Copyright 1977 The DA Residences Extended SEPTA Strike … · CONRAIL provides suburban...

10
Non-Prodi Omintntion U S Postage finmcird 1885 VOL.XCIIINO.49 -PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, APRIL 15,1977- Copyright 1977 The DA I, Penmylvanlan Residences To Replace 2 Directors By MARIA SHAO Two residential projects will have new directors next year and a house master in a third project may resign, Director of Residential Living Mary Beermann said recently. The Japan Program, located on the second floor of High Rise South and the Arts House, which occupies three floors in High Rise East, will both be under new directorship because current program masters are com- pleting studies at the University. The third director has not yet "tendered resignation," Beerman said and so she would not disclose the name of the project involved. In addition, approximately 50 new resident advisors (R.A.'s) have been named to replace departing ones, Associate Director of Residential Living Bob Hill announced two weeks ago. The Japan Program will be ex- panded thematically next year to include Chinese and Korean culture. Hill said Wednesday that the 35- member project will be known as the East Asian Program and will be headed by Martin Kermott, a former R.A. and a University graduate student working towards a Ph.D. in Oriental Studies. Kermott replaces current Japan Program director Bonnie Berry. The appointment of a new director for the lOO-member Arts House is "pending," perhaps until later this week, Gail Chamberlain, current Arts House director said Wednesday. The Health and Society House will appoint a University professor and a University research assistant as (Continued on page 7) Extended SEPTA Strike Can Hurt Area's Income PEOPLE LITTERED THE CAMPUS Thursday as warm temperatures hit the city for the third straight day. These sun- bathers are in front of Van Pelt Library. .^^^^____^^^^^_ McFate Asks Security Committee To Expand Probe of Surveillance By RICHARD GORDON Vice-Provost Patricia McFate has asked the University Council com- mittee investigating Campus Security's information-gathering activities to examine other uses of "student informers." McFate made public the new charge to the Committee on Open Expression (COE) on Thursday, two days after Vice-President for Operational Services Fred Shabel revealed that Campus Security used a work-study student to set up a "drug bust." The charge was contained in a letter U. Security Rape Squad Trainees Fail to Meet Police Requirements By HALETTE LASKER Three female trainees intended for Campus Security's Rape Squad "have been terminated during their training period," Security Specialist Ruth Wells said Thursday at a meeting of the University Council's Committee on Security and Safety. "Currently, the rape squad consists of one person," Wells said, referring to her assistant, Barbara Cassel. According to Wells, the three women were sent to the State Police Academy at Shippensburg, Pa. for the mandated 12-week training program, but were all fired before graduating. Chief of Police Merle Smith ex- plained Thursday that Beverly Jones failed the academic portion of the police training. After Smith was notified by the Police Academy, she was fired and removed from the Security Office payroll. "Elvira Diane Turner and June Monell Taste Investigation May Aid Sweetener Search By STEVEN A. MARQUEZ A number of researchers at the University's Monell Chemical Senses Center are currently working on a study of taste perception which may aid other researchers seeking a viable substitute for sugar. Two substitutes used commercially, saccharin and cyclamates, have been declared unsafe by the Federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The FDA banned cyclamates in 1970, and a ban on saccharin and saccharin-based products is forthcoming. Robert Cagan, Monell biochemist working on the study, said Tuesday that the project is not directed towards discovering a new artificial sweetener but is taking a different approach. Cagan's studies are specifically directed at "studying how the senses of taste and smell work," he said. In studying taste, the researchers hope to discover how "receptor sites (taste buds) discriminate among different types" of taste, he added. In most of the research conducted to discover substitute sweeteners, "someone accidentally discovered a Dining Service Rated Favorahly In Student Poll By ERIC JACOBS A recently-concluded University Dining Service poll shows that most customers are generally satisfied with the service but have many suggestions for its improvement. The survey, conducted jointly with the Undergraduate Assembly (UA), was distributed during dinner at the three Dining Service facilities on March 24. Dining Service Director Donald Jacobs said Thursday that the survey also shows there is a large enough market for weekend dining to make it an item to "really push" during union negotiations later in the year. About 75 percent of the people eating dinner returned the forms. (Continued on page 3/ sweet component" in a substance and proceeded to "see what is responsible for the sweetness," Cagan said. He pointed out that during the examination of one possible sub- stitute, aspartame, "some guy happened to lick his fingers" and discovered it had a sweet taste. The approach used at Monell is to "find how stimulus molecules" in a substance "interact with the receptor site," Cagan said. Currently there is little knowledge about how taste buds work although hopefully, he said, enough information will be found at (Continued on Page 7) Taylor failed the firearms portion" of the two-part training program, Wells said. According to Wells, the recruitment process was geared to women who could serve as normal police officers as well as be part of a specially trained Rape Squad. A complement of sue (female) of- ficers would allow for at least one female to be scheduled at each shift. These women, would receive WOAR, (Women Organized Against Rape) training and be prepared to deal with special problems involving females," Wells said. According to the University con- tract with the Plant Guard Workers of America, a labor union, security offers must be certified by an ac- credited police academy. Students at the State Academy at Shippensburg must qualify in both the academic and target shooting portion of the training to graduate as commissioned police officers and be issued a weapon. "State law does not require security offers and campus police to be ar- med," Wells said. "Only those officers who will carry a weapon must be qualified in the firearms test." (Continued on page2) sent Monday to COE chairman Larry Gross, an associate professor of communications. Phyllis Beck, law school vice-dean and a member of COE, said Thursday that the committee had not yet decided whether to accept the ex- panded charge. She said COE would decide at a meeting next Friday after Gross returns from a week-long trip to Italy. McFate said that if COE refuses to accept the expanded charge, "I would then like to discusse it with Larry i Gross) and get his recom- mendation." Gross said Wednesday that COE might not be the appropriate body to deal with the use of students in nar- cotics investigations, because such activities would not be governed by the University's formal guidelines on open expression. McFate said, "That committee should at least have the opportunity to consider" whether to accept the new charge. She added that she asked COE to broaden its investigation after receiving "some expressions of concern by students" about Campus Security's uses of students which had not been made public. She mentioned former Undergraduate Assembly (UA) chairman Ken Taber as one student who had discussed this subject with her. Executive Assistant to the Provost James Davis said Wednesday that the use of students in narcotics in- vestigations would definitely be in- vestigated. "Someone is certainly going to look at it," Davis said. "It's certainly not going to get overlooked or buried." Shabel revealed Tuesday at a UA- By ELIZABETH SANGER Wharton Econometric forecasters said recently that if Philadelphia's transit strike lasts ten weeks, the 1977 Gross Regional Product (GRP) for the eight-county area could drop $40.4 million from earlier projections. The strike against the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority completes its third week today. If the strike continues for seven more weeks, -the region's total personal income could be reduced by $29.6 million; -its total retail sales could drop by $7.4 million; -local gasoline sales could rise by $1.4 million to $864.2 million; -128.4 million in wages could be lost; -the collection of city wage taxes could be reduced by $400,000, Economic Professor and Wharton forecaster Lawrence Klein and Wharton Econometric forecasting associates James Savitt and Chom Storey initiated the special forecast in order to pinpoint the possible economic effects of the transit walkout on the region. Savitt said Wednesday the process used "sophisticated guesswork." The forecasters have "described the strike in economic terms," Savitt said. He added that the forecasters have "put the shock (of the strike) in the model," In the past, he said, the forecasters have never included anything as specific as a strike in their calculations. After two weeks of the strike the region's GRP had already been lowered by $7.7 million, and that figure will double if the strike lasts a month. If the strike should continue for ten weeks, the area's GRP could shrink to $44, 67,300,000 from an expected figure of $44,607,700,000 which was calculated earlier this year. A model calculating the GRP for the eight-county region is forecast an- nually. The forecasters simulated the ef- fects of the strike for possible durations of one month, and ten weeks. Other regional consequences of a ten-week strike would include a $1.3 million reduction in manufacturing output and a loss of $39.1 million in non-manufacturing output.Storey said Thursday the non-manufacturing sector incorporates services such as transportation, communication and utilities involved directly with SEPTA. The forecasters estimated the in- crease in gasoline sales by calculating how many riders switched to CONRAIL or to cars for tran- sportation. CONRAIL provides suburban transportation. Approximately 400,000 people use SEPTA daily, but for their calculations ths forecasters sub- tracted non-essential, non-work related trips, such as shopping ex- peditions. Such trips would presumably be postponed until after the strike, Savitt assumed. CONRAIL normally carries 115,000 riders a day, but this figure has in- creased to 300,000 during the strike, i Continued on page 7) WXPN License Denial Is Not A Test Case, FCC Judge Asserts (Continued on page 6) -Review- By JEFFREY BARKER The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) judge who refused to renew WXPN-FM's broadcasting license Tuesday denied charges that the station has served as a "guinea pig" for other university stations. FCC Administrative Law Judge Walter Miller said he based his decision "on the facts that were in front of me." Miller refuted charges that the FCC was looking for a case that would warn other stations in which the licensee was "out of touch" with the operations of its station. Miller said, "Boards of trustees are quite frequently out of touch" with the radio stations of which they hold the license. But I didn't decide it on that basis." Miller said that in the WXPN case, the University Trustees were "in a very weak position to begin with" in attempting to oversee WXPN operations. He pointed to the fact that the Trustees meet only three times a year and are dispersed across the country. He noted that many stations licensed to trustees at large univer- sities may have "some qualms" with his decision because they have a "similar set-up" as the University has with WXPN. Miller denied WXPN's license on April 4, stating, "The Trustees have failed to exercise adequate control and supervision over WXPN's operations in a manner consistent with a licensee's responsibilities." Miller acknowledged that he has been charged with sacrificing WXPN, noting a recent article printed in the Washington Star headlined "FCC Getting Tough with College Stations." At Bridgeport University's WPKN- FM, Station Manager Jeff Tillis evaluated Miller's decision by saying "The decision says to other stations: •look at your setup and establish some liason (between the radio station and the Trustees) if there is none already." Tillis, who is president of the Intercollegiate Broadcast System, said that the decision 'has widespread implications for other stations in the area of licensee con- trol." The System is a national association of college radio stations. He indicated that the regulations governing licensee control were (Continued on page 8) Penn Singers, Players Perform in Artsfest Productions Victorian Operetta Is Updated Players 9 Double-Bill is 'SurreaV By JOAN GRECO Let the viewer beware: the Penn Players' excellent dual-production of [A/ter Magritte and The Real Inspector Hound plunges the unwary observer into playwright Tom Stoppard's surreal universe without warning, holding him there until the final curtain falls. After Magritte opens on a less-than- typical domestic scene. A man, Harris (Rick Werblin), dressed in rubber overalls, stands on a table changing a lightbulb, while mother (Jenny Hamilton Stuart) sleeps on an ironing board with her foot against a hot iron, and Patrolman Holmes (Marty Dorph) stands outside like a statue at the window, observing the suspicious actions within. Indeed, this is only the beginning: the confusion increases as the plot wanders further and further from reality. Much of the play's humor relies on the surrealistic situation. The fast- paced confusion is reminiscent of Monty Python; William Young's excellent performance as Inspector Foot was especially close to the group's inspired insanity. It seems that merely presenting a totally bizarre situation i including a tuba-playing mother, a man accused of amputating the leg of a Pakistani minstral player, and a basket of fruit i Continued on paw 7) 'ettf and 7he Real TWO EXCELLENT SHOWS, After Magritte Inspector Hound, both by Tom Stoppard. opened Thursday night at the Annenberg Auditorium. The unu Penn Players productions transport the theatergoer from the real mttujfcu—L A GILBERT AND SULLIVAN OPERETTA is given a new twist by the Penn Singers. The production of Patience , which opened Thursday night at the Zellerbach Theater, is updated from the Victorian Era to 1969 l^.ndon. By DAVID N.PEARL The greening of Gilbert and Sullivan is now a/ait accompli, and the Penn Singers have turned the trick in an updated production of the Victorian dynamic duo's light opera Patience that opened Thursday night at Zellerbach Theatre. Despite the modern setting of l/indon in 1969 with characters such as flower-adorned poets and a heroine in bobby socks, the operetta was sung with all of the original lyrics un- changed. The result was as charming as it was different. The story revolves around Patience, a naive 18 year-old girl with an ap- propriately silly self-contradictory concept of love. Searching for pure love, she turns to her childhood sweetheart, now a rock-poet. Her love for him. however, can never be realized because she believes that "liOve, to be pure, must be absolutely unselfish." And since lie la so perfect, KlViflg him is selfishness. The object of Patience' misplaced affections, although hilariously vain, is no phony. A group of hippie-maidens, on the other hand idolize a bonus Alan Ginsberg-type in their quest for esthetic beauty. The complications that ari8e from the contrast between the two poeti ii vi i eii ic to be a nil

Transcript of Copyright 1977 The DA Residences Extended SEPTA Strike … · CONRAIL provides suburban...

