U.Grad Student Stabbed to Death In Apartment

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VOL.XCVINO.J5
PHILADELPHIA-MONDAY, MARCH 24, 1980
U.Grad Student
Stabbed to Death
In Apartment
\30,000 March On D.C.
In Anti-Draft Rally
By ANDREW KKTZMAN
WASHINGTON-Approximately
30,000 people from all parts of the
country massed together here
Saturday In the largest anti-draft,
anti-registration rally to take place in
this country since the end of the
Vietnam war.
Slushing through sticky mud and
enduring cold winds, the mostly
white, college-aged crowd marched
through the streets of the nation's
capital and gathered in front of the
Capitol for an afternoon of speeches,
protest songs and chants.
Figures remembered mostly for
their activism in the anti-war
movement of the 1980s came back to
familiar surroundings. As the crowd
chanted such slogans as "Hell no, we
wen't go, we won't fight for Texaco,"
Socialist Michael Harrington, former
representative Bella Abzug, and
Reverend William Sloane Coffin
urged the crowd on with fiery
speeches.
"There have been more people
STOKELY CARMICHAEL
'It Muit Be Defeated'
demonstrating against the draft in the
past three months than in the first
four years of the Vietnam war,"
former Chicago Seven defendant
David Dellinger exclaimed to the
crowd's delight. "We now understand
better than peopU did all through the
1960s that war is never a mistake or an
accident"
The day passed without serious
incidents of violence, in striking
contrast to the days of the 1960s, when
protest marches would number in the
hundreds of thousands and would
result in scores of arrests. For the
most part the protesters were
peaceful, if only because the blustery
day discouraged much strenuous
activity of any type.
But if the rally differed from those
of the 1960s because of its relatively
small turnout and peaceful activity
most the trappings were strikingly
similar-if not modeled after-those
things which characterized rallies of
the 1960s. The cast of "Hair" gave a
rousing rendition of "Let the Sun
Shine In." Dozens of venders hawked
buttons and stickers reading "Peace
now" and "Send Amy first"
But most of all, the list of speakers
served to define the tone of the rally.
"After we stop registration, are we
going to go home not caring, or are we
going to continue protesting these cold
war policies?" Harrington bellowed
rhetorically. "After we defeat
registration, we have to pass SALT II,
then SALT III, until we rid the world
of nuclear weapons. That's the only
way."
At Harrington's mention of nuclear
weapons, the crowd exploded into an
excited cheer, which happened
repeatedly throughout the day. Many
in the crowd said they had been very
active in the anti-nuclear movement,
which had served as the sole rallying
point for young activists of the 1970s
before the new anti-draft movement
'80s Fund Drive Near End;
$21 Million More Needed
By KOB CITRONBKK<;
With slightly more than three
months remaining in its five year
drive, the Program for the Eighties
fundraising campaign has garnered
3234 million, almost 92 percent of the
campaign goal set in 1975.
According to the most recent
figures, dated March 21, the drive has
secured more than 38 million in the
last month, reducing the amount of
contributions needed by June 30 to $21
million. A pace of almost 37 million
per month will be necessary for the
drive to achieve the 3255 million
contribution goal.
"We're optimistic about reaching
the goal," commented Program for
the Eighties coordinator Kenneth
Moore. "We will need a maximum
commitment from administrators,
Trustees and everyone associated
with the program in order to do so,
though," he added.
Contributions from individuals
comprise the single largest portion of
the campaign goal, representing more
than 52 percent. As of March 14, the
"individual" contributions to date
accounted for only 85 percent of its
projected donations. Funds from
corporations have been extremely
successful, having already exceeded
their target by 11 percent. Contributions from foundations and
associations have also been fairly
close to the amounts targeted five
years ago.
A certain amount of all contributions collected during the
campaign are used to bolster the
University's financial aid accounts.
Recently, the University has received
more than 83.9 million to further
student aid, bringing the total for the
campaign to almost 322 million.
A major portion of the financial aid
contributions in the recent months
was bequeathed by W. Richison Schofield, a 1918 graduate of the school of
Electrical Engineering. Schofield
donated 31 million to the University on
behalf of the financial aid fund. In
addition, a 31.2 million trust was
established by the estate of Katherine
Kolb Paanakker Guttman, to be used
to offset the financial burden of
students in FAS.
In response to the University's
recent 13.85 percent hike in tuition,
Moore stated that there will never be
enough funds to adequately absorb the
burden of financial pressures on
and their families.
By JON GOLD
Photcs by Bruce Rosenblum
30,000 students protested the draft in Washington, D.C.
"With the changing of time, people
began.
Undoubtably, the most effective are struggling harder and we're going
crowd-pleaser of the day was Stokely to defeat this system," he said, to the
Carmichael, the black revolutionary cheering of the crowd.
activist of the 1960s. Taking a minute
"Can a human being stand in the
at the beginning of his speech to face of injustice and do nothing?"
quietly thank all who had come, Carmichael asked the crowd, and the
Carmichael launched into a high- 30,000people screamed back, "No!"
pitched, almost frenetic speech,
. Carmichael was asked later
calling at the same time for the defeat whether his call for the destruction of
of the registration bill and of the the capitalist system might have
capitalist system.
exceeded the demands of the crowd.
"You have the responsibility to or- "It doesn't matter," he said. "My job
gan-ize," Carmichael screamed time is to tell the truth."
after time. "It's not Carter or Ken"We're moving ahead," Carnedy, it's the vicious capitalist system michael said, adding that he will be a
and it must be defeated," he cried.
I Continued on page t)
INSIDE
•Women's groups at the
University held a conference
Saturday on "Sexuality at PennMyth and Reality," covering the
topic in workshops. Page 5.
•Superblock residents have been
the victims of recent crime waves.
PageS.
'•SAMP students of Occupational
Therapy hosted a conference to
exchange ideas in the field. Page 7.
A University student was found
murdered last Friday afternoon in her
off-campus apartment.
Julie Revsin, a 25-year-old
Annenberg School graduate student
was found dead by her roommate in
their apartment at 4530 Osage
Avenue. Revsin was pronounced dead
at4:2Sp.m. Friday.
Revsin was discovered in the
bedroom of the apartment she shared
with Thomas Wheelock, 32, who is
also an Annenberg student. She had
been slashed on both wrists, and her
throat had been slit, according to the
Philadelphia Medical Examiner's
office. She was also stabbed in the
abdomen. An autopsy confirmed that
the cause of her death was excessive
bleeding.
When Revsin was discovered, she
was wearing only a shirt and socks,
which led to speculation of a sexually
motivated assault. However, according to Halbert Fillinger of the
Philadelphia Medical Examiner's
office, the autoosv revealed no
VOTER REGISTRATION
Registration for the April 22
Pennsylvania primary can be made
by mail or in person at the Voter
Registration Office on the ground
floor of City Hail Annex today,
which is the deadline for registration
Changes in political party affiliation may be made by mail or in
person at City Hall Annex, ground
floor.
evidence of rape.
According to Lieutenant Arthur
Woody of the Philadelphia Police
Homicide division, the body was found
at 3:23 p.m. Friday. The time of the
attack has not yet been determined.
Woody said that no neighbors heard
any screams or signs of a struggle
coming from the apartment, nor was
anyone witnessed leaving the house.
Diane Mumma, who lived on the floor
below Revsin, reported that she was
present when the body was discovered
by Wheelock.
"I heard a loud noise upstairs,"
Mumma said. "Then I heard running.
Then I heard banging on the door. I
heard |Wheelock) running. He said.
•They killed her.' He was really shook
up."
Woody said that, since there was no
sign of forced entry into the apartment, it is possible that Revsin knew
her attacker and willingly let him into
the apartment. At this time, however,
police have no suspects in custody.
Detective Captain James Murray
(Continued on page a'>
JmO Edslone
The victim was found in her bedroom at 4530 Osage Avenue.
New Quad Security Working Well;
Students Express Mixed Feelings
FORUM
The University is sponsoring a
forum on neighborhood safety, to be
held today at 4 p.m. in Houston Hall.
Topics will include a presentation of
the facts of Friday's off-campus
murder and pointers on safety.
Attendance is urged for all.
r
I
Schuval
The permanent closing of the 37th Street gate Is part of new security measures
undertaken In the Quad
ByUZMcMILLEN
Quad residents encountered few
problems with the 24-hour security
installed March 5, according to
Residential Living Director Mary
Beerman, although student reaction
to the system remains mixed.
