchdown to cut the Columbia lead to 12-7.

The Lions took the opening kickoff and marched 75 yards in seven plays. The first play from scrimmage, converted quarterback Iarry Biondi, who had gained only six yards this year, swept around left end for 40 yards, the Lions' longest run in two seasons.

Later, sophomore Joe Cabrera busted loose for a 4<>-yard romp en route to a 138-yard dry.

Cabrera tallied Columbia's second touchdown to cap a 71-yard. 14-play drive. But that was all the Quakers would allow.

"We bent but we didn't break." said Penn defensive tackle Jeff Ellis. We

made some mistakes, but we got stingy and tough when it counted."

As expected, there was also op- timism in the lion locker room. "We're the closest team here in three years," Brown said. "We have a conscientious bunch of guys. We're 1- 1, and could go for the Ivy title."

Campbell was not ready to share this thought, pointing to the stat sheet where it read seven lion penalties for lOOyards. "We're not a big play team, we need a big drive and any penalty tan hurt," he said. "Ixwk at this: holding, offensive interference, defensive interferwici

While Campbell is not ready for the title, Penn is ready for a win. There were a lot of i »"1 -igns Saturdav.

For what it's worth, these guys are progressing faster than any team I've ever seen," Gamble said, reflecting the team's attitude.

"We are not going to go winless," Nelson Johnson said.

You could believe that after seeing Saturday's Maine. It was the lOOuth. it was a loss, but it wasn't that bad.

... r ", f

I'UiF.K THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN-Monday. October 8.1979

Booters, Gridders Don't Lfve New York Seddon: "Outclassed"

By ROY si I 11(1 .It NEW YORK - You heard all those

t >i ies about how great the Columbia M team was supposed to be. How

tin . won it all last year and still mil a squad of All - Everythings.

How they had purportedly applied for admission to the North American

SI 1 '-ague as the legitimate New T'a k ■ ■'111 > I "mini, they couldn't be 111 AT good, could they?

Don't tell coach Bob Seddon and his Perm booters (0-2 Ivies, 3-3 overall) that, after the l-ions (2-0, 6-1) whitewashed the Quakers, 5-0, Saturday morning at Columbia. The

Yorkers WEHE that good, and then some.

"We got blown out," simply stated Seddon. "The) completely out-classed

[Vnn desperately tried to establish :!i'iisive game early and actually

• ontrolled U)e play at the onset. For all of two minutes. The Lions trategkally worked the ball down-

lield on their first possession, setting up siipiiMiph Steve Charles for the first of his trio of goals at the 2:08 mark. From that point, the Quakers hail as much chance for success as (lie Titanic

That goal really took away any impetus I'enn had," noted Columbia i oach Dieter Ficken.

I heir goalkeeper kicked it out and id J came right down and scored,"

tartled Quaker Nick Pietrowski. W« Hfl saying What...we don't

believe it i II their credit, the stunned Quakers

hung tough for the remainder of the half while going against the brisk "mil But the talents of the Lions I II lived to be too much. Constant of- fensive pressure in the Hed and Blue end eventually resulted in two more

I ion goals (luring the opening session, including a second blast from Charles.

We tried to send (forwards) ShahJn iShayan) and Tommy i I'anavotidi i to split the defense and

(Continued on page 7) Scenes from a lost weekend in New York (clockwise from upper left): Quaker Kevin Klnnevy (171 Is blocked from the ball, Tim Mullowney (20) scores Penn's

Photos by Bruce Rosenblum and Michael sal) touchdown, Columbia's hattrick man Steve Charles (10) dribbles, Nelson Johnson lunges In vain for a Doug Marzonie pass.

Gamble: "Progressing"

II\ 1(11 LSI VIII NEW YORK - It wasn't pretty, and

it wasn't a victory, but the Penn football team put together its best effort thus far this season Saturday.

The Quakers (0-3, 0-2 Ivies) rose to an occasion - being the first college football team to play its 1,000th game- but Columbia (1-2.1-1) outlasted them 12-7 before a Homecoming crowd of 78SO at Baker Field.

Unlike their first two games, the Quakers had no less than three chances to win in the fourth quarter when they were down by five.

The first came after linebacker Randy Strich picked off a look-in pass from Lion quarterback Bob Conroy - one of four interceptions by Penn.