Non-Prodi Omintntion U S Postage

finmcird 1885 VOL.XCIIINO.49 -PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, APRIL 15,1977- Copyright 1977 The DA I, Penmylvanlan

Residences To Replace 2 Directors

By MARIA SHAO Two residential projects will have

new directors next year and a house master in a third project may resign, Director of Residential Living Mary Beermann said recently.

The Japan Program, located on the second floor of High Rise South and the Arts House, which occupies three floors in High Rise East, will both be under new directorship because current program masters are com- pleting studies at the University.

The third director has not yet "tendered resignation," Beerman said and so she would not disclose the name of the project involved.

In addition, approximately 50 new resident advisors (R.A.'s) have been named to replace departing ones, Associate Director of Residential Living Bob Hill announced two weeks ago.

The Japan Program will be ex- panded thematically next year to include Chinese and Korean culture. Hill said Wednesday that the 35- member project will be known as the East Asian Program and will be headed by Martin Kermott, a former R.A. and a University graduate student working towards a Ph.D. in Oriental Studies. Kermott replaces current Japan Program director Bonnie Berry.

The appointment of a new director for the lOO-member Arts House is "pending," perhaps until later this week, Gail Chamberlain, current Arts House director said Wednesday.

The Health and Society House will appoint a University professor and a University research assistant as

(Continued on page 7)

Extended SEPTA Strike Can Hurt Area's Income

PEOPLE LITTERED THE CAMPUS Thursday as warm temperatures hit the city for the third straight day. These sun- bathers are in front of Van Pelt Library. .^^^^____^^^^^_

McFate Asks Security Committee To Expand Probe of Surveillance

By RICHARD GORDON Vice-Provost Patricia McFate has

asked the University Council com- mittee investigating Campus Security's information-gathering activities to examine other uses of "student informers."

McFate made public the new

charge to the Committee on Open Expression (COE) on Thursday, two days after Vice-President for Operational Services Fred Shabel revealed that Campus Security used a work-study student to set up a "drug bust."

The charge was contained in a letter

U. Security Rape Squad Trainees Fail to Meet Police Requirements

By HALETTE LASKER Three female trainees intended for

Campus Security's Rape Squad "have been terminated during their training period," Security Specialist Ruth Wells said Thursday at a meeting of the University Council's Committee on Security and Safety.

"Currently, the rape squad consists of one person," Wells said, referring to her assistant, Barbara Cassel.

According to Wells, the three

women were sent to the State Police Academy at Shippensburg, Pa. for the mandated 12-week training program, but were all fired before graduating.

Chief of Police Merle Smith ex- plained Thursday that Beverly Jones failed the academic portion of the police training. After Smith was notified by the Police Academy, she was fired and removed from the Security Office payroll.

"Elvira Diane Turner and June

Monell Taste Investigation May Aid Sweetener Search

By STEVEN A. MARQUEZ A number of researchers at the

University's Monell Chemical Senses Center are currently working on a study of taste perception which may aid other researchers seeking a viable substitute for sugar.

Two substitutes used commercially, saccharin and cyclamates, have been declared unsafe by the Federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The FDA banned cyclamates in 1970, and a ban on saccharin and saccharin-based products is forthcoming.

Robert Cagan, Monell biochemist working on the study, said Tuesday that the project is not directed towards discovering a new artificial sweetener but is taking a different approach.

Cagan's studies are specifically directed at "studying how the senses of taste and smell work," he said. In studying taste, the researchers hope to discover how "receptor sites (taste buds) discriminate among different types" of taste, he added.

In most of the research conducted to discover substitute sweeteners, "someone accidentally discovered a

Dining Service Rated Favorahly In Student Poll

By ERIC JACOBS A recently-concluded University

Dining Service poll shows that most customers are generally satisfied with the service but have many suggestions for its improvement.

The survey, conducted jointly with the Undergraduate Assembly (UA), was distributed during dinner at the three Dining Service facilities on March 24.

Dining Service Director Donald Jacobs said Thursday that the survey also shows there is a large enough market for weekend dining to make it an item to "really push" during union negotiations later in the year.

About 75 percent of the people eating dinner returned the forms.

(Continued on page 3/

sweet component" in a substance and proceeded to "see what is responsible for the sweetness," Cagan said.

He pointed out that during the examination of one possible sub- stitute, aspartame, "some guy happened to lick his fingers" and discovered it had a sweet taste.

The approach used at Monell is to "find how stimulus molecules" in a substance "interact with the receptor site," Cagan said. Currently there is little knowledge about how taste buds work although hopefully, he said, enough information will be found at

(Continued on Page 7)

Taylor failed the firearms portion" of the two-part training program, Wells said.

According to Wells, the recruitment process was geared to women who could serve as normal police officers as well as be part of a specially trained Rape Squad.

A complement of sue (female) of- ficers would allow for at least one female to be scheduled at each shift. These women, would receive WOAR, (Women Organized Against Rape) training and be prepared to deal with special problems involving females," Wells said.

According to the University con- tract with the Plant Guard Workers of America, a labor union, security offers must be certified by an ac- credited police academy. Students at the State Academy at Shippensburg must qualify in both the academic and target shooting portion of the training to graduate as commissioned police officers and be issued a weapon.

"State law does not require security offers and campus police to be ar- med," Wells said. "Only those officers who will carry a weapon must be qualified in the firearms test."

(Continued on page2)

sent Monday to COE chairman Larry Gross, an associate professor of communications.

Phyllis Beck, law school vice-dean and a member of COE, said Thursday that the committee had not yet decided whether to accept the ex- panded charge. She said COE would decide at a meeting next Friday after Gross returns from a week-long trip to Italy.

McFate said that if COE refuses to accept the expanded charge, "I would then like to discusse it with Larry i Gross) and get his recom- mendation."

Gross said Wednesday that COE might not be the appropriate body to deal with the use of students in nar- cotics investigations, because such activities would not be governed by the University's formal guidelines on open expression.

McFate said, "That committee should at least have the opportunity to consider" whether to accept the new charge.

She added that she asked COE to broaden its investigation after receiving "some expressions of concern by students" about Campus Security's uses of students which had not been made public.

She mentioned former Undergraduate Assembly (UA) chairman Ken Taber as one student who had discussed this subject with her.

Executive Assistant to the Provost James Davis said Wednesday that the use of students in narcotics in- vestigations would definitely be in- vestigated.

"Someone is certainly going to look at it," Davis said. "It's certainly not going to get overlooked or buried."

Shabel revealed Tuesday at a UA-

By ELIZABETH SANGER Wharton Econometric forecasters

said recently that if Philadelphia's transit strike lasts ten weeks, the 1977 Gross Regional Product (GRP) for the eight-county area could drop $40.4 million from earlier projections.

The strike against the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority completes its third week today.

If the strike continues for seven more weeks,

-the region's total personal income could be reduced by $29.6 million;

-its total retail sales could drop by $7.4 million;

-local gasoline sales could rise by $1.4 million to $864.2 million;

-128.4 million in wages could be lost;

-the collection of city wage taxes could be reduced by $400,000,

Economic Professor and Wharton forecaster Lawrence Klein and Wharton Econometric forecasting associates James Savitt and Chom Storey initiated the special forecast in order to pinpoint the possible economic effects of the transit walkout on the region.

Savitt said Wednesday the process used "sophisticated guesswork."

The forecasters have "described the strike in economic terms," Savitt said. He added that the forecasters have "put the shock (of the strike) in the model," In the past, he said, the forecasters have never included anything as specific as a strike in their calculations.

After two weeks of the strike the region's GRP had already been

lowered by $7.7 million, and that figure will double if the strike lasts a month. If the strike should continue for ten weeks, the area's GRP could shrink to $44, 67,300,000 from an expected figure of $44,607,700,000 which was calculated earlier this year.

A model calculating the GRP for the eight-county region is forecast an- nually.

The forecasters simulated the ef- fects of the strike for possible durations of one month, and ten weeks.

Other regional consequences of a ten-week strike would include a $1.3 million reduction in manufacturing output and a loss of $39.1 million in non-manufacturing output.Storey said Thursday the non-manufacturing sector incorporates services such as transportation, communication and utilities involved directly with SEPTA.

The forecasters estimated the in- crease in gasoline sales by calculating how many riders switched to CONRAIL or to cars for tran- sportation. CONRAIL provides suburban transportation.

Approximately 400,000 people use SEPTA daily, but for their calculations ths forecasters sub- tracted non-essential, non-work related trips, such as shopping ex- peditions. Such trips would presumably be postponed until after the strike, Savitt assumed.

CONRAIL normally carries 115,000 riders a day, but this figure has in- creased to 300,000 during the strike,

i Continued on page 7)

WXPN License Denial Is Not A Test Case, FCC Judge Asserts

(Continued on page 6)

-Review-

By JEFFREY BARKER The Federal Communications

Commission (FCC) judge who refused to renew WXPN-FM's broadcasting license Tuesday denied charges that the station has served as a "guinea pig" for other university stations.

FCC Administrative Law Judge Walter Miller said he based his decision "on the facts that were in front of me."

Miller refuted charges that the FCC was looking for a case that would warn other stations in which the licensee was "out of touch" with the operations of its station.

Miller said, "Boards of trustees are quite frequently out of touch" with the radio stations of which they hold the license. But I didn't decide it on that basis."

Miller said that in the WXPN case, the University Trustees were "in a very weak position to begin with" in attempting to oversee WXPN operations. He pointed to the fact that the Trustees meet only three times a year and are dispersed across the country.

He noted that many stations licensed to trustees at large univer- sities may have "some qualms" with

his decision because they have a "similar set-up" as the University has with WXPN.

Miller denied WXPN's license on April 4, stating, "The Trustees have failed to exercise adequate control and supervision over WXPN's operations in a manner consistent with a licensee's responsibilities."

Miller acknowledged that he has been charged with sacrificing WXPN, noting a recent article printed in the Washington Star headlined "FCC Getting Tough with College Stations."

At Bridgeport University's WPKN- FM, Station Manager Jeff Tillis evaluated Miller's decision by saying "The decision says to other stations: •look at your setup and establish some liason (between the radio station and the Trustees) if there is none already."

Tillis, who is president of the Intercollegiate Broadcast System, said that the decision 'has widespread implications for other stations in the area of licensee con- trol." The System is a national association of college radio stations.

He indicated that the regulations governing licensee control were

(Continued on page 8)

Penn Singers, Players Perform in Artsfest Productions Victorian Operetta Is Updated Players9 Double-Bill is 'SurreaV

By JOAN GRECO Let the viewer beware: the Penn

Players' excellent dual-production of [A/ter Magritte and The Real Inspector Hound plunges the unwary observer into playwright Tom Stoppard's surreal universe without warning, holding him there until the final curtain falls.

After Magritte opens on a less-than- typical domestic scene. A man, Harris (Rick Werblin), dressed in rubber overalls, stands on a table changing a lightbulb, while mother (Jenny Hamilton Stuart) sleeps on an ironing board with her foot against a hot iron, and Patrolman Holmes (Marty Dorph) stands outside like a statue at the window, observing the suspicious actions within. Indeed, this is only the beginning: the confusion increases as the plot wanders further and further from reality.

Much of the play's humor relies on the surrealistic situation. The fast- paced confusion is reminiscent of Monty Python; William Young's excellent performance as Inspector Foot was especially close to the group's inspired insanity.

It seems that merely presenting a totally bizarre situation i including a tuba-playing mother, a man accused of amputating the leg of a Pakistani minstral player, and a basket of fruit

i Continued on paw 7)

'ettf and 7he Real TWO EXCELLENT SHOWS, After Magritte

Inspector Hound, both by Tom Stoppard. opened Thursday night at the Annenberg Auditorium. The unu Penn Players productions transport the theatergoer from the real mttujfcu—L

A GILBERT AND SULLIVAN OPERETTA is given a new twist by the Penn Singers. The production of Patience , which opened Thursday night at the Zellerbach Theater, is updated from the Victorian Era to 1969 l^.ndon.

By DAVID N.PEARL The greening of Gilbert and Sullivan

is now a/ait accompli, and the Penn Singers have turned the trick in an updated production of the Victorian dynamic duo's light opera Patience that opened Thursday night at Zellerbach Theatre.

Despite the modern setting of l/indon in 1969 with characters such as flower-adorned poets and a heroine in bobby socks, the operetta was sung with all of the original lyrics un- changed. The result was as charming as it was different.

The story revolves around Patience, a naive 18 year-old girl with an ap- propriately silly self-contradictory concept of love. Searching for pure love, she turns to her childhood sweetheart, now a rock-poet. Her love for him. however, can never be realized because she believes that "liOve, to be pure, must be absolutely unselfish." And since lie la so perfect, KlViflg him is selfishness.

The object of Patience' misplaced affections, although hilariously vain, is no phony.

A group of hippie-maidens, on the other hand idolize a bonus Alan Ginsberg-type in their quest for esthetic beauty.