"From the reports I get, the system
seems to be working well," Beerman
said last week, explaining that there
had been some operational problems
but that they had been fixed during
spring break. "The residents so far
have been very helpful and
cooperative with the student marsnails," she said.
Yet one student worker at the 37th
street office said that "people who
lived here last year say living in the
Quad now is like being in prison."
Many students complained about the
problem of lugging suitcases and
carts over the turnstiles coming back
from spring break, said Jeff Cohen,
and ID checker.
Jim Marinello, an RA in McKean,
said that "students are unhappy with
the 24-hour security but it is not being
opposed as strongly as I thought it
would be."
(Continued on page 5)
Monday Feature
Senate Decision
May Increase
Student Loans
Black Students Voice Unhappiness
Over 'Discreet9 University Racism
By INGE BANCROFT
The reauthorization of the Higher
Educational Act, a Congressional
evaluation that all major financial aid
programs are subject to every four
years, will be voted on by Congress in
the next month.
The House has already approved
the Education Amendments of 1980
(H.R. bill S192), which would
authorize a 50 percent increase in
federal aid to higher education. This
bill would also keep student loan interest rates at the present figures of 3
percent for the National Direct
Student Loan (NDSL) and 7 percent
for the Guaranteed Student Loan
(GSL).
The controversy that affects
students, however, is the fact that
some members of the Senate are
backing iieas from the KennedyBellmon bill, which provides for a
tremendous increase in the interest
(Continued on page 2)
Copyngni 1»»0 The Daily P»nnsyi»«m«n
A student protests the plight of the University's minority students.
By SCOTT HELLER
"The University feels the black community is expendable."
A University senior uttered these angry words only after
asking to remain unidentified, fearing repercussions, and
comparing - perhaps dramatically - the University to the
Soviet Union.
"It's like what a Russian feels," he said. "There are
certain things a black student can't say at this University
for fear that there will be personal repercussions or
repercussions towards the group as a whole or towards
other individuals."
"I would have rather experienced overt racism at a
Southern institution than have experienced the nebulous
and discreet racism here at the University of Pennsylvania," he concluded sadly yet resignedly.
In listening to the words of this and other black University
students, a pervading view seems apparent.
The University has effects on its black community that
are detrimental and discouraging at the very least, and
scarring at worst.
So say leaders in the black student community. So say
students with little affiliation with black organizations. So
say students from inner city backgrounds. So say students
who grew up in the middle class.
In short, many black students at the University are not
pleased with the role and treatment they receive. They cite
insensitivi ty on behalf of the administration - and on behalf
of students and faculty. They see their tenure at the
University as a struggle against racism, overt and subtle,
and against general ignorance and lack of understanding of
a small yet vital force in the University community as a
whole.
Though few others were as clearly distressed and
angered by the plight as the one student who chose to
remain unidentified, most agreed with the gist of his
comments. Black students see and feel "nebulous and
discreet racism" - and have personal experiences to prove
it
"Being black is in some way a handicap," says Julie
Chappell (FAS '82). She pointed out the two central means
for such discrimination: either "a sense of not being
welcome," or being treated as "special" and "inferior."
Chappell recalled vivid incidents during which her
blackness clearly set her apart. And, showing the scope of
what many have termed "institutionalized racism" racism by means of attitude, action or structure which is
not based directly on color but through some mechanism
affects minorities, sometimes unintentionally - the incidents involve administrators and students, and occur both
within and outside the rlassroom.
(Continued on page 3)
PAGE 2
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN, Monday, March 24,1M0
Campus Events
TODAY
OR SCOTT WARD, proteasor 0' marketing
al the Whacion School, will speak on
'Television advertising and lamlly conllict
when, where, why. and show?" The
presentation will be held at 4 p.m. in RM
126of the Annenberg School.
GAY PEER COUNSELING call 243-8888 or
visit Rm 4, Christian Association, tor
supportive, confidential counseling Mon
thru Thurs 4-10 p.rn F-i. 4-7 p.m.
PROFESSOR RICHMOND LATTIMORE
discusses the translation of the New
Testament from the Greet! 4 30 p m Ben
Franklin Rm Houston Hall
OBSERVATORY OPEN
See the Orion
Nebula, Moon, Star Clusters. Double Stars
& Planets through a professional
telescope. Tonight and every Monday S
Thursday night Irom 7*30 to 9 p m. II the
sky it mostly cloudlets. DRL Rooftop.
33rd » Walnut St
PRAYER AND MEDITATION
Christian Association. 12 15p m.
at
the
SCIENCE FICTION AND FANTASY CLUB
will be meeting in the Bishop White Rm ol
Houston Hall at 9 p m special guest
speaker George Suthers, editor of Isaac
Asimov'S SF Magazine Refreshments will
be served.
SEE A MOVIE ON THE AMAZING HEART
at the next Biology Club meeting 4 p.m. in
Rm 100, Biology building. All welcome1
HILLEL SOCIAL SERVICES COMMITTEE
MEETING at 4 30 p m if you are interested
in helping Jewish elderly, children, needy,
please come
WOMEN'S SOCCER CLUB-practice
Field, 4 p m. Rain or shine.
Hill
THE
WHARTON
MARKETING
ASSOCIATION
presents
Or
Tom
Robertson, chairman ol the marketing
dept He will discuss the afreets ol T v
advening on children at 4.30 p.m E208
Dietricn Hall
GAYS AT PENN MEN'S organizational
meeting. 8-10 p m.. Christian Association,
Rm E All Gay men welcome!
THE UNDERGRADUATE ENGLISH CLUB
will meet at 8 p m In the 8th Moor lounge
ol High Rise South New members
welcome!
OON'T 'MISS UTV'S hit game show
ROOMMATES "at8 p m
OFFICIAL
PENN LAW VISIT Sponsored by Career
Placement
Tour, visit, t talk on law
school. Wed 8 Thurs 3/26 8 3/27. Sign
up at placement
i
CAREER DECISION TO MAKE' Wharton
Sophomores and Juniors Explore values,
skills and interests in a Career Awareness
Workshop Call Audrey Kahane, Placement
Service. 243-7533 Wed.
WHARTON FRESHMEN. SOPHOMORES
AND JUNIORS' Undecided about your
luture? Talk to Audrey Kahane in the
Placement Service, Wed. 9 am. -12 p.m .
Houston Hall.
VAN PELT COLLEGE HOUSE seeks
University Graduate Students 4 Faculty lor
Resident Stall positions SuOmlt resume
and letter ol interest to Prol. Mark Adams
3909 Spruce St
ELEMENTARY
SCHOOL
STUDENT
TEACHERS: For Fall. 1980 led
4221
contact Ten Pica 243-7415. GSE. Rm. C-29
lor appointment to arrange student
teaching placement
All students applying to the Raid Hall
programs lor 1980-81 must sign up for an
interview in the IPO 133 Bennett Hall by
March 28 at the latest! Interviews will be
held on March 31 st
Junior Year In Munich applications are due
by March 31 Pick up your application in
the German Oept . 745 Williams Hall
AED,
THE
PREMEDICAL
HONOR
SOCIETY, Invites sophomores. Juniors.
Seniors IQPA 3 4.1 to apply tor membership. Register at HPAB (Mrs. Lovel 2nd
floor Houston Hall Deadline 3/28
PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE: Careers in
insurance, open to everyone. Placement
Office. Houston Hall Thursday March 27.
7-9 p.m
LAW CAREERS Lawyers Irom different
fields talk on law as a career 3S33 Locust
Walk. Thursday. March 27. 7-9 p.m. Call
243-4381 to sign up.
Career Decisions to Make?
Wharton Sophomores S Juniors,
Explore Values, Skills S Interests in a Career
Awareness Workshop. Call Audrey Kahane
Placement Service by Tuesday, March 25,
at 243-7533.
FUTURE
UTV INTRODUCES THE DATING GAME
ConteMants call UTV at 243-4796 or Mike at
388-8199
THE WHARTON MARKETING ASSOC
Presents CORNING GLASS WORKS and
David Van Allen, Vice President with "The
Uncandle Story" A marketing millionaire at
4 30 p.m Thurs. March 27th, In high rise
north rooftop lounge
MEETING:
Boycott Cotrell and Leonard
Caps and Gowns
Representatives of striking workers at Cotrell
and Leonard and a representative of the
International Ladies Garment Workers Union will
discuss the company and alternatives for Penn.