On the next play, a halfback option, Columbia's Steve McCarthy was called for interference on a pass from Ron Gray intended for Nelson Johnson. The penalty moved the ball 31 yards to the Light Blue 30.

Three runs later, with the Quakers in a fourth-and-five stiuation, signal- caller Doug Marzonie threw a long bomb just beyond the outstretched fingertips of Johnson, who was lunging over the end line. The Red and Blue's top pass-catcher, who Satur- day snared five throws for 60 yards, gave the coaching staff a scare as he crashed face-down onto the asphalt beyond the end zone after the play ended. But the durable 6-1, 175 pound Johnson regained his feet unaided.

Penn's defense - and a holding penalty - gave the Quakers another opportunity. From their own 20, they drove for a first down on the Columbia 33, the key play being a 21-yard gain on a screen pass to Tim Mullowney.

But Penn's luck ran out again. With four minutes remaining, Marzonie lobbed a second down pass over the shoulder of a wide-open Tun Goines inside the Lion 10 that slipped through his hands. Facing fourth down, Marzonie's aerial to Johnson was tipped by linebacker Sean D'Arcy.

(Continued on page 7)

PENN 0 7 0 0 7 lua 6 6 0 0 12

ii 3 run (Kick tailed) C- Cabrera 4 run (passed tailed) P Mullowney 7 run |D*yer KicKi

INDIVIDUAL LEADERS RUSHING PENN -Brodsky 15-72.

Monlesanti 10-33. Gray neauvais 2-8 Columbia-Cabrera 17-

. 4 95. Syndor 14-60. Conroy 8- 14 PASSING: PENN --Mar/orue 9-23-109

IIOy-7 20-98 RECEIVING PENN Johnson 5 80.

H<. Smith lit Goines 1-12 i 2 48. nontey 113.

i Stiorey 1-13, Cabrera 1-6.

IVY FOOTBALL STANDINGS Cornell 1 0 Harvard 1 0 Yale 1 0 Brown 1 1 Columbia 1 1 Princeton 1 1 Dartmouth 0 1 PENN 0 2

I >wns yards , i' i

Return yards

Punts

PENN 21

50 107 log 57

9 23-2 ■j i' 2-0

Columbia 23

53 294 98 55

7-21-4 538 2-0

0 O 2 5

C-Vnale.

PENN o Columbia 3

First Hail C Charles. 2 06 19 20 C-Charles. 24 50

Second Halt C-Sllllltano. Charles. 38 24

Shots Columbia 19. PENN 15 Saves McElaney (C) 8. Tabak <P)

Moore (P) 2

4.10. C-

Qn the Sidelines

Tale of Two Teams: Talent Against Heart

BvJIMMcCRACKEN W YORK -- Rotherham,

England. Sheffield, England. Tehran. Iran Monrovia. Liberia.

Hie hometowns of the Columbia I.urns 9OCC0 playtn read like a' travel itinerary for a Secretary of stale The 18th ranked team in the nation is led by players with names such as Shahin Shayan and Giovanni \ itale Columbia has to be one of the leading importers' of foreign objects in the countrj. And that is precisely the

II for their rise to the top of the i\> League and. potentially, the i uiiiiii >

firings weren't always this way. In the early 70's. Columbia soccer was

as seriously as professional wrestling. In 1973, the Uoni lost 12 games: In 19W, they didn't win one. Previous to last year, they had won ■ml) Moul of 138 Ivy League contests.

Hut that was before Barry Nix came 'nun England and made first

team Mi-American fullback as a freshman And before his fellow countryman, Steve Charles, mowed up to finish second in Ivy League

: ) en Charles was second .ihin Shayan, the career goals

the Lions and a native of ii an

tins foreign connection gave Columbia its first Ivy League title ever last year and enabled the Uons to upset defending champion Hart- wick in the first round of the NCAA's. On!) one starter was lost to graduation from that squad.

"The) looked better than last year," said Penn coach Bob Seddon aftei watching his team suffer a thorough 5-0 beating They'll run awaj with this league They are

What's even more awesome is that 13 players on the Uons' roster, in- cluding Charles and Nix. are either freshmen M sophomores. And. oh

:> ii lop freshman gees b> the naux i k Iambi.

feaneck, New Jersey. Cherry Hill, Ne« Jet -i i Itenton, New Jerse)

On the Sidelines* David Elfin

Brodsky* New Outside Threat __ •» . _ . . _ _ . mv soeed. It takes some time to eet roommate's nerformance th: NEW YORK - Until Saturday, Paul

Brodsky hadn't carried the ball from scrimmage for the Red and Blue. Until Saturday. Paul Brodsky was Just another sophomore with poten- tial.