The complications that ari8e from the contrast between the two poeti ii vi i eii ic to be a nil

Page 2 The Daily Pennsylvania!! *^*^M^M^M^«^M^M^M^H^>k^H^M^I

Jazz Culture Come Hear Mr. Harrison Ridley,

Musicologist & Black Historian

April 19, 1977 8 P.M.

Annenberg School Auditorium

3620 Walnut St.

I Sponsored by Penn's Black Student League

,

CAHMJftCVtNY* TDHFAJ

FREE ADMISSION ^V^M^H^M^M^H^K^M^H^H^K^V^H^H^a^W^tC^I

DOCTOR Zlli\\(.(> SAT., APRIL APRIL 16. 7 & 10:30, FINE ARTS']

CPR Last day to sign up tor Cardfo Pulmonary Resuscitation classes at McClelland Hall desk Class slie limited. Sponsored by American Red Cross.

T G IF. Open house, wine and cheese. 3:305 p.m. Conversation with Andy Koch of the United Farm Wortters u. Lutheran. 37th and Chestnut

MILLEL SHABBAT SERVICES: Orthodox a. Conservative; 6:15 Oneg Shabtoet, 100 follows Shabbat dinner Liberal services; 1:00 p.m

THE DRAMA IN A ROMANTIC CHILD'S EVE: An exhibition of the 19th century Toy Theatre Philomathean Art Gallery. 4th *l . College Hall, Apr 1 31. 12 S.

WHARTON ACCOUNT STAFF MEETING: 3:00 l p.m.. E 17. Positions lor next year will be

discussed

ENTEBBE, WHAT REALLY HAPPENED? Presentation discussion with Air Attache. Israeli Embassy, 100 p.m., W-1 Dietrich Hall.

WraftErJJi RUSSIAN CLUB: Is sponsoring Dr. Zhlvego this Saturday, April 16; 7and 10:30in Fint Arts.

ARMENIAN CLUB: Meeting to plan upcoming events, Son. I 30 p.m , 1012 HRE. call Ed 471 75(4 or Tom 11} 660

SUFI DANCES OF UNIVERSAL PEACE: Every Sat. 10 II. H.H...Ivy Rm.

HILLEL PASSOVER SERVICES: Orthodox l Conservative; 9:30a.m. Downstairs Mlnyan; 10:00 a m. Sat and Sun.

CONSERVATIVE SHABBAT MORNINO SERVICE Recapture the spirit ol Friday night. Join us at our service on the 3rd tl.. Hlllet; 9:30 a m every Sat.

PENN NEWMAN CENTER: Masses. Sat. midnight and Sun; 9:30 a.m. A 11:00 a.m. Come help us celebrate, 3720 Chestnut.

MIDDLE EASTERN MUSIC CONCERT: l:X p.m.. Sat, April lath, H.H.. 2nd (I., Rehearsal room

CAMPUS PERFORMANCE SOCIETY: Presents Jane Margulles. classical and popular works tor voice. Sun. April 17; 8:00 p.m.. 4th II. college Hall.

PHILOMATHEAN SOCIETY: Meeting Sun. April 17, 11:00 em. 4!n II College Hall.

NEW CHINA DAY: Workshops Sat. April It; 10 30 am, 5 p.m., H.H. Sponsored By U.S. China Friendship Association.

COMMENCEMENT AND ALUMNI WEEKEND WORKERS WANTED Meeting Sun, April 17; 7:00 p.m.. Franklin Room, H.H. Info Ira 3B2-4B94.

PENN PLAYERS ELECTIONS: For Board of Governors. Sat, April 14; 1:00 p.m.. room 511, Annenberg Center.

STUDENT OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY ASSOCIATION Sponsoring Mini Conference Sat. 10 3 p.m.. Samp. Speakers & exhibits on variety of topics.

CHILOABUSE WORKSHOP Sat. School of Allied Medical Professions. 3v,h and Pine St.. rm 214; 10 a.m. 1:00. Sponosorod by UP S.O T.A

HEBREW CONVERSATION COFFEE HOUR: Sun; 7 9 p.m . llth II. lounge. Harrison HRS. Into 382 8754

FELLOWSHIP OF CHRISTIAN ATHLETES: Meets inc. A.. 7ndfl. lounge. Sun. 9: IS p.m.

wmim WEOUPA3TASK FORCE: Will meet Frl; I p.m.. H.H., Bishop White Rm.

CAFE E CONVIVIO LUSO BRASILEIRO: Todat as sextas. das 4 as 6 da tarde, no predlo Class of '25 3940 Locust Walk, salao 411

NEW MUSIC: For chamber orchestra by Penn Composers' Guild members Steve Jaffa. Robert Kyr and Cynthia Lee. Sun, April 17; 7:30, Annenberg Center Lobby.

STUDY POLITICAL SCIENCE IN MEXICO CITY THIS SUMMER: Meeting to discuss Penn's summer course In Mexico with Dr. Wells, Mon; 3:00. Bishop White Rm, 2nd II., H.H.

Friday, April 15, 1977

Trainees (Continued from page I)

"I am now practicing my target shooting at Hutchison gym and working with Chief Smith," Taylor said. "Hopefully, I will be able to qualify in the firearms test under the supervision of someone from the NRA (National Rifle Association)."

"For six months, (before her training at the Academy) June per- formed duties (for Campus Security) nor requiring the use of a firearm,' Wells said. "Perhaps she could have continued these activities rather than have been immediately terminated."

Wells said that her office is responsible for the recruitment and interviewing of candidates prior to their hiring. "I was not informed of the termination of the three women until after the decision had been made," Wells said. "If this continues to occur, I won't have the opportunity to know what is happening and all of my efforts to select the most qualified individuals will be in vain.

We had hoped to add five more officers to the Security Force," Wells added. "The addition of these officers was approved and the necessary recruitment process was budgeted.''

WHITE FOR .FILMS AND TELEVISION!

• Experienced professionals • Valuable industry contacts • Editorial and marketing aid

• Do not send manuscripts • For information, write

SCREEN WRITERS SERVICE 2064 Alameda Padre Serra Santa Barbara. CA 93103

CURE "TERM PAPER FRIGHT

^&^^ ERROR-FREE TYPIN6

ERROR I IE CAMPUS STORE NOW ALSO AVAILABLE IN BROWN, RED, BLUE & GREEN

- WITH ERRORITE!

ciA%%iri»% j\Pj\XStiltJ<Si>

1-2-3 BEDROOM APTS. Some with Fireplaces 5 & 6 bedrooms

TOWNHOUSES with fireplaces

382-3100 jgyggl

MODERN APTS. On Campus

Eastern States Realty EV-609H

6 ft 7 Rms. Hall 2 Baths — S290-up 3 Rms ft Bath — $i50-up

Fire Towers. Well kept Bldg. Sunny. Cheerful June & Sept. Rentals 664-2200 Chestnut near 43rd 4464697

«1N0 4 SPRUCE—! Bedrooms} baths Kitchen Dmingroom available June 1st All utilities included USD Ml tin am

CEDAR PARK ) charming apartments efficiencies and one bedroom 1130 to S1I0 including utilities Available May or Sept w 9641 before 8 p m .■

PENN SENIOR wishes to share lovely spacious 1 bedroom apartment at 43rd 4 Pine with another woman; Vegltarlan cooking preferred Call Rachel 3(4 4484 ls

Jfle SANSOM ST. Modern, partly furnished 1 bedroom apt Available SEPT 734 1313,442

"" 4*44

IFFICIBNCY AVAILABLE. Chestnut Hall. 14 tl,. security Air cond . garb disposal. Call Mar* 15, 277-1*00. ,

PINE A 40TM ST. One A Two bedroom A efficiencies Furnished & unfurnished Call 179 0400 or|77-5W4 4t»

rMa PINS—Furnished effic S140 *> Utilities -UND * WALNUT-Lerg. unfurnished oot bedroom redecorated »173 + utiiit.es Available Now>M 7167. 4979

rowH HOUSES Largest selection lo choos* ■rom inuniv City 30 houses m vicinity of *th & Spruce to 42nd 8. Locust Largo 5 to W •Tir-oomv 7 to 6 baths. Many are or will bt enovated, paneled, carpeted, etc Avail June

tr Sept Reasonable Day: EV? 1300 or BA2 *?5<i Campus Apts atU3 Walnut Street. Call etween I ■>

LARGE. BR itiMT 3 bedroom apartment available immediately. Furnished or unfurnished. WV6 73W Weisenthai Apts «)4 Spruce St 461]

FOR RENT: Attractive One Bedroom apartment on S 47th St. S13S per month plus utilities, Attractive studio $m plus utilities SA 7 8717 4901

^iilJ7*

39th ft PINE TO 42nd ft LOCUST:

' i block radius of superblock Large eff 1 2 3 4 bedroom apts June or Sept rentals •reasonable Day EV2 1300 or BA2 4254 Call between a 5

STUDENT APTS. AVAILABLE

JUNE OR SEPT. OCCUP.

HAMILTON COURT APTS. EV-6-5200

4405 BALTIMORE. Subletting all or part ot spacious 8 bedroom home Furnished Full kitcnen Extremely reasonable Call Greco 317 IJ77orOan 3(7 1171 4949

Mil CHESTNUT Mu May until September Fully lurnished and carpeted. 2 bedrooms (with spacious lofts). Living room. Kitchen, great location Rent Negotiable Call 317 3139 44.1

Itln A PINE. ATTRACTIVE I Bedroom, Bay Windows, Modern Kitchen. SI25 mo; May IS-Sept I Jon 34)2 9033 «|70

SUBLET. June 1st. Fall option very large,

"!"".*.!?wo b,*oom apartment 42nd and Walnut 5

JUNE AUGUST Furnished one bedroom apartment large for two! 41 and Baltimore. S140 utilities Included {negotiable). 362 1895 4948

ROOMS AVAILABLE in spacious, furnished, air conditioned S bedroom apt. 41st & Pine Junel Aug 31 Call 382 5054 494;

SPACIOUS, SUNNY SUBLET 2 Bedroom Apt. Sep Lvng.ADng Call now 349 8673 Avail early May.

4942

SPACIOUS EFFICIENCY Separate kitchen. Giant walk in closet. 24-hr. security. Laundry. carpeting, air conditioning, garbage disposal Fall option Cheap rate 39th A Chestnut July and Aug. EV2 22«2 a

4.1ST A PINE—Beautiful. Spacious. Duplex Apt Furnished. 4 Bedroom. 3 bathroom, A C. Dishwasher Individual rooms or entire apt. available June 1 September 1 ftloo & utilities person 349 9118 382 9137 ,n,

BEAUTIFUL. SPACIOUS. CLBAN.Sunny. ' furnished, studio available in TOP security bldg. on campus 3*Th A Chestnut call 243 4778 (day) 387 4712 (night) ,9|.

SUMMER SUBLET—5 bdrm. kitchen, living room, dining room, furnished 40th A Sansom S65 per person Call 382 0355or 349 9033 )4

APARTMENT TO SUBLET—Individual or Group Large 5 Bedrooms at 4400 Walnut Cheap. Call after 7 P.M EV2 9443 12

SUMMER SUBLET, beautiful 2 bedroom apartment, 41st A Spruce, Air Conditioned, semi furnished, reserved parking under building, laundry in building, Modern Kitchen and Bathroom, Price negotiable. Cal I 349 6147 4

3BORM. PURNISHEO APARTMENT. COnvlently located 10 campus, shopping, laundromat. Rent negotiable Call 662 5425 13

SUMMER SUBLET from May 1 (or shortly thereafter) to September. AirConditioned quad with kitchen In HI Rise North. Rent about S83 rrfontn. Cell Lou. 3(2 8074 47

JtTH AND PINE, 4 Bedrooms to sublet together or separately, fully equipped kitchen, 7 bathrooms, Sundeck; price negotiable Leo 647 5975 Eric Steve 387 0428 |7

TYPIST. PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS. Electric Executive. Superior Quality. Expertise Dissertations, Theses, Termpapers, Manuscripts, Whatever. "Roj" 477 3305 48SI

PROFESSIONAL TYPIST. IBM SELECTRIC Dissertation, manuscript, and resume expertise including foreign language, scientific and legal. Excellent faculty references. DORIS GR74841 4430

tr<D» mm SAMSON AT 43rd Large 6 room house plus 4 room lstlloor3beth avail. Sept. EV2 1300S393.00 4918

LOCATEO AT 42ND. ST.-Large8 Bed 5 Bath plus luge Living Room, Dining Room A Kit 1575 no evj .300 JS

BEAT THE STRIKE-Buy a bike. Peugeot 10

l^fa:w"" "Bh"' ••™*r». Hhjgage rack, asking SI75; Raleigh Glan Sport, 10 speed, light weight, 531 tubing, asking (225 Both perfect condition "'«'*» ,933

LIFEGUARDS r-our openings at center city outdoor pool 40 hours from end of May to Labor Day. Sr. Llfesavlng required. Call David 6V2 7893. ,

SUMMER RESEARCH POSITION: Opportunity 10 participate in cardiovascular research this summer at the Ml Desert island Biological Labs m Bar Harbor. Maine Basic chemlslry or biology background preferred. Will train Summer Work Study students may alsq apply. Call 243 7939. 4915

im $>mi WALNUT AT 43ND-Large 7 Bed House plus 3 rooms 1st floor and 3 bath S425.00. EV2 I30Q

•**^ 491* Available June.