EUROPE
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Mall this ad lor Special
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a SUtUIL PASS < VOUTM MM
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Houston Hall
CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF AGING
PENN LAW SCHOOL
VISIT
presents
TUESDAY, MARCH 25
Want lt> lake a imir of Penn
DR. GEORGE GERBNER
Law . sil in Oil a class, and
DEAN, ANNENBERG SCHOOL OF COMMUNICATIONS. U OF P
on
'Aging as a Social Role'
International
Shah Depart* for Egypt
PANAMA CITY, PANAMA- The deposed Shah of Iran
and his wife left Panama yesterday, and are reportedly
bound for Cairo, Egypt. Spokesmen for the U.S.
Embassy here said, "We understand the Shah has
departed Panama for Cairo, accepting the long standing
invitation of (Egyptian) President Anwar Sadat." The
Shah and Empress Farah are travelling aboard a DC-*
jet chartered from an American firm.
Iranian Foreign minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh warned
that the stopping of extradition proceedings would
delay the release of the hostages and "will be to the
detriment of peace in the region."
A spokesman for President Sadat denied that the Shah
would go to Egypt Panamanian television, however,
reported that the jet had already taken off and would
refuel somewhere in Portuguese territory en route to
Egypt.
Jeus To Settle in Hebron
JERUSALEM - The Israeli Cabinet voted yesterday to
allow Jews to settle in an Arab-occupied city, a decision
that is likely to complicate already stalled Palestinian
autonomy negotiations.
One proposal was to establish two schools in which
Jewish students would live full-time In the Arab city of
Hebron on the West Bank of the Jordan River. The last
Jewish residents left that city after Arab rioting in 1929.
Although Israel has more than 50 settlements on the
occupied West Bank, it has never allowed Jews to occupy Arab cities. However, Prime Minister Menachem
Begin has come under right-wing pressure to carry out
the Hebron move.
^^^
National
Kennedy, Reagan Campaign
Senator Edward Kennedy worked to overcome his
underdog image in New York's presidential primary.
CAR
. Tonight
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
Compiled from Associated Press Dispatches
RENT or BUY
An Israeli
Comedy Film
Christian Association
3601 Locust Walk
Monday, March 24, 7:00 p.m.
NEWS IN BRIEF
hear a talk on law school?
Sign up ai the Placemeni
Office in Houston Hall for u
\isil on March 2b or 27.
I ('<intinucd from page 1)
rates on student loans; up to 7 percent
for the NDSL and up to the treasury
rate minus one percent for the GSL
which, today, would be approximately
12.5 percent.
Although the Education Amendments of 1980 make some changes In
educational grants and the work study
program, the issue of student loans la
seen as the most important and
controversial since it affects most
students. The loan programs are the
NDSL and the GSL.
The NDSL is a federally funded
program that provides loans to low-tomiddle income undergraduate
students at a very low interest rate.
This program enables students to
attend schools that they could not
afford otherwise, and the interest
rates on the loans isn't applied until
nine months after graduation.
The GSL, like the NDSL, provides
loans for students at relatively low
interest rates that are not applied
until nine months after graduation.
Unlike the NDSL, however, the GSL is
available to any students, including
graduates, regardless of income or
ability to pay for the school. The GSL
is not government funded, but the
government subsidizes banks and
commercial institutions who give
student loans.
To complicate matters further,
President Carter has issued an
ultimatum to Congress; if the
provisions of his proposal are not
r mmmmmmmmmmmm$mmammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
4-5:30 pm
REFRESHMENTS
Due to heavy demand the Penn
WISTAR INST. AUDITORIUM 36TH ST. AT SPRUCE
U OF PCAMPUS
Annenberg Center
Student Agencies' International
School of Bartending will hold a
second spring session beginning
Kennedy toured a black neighborhood and met with
Orthodox Jews, while attacking President Carter's
handling of economic, energy, and foreign issues.
Kennedy, who has won only two primary and caucus
contests, declared that he would stay in the race even if
Democratic party leaders asked him to withdraw.
Meanwhile, a relaxed Ronald Reagan all but rejected
his Republican rivals as possible running mates. Reagan
made his first campaign visit to Kansas, which holds its
primary April L
Senate Debate* Budget
WASHINGTON - Republicans and Democrats are
squaring off in the Senate to see which side can come up
with a more appealing plan for balancing next year's
federal budget.
Tuesday has been set aside in the Senate for debating
the separate approaches to balance between spending
and income during the 12 months beginning Oct. 1.
The Republican version limits spending to a fixed
percentage of national income, which the Democrats
insist would force severe cuts in many programs.
The Senate will aslo continue talk about Carter's
proposed "windfall profits" tax in the oil industry, which
is also a major part of the war on inflation. The
Republican-led opponents feel that the bill would prove
too costly, and are drawing out debate in order to obtain
a more acceptable version.
State/ Local
Bruno Murder Inventigaled
Police continued their search for the murderers of
reputed organized crime boss Angelo Bruno yesterday,
while his family made funeral arrangements for him.
Bruno was the victim of a gangland-style shooting
Friday night
Police are still searching for a motive, according to a
homicide detective spokesman. "You can't rule
anything out. To limit it because of the man's
background or notoriety would be very presumptuous,"
the spokesman said.
■COPUS
included in the bill, he will veto it. The
President's proposal is similar to the
Kennedy-Bellmon bill. It calls for
interest rates on NDSL to increase to 7
percent and on GSL to increase to the
treasury rate plus one percent.
Two problems in the current system
have made President Carter and
some senators take the stands that
they have. The first problem is the
fact that many students who want
loans are not getting them because
others, who do not really need the
GSL, are using them to cover nontuition expenses. The other problem is
that many students have not paid
back their loans. This problem has
arisen because the current system
falsely assumes the ability of all
students to pay back their loans.
The House, which is supporting bill
5192, recognizes these problems in the
current financial aid program but is
trying to alleviate them by reform
that does not penalize needy students,
unlike the Senate group which has
dropped their long standing social
objectives in favor of cutting the
budget.
The Coalition of Independent
College and University Students
(COPUS), is a national student lobby
and research organization concerned
with the problems facing private
college students and their institutions.
Luis Solis, director of the University
chapter, explained how this controversy in financial aid reform will
affect University students and what
__•
must be done to convince senators to
vote for bill 5192 instead of the Kennedy-Bellmon bill.
"Students must show Congress that
we are interested in the shape of
education for the future and want to ■'
help them in the difficult job of forming policies," Solis said.
To do this COPUS Is pursuing a twopart plan. First, they are urging
students to write letters to Carter and
those backing his Kennedy-Bellmonbased bill asking them to reconsider
the bill. Along with this, they are' urging students to send letters to their'
congressmen, asking them to vote for
bill 5192.
The second part of the plan to get
5192 passed is direct lobbying in" Washington.
"The important thing is for us to act
as an organized group," Solis explained. '"The Congress wants to do
what the nation as a whole wants and
they want some sort of direction, so
we must let them know that we fed
very strongly about this bill that will
greatly affect us as students."
Even If Carter vetoes bill 5192
because it does not include his
proposals, Congress can override that
veto.
mommmmmausmmmmmmmmimmmmmm
Guess the number of jelly beans in the jar
Entry blanks at Houston Hall Candy Shoppe
8:30 am-6:00 pm
* Courtesy of TBR II Bicycles
next Thursday, March 27. The
FOLGER
THEATRE GROUP
a bright young company outside N.Y. attacks com-
course will run for four consecutive
plex but rewarding new plays ... this is the best
kind of theatrical news . ." Jack Kroll, NEWSWEEK
% LOVE LETTERS
ON
BLUE PAPER
a hauntingly beautiful love story
BY Arnold Wesker
Directed by Kenneth Frankel
Tresa Hughes' fine performance ... is a virtuoso
piece of acting . . . William Myers . . . gives a precise energetic and deeply felt performance."
Thursdays and will consist of only
two sections of not more than
thirty students each. Registration
will begin Monday, March 24 and
continue through Thursday, March
17. Registration fee will continue
to be *45°° and diplomas will be
conferred upon graduation.
For more information, contact
Kevin Garcia at
M.aw.1. « n -* m WASHINGTON POST
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This can be very embarrassing when they're caught in the act
Others have pocketed Pilot's Fineliner pen. The one with the slightly
less delicate stroke It's only 69«
So If you borrow someone's Razor
Point or Fineliner pen
you'd better
be prepared
to pay the
consequences
But, for much less than a
dollar, you'd be smart
to buy your own.
finelne marker pens
More than pjst something to w"te wilh
THE DAILY PENNSYLV ANIAN, Monday. March 24, 1980
«C^y FEATURE
PAGE 3
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'Institutionalized Racism' Assailed by Black Students
(Continued from page 1)
One time, during her freshman year, she walked into FAS
advising and, as she describes, was treated "as If I was
inferior," when the person she spoke to "pointed to the lady
I was supposed to see, and she made sure to describe her
clothes, the color of her hair, and everything."