Saturday afternoon at Baker field, Paul Brodsky came of age as a Pennsylvania Quaker, rushing for 72 yards in 15 attempts in Penn's 12-7 loss to Columbia.

Since the installation of the wish- bone attack two years ago, Harry tiamble's offenses racked up im-

Ive rushing statistics but had never found a consistent outside threat. Penn relied on the power of Denis Qrosvenor and the elusiveness of Tom Roland the past two cam- paigns, and while the Quakers fooled opponents to the tune of a 5-1 mark in 1977 and a team rushing record, the wishbone's second go-round last season resulted in 400 fewer yards, 25 fewer points and a 2-6-1 record. Phil Avlla, the only genuine outside threat, was often injured and thus could not !)<• counted upon.

Against Columbia, Brodsky showed the promise of fulfilling the outside threat role for Gamble's no-longer- predictable attack. "Paul is clever on his feet." Gamble said. "He has diversified our offense. Paul's speed and Doug's Mar/.onie) passing ability give us the balanced offense we

need to be successful. Paul quickness can only help our offense."

The Red and Blue opened against the Lions with their usual back fie Id triumverate of John Montesanti. Tim Mullowney and Ron Gray, but it was Brodskv. along with the aerial combination of Marzonie to Nelson Johnson, that added bold new dimensions to that same old Penn offense.

On Penn's first play of the second quarter, Brodsky swept right and woke up the crowd with an impressive 20-yard jaunt. The sophomore speedburner finished the half with 41 yards on just seven carries. Brodsky added scampers of 13, six and six yards in the second half, and on the day picked up four of the nine first downs Penn gained on the ground.

The Fbrida native won nine letters at Miami Beach High, gaining all- state recognition on the gridiron. Brodsky garnered MVP honors for the 1978 frosh, running for 436 yards and three touchdowns, including a 129- yard performance against Princeton.

After Saturday's loss, Brodsky sat on the trainer's table and calmy and humbly discussed his showing. "I was fortunate that I had the chance to play," he commented. "I was con- fident I could help the team, and I hope I gave the coaches some con- fidence in me. I think my strength is

my speed. It takes some time to get used to the blocking and with my size (5-10,175), I can't outmuscle them."

Asked whether he should have started from the beginning of the season. Brodsky quickly replied, "No. I had to get the experience. It's a big jump from the frosh team to varsity."

Although Brodsky appears to have moved ahead of fellow sophomore runners Rick Beauvais and Tom Pidgeon, Brodsky insists there's no jealousy brewing. "We have good rapport," he said. "We're all pulling for each other."

Quaker quarterback Doug Mar- zonie, who looked good in his initial start, was more impressed with his

roommate's performance than his own. "Paul did an excellent job," Marzonie exulted. "He's quick and exciting to watch."

The Red and Blue offense put on its best show of the young season against Columbia and yet was only able to register a single touchdown. "It's our inexperience and individual mistakes that prevented us from getting the ball in," Brodsky said. "The sophomores are gaining confidence and the seniors are providing leadership. Coach Gamble told us we're getting better and he's right. We'll be competitive the rest of the season. We now have the attitude that we can win.

Paul Brodsky (21) showed Harry Gamble something he hasn't seen in a long time: outside speed. Bruce Rosenblum

Bruce Rosenblum KAKRY NIX

Any comparison between Penn's lineup and Columbia's becomes some sort of geographic joke. But it isn t location so much as talent that marks the difference between these two squads.

For if Columbia is filet mignon, Penn is franks and beans. They don't outclass teams: they outlast than, The Quakers play heady soccer with a combination of pride and grit.

"Down 3-0, they should have been demoralized." said Columbia's Nix after the game "

Disappointed they were, but not demoralized Still, they could not pull out an upset: they could not even avert a shutout. Because you can't play 90 minutes on pride against a team of Columbia'! caliber and win.