149 9117 WMWKL

RENT A CAVE ON CAMPUS

We have a huge, spectacular, very special, really unusually renovated, 5 bedroom, 2 bath, 7 level residence with all manner of esoteric leafures like real brick, wooden beamed ceiling, rough cast plaster, open stairway, carpeting, new formica kitchen with garbage disposal and new appliances, new bathrooms, built In 0*r, furnished, and only S540 monthly includes heat and hot water. Come see something different.

Also, some really huge renovated three, four, five and six ■tearoom apartments, and houses in excellent condition. We also have efficiency, one, and a few two bedroom places left.

39th & Pine to 44th & Walnut University Housing Co.

EV2-W86 rmest apartments on campus.

PINE A 39TH. 3 Bedrooms in Spacious, furnished apartment 2 bathrooms May August SI20 bedroom 442 5440 4977

SEXY SUBLET—One bedroom in 3 bedroom apt Osage A 43rd. Nicely furnished. Available May 15 Call Jim evenings 382 3228 4925

48th A CHESTNUT. I Bedroom Apt . Furnished with Separate Living Room Sublet May 15 Sept I Call EV7 2044 4923

39TN A WALNUT. May Sept I BMroom Completely lurnished SIS0 month (includes utilities ec> Call 462 5775 40,4

4IST A PINE-Room in house, backyard driveway, laundry V„y pleasant Available mid May S90 Ellen, 442 5554 iW2

SUMMER SUBLET, sis—9 I Female wanted -or ', of two bedroom apt. in Grad Towers Great view convenient, clean, sate 349 6867 4696

SUMMER SUBLET—39th A Pine June August 2 bedrooms and kitchen Ideal for couple Call 387 5774 em

SUMMER SUBLET Furn.thrd 7 Bedroom Apartment 40th A Spruce. Reetl lii-ootiaolt- Call

Going Overseas?

Take The World At Unbelievable Low Prices

Don't Call Just Any Travel Agent or Airline

Call .387-1700 Ask for Mr. Tuli

3733 Walnut St.

. v.-n.ruis HI 0480

LOW COST TRIPS 10 ports and villages in the South Pacific Free catalogue Goodman's Goodtravel Tours, Dept DP 5332 College Ave., Oakland. CA, 94418 4846

,«09

Renovated 3 Bedrooms

Thick shag carpeting available (S4 17 per month extra)

Available Sept 1 Large rooms Eatintormlra kitchen Garbage disposal 1' .■ ceramic tile baths. Large balcony Intercom. Oak floors Many closets Paneled living room. Furnished Air conditioned (S10 extra). Pine to Locust 43rd lo 45th

$335. EV2-2986

NEWLY DECORATED ' BEDROOM APT III ualh. mod kitchen, near university 535 8043

lp\y!M8JNTI IN BEAUTIFUL GARDEN COURT £REA • '. iroj Mudios I

■-. nts Close1 »0 sfoppimi .t"ti ii.i'isporirfi.ii" iMh ,mn *r"

. . || :■ 3101 "904

11ST A CHESTNUT-immedialelv available one wdroomefficiency furnished H30 362 7147 4929

SUMMER SUBLE T RiauMul 7 Moors. 4 bedroom .ipl 4lslAPine Furnished. AC A laundry SI25 utilities per person June Isl September 1st Crt.l 187 8VJ7or Alice. 349 8771 4904

SUMMER SUBLET. 5 15-9 1 Female wanted tor '. of twobedroom apt in Quad Towers Great view, convenient, clean, safe 349 6667 48M

ROOM IN A LARGE HOUSE ol 5 students, friendly people, good times April 15 August 31. 140 morth BA2 4539 21

SUMMER SUBLET Pine St A 40th Efficiency with separate kitchen. Excellent apartment with high ceilings, bay window. S145 mo includes utilities. 767 9572 35

SUMMER ROOMS—Free kitchen and laundry very reasonable 1415 Locust walk BA2 9634 ask lor President ,„,

SUBLET-NEW. LUXURIOUS APARTMENT 114th fl ) One Butfonwood Square. Summer. Fully furnished. 2bedrooms, color Tv. AC Hourly Bus 10 CC Reasonable 566 2351 evenings 4943

SUMMER SUBLET Available June 1st to August 3lsl Furnished 7 3 bedroom apt 318 South 42nd St 1310 00 1149 92141 494S

EFFICIENCY aoih between Spruce anu Pine Avail W61 IS Veryquiet EV7 484S 4950

INTERESTED IN LOW COST JET TRAVEL TO EUROPE AND ISRAEL? Student Travel Center can help you travel with maximum flexibility & minimum cost. For more information call TOLL FREE 1800)325-8034.

REWARO: Lost on Spruce St Woman's gold wrislwaicn April 5th initials MRMCC on back Call EV7 3377 a,

TYPIST, IBM SELECTRIC, Spec.allilng ,„ dissertations, manuscripts, tables, and alpnanumerics Excellent lecully and professional references DIANE. 477 0797 4,,,,

■ ■' ' " 11 . . . •1 . .i.onabi, call 38* .m; „u

PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER Speciallung in Doctorates. Masters. Manuscripts Sample work •n area 1'braries Flore Cerlm 279 2211 4605

HOUSE: 2 Rms. available In Spacious, Beautiful coed house, 43rd A Sansom MS month (covers all utilities) girls preftred Meg or Paul 349 (623 19

FARMHOUSE, NEW JERSEY midway bl-r

21M" W"h "'""" "U "" * U"L C*" *"'

Secretaries- If you have the time... We have the Assignments! Let's trade!

SECRETARIES MED. SECRETARIES

LEGAL SECRETARIES STENOGRAPHERS

TRANSCRIPTIOIMISTS LOCAL ASSIGNMENTS

TEMPORARY SHORT AND LONG TERM EXCELLENT RATES

133 S. 34th St. Philadelphia

382-4554 1640 Suburban Station Bldg.

16th & Kennedy Blvd. Philadelphia

564-3110

KELLY GIRL A Division of Keller Services

An Equal Opportunity Employer

NEEDED: PHILOSOPHICALLY HUMANISTIC. community action type with communication skills to young and old to train for future leadership role in our organliatlon. Minimum 15 to 20 hours a week, salary negotiable. Write Trainee. 190* s Rittenhouse Sq., Phlla., Pa. 19103 so

persons experienced in administering Baylay scales infant Development needed for study 12 hours required L07 7255. 4935

POETRY WANTED FOR ANTHOLOGY Include Mumped envelope Contemporary Literature Press. P O Box 76462. San Francisco, California 94176 4,4,

PART-TIME JOBS for singles and married couples available Now for the coming months. Have fun and earn $112 week A food caring for children A homes of locAl vacationers. (One child okay.) University Home Services. Call now:525 (5(0 4(44

DELIVERY MAN: Parfllme-must have a car University area GR29930 4(43

WANTED Summer work study student to be assistant to the editorial staff of The Wharton "'•"•' WuM h»" »ood typing skills, a working knowledge of the English language, some knowledge ol office procedures, a pleasant phone manner, and a large measure of native intelligence This is a good opportunity to learn now a megajine is put together from the editorial perspective The staff is small, the duties are

°l,cr""M 4890

WANTED BOOYGUARD. Par! time now. Full timethissummer. Write Box 1253. Lancaster Pa 17*04 j,

COUNSELORS NEEDED lor private, coed children's overnight camp: group heads, phys ed. malors. WSIs. riding, waterskl, sailing, canoeing, gymnastics, archery, riflery, over nights, tennis (609 424 1658 4727

I9J1 PIAT 124-SEDAN. 62,000 automatic. AM Radio, radlals. WelHoved. $995 648 37S2 (Day) 4*14

SUPER PORCH SALE-Bake Sale 4000 Pin* Sunday Plants, books, gifts, rugs, drapes, clothes etc. „

SELL. KINOSIZE spring box and mattress. Very goodcondltlon$loocall367 1754 51

■74 PINTO WAGON—Auto. Air. AM FM Stereo Tape. Disc Brakes, Clean, 496 7175, eves. A wknds. 4913

FURNITURE SALE 39th A W*lnut D.sk, Double Bed. Bookcase, Lamps, Kitchen table, chairs Call 222 2326after300P.M. 4,44

• NIGHT AT THE I BACES

• MONTE CARLO • BEEF AND BEER • I Fri. & Sat. • - April 15 & 16 I 8 P.M.-?? • $1 Admission • JST. FRANCIS DE SALES

• School Auditorium • 47th & Springfield Ave. %•••(»••••••••••'<

AlJ%>s& GOOD DIRECTIONS MOVERS. Propmt eHlcitnt lorvlc*. Rpasonablt? RattS. Call ■nytime(49 0373 4614

HAVI A RELAXING PROFESSIONAL MASSAGE by an experienced masseuse. By appointment only. 724 4395 18

BICYCLE REPAIR SERVICE

Expertly and conveniently done at your home, by engineer and crotrcountry cyclitt. Reasonable rates, whoelt built, children instructed.

Gihon — EV2-0420

low CO/I prinlinq

Keroxiflql Xerox copies 5 cents ,

RESUMES REPORTS

PAPERS

, Xerecenter 3736 Walnut St.

386-30B1 .

PMOTOOKAPHV CLASSES: On campus instruction. Five Saturday classes Mylnnlno April 14 Call Jon 3(7 9204 eves. July and Aug 10

^ WE'RE BUYING USED

FURNITURE We want tables, desks, bedding, chairs and everything else you got.

WE'LL PICK UP Furniture Surplus

4219 Chestnut St. (215) 349-6700

■ »< V *Jt <3> <jr s;

Today

FACE TO FACE \ is cancelled due to the distributor's crass I commercialism

• » » mm<

STEVEN A. MARQUEZ Night Editor

STEVE BLUMENTHAL BARBARA DL'BERSTEIN

Copy Editors

MICHAEL THOMPSON Photo Day Editor

JON LANSNER ANDYROSE

Sports Copy Editor

Sunday 4/17 THE MEMORY OF

JUSTICE by Marcel Ophuls

The Philadelphia Premiere of Ophuls' ("Th« Sorrow and the Pity"! new masterpiece of documentary cinema. CA. Real lo Reel lrvlne-200 pm (runs 4 hours with a hall hour intermission! 13 00

Wednesday, 4/20

PRIMATE bv Frederick Wiseman (19741

Wiseman films the activities ol the Yerkes Primate Research Center ano their experiments in behavior modification

C A Wiseman Retrospective C A Aud. 4 30pm t 8 00pm Si 00

Summer Sublet ,oron|y $67. Spacious room in co-ed house

42nd & Locust

callFreo (weekdays! 24J-65B' leveningsi 6625767

by BBC TV BATTLE OF CULLODEN

AT WINTER SEA ICE CAMP, PART 1

bv Asen Balikci (19471

, n^.njr.W."-.D°<:U",'nM"«s S'ual° "»•"* 4 OOpm A 7 OOpm Free

i I I

.

Friday, April 15, 1977 The Daily Pennsylvanian

Page 3

news in brief Compiled from U"'ted Press International

U.S.-VIETNAM TALKS PLANNED-Carter Administration officials said yesterday that the U.S. and Vietnam will attempt to Improve their relations in high-level talks scheduled for Paris next month. The re-opening in American- Vietnamese discussions indicates that the U.S. is satisfied with Vietnam's efforts to find out about American soldiers missing in action during the Vietnam War. RUSSIAN FISHING SHIP RELEASED-The Antanas Snekus, mother ship of the Soviet fishing fleet operating off the New England coast, was released yesterday by American authorities. The vessel was the first of two Russian ships seized by the Coast Guard for violating the 200-mile fishing limit that took effect in March The other ship is still being held.

UA Dining Survey inuedfrom oase II " J

«ss*

Oalivara4 IrtMl la rowr door Sunnav morning — How about MM Tim It lull anothar .del.a friendly taatura ol

(Continued from page I) Jacobs said he was "very pleased" with the unprecedented rate of return.

Roast beef au Jus was chosen as the favorite dinner by a wide margin, with 77 percent of the respondents mark ing the category that they liked to eat It.