"Students have tried to make me feel inferior by treating
me on a lower level than they would their friends," she
added, giving an example from a recent science lab course:
"There was a simple problem (to do), and the student
walked up to me and said, 'Julie, let me show you how to
convert one substance from moles to micromoles,' or
something like that - a very simple thing to do. I didn't ask
far her help. She didn't go over to any other students, and
others were having problems greater than mine.
"The only reason she came to help me, I feel, is because I
was black," Chappell reasoned. "If she was genuinely
interested in helping a student, why couldn't she help those
white students who were confused?"
Chappell's third example occurred while she was working
ul a high rise commissary.
A student came In and "asked me to get five things,"
Chappell explained, "and I was nervous as it was. I started
getting his things, and I asked him to repeat the last two
things. He said to his friend, 'Well, they're all alike,' and
then said to me 'Why don't you go back to Africa?' "
Although she managed to shake off such incidents,
Chappell and other black students say they do not forget.
The black student walks Into the University with what
appear to be self-doubts prompted by society and
exacerbated by the University.
"When you're a freshman you feel you have to prove
yourself," said Michael Nixon (FAS '80), Black Student
League representative to the United Minority Council, who
indicated that over the years and through alignment with
other students in black organizations he has overcome that
need.
Others are less lucky and assert that the specter of blackstudent-as-special-admit-and-intellectuaUy-lnferlor haunts
them both In and out of the classroom.
"I know I'm only here because I'm black," said FAS
Junior M.J. Mitchell. "If Penn had a choice - if they didn't
have a quota system -1 wouldn't be here," she continued.
Sophomore John White indicated that a similar view has
hurt his performance at the University, "sapping some
competitive spirit out of me (and leading me) to be satisfied
to coast Into B's." Heather Berthoud (FAS '61) said she
spent "the first year here proving to myself that I belong
here" due primarily to a letter she received from the
University before matriculating which began "Dear
minority student,..."
Senior Frank Mannings outlined a far more detailed and
damning view.
"The black community at Penn is composed of some of
the finest students coming from good school backgrounds
(with) excellent academic potentials," he maintained.
"However we have a very high attrition rate. I think that
it's the University's responsibility to answer why."
Calling himself "disillusioned" with the realization that
the University won't answer such a question, Mannings
offered his own reasons.
"There's an Informal network at the University that
allows white students to feel more comfortable In the
classroom," he said. "It's hard for us to establish informal,
out of class relationships with professors, which Is a key
part of the educational experience. The black student Is not
allowed into the informal network that catapults white
students Into student organizations, honor societies and key
recommendations which will allow the white student to
reach full academic potential."
The shortcomings, as he sees it, lie chiefly with administrators and faculty. "The administration only
responds to the black community when It has to - when It
(administration) does something so racist and so blatantly
insensitive that they're forced to renege," he concluded.
"I look and I see institutional racism. I've seen the
stigmatization of the black student and questioning of his
ability and Intellectual dedication. The only way to help this
is to bring In more black professors. White professors,
because of socioeconomlc class and world perceptions,
cannot provide the necessary push to get us through this
University," he added.
Mannings offered Incidents from his own experience as
motivating factors behind his beliefs. In particular, he cited
a period when he was almost convinced by "the University"
to take a leave of absence after tallying a number of mcompletes due to Illness - despite the fact that he is a double
major who "made a sincere effort to complete three of the
incompletes" during the summer.
Mannings' harsh criticisms were echoed by many other
students who relayed similar Incidents.
Faithe Moore (FAS '81) was unflinching and forthright
when she described her professor during sophomore year:
"He didn't like black women. That was his problem." She
mentioned that the DuBois program - a residential living
program for heightening awareness of black culture that Is
located on the first two floors of Low Rise North - "doesn't
get fixed up like the other dorms do," explaining that
"because we live here we are. In a sense, punished. Even If
you live on the third or fourth floors, things'U get fixed
quicker than in here."
Nixon offered examples of what he called "overt"
racism, although he measured his words carefully when
saying that he would "assume that It was because I was
black" that a rock was thrown at him outside Low Rise
North.
An unidentified student who said that "a black student
always feels Intimidated and inhibited" describes an incident from his own experience as proof. "I've been stopped
by campus security near the (38th st.) bridge, they
believing I was a West Philly resident, not a University
student," he explained. "They were asking 'Hey son, what
are you doing here? Where are you going?' I had'to show
them my ID before the questioning stopped."
Modern art exemplifying the Mack culture adorns a lounge wall of W.E.B. DuBois College House.
Some may debate whether these Incidents and others like
them are related to race; the greater context of the
University, however, sets the proper stage and emphasizes
their importance.
The black community is a separate community. After 100
years of black presence at the University, that community
Is dissatisfied with the fact that the separateness still exists
and that the University is apparently lagging In Its efforts to
create One University in all respects.
Russell Brooks (FAS '81), chairman of the BSL, said he
recognizes the separations, but views them as Inevitable as reflections of the larger society.
"White America Is insensitive to black America," he
said. "This Is not particularly characteristic to Penn. The
University - because it is not a black University. . .will
never set up the means that we would like, so we will have
to do that."
"Dissatisfaction is always a constant with us," he added,
pointing out that efforts at improving the situation must
"come through us."
"If no one else is going to look after your behind, you've
got to look after your own behind," he said.
Brooks added that he sees minimal Integration at the
University, calling the situation "separate but OK."
"You can have integration, but it doesn't have to be total
to be fine," he said, adding that "liberals take Integration to
an extreme. They think mat Integration means we should
be together all the time, which Is unrealistic."
As he sees It, socio-cultural differences and the climate in
the nation today make the possibilities for Integration and
intermingling on a social level little more than a fairy tale.
Brooks Is pragmatic - and admittedly suspicious.
"I really don't think white Penn really does anything to
aid the problem," he said. Wondering if efforts thus far are
"real reform or just some spasm. They may be sympathetic rhetorically, but they do very little to help in terms
of acting and telling other whites." He credited recent efforts, particularly since the appointment of Vice Provost
Janls Somerville, but attributes them to "not-too-distant
statements by blacks on racism In the community."
Spontaneous - truly concerned and helpful - action
rarely comes, he noted, although whites at this point are
cognizant of what Is clearly offensive to the blacks at this
University.
"If it's at worst questioning your roommate when he
makes a racist remark, or taking down a Confederate
flag," he pointed out, relations may improve.
With a mixture of disgust and disappointment he added,
"Whites haven't - so far."
"You notice the problem. If you're Intelligent, you don't
need to be taken by the hand," he said as if addressing those
whites at the University who sit back and let racism occur
or partake In it. "If you can think for yourself, you can act
for yourself. If it's necessary for me to explain the specifics,
then I'm probably wasting my breath."
"Showing white people the way is not the answer.
Changes in society for us will come through us," he concluded. And, under las and others' leadership, the black
community unabashedly looks after Its own - using black
organizations, self-help groups, fraternities and sororities
and especially the DuBois program as means.
The DuBois program houses 90 students, less than a
quarter of the black students at the University, but is
universally acknowledged as a hub of activity for the
community. As a residence, it is designed for those students
who are particularly Interested in and committed to black
culture. It is not for blacks only, although In practice blacks
make up a very dominating majority. At present, two nonblacks live in the program.
The DuBois gallery is a center for meetings, events and
parties as well as a common area for Low Rise North,
although It Is usually Inhabited mostly by DuBois residents.
In addition, speaker programs and seminars are coordinated and often held In the house, as are art exhibits - all
in the effort to provide individual growth along with community spirit and attitudes of self-help.
"I feel like this Is a home for me," said Nixon, who lived
elsewhere on campus for his first two years. "There's a
sense of community here."
Moore agreed. "I find it comforting," she said, "because
I like - I prefer - to be around black people. It's more like
my atmosphere at home."
''Showing white people
the way is not the answer.
Changes in society for us
will come through us."
— Russell Brooks
The DuBois program has grown synonymous with "black
house," and, as Moore pointed out, is called "the ghetto, the
projects, the slums." Black students in general. Indicated
that forces both within and outside of the program cause
such opinion.
"Penn tries in a lot of ways to break us down and make us
part of the larger homogeneous culture," stated Brooks,
who sees the DuBois program as a way for blacks to "join
together. . .like any other group at the University" does. In
fact, DuBois Is not the sole ethnlcly-devoted residential
program at the University. The East Asia program in High
Rise South is a second.