But the Quakers tried, and evidence of their efforts showed through the game There was Glenn fitter stripping Charles of the ball and sending it upfield. only to find it back almost immediately. There was Kich Barrios running all over thi field and colliding with John McElanev in an attempt to generate Something, Mil)

( the Lion goalie hold onto the ball It was Dave Weigand working

pportunlt) in front of the lion goal, onl) to see lbs ball bounce off Ml F.lanev

We didn t (inn. Seddon said, but heart

"You Can teach them SO much,'' he continued, then it'ss matter of being good enough

w- were outclai

Harriers Backstroke Past Tigers By CHARLES FL'CHS

Princeton was not a nice place for running, or. for that matter, being outside last Friday. For the per- ceptive observer, it was not the type of weather in which one would relish walking to class, let alone running five miles. It was cold and sloppy, and the ensuing downpour did not suggest conditions would necessarily im- prove.

But Penn and Princeton had a cross

country meet to run Friday afternoon, and run they did. And when it was over, though mudcovered and drenched, the Penn harriers were to claim their fifth victory of the season without a loss, dominating the Tigers, 20-38.

On a good day the Princeton course has been called by Doug Moreland a labyrinth where runners are "like the mice in a psychology experiment." On Friday, only those mice that could

uaker Oats MOUND THE IVY GRIDIRON: In Saturday's other Ivy league game.

Brown mowed a b) it was the pre-season favorite, using strong defense and a balanced attack which produced over 400 yards total offense to stop Princeton, 31-12 Hick Villella gained 114 yards rushing for the victors.

The other Ancient Eight schools squared off with non-conference rivals, and only one of the four could muster a win. That was Yale, which shut out Colgate 27-0 for the Ells' third win without a loss. Safety Chip Kelly picked off three Colgate passes.

Cornell lost its first of the year after two wins, falling prey to upset-minded Bucknell. 10-0. The Big Red, now 2-1, had scored 87 points in its two previous wm~ over Penn and Colgate before the shutout, which was Bucknell's first 11111 ovei 1981. Boston U. rallied from a 10-0 deficit to nip

Pd 14-10. and Dartmouth remained winless jn the vear. falling to Holy Cross 13-7,

Mt'H M) THE DIAL; Penn's own window to the world I 'TV. will be show ing the Penn-4 'olumbia football game tonight at 8:45.

Utoi \1) DISC: That's what a frisbee is. and the Quaker ULTIMATE FRISBEE team showed it knows how to use one. knocking off Airforms Ultimate. 30-12.

tread water got their cheese. Despite an undesirable en-

vironment, the Quakers had a strong performance. With five of the top six finishers, the Red and Blue easily controlled the race. But the most impressive statistic is that there was only a 17-second gap between the first Quaker and the fifth, illustrative of a very strong and consolidated team effort.

"The spread between your first runners is probably the best in- dication of overall team per- formance," explained Quaker coach Karl Thornton. "I'm very satisfied with our performance today - it represents an outstanding team ef- fort."

Indeed, the harriers faired well. Senior Dave Weller, who slipped on a turn on the four-mile mark, came in second after trading the lead various times with the winner, Princeton's Dave Olds. Jim Marino placed third as Joe Brandon, Rich Mohler and Doug Moreland tied for fourth.

The irony is apparent - such superior achievement by the Quakers on such a miserable day. When a runner regrets stepping off of the lean bus, how does he manage to run with the Earns skill and enthusiasm that can be difficult to elicit on a pleasant day?

"When you start to feel some pan: in ■ unditiiins like that it's easy to feel

sorry lor wmiseit,' remarked junior Joe Brandon. "At that point, it becomes an individual's struggle with himself.

"Unlike most sports, there are no time outs in a cross county meet. If your mood changes, if you start to feel the pain, or if you slip and fall, you can't just stop everything so that you can regain your momentum. Then, the race becomes a personal battle where your main resource is your own mental toughness."

For Sunday jogger and competitive runner alike, running becomes a personal struggle against the en- vironment and one's growing fatigue. Dave Weller's struggle came to an almost overwhelming climax.

"I didn't let it (his fall) upset me," explained Weller, "though, when in that situation, it is very easy to feel sorry for yourself. I've seen guys who don't even bother to get back into the race after something like that, and I've seen guys who lose all their momentum and drop back three or four places. A runner has to draw his mental competitiveness to get himself back in the race."

Though the conditions were somewhat worse than usual, Friday's race represented the same challenge that a runner fares everytime he steps up to the starting line, a sbuggle for the mind and the bodv.