On the other hand, the "peanut butter and carrot rice loaf" was liked by four percent of the students and

Shelley's Deli On the NW Corner of 37th

& Walnut St. NearGimbels Gym

Slap dawn any day Man mm Friday and piac • your ordar Or you can pkona II In aliar I.K »M by calllna DE i sni w. laalura any ol Iha fraal varMlai 01 oagals — onion. Sttami Poppy. Ryt, Sail, Plain, Pumjirmi.lr or Gar In Wo normally carry plain oageli during tho woan and Sun, 10 ordar your specialty and havo it hoi and waiting l 11.71 a doionor TOcenti apioca

Hour* Mon Thru Friday I 00 AM To S OOPM

Sun 10 00To 7 OOPM

SPRINGTIME BASH at

We now offer catering service tor your next party

(btw the hi-rises) Don't miss the last great party of the year

April 16 9:30 - ?

Featuring Purple Haze Mobile Disco

ALL ARE WELCOME

has subsequently been eliminated from the menu, according to Jacobs.

The survey showed greatly- improved student feelings on the treatment they receive from Dining Service workers. This relationship has been a sore point in past polls and Jacobs said he feels there has been "appreciable improvement" in employee courtesy.

BIKE REPAIR COMES TO UNIVERSITY CITY;

UNIVERSITY CITY now has a one stop Repair shop. GENE's25 HOUR TOWING and SERVICE CENTER INC. now provides complete service In auto repair and towing. Gene's is now featuring BICYCLE REPAIR with same day service.

watch for grand opening of GENE'S MINI MARKET -31st & Spring Garden

MI-

GRAINED COWHIDE MONEY BELT KEEPS CASH TUCKED AWAY-

JUST IN CASE!

growing per- cent age of ua who »>e •ictims o' robbene*, or lost wallets, a money belt is an ounce of prevention that really pays off

Dress belt of supple handsomely grained cowhide 0 **" wide* with smooth-pod shad metal buckle—goes well with any style of clothing Concealed compartment inside over 16 ' long doses with two way zipper, holds enough big bills for a round the<world tnpi Two colors: dark brown or black (with nickel plated silver colored buckle) Cowhide money belt (SPECIFY EVEN SIZE* 3244. color, and horseshoe ishown> or regular buckle Style $12.95 (shipping incl I Add 5% tan on shipments to Mass addresses only

BELTS P.O. Box 231, Boston, MA 02134

WALNUT MALL 'it-JS* 222-2344 WALNUT at 39th

OPPOSITE UNIV. OF PENN CINEMA I All MATS $1.00 AT AU TIME

CINEMA IlilHSl.SO 71E30PJL EVERYDAY

PICNIC 2:00 5 55 9:50 M«*Tue. f I 1 William Holden 4 Kim Novak j^ftoBIRD '

| Pius: BORN YESTERDAY4 ossoo William Holden St Judy Holliday

RAGGEDY ANN & ANDY G

2:00 3:45 5:30 7:15 9:00

FayelXinaway Orsan Welles PG VOYAGE OF THE DAMNED

2:15 4:40 7:05 9:30

. „.

WHY PAY MORE?

Xerox Copies

]ampus C°Py Centef

3907 Walnut Street 382-1829

Next to Baskin-Robbins

Lowest Prices on Campus

CALENDAR Bull n Barrell University

CLASS OF '77'

T- SHIRTS NOW ON SALE s3.00

Limited Quantity

BUI I & BARREL

*•••••••••*; * FRATERNITY J * NOTES J -^ Springtime Bash at ^.

¥ zbf Z. .w Don't Miss The Last J ^ Great Party J

Disco

k SATURDAY.April 16 ^ M 9:30 -? J •^Featuring the Music of J ^.Purplm Haze Mobile^.

*

* * * *

Take Note: . DEKE is Having a C DISCO Party J Sat. Nite: 10 - ? J at Deke of course J307 South 39th Street*

k <~7ThT=>~ J k Sigma Phi Epsilon J £ Challenge J * VOLLEYBALL J £ MARATHON * ^6 p.m., Friday through 6 pm» ^(Sunday on College Green ^ ±All Proceeds go to Children's^ ^Hospital 1^ ^(Individuals and teams invited ttji wpledge and play J pFor more Information call 222^90GJr

Now comes Miller time.

C 197'UMrBrao-ngCo M*»au>a* VU>

. . ii, -■ .

The Daily Pennsylvania!! Friday, April 15, 1977

r tUtl* Patl^etttiggtoanian Th

f$83 • 1977 Ni'ir.i/w/MT n) ihr I nimriily of I'liiiisylumui

Page 4

CAROL J. HUTCHINSON. Executive Editor RAYMOND C. VAN DER HORST. Business Manager

DANIEL M. AKST. RHONDA ORIN Co-Managing Editors

READERS' FORUM' Examining the Issues Behind the Decision

By |im Campbell r I ll I —UL 1 Friday, April is, 1977 By Jim Campbell

.. .

i

in i

i

TER/M GROSS Editorial Page Co-Editor

LORENFELDMAN Sports Co-Editor

WILLIAM S. ALTMAN Photography Co-Editor

GREGORY P. OUSSAN1 Associate Business Manager

PH. WIEST City Editor

JEFFREY R. EDWARDS Production Manager

ELIOT KAPLAN 34th Street Co-Editor

FRED A. SCHNEYER Editorial Page Co-Editor

MARK HYMAN Sports Co-Editor

PETER L. CHAPMAN Photography Co-Editor

AMYS. BORRUS Feature Editor

M.B. NEISNER. JR. Advertising Manager

JWSSBLL B. UTIN Credit Manager

DRUSILLA MENAKER 34th Street Co-Editor

in

jh. fl -

The decision by The Daily Penn- sylvanian editorial board to endorse Judge Walter Miller's recom- mendation of license non-renewal in the WXPN case is unfortunate.

It is unfortunate not only because of the opinion expressed, but even more because of the foundation of misun- derstanding and inaccurate in- formation upon which that opinion seems to be based. Editorial writers have a right to express their opinions. But they have a corresponding obligation to understand what they are writing about.

Judge Miller's decision, as Ms. Or in (a member of the board) pointed out in a signed column, (DP, Aprils), was not supposed to be a decision con- cerning obscenity.

The criteria for judging obscenity outlined by Orin have been super- ceded (see Miller vs. California), but no criteria concerning obscenity-old or new-were the issue in this case in any event.

The issue, as Orin rightly pointed out, was and is "licensee control," yet

Pointing Out the Culprit By Robert Frleden

...The decision to revoke WXPN's license is regrettable, but ..ironically preventable and more Indicative of disfunctions fhan an inability to manage a radio station.

It represents how various factions within the University , fail to assess their function and the ramifications of their | decisions or non-decisions. Somehow, we get trapped into our •"owft microscopic conceptions of our function within the

I -University, lose an overall perspective on what a particular action means.

if the case of WXPN, University administrators were so eblivious to the ramifications of real and potential violations {regulatory and legal) that they neglected their obligations Jo insure proper station operations while not Impeding the freedom to experiment and express alternative perspectives, station operators really cannot be expected to satisfy more than their individual tastes and the tastes of real and potential audiences they choose to serve. fStudent governance is all too often content to share a symbolic policy making role with their counter parts In College Hall, or opt for less than selfless service in the Student interest. ^ In the absense of effective oversight, with very few people attuned to the daily operations of the station, members of the Nation were free to proceed on any course they individually {hose to pursue. „ A distinctive minority ruined an ideal Athenian IJejpocracy by choosing to tred the bounds of priority •fMnsively in order to expand their first amendment freedoms. More likely, they were trying to be as outrageous as possible. As such they were outrageous enough to rouse a *>rmally ineffectual and complacent Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to act. •Contrary to popular assumption, the FCC did not Just step

around February 1975 and rob the University of its right to ♦representative on the airwaves. The violations, which we seem to recognize, but cast aside as regrettable but rorrected, do not Just pass away In the eyes of a regulatory •dy that has been forced to act Since 1969, there has been a continuous sequence of questionable broadcasts, ^proprieties, misjudgements, and violations, ^tyeither I, nor the Commission pursued an ongoing monitoring campaign to nail WXPN. The violations are clear and evident, and the Commission did not Just step in and designate the station license for a hearing.

If anyone cares to investigate, WXPN's record Is rift with official FCC documents of warnings, notices of apparent liability, and desist orders from both the Commission and apparently powerless University administrators.

Not only did the station and the University fail to heed FCC warnings and official correspondences, but the station's attempt to Invoke its self-assumed duty to serve the Delaware Valley wasagreater goal than legal and officially sanctioned operating procedures.

Things just do not work that way. In spite of regulations that may seem foolish, time consuming, and wrong, the station members and the Trustees as licensee have implicitly, at least, decided to abide by them. The Invocation of the First Amendment as a protective skirt does not seem to apply here.

No one has convinced the Commission, (or me), that their alleged violations were mere by-products of a quest for the avant-garde and freedom of speech.

An agreement to be licensed by the FCC, either as an operator or as a licensee necessitates certain obligations and voluntary relinguishment of personal sovereignty. A license to broadcast does not translate Into a saction to pontificate, to zealously pursue that which station members think the

public should appreciate, or to willfully ignore clear rules and regulations.

The designations of authority and concern do not reduce individuals into compartmentalized experts of one individual perspective to which no other view will gain credence.

Back In 1973 a couple of students felt that WXPN was both a potential source of embarassment to the University and an unjustified recipient of nearly $15,000 of precious student activities funds.

We pursued every channel of influence Including discussions with station members with an eye to prompting a more responsible public serving attitude at the station. We met with administrative representatives from numerous sectors within the University in hopes that someone would recognize the obligation to insure proper operation and have the wherewithal to do something about it.

Our hopes were not realized. Indeed, high level University administrators insisted WXPN was "a student matter," and we "should get it out of our minds that this is a Trustee matter." They now know that it is a Trustee concern. In an effort to protect them from "incidentals," they have done a disservice to the University by preventing access to them until damage had already been done.

WXPN does not fit Into a readily definable administrative line of responsibility. This academically libertarian environment Is not conducive to necessary intrusions of a model of pure demoncracy at the station and indeed students do not like to be told how to behave.

What Is not offensive or a mere oversight to us is a disgrace and outrage toothers. The instances of obscenity and slander meant little to me as compared to the greater goal of making WXPN a powerful broadcasting force in the Delaware Valley. The station has only begun to do more than spin discs and serve their own interests.

But it did change only because outside pressure became intense. The period for consideration by Judge Miller spanned the time from 1972-1975 and WXPN will have to stand on the merit or demerits of those years.

We cannot defend the station's transgressions as college pranks If we attempt to demonstrate the need for another University non-commercial station in Philadelphia. We cannot invoke the First Amendment as our salvation when there are dozens of non free speech issues that demonstrate the same impropriety.

Few people get excited over the failure to fill in log readings, the falsification of logs and records, uncorrected technical violations, failure to respond to FCC correspondence, mismanagement of student funds allocated to the station, and a variety of other "incidentals."

The revocation of WXPN's license is neither a victory or vindication for the few people who tried to prevent it. Indeed my efforts and the well intentioned efforts of all concerned did not really amount to much. Perhaps this indicates a greater malaise than the public embarrassment WXPN has caused. There does not seem to be mutual trust and two way dialogue between students and administrators and among administrators of different sectors within the University People pursue their narrow objectives and do not seem to want to profit from the perspective of others.

If there is a lesson to be learned from WXPN, it is not that noncommercial radio stations should clean up their act, or administrators should devise a complex, but symbolic framework of overseeing pannels and boards.

People should realize that it is important to listen to, and profit from, the views and perspectives of outsiders who may Just have better vision.

Robert Frieden (FAS '77J has served on the Students for Responsible Media Committee.

a reading of Judge Miller's decision shows quite clearly that the red-flag Issue of obscenity was dragged in through the back door and. in my judgement, colored >he entire text.

The Daily Pennsylvanian ap- parently accepted unquestioningly the Judge's assertions regarding a long list of violations and-or impropr eties that supposedly occurred at WXPN from 1972 until 1975.

Did anyone make an effort to check these assertions? Did anyone recall the objections of the University's counsel in the hearings held last fall that many of the allegations presented by the Broadcast Bureau were based on heresay, and not documented by any acceptable standards of evidence?

Did anyone Investigate whether evidence had ever been presented to substantiate the allegations? Apparently not, because the answer Is that In many instances, no evidence was presented. Read the decision. Carefully.

Upon more thorough investigation, many allegations turn out to be un- substantiated, and some are downright silly. A case in point is the "interference" with television reception. Was there in the Judge's decision even one suggestion that the interference was WXPN's fault?

No, because it was not then and it is not now. At this moment, the FCC has a docket before it to try to solve the vexing problem of interference bet- ween FM stations in the low end of the band and television stations.

The docket does not concern itself with WXPN or Philadelphia in par- ticular, but instead with hundreds of cities across the country in which the problem exists.

The problem is one of spectrum allocation. It is the FCC's problem, not WXPN's. WXPN is being blamed for being on frequency. Some days, it seems, it's tough to do anything right.

Perhaps the editorial board could have more profitably addressed itself to some of the more substantive questions raised by Judge Miller's

f-Rothsteir

comments. The board agreed (and Orin underscored) that the University did not exercise sufficient control over the operation of WXPN.