Black students who do not live In DuBois often end up
associating with it in one way or another anyway. Chappell,
a High Rise East dweller, attends BSL meetings in the
Gallery, and although she felt she "wasn't ready to contribute to any residential living program" previously, she Is
considering DuBois as a housing option for next year.
"It's not because I feel uncomfortable in other places,"
she said. "I'd never dreamed that I could get into it and feel
really as at home as I do in Low Rise North."
But, she warned, "(one) can't live there because all
blacks live there. You should be living there out of Interest,
and it's Important that you put something into it."
Motives like those don't always come Into play in regard
to black Involvement. Often, blacks asserted, conditions at
the University force the black community to close ranks sometimes to the point of being constrictingly close.
"As a black student you have a choice to assimilate into
the white culture or be separatist and stay with the black
community," said Nixon, citing the size of the University
and small number of blacks as making it "important" for
blacks to socialize and deal predominantly with blacks.
"It's very easy If you I've in the Quad or High Rises to get
swept away In the white community," he added.
Ray Wallace (CEAS '80) sees problems inherent in the
program nonetheless. "They're very much for unifying the
black community and I'm for that also, but I don't think It's
very practical to confine anyone to certain guidelines, rules
and regulations," he said. Others speculate that the
program may isolate Itself from the rest of the University
and may fragment the black community as it attempts to
unify.
Black organizations, leaders say, are a second Important
means towards unification. What they attempt to do Is face
the fact that blacks at the University are a unique group
with unique interests and unique needs that cannot be met
in the mainstream
As Brooks explained it, distinctions lie in basic philosophy
in regard to what black and white students seek to "get out"
of the University.
"Black students have a sense of mission to a degree," he
explained, adding that "differences in opportunity among
blacks In general are so stark that many who receive advantages feel we must contribute back to the community."
White students - and their organizations - are not and
cannot be expected to fulfill such a need, he concluded.
For socializing, black fraternities and sororities play an
integral part The University has affiliations with two
fraternities and three sororities, although the nature of the
affiliation Is a controversy In itself.
Wallace, president of Alpha Phi Alpha, a city-based frat
with 17 University members, emphasized that "commitment to our community" is a central goal of the
organization.
"Penn can so easily kill one's self-confidence and selfesteem," he said. "The fraternity offers support - the kind
of support Penn doesn't offer to a black student." he added,
singling out academic support, a sense of camaraderie, and
an affinity with Philadelphia's black community as three
key factors.
Mitchell, an Alpha Kappa Alpha sister, sees her involvement as "giving something back to my community
that I couldn't before" and cited dance marathons for sickle
cell anemia, talent shows and panel discussions as some of
the sorority's key activities.
Moore, another AKA sister, added "They (non-black
sororities) don't do service for black people, and those are
the people who need the most help."
Black frats and sororities do not receive official
University recognition because they are city chapters, a
status Moore is unhappy with; she cited this as another
form of discrimination on the University's pert
The fraternities and sororities - and Groove Phi Groove,
a social fellowship that is University-based - sponsor many
of the parties and social gatherings that black students
attend. In addition, member Phil Cuffey noted, Groove Is "a
vehicle to achieve a lot of positive things," including a Big
Brother program that affiliates members with black youths
from greater Philadelphia.
Almost down the line, there is a duplicate black
organization for every University pre-professional and
honor group; there is Onyx, the black senior honor society,
black pre-health, black pre-law, black engineers, and a
black yearbook and newsletter.
"These organizations focus on what I want to focus on,"
said Nixon, a member of black pre-law and assistant editor
of the DuBois newsletter. In particular he pointed to
speakers the organizations present for black students.
Black students need positive black role models," he
said, to dispel myths "that blacks can't do this kind of
thing." ' If we were in the pre-law society," he offered as an
example, "we would be seeing white lawyers."
Onyx President Carolyn Williams stressed the need for
such an organization by explaining that the honors and
credentials necessary for admission into other honor
societies don't coincide with those blacks most often will
have garnered, namely community service endeavors.
And, she adds, "it's almost as if there's an unwritten quota
In certain organizations."
Black leaders stressed the fact that blacks mustn't "lese
their perspective" and should participate In some blackoriented organization to stay part of the community - a
designation that doesn't come automatically with color of
skin. Yet with such guidelines, some students are left on the
other side of the fence. With the benefits that come as black
students close ranks and demand more of each other and
the University comes suffering and disagreement.
"Just because I don't live In Low Rise North and just
because I'm only In one black organization doesn't make
me less black than anyone else," said Mitchell. "I don't
believe I should use my blackness as a crutch," she added,
also pointing out that she doesn't believe "the black community at Penn lets blackness or whiteness get in the way of
relations."
Others disagree. White, who has curtailed involvement in
black organizations in favor of varsity swimming, knows
that others are disappointed with him for it. Still, he
asserted, "Penn doesn't strip away a black identity. It's not
superficial. You don't wear it on your shirtsleeve."
Berthoud, admitting that she "is not part of it (the black
community)," sees blackness becoming too much of a
badge at the University.
"For me, blackness is not a way of life, it's not a mentality and It's not an Ideology. It's a skin color, and I've been
taught that skin color is as superficial as hair color," she
said.
"I was never told It made a difference," she explained.
"Now I'm told It's supposed to make a difference, and I get
Into conflicts over that." Conflicts can be as minor as over
tastes in music ("When I tell my black friends I listen to
WMMR, they look at me funny"), or over matters as
serious as relations with whites.
"They have an us-agalnst-them mentality," she says of
fellow blacks. "(They) feel that whites are deceptive and
don't really mean well. They want retribution for a history
of oppression. On the other side I think are the whites who
feel that blacks are basically hopeless - they don't amount
to much.
For the most part, she said, hostility comes from fellow
blacks who view her as a "traitor."
"I'm always told that I don't understand, that I'm not
living in the real world," she said, adding "I will not be
Intimidated. There are things I want and things that I like
and If I like them I like them and I can't pretend."
Williams, who calls herself an "activist," said she feels
equivalent pressures, although In a quite different way.
"I'm a person first and I have real interests of my own and I
don't like to be the only one to bring up the minority view,"
she said, explaining that it becomes her obligation In any
organization or committee she participates In to make sure
that "the minority view won't be largely ignored."
Although she doesn't begrudge such a role, she said she
Hulh ROMDMfg
"(Blacks) have an usagainst-them mentality...
they want retribution for
a history of oppression."
— Heather Berthoud
believes It to be a manifestation of a belief that "the
minority culture isa fringe culture."
"We have a responsibility to make people aware," she
said, seeing most problems stemming from "a lack if
understanding."
"We can't sit back and develop bitterness lor) be oversensitive to racism," she added.
Among most blacks spoken to, it was a given fact that
problems In communication and understanding - hence
"sensitivity" - are at the heart of much of the difficulties.
Differences In opinion sprout in analyzing how to combat
the ignorance that characterizes both blacks and whites at
the University.
Brooks and many black leaders said they strongly believe
the effort must be an internal one - the black community
must be united and strong before it can seek easing of racial
problems.
But, as Williams noted, "the black community is not
unified. There are different black students with different
interests and desires." And, by association, different black
students offer different solutions.
Chappell said she has mixed feelings. Although she is
cognizant of shortcomings at the University, she said that
"you can't put two opposites together when it comes to
socializing," and said that most of the understanding she's
gained of white students has been "negative." In addition,
she asserted, she Is skeptical and has lost trust in the
University since she's arrived, calling most efforts of the
"Aren't I good because I helped a black student today?' "
variety.
Williams seemed more optimistic, and is attempting to
employ all groups at the University to battle institutionalized racism, the kind she calls "the hardest to
fight." To this end she has organized a conference called
"Racism: An Institutionalized Specter" for tomorrow, at
which student leaders from throughout the University will
work to help "bridge the communication gap that exists
between black and white students" as the invitation reads.
(Continued oo page f)
An Eye-opening Run
Stye JBatly ^Ewnsgluanign.
By Adam Levlne
As I set out on my daily run I can not
enjoy the solitude of those who run on
country roads. My footfalls compete
with the din of buses and trolleys. I
cross on the red against oncoming
cars and trucks. I share the sidewalk
with shoppers and salespeople. I am a
city runner, and my beat is the streets
of Philadelphia.
In any city people are pervasive,
and -they become a city runner's
greatest bane or joy. Those who
dislike people do their city running on
oval tracks or in city parks, away
from the crowds.
I love people. I ply the streets in
search of them. My running route
takes me through the heart of the city,
to hundres of human encounters.
The first person I meet on my afternoon run is a man and his sandwich
truck outside the post office. Around
DICK STEVENSON. EXECUTIVE EDITOR
DANBREEN. MANAGING EDITOR
MICHELEB. BENOWITZ. BUJINESS MANNER
GARY BINDER
RANDY MALAMUD
EDITORIAL CHAIRMAN
NEWS EDITOR
MIKEOCONNELL
BOBSCHAEEFER
SPORTS EDITOR
SPORTS EDITOR
ROB r>uBOW
APHRODITE VALLERAS
FEATURE EDITOR
CITY EDITOR
W. OWENLAMPE.JR.
MICHAEL S. SPEIRS
PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
A. WILLIAM CAPORIZZO
FINANCIAL MANAGER
MICHAEL LISS
ADVERTISING MANAGER
MICHAEL R BREDA
1885 • 1980
CREDIT MANAI.I K'
PRODUCTION MANAGER
The Newspaper of the University of Pennsylvania
KH H RABINOFE
CHRISTINE WOODSIDE
IDDI) HACEN
34TH STREET EDITOR
BY
34TH STREET EDITOR
Monday, March M.UM
PAGE 4
Turning the TablesWhere
onYourTuitionDollar
Tuition Goes
Gary Binder
Students at the University of Miami
who maintain "A" averages are
eligible to receive tuition refunds of
$100 to SI. 000 So far. 117 students have
been awarded a total of nearly $70,000.
It's the school's way of rewarding and
encouraging "our best students,"
says a spokesman.
-The Wall Street Journal
Many a student was moaning after
last week's announcement that next
Off the Record
year's tuition will be $6000. But I took
the news rather calmly, and so should
you. For, you see, I know how to get it
back.
No, there's no $500 rebate check
sent directly to you from the
University, even though its financial
situation does resemble that of
Chrysler. Nor did I win a bundle by
making a bet with Jimmy the Greek
on the amount of the tuition hike (the
line on 13.85 percent was too low). As
another car maker would say, I've got
a better idea.
It came to me while my roommate
and I were studying at 2 a.m. last
Tuesday. "Look at this," I cried. "I've
been reading for hours and I've still
got reams to go. This isn't school, it's
work! I should be getting paid for
this!"
Eureka.
I felt the way Hypotenuse must have
felt when he discovered the triangle.
It's simple. I'm going to do it, and you
can, too. Just bill the University for
services rendered.
After all, there are lots of things you
do that the University should pay for.
If professors get paid for doing their
research, then students should get
paid for doing their homework. It's
only fair.
Let's see-at $10 an hour, time and a
half after 1 a.m., and double time on
Sundays, that could become quite a
pile of dough. It might even get you to
study more often. Figuring about $150
a week (sorry, Mom), and $250 for
finals, that comes to about $5000 right
there. Tuition looks lower already.
You can make some more money on
food. Ten meals a week on Dining
Service must do seme sort of
irreparable damage to your digestive
tract. You know it hasn't been the
same since you ate that Turkey
Stromboli last week. As their sign
says: please don't take extra food.
The food you don't eat today will be
the food you eat tomorrow. With a
good lawyer, you could probably get
$1000for the old tummy.
Many of you are probably on clubs
that benefit the University but are
funded from the general fee (that
comical subdivision made so that
tuition doesn't look as high as It Is).
The University couldn't possibly buy
the services It receives from these
clubs, but let them slide for a standard
$5 for an hour of your time. That
should be good for another two hundred or so.
Another good place to make money
is right in the room. Catching mice
can be adventurous and, at two bucks
a
shot,
profitable.
Pricing
cockroaches at 20 cents each (35 cents
for the really big ones), someone with
a quick eye and foot can easily earn
himself $25.
But the really big money in the
room is to be made through false fire
alarms. Under normal conditions,
having to leave the room for a fire
alarm would only net you a fiver, but
you can charge $50 if you were asleep,
$75 if you were in the shower, and $200
if you were asleep, or in the shower,
with your girlfriend. In a good year
you could make $500 just for having
your eardrums broken.
Another way to counteract inflation
without walking out the door is to do
just what Mom's been telling you all
these years: clean the room. Since the
University no longer provides
housekeeping services, you can pick
up a few bucks just by picking up
around the room. I'll admit that I
don't do this too often, but at $5 an
hour I could become motivated. Chalk
up another $100.
You can still earn some big bucks
after leaving your room. Walking
through Superblock is worth your life
on a windy day. In addition to the
mental anguish experienced, I have
lost numerous umbrellas, papers, and
hats. Once the wind god almost took
my glasses. Easily $300.
^^ A l\
A
r
x
^
Mfll
By Susan Chuxnsky
forget his own, or at least makes his
seem trivial by comparison. Although
he's not familiar with the other soaps,
he chooses "G.H." because he likes
the hospital setting and some of the
characters, and especially because
once he tried it (after hearing others
at school talk about it), he couldn't
■stop.
\
\f t /
D
\
I
A- Faculty salaries
30 cents
B - Illegal payments
5 cents
C - South African gold
10 cents
D - God only knows
10cents
E- Administration salaries 10 cents
Even when you're not up to par, you
deserve payment for going to the
interns at Student Health. Where else
but from students can an aspiring
doctor get a real live body to play
with? Charge them $150 or they can
play Dr. Kildare with someone else.
Although the Ivy agreement says
the University can't financially
recruit or reward its athletes, who
says it can't hand out a few George
Washingtons to good students? I did
pretty well in high school, and I think I
could've held out for at least a grand
to come to Perm. Spread out over four
years, that's 250 buckaroos. And you
should get paid for good averages, as
are students at the University of
Miami. Multiply the ok) GPA by $100,
and you've got another incentive to
study, and around $300.
And, since you'll have put in a good
four years of work here by the time
validity. Watching "G.H." provides a
refuge from the mental fatigue and
pressure of studying - probably more
of an escape from than an escape to.
The question of why Penn Students
watch soaps, and why "G.H.", is a
complex one. This question is overshadowed by others, equally complex,
and as yet unanswered: Will Laura be
Meanwhile, back at the hospital,
Rick and Monica exchange grave
stares, the immediate tip-off that
these two are in love, despite the
obstructions.
Many students single out "G.H."
because it coincides with their
schedules. The program starts at 3:00,
when many just want to collapse in
front of the TV and be mindlessly
amused after the day's classes.
Steve, however, builds his schedule
around "G.H.", rather than vice
versa. He once switched to an earlier
time for an appointment with a
professor, and another time cut short
a lunch date with an old friend. In
addition, he declined to take a course
in American political thought because
it was being given on Tuesdays and
Thursdays from 3:00 to 4:30. In fact,
Steve has done such a thorough job of
removing anything interfering with
his three o'clock - weekday ritual that
he hasn't missed an episode in the last
fifty-five days (and counting).
While not all "G.H." junkies are as
fanatical as Steve, the show's addictiveness
is
surprisingly
widespread among the University's
student body. Traditional specualtion
on the popularity of soap operas has
centered around the idea of escape:
escape from a mundane, tedious
world to one of the romance, adventure, beauty, and Bloomingdale's
fashions.
Although this sort of speculation
seems a bit far-fetched when applied
to the University audience, the concept of escape is not without some
l|n
i\.
c
7
\*/ f
The "G.H." Epidemic
Laura Baldwin flashes her serious,
blue eyes at the kinky-haried Luke
Spencer. The two, with the usual tone
of urgency, discuss how they are
going to disentangle themselves from
the hydra-like grip of "the mob."
Without coming to any resolutions,
they abandon this topic-but not their
urgent tone - and begin rehashing the
story of how sorry Luke is about
having raped I .aura, and how even
sorrier he is that I .aura, who he loves,
is married to Scotty.
Meanwhile, back at the hospital,
Kick and Monica exchange grave
stares, the immediate tip-off that
these two are in love, despite the
obstructions.