But what is "sufficient control?" I don't know. The Judge didn't say. The FCC has never spoken on the subject with respect to non-commercial stations. We don't know what control is, we just know what it isn't.

Does the board know? If so, it would be a real service to the rest of us if it would speak to the question. If not, upon what does it base its agreement?

I'm not trying to score debating points. I am trying to help run a high- quality, highly respected 24-hour broadcast service staffed mainly by student volunteers.

I need to know what "control" means, and so do people at five or six hundred other college based stations around the country. Perhaps when all

the smoke has cleared, the FCC wili have spoken to the question.

Until then, I'm looking for good, solid, independent reasons behind concurrence with, or dissent from, Judge Miller's decision. I haven't found them coming from the editorial board.

There Is no point in re-writing the Judge's decision here-that will be taken care of in the appeal process. My point is simply that responsible opinion should be based upon in- dependent investigation and in- dependent judgment, not echoing, however "regretfully," the judgment of someone else.

Less than that is a journalistic disservice not only to The Daily Pennsylvanian's readers, but in the last analysis, to its writers as well. Jim Camped is Station Manager of WXPN-FM

Bureaucratic Baloney By P.H. Wiest

Like a lousy play, the entire WXPN renewal defense was a complete bomb. I know. I was there.

Given every opportunity to prove that it had mended its ways, and had instituted meritorius programming, the best the University could come up with was bureaucratic baloney.

It was not the students who lost the WXPN license. It was the University, the boys in College Hall.

In his decision not to recommend license renewal, Judge Walter Miller demonstrated an enviable capacity to cut through University manure.

His decision represents the correct observation that between 1972 and 1975 no one ran WXPN. There was no control and no sense of responsibility.

In his decision, Miller cites the Vegetable Report. His attacks are not on the quality of the weekly series but the fact that the University took no action in response to community complaints about the program.

In addition, Miller had no option but to rule that since 1975, programming on the station was not meretorius.

It's simple to make that kind of a ruling when the University and its attorneys fail to submit any examples of good programming.

The strength of Miller's decision is exemplified by the weakness of the grounds upon which the University is appealing.

University attorney Stephen Bur- bank contends that Miller should have not denied the University a license because:

1) The University since 1975 has taken corrective measures to insure

Program Excellence

By Diane Kaplan After having lived through three

years of University hearings, Activities Council meetings. Finance Committee sessions and continuous abuse from The Daily Pennsylvanian, I am beginning to realize that a column such as the one I am writing can do little to counter the excessive bad feelings that have been generated towards WXPN.

Not only has the DP repeatedly misquoted, maligned and villified the students who put their biood and guts into the running of this 24 hour a day, 365 day a year operation (which is unparalled in programming ex- cellence in the Delaware Valley), but its Editorial Board has gone to the extent of endorsing the ill-conceived, errant and sensationalist decision of an FCC admisnistrative law judge to revoke the station's license.

Although the DP WXPN reporter wrote an article on station programming and on a 24 hour International Women's Day special

we sponsored, the paper did not find this suitable "news" for its pages.

Even after the station provided the paper with information on a Philadelphia Jazz Awards Benefit Concert, the DP did not print it. Yet the pages of 34th Street magazine criticized WXPN's commitment to jazz just a few weeks ago.

The DP seems to prefer to publicize events of commercial off-campus establishments which hardly need the free publicity.

In it presentation of the range of ideas and interests that the campus community encompasses, the newspaper is a dismal failure. The DP Editorial Board's rhetoric on WXPN is out-dated and unrepresentative of those it claims to serve. My apologies to those at the paper who continue to show their support to the station in spite of the writings of their editorial board. Diane Kaplan (FAS'78) is Program Director for WXPN-FM

direct lines of Trustee control over the station.

2) The FCC should hold University radio licenses up to different stan- dards than regular non-commercial broadcasters.

As for point number one, during the public hearings, Miller was markedly interested in the corrective measures taken by the University. He even directly questioned University wit- nesses about the changes in station management since 1975.

However, when told of the numerous committees, officers and administrators in the chain of com- mand over WXPN, Miller looked distinctly confused.

"Run this by me again," he said politely after numerous explanations of the labirynth-like University committee structure.

Furthermore, in asking for special treatment, the University wants to be held up to different standards than other non-commercial stations.

What kind of crap is this? If you play the game, you have to play by the rules. You can't change the rules when you find yourself on the short end of the microphone.

First Amendment rights have nothing to do with the WXPN matter. The only relation the Vegetable Reports and the Stay-Hard com- mericals have to the case is that they were the catalysts.

Had there been no "licensious slime" and "nauseating verbiage" there would be no trial and no license renewal challenge.

Photo by Peter

The incidents merely provided evidence for lack of University control and prompted a FCC investigation revealing far more specific FCC violations.

The FCC requires licensed stations to keep program logbooks and to maintain adequate equipment and licensed personnel. But WXPN didn't.

Miller's decision is quite explicit. For years the Trustees ran WXPN by the power of assumption. For years the Trustees assumed that someone somewhere was keeping an eye on the station.

But, then again, the Trustees assumed Miller would roll over, play dead, and give back the license.

P.H. Wiest (FAS 78) has covered the WXPN controversy for The Daily Pennsylvanian.

The Daily Pennsylvanian welcomes comment from the University community in the form of columns and letters to the editor. Material should be typed approximately 66 characters to a line, triple-spaced and signed, although names will be withheld upon request. Address all contributions to: 4015 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104. We reserve the right to edit according to space limitations.

:

Friday, April 15, 1977 The Daily Pennsylvania!! Page 5

Creating a Guinea Pic for the FCC By Jeffrey N. barker

When a University radio license is taken away, student and area listeners are not expected to cheer. And they haven't.

FCC Adminstrative Law Judge Walter Miller's denial of the WXPN broadcasting license has received criticism of several varieties. A major critique is that Miller's decision represented a need by the FCC to reaffirm its stand that a station licensee must not let its station run wild. In this critique, WXPN serves as the "guinea pig."

For many Ui. iersity students, trying to understand the WXPN controversy has been like attempting to make sense of a movie which they have entered an hour late. And a Fellini film at that.

University juniors and seniors have caught much—but not all—of the show. Sophomores might remember December 4, 1975, when the FCC fined the University $2000 and ordered the Trustees to fight for the license in public hearings, if they wished to retain it at all.

Freshmen could understandably believe the case essentially began on April 4 when Miller harshly denied the WXPN broadcasting license.

The period designated for examination by Miller goes back to November, 1972—before even current seniors had arrived in West Philadelphia.

In evaluating the "guinea pig" critique, an important date is December 4, 1975. On this date, the FCC commissioners voted 4-3 to send the University to a public battle—hearings in Philadelphia and Washington—to try to prove that the Trustees had attempted to establish some sort of liason with WXPN-their rebellious child.

"Guinea pig" advocators argue that the WXPN set-up, in which trustees are predominately uninvolved with their station, is commonplace.

This belief was shared by FCC Commissioner Benjamin Hooks, who wrote a dissenting opinion against forcing WXPN to go to hearings. In his dissent, Hooks wrote that the situation in which a licensee has no stake in stati operations "was characteristic of too many schools."

Hooks maintained that "correction of the problem on the national level should be our goal." He maintained that a denial of the WXPN license "would Irrevocably penalize thousands of present and future Perm students."

It should be noted that Hooks did not say that the FCC was looking for a test case. He simply expressed the belief that it could turn out that way.

Others have—in explicit terms—said that the FCC was looking for a specific case in which a general announcement could be made to other stations.

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The announcement would indirectly tell licensees to exercise some control over their radio stations.

The FCC was looking for a case in which to say this, said one observer, "and WXPN gave it to them on a silver platter." "The FCC has, in the past, demonstrated concern about stations licensed to trustees—but in fact run by students. This particular case is one in which they demonstrate this concern," said WXPN Station Manager Jim Campell.

Judge Miller realistically admits that there are universities with the same licensee-radio station relationship as WXPN.

He denies, however, that he intended his decision to affect anyone except the University. "I based my case on the facts that were before me," said the judge.

Whether the WXPN case was meant to be a test case or not, it has certainly been an unfamiliar and unnerving experience for the University. It has been like that of a child in the dark. Shortly after Miller's decision was released, certain University officials did not know who had the authority to make the decision to appeal.

One Trustee thought the decision would come from the Board of Trustees, the station licensees. He had forgotten that the power of appeal had been delegated to a Trustee subcommittee last January.

Whether WXPN is a "guinea pig" or simply paying for its own mistakes, the case has proved as embarrassing as it has been damaging for the University.

Jeffery N. Barter (FAS 79) covers WXPN for The Daily Pennsylvanian.

Letter to the Editor

History of WXPN In the light of the recent revocation

of WXPN's license, it might be in- teresting to go back a few years in order to reveal the changes WXPN went through that set the stage for the FCC violations.

Prior to the fall of 1973, WXPN operated under a set of rules (known as the constitution) that bred responsibility on the part of staff members.

There was a centralized station board, comprised of the heads of the various departments (AM, FM, Sports, Production, Tech) and responsible for coordinating the policies of the different departments and running the station as a whole.

In order for a person to become a department head, he had to be nominated and approved by the board. Once appointed, each department head was responsible to the rest of the board for keeping his department in order.

The result of this self-policing effort was very strict broadcast quality standards. The mere failure to log the test of the emergency broadcast system resulted in the Suspension of one's air clearance for a week.

During the summer of 1973, FM stayed on the air alone (no other department was functional). The folks who ran FM during this time decided that they liked not having a station board to answer to.

Consequently, when regular broadcasting resumed in the fall, this contingent circulated a petition for a new constitution. The new con- stitution, which was eventually ratified, abolished the centralized station board and each department was able to make its own policies.

The department heads had only their own staffs to listen to. It followed that the department heads chose staffs which supported their own philosophies.

Therefore when the people who ran FM decided that obscenity was cool for broadcast, there was no over- seeing body who could stop this policy. Similarly, when FCC violations oc- curred, no one was there to punish the offender.

Had there been a station board, the board would have removed the FM head from power and nominated someone more responsible. Since there was no board, these violations went unchecked.

Before the board was abolished and WXPN was well-run, the station produced several professionals-many of whose names you would recognize. I don't believe it is only coincidence that no professionals have emerged in the last three years.

ANDREW PINCUS WH'77

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BySTEVENA.MAROUEZ ......... .->..-.. . . . . « By STEVEN A. MARQUEZ A group of Dental School resear

chers have released a study claiming that obesity in children is not necessarily attributed to excessive consumption of sweets, and that obesity and tooth decay are not linked.

The findings of the research group, which Includes Associate Professor Aaron Katcher, Associate Professor Michael Miller, and Professor Irwin Ship, were presented April 1 at the 55th General Session of the Inter- national Association for Dental Research in Copenhagen, Denmark.

Katcher, a behavioral scientist and a dental professor, said Tuesday that the study was part of the school's Rural Dental Health Program. In the project, the researchers observed 1900 children, 200 of them obese, in a Juniata County, Pennsylvania school district.

Juniata County, a rural district, was chosen because it has a high degree of tooth decay since the area's water supply is not flouridated. For un- determined reasons, the Juniata region has a high level of obesity.

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If those assumptions were true, Katcher said, "Fat people have to have more cavities than thin people."

However, Katcher's project disproves these assumptions. In examining the teeth of the children, the researchers found that the obese children actually had fewer cavities than children of normal weight.

To measure the effects of sugar on obesity, 300 of the children were allowed to choose either salty or sweet snacks from a table set up by the researchers. Katcher said that no correlation between obesity and choice of snack was discovered. This fact indicates that it is "hard to at- tribute obesity to sugar con- sumption," he said.

Surveillance (Continued from page I)

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Monell Taste Study \nued from page 1) J (Continued from page 1)

Monell to "bring the two approaches together."

At present, investigations similar to Monell's are underway at only two other research centers, one in California and another in Japan. The Monell study, which involves ten researchers and support staff, is the most active investigation of taste receptors.

In the research, which has been conducted at various levels of in- tensity, since the Center's formation in 1968, investigators examine receptor sites in different animals. Catfish are used extensively, Cagan said, because "they have taste receptors all over their body sur- faces."

In one recently published ex- periment, the catfish receptors were

Penn Players (Continued from page 1)

hanging from the ceiling), was not enough for Tom Stoppard. In the second production, The Real Inspector Hound, he challenges our idea of what is real and what is play- acting.

The play opens on a theater in which two critics in a balcony seat observe a typical who-done-it production. As the play progresses, the line between reality and drama becomes blurred and eventually non-exist nt.

Economy (Continued from Page I)

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treated with alanine, an amino acid with sweet properties. Currently, Cagan said, the researchers are at- tempting to further isolate the taste buds of the fish. "We are having a reasonable amount of success," he claimed.