So it goes, weekdays from 3 tu 4 pin,
on "General Hospital." This soap
opera is no less "soapy," no more
intelligent, than the others. In fact,
bluntly stated, this soap opera is
ridiculous. Yet its popularity is undeniable, not just among overweight
housewives wearing bathrobes and
curlers; rather, this soap's popularity
transcends this traditional stereotype,
claiming diehard fans from the ranks
of the smartest of Penn students, male
and female. All one has to do is ask
around. At the mention of "General
Hospital"- or "G.H.", as devout
viewers refer to it - a surprising
number of Van Pelt sitters and Locust
Walkers will admit, perhaps reluctantly, to being part of this cult
"Steve," a sophomore majoring in
Political Science, is not ashamed to
admit that he loves "G.H.", nor is he
hesitant to discuss the program, but
he would not go so far as to be Interviewed under -his real name. Like
many soap addicts, he never thought
he'd get hooked. He thought soap
operas were stupid-until he "got
sucked into it." Although he
recognizes that "G.H." is as stupid as
he had thought to begin with- "full of
stereotypes - the goodies, the baddies,
the sweeties, the meanies" - he
watches it religiously.
Like many serial fans, Steve watches because it's relaxing and absorbing. He says that seeing the
characters' problems makes him
N,
murdered by "the mob"? (Organ
chord) will Heather get well enough to
leave the asylum? ('Organ Chord)
will Tracy (SSSS) ever get her hands
on the evidence that will prove to be
the ruin of Monica, Rick, and Alan?
(Organ Chord; And what about.. Zelda
Bernstein?
Susan Chumsky is a staff member
of The Daily Pennsyl vanian
■Letter*
Whites Are a Race
1
In his column in The Daily Pennsylvanian of March 19-Reverend
Ralph Moore, of the Christian
Association, states that "by the end of
the decade, blacks, hispanics, and
other racial groupings will comprise
more than forty percent of the U.S.
population." Isn't the figure one
hundred percent—in the past, now, in
the future, and always? Aren't
"whites" a race? Clearly, in Moore's
mind "races'' are found only among
"them" (blacks, hispanics, etc.)
while the rest of us (Including Rev.
Moore) have no race and are just
plain normal folk. I suggest Rev.
Moore examine more deeply his own
peculiar racial views before lecturing
us.
BOBKIRCHNERCGS'81
yr
^S
^^
Graphics by
Michael Spelrs
F - Administrative playthings 8 cents
G - Stall salaries
5 cents
H - Paying off the city
lOcenls
I - Settling Lawsuits
10 cents
J - Student services
2 cents
graduation rolls around, you deserve
a pension. The University should
contribute at least a thou each year
for your future benefit You can't buy
food with a diploma.
Now you have some idea of how the
University arrives at tuition. It's easy
to add numbers once you get started.
year
Hmmm.
Just slip it under my door, guys.
Gory Binder is editorial chairman
of The Daily Pennsiyvania. Off the
Record appears biweekly on this
page.
Rick Feehery
the corner a teenage boy sells bunches
of flowers to cars that wait in traffic.
Across the SchuylklU River I pass a
security guard, almost asleep at his
desk in an almost empty building. And
I alwalys go by the Greenfield School,
where the kids in the playground
remind me of the free spirit I once
had, and am trying to regain.
I run through Rittenhouse Square,
where old and young and black and
white mingle with birds and squirrels
to creat a panorama of humanity and
wildlife
amid
thirty-story
skyscrapers. A "Pigeon Lady" roosts
here, strewing bread crumbs to her
faithful flock from a paper sack.
Lonely and forgotten, she has no one
left to love her but these mindless
birds.
Below the Square I often have to
dodge the well-dressed crowds
surging out of the lastest orchestra
matinee at the Academy of Music.
They wear thousands of dollars worth
of clothing to hear thousands of
dollars worth of instruments make
music at ten dollars a ticket. Further
on I pass an old age home, outside of
which Invariably sits an old man,
watching the world as it passes him
by.
In Washington Square I see kids
playing football while old people
watch. I then run Into Society Hill, a
section of renovated row homes
inhabited by the city's elite. I wind my
way past private tennis courts on
which people in their sporting best
bang yellow balls; through private
streets "maintained by the residents"
where behind high brick walls people
water their private gardens. In the
distance I see the three Society Hill
Towers, exclusive high rise apartment buildings that are landmarks of
the good life to the poor in nearby
slums.
Past a nunnery, an old graveyard,
and then around the three Towers I
run, ignoring the signs that say' 'Keep
Off The Grass!" At the base of these
buildings I pass two men, one sitting
and one standing, both naked and
made of bronze.
Down a small hill and I am in the
revitalized Newmarket. People crowd
into old-fashioned shops and fancy
restaurants. Street magicians do their
tricks and ask for money. Couples
walk as one and tourists with cameras
yell at their kids and pause for pictures.
Leaving Newmarket I turn up South
Street and the neighborhood suddenly
changes color. Black faces increasingly mingle with white and
eventually predominate. What five
blocks below would have been ice
cream and antique shops are now
discount furniture and clothing
outlets. Upper South Street Is a ghost
of its lower self; I veer off this brokendown street onto Lombard, just a
block away.
On Lombard Street I pass a
basketball court on which blacks and
whites play side by side but rarely
together. I see black women laden
with groceries headed in one direc-
tion, and white women with fancy
boxes headed in the other. I run down
a side street where kids riding Big
Wheels and their parents in lawn
chairs all pause and stare.
Passing a garage I hear the banging
of mechanics doing brake jobs and
body work. Up the block is an old
white-bearded man in a chair on his
stoop. He greets me with a silent nod.
Through Filler Square I run, where
mothers with babies in carriages and
homeless bums on benches all admire
the fountain and flowers. In the
Schuylkill River Park I pass two
softball teams in bright-colored
uniforms cheered on by wives and
girlfriends. Outside the gas station
nest to the ballfield teenage boys
smoke and spit and make rude
comments.
Past a fancy corner tavern, again
across the Schuylkill and I am home,
back on the University of Pennsylvania campus. Here I see students
with books going into the library,
students with rackets going into the
gym. Students oblivious to the larger
world around them, students whose
only worry is their next exam or
Friday nights' date. Students,
students, students, all gathered
together under the guise of education,
"in pursuit of knowledge."
Close to my dorm I always pass
several joggers who, in their expensive jogging suits, run a few laps
around the track, or circle the campus
once or twice. I have often thought of
how much they could learn by running
off-campus, Into the city, and looking
at something besides themselves.
I know how much I have learned.
Caught In the unreal world of a
university, I need the people of the
city to remind me, to teach me, of the
real world of which I will soon become
apart
Adam Levlne is a staff member of
The Daily Pennsyl vanian.
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIA!"), Monday, March U, MM
Sexuality Seminar Finds
Students Naive About Sex
By KRISTIN DIETZ
"Students don't have enough Information on sex Issues and they want
to talk about them," said Melanle
Gansler, a coordinator of a conference
held Saturday in Houston Hall entitled
"Sexuality at Penn-Myth and
Reality."
After a coffee hour, Marcie
Coleman, an obstetrician and
gynecologist who is involved with the
relationship and sex therapy program
at the Marraige Council of
Philadelphia, gave a speech
highlighting the many sexual myths
that exist on campus. One of the most
popular, she said, is that "everyone
screws."
•
"People are concerned about the
myths, but really don't know what to
do."
' The conference, sponsored by the
Penn Women's Center and the Penn
Women's Alliance, divided into several
workshop groups where students
could air their feelings. The
workshops encompassed many
aspects of sexuality.
Lin Brodsky, a gynecological nurse
practitioner for Student Health and
leader for the contraception
workshop, said "A great deal of
research about contraception has
been quietly going on for the past 20
years-, but much of this data never
reached those who are affected. It is
the responsibility of those in the
health professions not only to pass on
this information, but to help consumers relate to it in a meaningful
way."
Other topics covered In workshops
included women's health issues led by
members of Women's Health Concerns Committee; male sexuality;
relationship
issues;
sexual
preference, led by Jeremy Nicholson
and Marge Brannon from Gay Peer
Counseling; and sexual enhancement
led by workers from the Sexuality
Collective.
Quad Security(Continued from page 1)
Alan Herchenfield, a freshman in
Baldwin, complained that his house
had chosen to continue locking the
front door. "I think the 24-hour
security is good," be said. "I don't
mind the ID check but we still use the
Z-keys. Before, the Z-keys were easier
but not very effective." He added that
he thought moat people probably did
not like 24-hour security.
According to South Campus
Director Gigi Simeone, student traffic
at peak hours through the Quad has
not been as heavy as anticipated. "I
live here and I haven't seen any major
problems," she said.
One of the problem Beerman
mentioned with the system so far was
staff scheduling, along with the cold
temperature in the Quad office since
both doors are often open at the same
time. Also, the padlock at the 37th
Street gate has been lowered to make
it accessible to the handicapped, who
have keys to the entrance.