Cagan said it is hard to determine when research will be completed. "There are varying degrees of complexities" involved in the dif- ferent studies being done, he added.

One of the difficulties in marketing a new sugar substitute is that many sweeteners are underdeveloped, and will have to be tested extensively before !N«y can be considered safe for commercial use.

Cagan himself found a sweet protein, monellin, while examining a West African berry. "In principle, it's feasible" that monel'in could be developed into a sweetener, Cagan said. However, research costs, which may be as high as SI million, will prevent such a substance from being marketed immediately.

The studies are funded entirely by two federal government organizations, the Veterans Administration Hospital and the National Institute of Health.

Residence (Continued from page 1)

house faculty members. Health and Society Administrative Fellow Al Glowasky said Wednesday.

Glowasky refused to disclose their names because the appointments have not yet been made offical.

He added that three students will be named as graduate fellows of the project, probably by the end of the month.

The Daily Pennsylvanian

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SHX APRIL it

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Page 8 The Daily Pennsylvania!! Friday, April 15, 1977

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UA Lobbying Meeting Postponed Until Fall

By JONATHAN GREEK A conference between Pennsylvania

legislators and University students planned for late April has been postponed until next semester, Student Legislative Action Committee i SI.AC i coordinator Steve Biddle announced Thursday.

Biddle said that the "conference was going to be a . . . training workshop for Perm students to train them on how to lobby." The con- ference was postponed because a commitment from Provost Eliot Stellar to provide $2000 for the project was not made final until last Thurs- day.

The UA also released $600 from the 1976-1977 SLAC budget for the salary

Noon PENN DANCE GROUP

An outdoor performance with the Improbable Furniture at the I.C.A.-on the Fine Arts Plaza- FREE

PENN BAND In performance on the Annenberg Plaza-FREE.

4:30 P.M. PENN BALALAIKA

ORCHESTRA Authentic folk music from Russia, the Ukraine, Lithuania, and Yugoslavia-in the Annenberg Center Lobby-FREE.

8:00 P.M. PENN SINGERS

In PAtlence by Gilbert and Sullivan; Zellerbach Theater, Annenberg Center-Tickets-$4 public, $2.50 Perm students, at the Annenberg Center Box Office.

PENN PLAYERS In The Real Inspector Hound and After Magrltte, two one act plays by Tom Stoppard; in the Annen- berg Auditorium, Annenberg School-Tickets $3 to public, $2 to Penn students, at the Annenberg Center Boi Office.

>ENN DANCE GROUP In performance; Houston Auditorium-FREE.

Hall

Saturday's Events: April 16

8:00 P.M. PENN SINGERS In Patience.

PENN PLAYERS In The Real Inspector Hound and After Magrltte.

>ENN DANCE GROUP In performance; Houston Hall Auditorium-FREE.

Sunday's Events: April 17

2:30 P.M. POKO PUPPETEERS In a musical excursion through jazz, from ragtime to avant garde; in the Zellerbach Theatre, Annenberg Center-Tlckets-$1.50 at the Box Office.

7.30 P.M. PENN COMPOSERS

GUILD Performing new works by University graduate composers; works for chamber orchestra; Annenberg Center Lobby-FREE.

//C)"* """etliCINtll

0Kf^ —*"" ""— ortsfest

of a secretary who will help SLAC define its position in the University by preparing papers over the summer. Biddle said the secretary will help put "student lobbying on firmer footing."

In other UA business, Nominations and Elections Committee Chairman Marc Falkowitz retired from the position which he held for two years. The NEC elected Diane Kasrel as his successor.

The UA also voted to fund the first issue of a newsletter to be published by UA members. The newsletter will be distributed to students via in- tramural mail.

WXPN (Continued from page I)

vague and that he was pleased the University was appealing Miller's decision so licensee control standards "can be clarified."

In December, 1975, FCC Com- missioner Benjamin Hooks said that WXPN should not be singled our for a nationwide problem of licensee control. In a dissent against the FCC decision submitting WXPN to public license-renewal hearings, Hooks stated that a lack of licensee control "was characteristic of too many schools."

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Friday, April 15, 1977

Softballers Trip 'Nova

ByRICHGEBEL It was the best of times. It was the

worst of times. It was ths best of times. That's not quite the way Chuck Dickens said it, but that's the way it was at River Field yesterday during the women's softball team's (2-3) exciting 12-11 victory over Villanova at River Field.

For the first three innings, the Quakers played excellent ball, both offensively and defensively.

They got three quick runs in the first and in the second inning they ex- ploded. Phyllis Paul, Debbie Derby, and Sharon Caine all ripped triples and powerful Sandra McCatty smacked a deep sacrifice fly to centerfield. When the basepath dust finally settled, Quakers had five more runs to show for themselves, the end of three, the Quakers looked invincible leading 8-2.

But then came trouble. The bats died and the defense wilted. In the next three frames Villanova got nine runs to Penn's two and all of a sudden, things looked bleak for the former - invincibles as they went into the bottom of the seventh, and last inning, trailing 11-10.

Then, with two out, bases loaded, and the score tied, Villanova pitcher, Eleanor Dolan, took the apple and walked Sharon Caine to send in the winning Quaker run to approval of the Perm Dlavers and fans.

!

The Daily Pennsylvanian Page 9

Ursinus Drops Laxwomen

"*Ur^- Glen Sakamoto

DYNAMIC DUO-Quaker batwomen Sandra McCatty (45, third base) and Debbie Derby (34, catcher) were main cogs in the softballers classic thriller yesterday. McCatty had a big sacrifice fly In the five-run second, and Derby walked to load the bases and set up the whining run.

Racquetmen Play Host ■ (Continued from page 10)

underdogs. This time we're the favorites." One Quaker who couldn't feel more pressure is captain Meyer. "Ricky's trying

to carry the team and get himself ready to play professional tennis at the same time," says freshman Eben Hardie. "That's a lot to ask of anybody-even an exceptional person like him."

Added Molloy," Ricky is pressing to get that quick win to give everybody a little confidence. The team is looking too much to him for leadership. He may be trying too hard."

So while Meyer and the netmen think about staying loose on the court, Penn followers will be hoping for a convincing sweep to end the home season-and send Cornell and Army looking for a patsy.

By LINDA FRANK Ursinus College sent a strong squad

down from Collegeville to hand the Penn women's lacrosse team their first loss of the season yesterday afternoon at Franklin Field.

Trailing 11-3 at the half, the Red and Blue came back to play serious defense and hold ths visitors to three goals in ths second period. Unfor- tunately the women from Collegeville held Penn scoreless and won, 14-3. Last night's game was only Ursinus' third outing this season. They beat Glassboro and Temple earlier.

Freshman Cinni Klein led the Quaker offense with two goals, junior Alison Irving contributed the third to account for all the Red and Blue scoring. The quick passing and fancy footwork of Ursinus challenged goalie Natalie Nesbitt with a steady stream of shots on goal. Hustling for the entire fifty minutes, the Quakers were at times a few steps behind the visiting club, but in the second half, seemed better able to anticipate their moves.

The one injury of the contest came during the second half to Ursinus third home Margie Rose, who left the game with three goals as the game's second highest scorer (Candi Russell had five).

Looking beyond last night's loss, Quaker coach Anne Sage looks for- ward to Yale where the laxwomen will

nay on Saturday. The Elis haven't .ost a game in the past three years. They pose a powerful threat. The game against Ursinus proved to Sage that although "intimidated," the Penn team could challenge their offensive

onslaught and that the contest was a "good game to preceed the Yale game."

The Quaker club leaves for New Haven, hopeful that memories of the loss only as experience gained.

Sailors Seek Kennedy Cup Elimination Victory

■*■ By JAY I I UK IK IN *S~ "When we travel to Navy this weekend for the Kennedy Cup eliminations, we'll

be fielding an experienced team," said Penn sailor Garry Blank. "Coach LeFort has done a fine job putting together a big boat crew."

Despite Coach LeFort's efforts the prospects facing the Penn sailing team this weekend are less than promising. Consider the situation.

-The Kennedy Cup Elimination competition will qualify two of nine teams for the trophy competition to be held next week. Navy, ranked number one nationally, is a shoe-in for one spot leaving eight teams scrambling for the remaining spot. ^^

-The crew Penn is fielding has never sailed together. In fact, the team is * leaving a day early so it can practice.

-Penn does not own any 44-foot luders (the boats being used for this j' competition) and is therefore competing in a boat new to the crew as a unit.

-The Kings Point boatmen, who appear to be Penn's toughest challenge for the *! other qualifying spot, have practiced on their own luders giving them time to B perfect the necessary coordination among their eight crew members.

Nonetheless, team members are optimistic about their chances. "We have a fc

really good crew and should qualify," commented co-captain Cory Staller. 8 "However Kings Point and Queens College from Canada will both present stiff -: challenges."

For the defending Ivy League champs, this weekend provides a chance for an I untested crew to prove themselves.

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. .

Page 10 The Dally Pennsylvania!! Friday, April 15, 1977

Ivy, EIBL Rivals Challenge Stickmen, Nine Flat Batmen Face Red, Army

By MARTIN COOPER Bob Seddon is mad as hell and he's

not going to take it anymore. In a arare display of anger, the usually calm and patient coach of the Penn baseball squad blasted his players for their generally uninspired play this season.

Seddon has a very long fuse, but he obviously reached the end of it after watching his Quakers (7-8-1, 3-2-1 EIBL) drop a 6-1 decision to Lehigh on Tuesday, in which the Red and Blue diamondmen displayed less emotion than the faces on Mount Rushmore.

"We're not gonna be flat anymore," vowed Seddon. "If they are, they're in for a lot of trouble from us (the

Hot Laxmen to Face Shaky Green

BOBSEDDON Sick of It

coaches). We're just gonna get people in there who aren't flat. Being flat is immaturity in the team. Where it is is hard to say, but we have to do something about it.

"It's up to the individual athlete to get himself up," continued Seddon, his voice still touched with anger and a hint of disgust. "We as coaches have t» work very hard to not let it (going ■flat) happen. I'm just sick of hearing about it. I'm gonna put an end to it."

It was suggested th»' the Quakers

lacked enthusiasm against Lehigh since it was a non-league (translated: not crucial game, to which Seddon replied, "That shouldn't bean excuse, but it is a factor. Especially when we play so many games. It's just a fact that the team isn't gonna get up as much for a game against Lehigh as for one against Columbia or Prin- ceton."

Penn has already lost its game to Princeton and the Quakers won't play Columbia until April 27, but two league opponents, Army (today at 3:00) and Cornell (doubleheader tomorrow at 1:00), visit Hollenback Field this weekend.

The Cadets march into Philadelphia with a young roster and very little game experience. They've played just three games, beating Wagner 5-2 and falling to Seton Hall 12-0 and RPI5-0.

"We haven't played well at all," said Eric Tiptm, coaching his 20th year at West Point. "I'm dissatisfied. We didn't go South. We've made three or four errors each game (sound familiar Quakers?). We have just 19 hits and an average of just over one run in three games. We haven't done well in anything."

Erv Antoni, who hurled a two-hitter against Yale last Saturday, will take the mound against righthander Wally Anderson of Army. This will be the first EIBL game for the Cadets and Tipton predicts, "We'll be just about as good as we were last year (9-5, tied with Penn for 3rd in EIBL). We don't have many games under our belt yet. Everybody we play went South. Our boys went home over spring vacation. We haven't been able to get back on the track yet."

Cornell's tracks took them on a 13- game, 9-day whirlwind tour of Texas, where the Big Red faced some of the top teams in the country. When the dust finally settle, Cornell (7-8) emerged with a respectable 5-8 record. "I'm very happy," said 16- year coach Ted Thoren. "I though we had a good spring trip. Defensively we're stronger and we're stronger j.i

Streaking Trackmen to Face 3rd-Ranked Army

By LUTHER JACKSON * When Army's track team marches into Franklin Field tomorrow for a 12:00

meet (running events at 1:00) with the M Quakers, they'll be sporting a 3-fl record, a top-notch coaching staff, and a number-three ranking in Penn coach Jim Tuppeny's annual Eastern track dual meet ratings. Since Maryland and Penn State are ranked numbers one and two, that makes the Quakers underdogs for the first time in years.

"Just look at their coaching staff," Tuppeny said, "they've got Mike Shine (Olympic silver medal winner in the 400 meter hurdles), Tommy Haynes (a 55- foot triple jumper from Middle Tennessee), Charlie Green (former world class sprinter and current admissions officer) and Ron Delamere (an Australian jumper | The whole staff is young and enthusiastic. Mr. (John) Randolph (head coach) is very enthusiastic and a fierce competitor."

Fortunately for Penn, coaches aren't allowed to compete but Army still has a talented group of athletes. Curt Alitz is a national caliber distance man. Formally a swimmer during the winter season, Alitz turned to track this year with favorable results. At the indoor Heps in February he placed ihiru in the mile (4:11.20) and came back thirty-five minutes later to win the two-mile from Penn's SteveSholtes in 8:48.79. A week later he won the IC4A two mile in 8:37.6 and then placed fourth in the NCAA three mile with an excellent 13:24.2 clocking.

While coach Randolph wouldn't reveal what Alitz is running tomorrow, he did note that "he's in good shape. So far his best time this year is 14:30 for 5000 meters." If pressed he could go much faster Saturday.

The pivotal events of the meet will probably be the hurdle races. "Ivory Carson (Army) should win both hurdles," stated Tuppeny. If any of Mike Shine's talents have worn off on Carson he could be right. Penn will be resting its hopes on freshman Greg White in ths 110-meter high hurdles and Mark Mancini in the 400-meter intermediates.

If the meet comes down to the 1600- meter relay, Army can send Clay Slack, Carson, Mike Patterson, and Mike Schaefer-a team that finished fourth (3:17.0) at ths indoor lC4As-to the starting line. But Penn freshman Ernie Robertson isn't conceding anything. "We're running a good team," he noted. "We can beat Army, unless they're running 3:09 and then we'll give it to them." And then check to see if Shine had snuck onto the track.

Injuries to Tom Murray, John Stockel, Ken Roberts, and Joe Faubel will be a big block in the Quaker's attempt to win their 45th consecutive meet. But at least for the seniors there will be extra incentive. "Being a senior and going undefeated so far I'd like to leave here undefeated," said Bruce Fiori.

Whether Bruce gets his wish, may beup to the field events. Army brings two top flight hammer men-Dave Wiener (191-foot throw this year), and Scott Irishman (175 ft)-to challenge quickly improving I.arry Cobb. Cadet Bob Hoisington high jumped 6-10 indoors as did Penn's Mark Fonda.

LOOSE SPIKES: Mike Willis, hurdler and long jumper finished second to James Brown by a quarter inch in the indoor Heps. Randolph on Brown: "He's a one-man team, that guy." With the forecast calling for temperatures in the 60s Penn's sprinter should be able to run without m c;i tpants for the first time all year. I-astyear'sseore was Penn 103, Army 60.

CURT ALITZ «>•«.. Slwrr Good Shape

Crew Women Row vs. BU

By ROBERT KNAPP Coming off a second place finish last

Saturday, Penn JV and Varsity Womens Crew Teams (2-1 record) will race in Boston this Saturday morning against Boston University (0-2 record).

Coach Duane Hickling expects the team to do a good job although it has lost its first two races. BU will probably be rowing its hardest to maintain its high rating. "On paper, it looks like we will win all of our races. We'll try to put them away by the first 1,000 meters."

Hickling also asserted that the 7:15 AM start will lessen the affect of the strong New England headwinds. Penn should be ready as the recent fair weather enabled the team to get in a full week of practice.

the plate. We have a good solid ball team. How good depends on how we do this weekend."

John Ieonard and Tim Timlin will hurl for the Quakers against Gary Gronowski, who beat Penn last year, and either Tony Crump or co-captaln Bob Dutkowsky. Co-captain and second baseman Joe Guarascio (.441, first team All-Ivy) broke his wrist before leaving for Texas and is out for the season.

"We think Penn has the best material in the league," offered Thoren. "And they're well-coached. Games down in Philly are always tough. This will be a key doubleheader as far as the league goes. I just hope we don't have to use our whole pit- ching staff against Columbia on Friday.

"By the way, what's your record?" asked Thoren.

7-8-1. ' 'How about in the league ?'' 3-2-1. "That's not Penn's usual league

start, is it?" Bob Seddon will verify that it's not

easy to get off to a rolling start when the wheels are "flat."

By DAVID SCHRAGER After their 9-8 sudden-death victory

over a tough Princeton squad Wed- nesday night, the Penn lacrosse team (6-0) has to be confident.

They faced the number 12 team in the country, were threatened severely, but came through with the chips down to maintain their own number four ranking.

The schedule-maker, though, has not given the Quakers much time to savor the emotional victory. They will be right back in action Saturday af- ternoon (4PM) at Franklin Field. Opposing them will be an un- predictable Dartmouth team (2-3).

The Big Green's last contest was also on Wednesday, but they rr~t a different fate than the Red and Blue. The New Hampshire natives fell to the University of Massachusetts, 14-9, in a game which just about summed up the Dartmouth season, according to manager Drew Baker.

"We usually play well for three quarters, then fall asleep for one quarter and get blown away," sighed Baker, "it seems like that's what happened in each of our losses."

Penn coach Jim Adams doesn't consider the Big Green to be

pushovers despite their relatively lackluster record.

"Last year, they beat us, 108, and they've really built up their program in the last two years. They're big and strong physically and have good depth. We have to respect them," said the man they call, "Ace."

Dartmouth coach Dudley Hen- drick's leading scorer and top player is crease attackman Jeff Hickey (12 goals, 3 assists). Steve O'Neill, who made honorable mention All win as a freshman last year, is the leading assist man with seven and Bruce Bierman supplies strength across the middle of the field.

These three are the Big Green's main nucleus and should provide the most trouble if any is provided for Penn on Saturday.

"Against Penn, we'll try to go with a more settled type offense," Dart- mouth's Baker explained. "We know we can't afford to rush things."

But whatever Penn's Adams says about the difficulties his team may encounter against Dartmouth, a loss Is not likely. The Red and Blue are at their season's peak, playing excellent team lacrosse.

William Ecksttln HOW TO CATCH A TIGER—Quaker mid-fielder Peter Eisenbrandt (26) looks to put the moves on a Princetou defender in action from the laxmen's 9-8 sudden-death overtime win Wednesday night. Eisenbrandt and company hope to have an easier time with Dartmouth on Saturday.

Golfers Drive for Ivy Title By GREG STONE

Jim O'Leary and Jeff Kiley have been there before. Bill Neusidl, Scott Collins, and Steve Sieg have not. "There" is what Ancient Eight golf is all about: the Ivy League Cham- pionship Tourney, to be played this weekend in Providence, R.I.

For the young freshmen, who have performed so admirably this season, this weekend's Tournament provides their first major collegiate encounter with other Ancient Eight members. On the line is the all-important Ivy golf bragging rights, currently en- joyed by defending champs, Prin- ceton.

This year's event is being held at the home course of Brown University, the Agawam Hunt Club in East Providence, R.I. It is a tough course that should prove difficult for the Ivy golfers. At par 71, the course plays to a little over 6300 yards.

The layout starts out in a difficult fashion, challenging the golfers on the first two holes with hilly fairways and numerous hazards. One of the distinguishing features of the course is a meandering river which rears it ugly head throughout. But the water hazard might be insignificant if other forces of nature take over. The back nine is elevated, and on occasion, can become extremely windy.

Though the home course advantage is important in golf, it should not be a major factor in this tournament. The Brown squad has been the victim of bad weather this season and has not completely rounded into form yet. In fact, the advantage probably belongs to Harvard. The men from Canbridge came down to play the Bruins on Wednesday and defeated them 389- 449. The size of the victory indicates that Harvard is the team to beat. Two- time defending individual champ Alexander Vic shot a 75 on the Agawam course in the Crimson victory.

Defending team champion, Prin- ceton, returns with the same team that won the crown last year. The Tigers have been playing consistently will this season and should prove to be formidable. Penn's early season match with the Tigers was rained out, s o this will be the linksters first look at the only squad to outdistance them in last year's tourney.

Though the Quakers cannot be rated as the favorites in the tournament, (due to the presence of three fresh- men who lack tournament ex- perience i they do have a realistic title

shot. Of course, the key lies in the play of the young freshmen. Gutch per- formances by these young golfers is essential for victory.

The Quakers last won the Ivy Tournament in 1974. The past two season, they have finished runner-up

to Princeton. Though this might not be the year when the golf crown returns to Philadelphia, the experience gained by the freshmen this weekend will prove invaluable. And the fresh- men have proven to be very good students this season.

Photos Dy Ira ' IF JEFFERY CANT DO IT, JIMMY CAN-Quaker golf co-captains, Jeff Kiley i left i and Jim O'Leary head a group of five linksters who will represent Penn in this year's Ivy Golf Champlonships-this year's edition to be held in Providence, K.I. Joining Kiley and O'Leary are Quakers Bill Neusidl, Scott Collins, and Steve Sieg.

Netmen Aim to Spoil Visitors9 EITA Debuts

By STEVE HALPERN Don't tell Penn tennis coach Al Molloy he should have opened his league

schedule against a patsy. He had no say in the matter. And besides, the Quakers' (2-7,1-3 EITA) long-forgotten, lidlifter loss to Princeton might just come up in the conversation.

This weekend, Molloy's netmen will be out to prove that they, like Old Nassau, are no easy first league opponent for EITA teams when they take on Army (3-0) and Cornell (0-0) at Lott Courts | Friday, 3:00 P.M., Saturday, 2:00 P.M.).

The Cadets, minus departed coach and World Tennis contributor Ron Holmberg, sport and experienced, competitive triumivrate. Veterans Dan Hammond arid Brian Smith follow senior captain and number one player Zack Smith, a winner over Red and Blue ace Ricky Meyer two years ago.

An EITA doormat for several years running, Cornell remains a mystery team because it has consistently failed to improve. "They have probably the best tennis coach in the Ivy League in Ed Moylan," Molloy said. Moylan. considered "one of the all time tennis greats" by the Quaker mentor, instructs the Big Red during practice but never attends matches. Captain Glenn Graves leads a predominately freshman lineup into tomorrow's encounter.

"It will be a good weekend for confidence-building," observed junior Paul Moss in echoing his teammate's guarded optimism. Offered Ray Stein. "I think there's more pressure on us because against other teams like Yale, we were

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Pete Hollis, Mike Page, and Tim Dachille are scoring brilliantly and goalie Cornell Baila has shown he can play goal capably. All in all, everyone is contributing.

The unranked Big Green are just not up to the present level of the Quakers, who have yet another "Big"team to look forward to next weekend, but the color will be Red, as in Cornell, as in numero uno in the country. However stranger things have happened to Penn athletic teams in the past and Dartmouth could conceivably throw a monkey wrench into the Red and Blue hopes for a showdown between undefeateds next weekened.

It's a danger the laxmen must guard against.

Lightweights Face Touch Red Squad

By DANNY ISA ACM AN Day alter day, eight months a year,

the Penn Oarsmen battle cold tem- peratures and harsh winds, as they faithfully punish their bodies in the hone of maintaining the tradition of excellence that Penn crew has earn- ed.

As the curtain rises on another rowing season it remains to be seen whether or not all the work will be rewarded with glory, but as far as varsity lightweight coach Fred Leonard can see, "signs are good" for yet another outstanding season.

The latest challenge to the light- weight's quest for glory comes Saturday against the tough Cornell team that upset the Quakers in an exhibition race last fall. The Ithacans are vastly improved over last season's squad (which lost all 5 races in last year's regatta) and Coach Leonard considers them a real challenge to his inexperienced team that sports only one senior on the varsity-eight.

"This will be the proving ground for many of my newer oarsmen who lack racing experience. We'll have to stay calm to win."

The varsity-eight, which will again be led by stroke Bruce Knopka, is seeking to repeat as Eastern Sprint champs.

Leonard seems pleased with the power of his men. "We definitely have the boat-movers. The first boat is beginning to get their timing down and both the second and third boats are looking good. I couldn't believe how strong the second boat looked against Rutgers."

Freshman coach Kurt Kaufman is still looking for the right combination to avenge last week's embarassment against Rutgers. "We have the bodies, we just have to put the right parts in the right place." As freshman Steve "Stain" Milano puts it, "We certainly have the determination -1 mean what kind of joker is willing to row three to five hours a day, and give up spring break if he really doesn't care. We'll come around."

Somehow, the Quaker crews always do.

DWIGHT STONES, who once took over the Franklin Field public address system to thank the fans for their support, will head an exceptional field of high jumpers at the Penn Relays April 30. Stones appeared at Franklin Field twice last summer, setting a world record each time.

The PENN RUGBY TEAM will journey to Providence this weekend to play in the IVY LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP. All eight schools will be represented and the Quakers expect a number three seeding behind Brown and Dartmouth. Brown has won the tourney the past three years and remains the favorite.

Penn'sWATERPOLO TEAM whipped the Wildcats yesterday 11-7 at Villanova. The splashers will face Johns Hopkins at Gimbel Gym both tonight (6 PM) and again on Saturday (11:15 AM).

Quaker baseballer DAVE MILLER was named EIBL PLAYER OF THE WEEK for his heavy hitting against Brown and Yale last weekend. Miller gar- nered eight hits in ten plate ap- pearances, including a double and a triple.

Miller's 22 runs-batted-in place him second in the nation in that NCAA statistical categorv.

And for all of you who can't wait for the BASKETBALL SEASON, PRINCETON'S newly announced '77-78 schedule has the PENN HOOPSTERS playing at Jadwin Gym Jan. 3rd and the Tigers visiting our Palestra Jan. 28th. 1978