"This system is clearly not ideal for
access to the Quad for the handicapped," she said, adding the
Residential Living is reviewing longterm plans for improving security
there. "We will use the same system
next year, but we are looking at other
major changes for the future."
Whether or not a booth such as those
at the 36th Street and Hamilton gate
entrances will be Installed at 37th
Street will depend on further
evaluation of this entrance, Beerman
said.' 'We were going to install a booth
at the 37th Street entrance if the
traffic flow couldn't be managed. For
now, we will try to go with the office
but we want to evaluate the portal
longer."
Turnstiles stopping students from
both sides are on order which will
replace the present ones that only
regulate the traffic flow, Simeone
said. Also, local telephones for
emergency and staffing uses have
been installed In the booths.
Information on infra-red beams that
will be installed around the perimeter
of the Quad preventing illegal entrance is still being reviewed,
Beerman said. "We are still looking at
different companies and prices and
the fastest delivery that would be
most useful for our situation.
A meeting will be held tomorrow at
7 p.m. in McClelland Hall for Quad
residents to voice complaints over the
24-hour security.
—Murder—
I Continued from page 1)
said that "whatever happened happened in the bedroom." The murder
weapon, a butcher knife, was found
next to Revsin's body, which was
lying face down near the bed.
Revsin came to Philadelphia four
years ago after graduating from Lake
Erie College near Cleveland. She
entered the University last September
as a Masters degree candidate.
GRAD SCHOOL
LSAT • MAT
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Only Barber Shop
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RING DAYS
WHAT 6-DAY SPRING SPECIAL
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COMPARE THE BALFOUR RING...
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(BUSINESS, MEDICAL, DENTISTRY. VETERINARY, LIBERAL
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** ALSO FOR THE SIX DAYS ONLY 6ET 20% OFF
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Penn Singers presents
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March 27, 28, 29
8:00 pm
Zellerbach Theater, Annenberg Center
Tickets on sale on Locust Walk
and in the Box Office
RAs: Remember that group rates are available!!
For information, call 243-7569
funded by SAC
or 243-6791
HAYIM
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1
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN, Monday, March 24,1980
PAGEt
Support the Man Who Supports Us
HARDY WILLIAMS
For
7 DAYS. M
Congress
in Our (the 154) district
For More Information
Call: 386-0477
♦
I
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TH
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TOP UUMLI
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Is Your Future Socialized?
!
)
Or. Rosemary Stevens discusses
Ike implications of
j
Socialized Medicine
) George ScHhers, Editor, Isaac Asimov's |
|
Science Fiction Magazine
A
Wednesday, March 26 at 8 p.m.
♦ on Monday, Mar. 24, in the Bishop >
White Room, Houston Hall Meeting |
Refreshment* wrill be served
AH are Welcome
starts at 9:00. Refreshments will be
served.
NW bf SAC/
in the Franklin Room, 2nd Hoot
Houston HaH
♦
By JON GOLD
An epidemic of break-Ins In the high
rises, especially High Rise East,
culminated in a 14600 robbery which
occurred during spring break.
None of the thefts gave any
evidence of forced entry.
According to Detective Sylvia
Butcher of the Department of Public
Safety, there have been at least ten
break-ins since the start of the
Christmas holidays and at least four
during spring break. Since there were
no signs of forced entry, suspicion has
centered on those who have access to
room keys. This includes resident
advisors, graduate assistants, and
physical plant employees.
Many of the reports of thefts which
occurred in High Rise East during
spring break have not yet been
released by the Department of Public
Safety. One robbery on the 18th floor,
however, has been confirmed. In this
incident, two complete stereos, one
camera, one television, one
typewriter, one tape deck, and a piggy
bank containing over $100 in pennies
were stolen, with the total loss valued
at over 1*600.
Most of the other thefts in High Rise
East happened on the upper floors,
although there have been scattered
incidents throughout the building.
The 20th floor has been most
3736 WALNUT ST
386-3200 _^_
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the creative quick prnting system
V olunteers Needed
Call 386-0477/471-4727
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High Rises Victimized by Thefts;
Keys Used to Cain Easy Access
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PENN STUDENTS
GET INVOLVED!
Run for a seat on your
Undergraduate Assembly or
University Council in the spring
upperclass elections.
Election petitions and an information packet are
available in the U.A./N.E.C. office, first floor,
Houston Hall March 24, 25. Last two days! 10-4 pm.
Deadline for petitions is March 25, 4 pm
Sponsored by NEC.
Funded by U.A.
Blacks Assail
RacismAnd, as he sees it, "the University is
SENIORSDON'T LEAVE
Without making plans lot
\our future! The placeman
service counsels .ill seniors
about jobs, graduate school,
resume writing, interviewing
and career choice. Sign up
lor a workshop soon!
Ilillcl needs people to help
serve Passover meals
March 31. 4-10 I'M
5-9 PM April 3
Ill PM and 5-7
cannot
accept
students to work
April I.
April 8.
PM We
Jewish
on the
holiday Call Htllel 243-7391
martins shoes '
seriously victimised, with at tout
three robberies according to Butcher.
In another incident, several personal checks were stolen from an
apartment in High Rise North. A total
of four personal checks were removed
from the room during Christmas
break. There were no signs of forced
entry in this incident either.
One check was cleared by a bank In
Long Island for $200. Another check,
drawn on another bank, was cleared
for $150. A third check, also for $130.
was rejected for Insufficient funds.
The fourth check has not yet been
recovered. The theft was discovered
only recently.
Also taken from that apartment was
a 35mm camera, valued at $150, which
belonged to a fourth roommate. This
resident had no checks stolen.
The Provident Bank, where the
checks were presented, has agreed to
refund the lost money to the victims.
One element common to most of the
burglaries has been the selectivity of
the stolen property, according to
Detective Butcher. The thief apparently knows exactly what to take
and where to find it, she said. "These
goods can be easily sold or otherwise
distributed." In one Incident, only
certain albums were stolen from a
record collection, while the rest of the
collection remained intact
(Continued from page 3 •
"It's going to be a matter of consciousness-raising," she said, explaining in the invitation that the task
"Is a great responsibility and requires
much sensitivity, an open-mind and
above all, self-education."
Black students agree that the
University has to be the leader and
role model to achieve One University.
"It's important for a university to
become universal," Cuffey notes. "A
mutual initial effort would have to be
made, and would have to include the
University. If the University doesn't
move with it, then that's a hindrance."
Just sitting back and letting things
happen."
"The Director of Fraternity Affairs
could have a white frat sponsor an
event in conjunction with Groove PM
Groove," Cuffey offered as
suggestion. "But when it (such a
union) happens, it's going to be
something to attract attention. Just
the novelty of it will make it attract
attenUon. It's something worth
reaching for."
Then, added White, "There
shouldn't be such harsh cultural
grades. We should be able to share the
common humorous situations and
frustrations of the University first."
Anti-Draft Rally
(Continued from page 1)
major voice in the anti-draft
movement of the 1980s. "We're
moving ahead."
Less than 100 University students
attended the rally. Standing in the
midst of the throng of protesters,
Steven Alter, a junior in FAS, said
that, although he was glad to be at the
rally, the fact that such a rally was
necessary was "scary."
"I was standing here in the middle
of all these people, really happy to be
here, when it hit me," Alter said. "AH
of the sudden I got really scared that
there's a reason that I have to be at a
peace rally."
FAS senior Lisa Kramer echoed
Alter's sentiments, adding that she
thought that the rally would serve to
send a message to Congress. "The
rally Is important," Kramer said, "to
show the country that there are large
numbers of people willing to come out
for this cause in the middle of March
In the cold."
DINGO BOOTS
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MAHTINS WALK [ASVSMOtS
MONDAY
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GILDA LIVE
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WRITTEN BY ANNE BtATTS LORNE MICHAELS MARILYN SUZANNE MILLER DON NOVELLO
MICHAEL ODONOGHUE GILDA RADNER rAULSHAffER. ROSIE SHUSTER ALANZWEIBEL
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OPENING MARCH 28 AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU
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Open 6 Days til 2 a.m. Sun. til 12 a.m.
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THE DAILY PENNSYLVAN1AN, Monday, March 14,1W>
Occupational Therapy 0>nference
Promotes Exchange of Concepts
By ELAINE SONG
The School of Allied Medical
Professions hosted the first annual
Statewide Occupational Therapy
Conference this weekend.
Seventy representatives from
Temple University, Mount Aloysius
College, EUzabethtown College, and
the University attended the conference to exchange ideas and assess
new developments within the
Occupational Therapy field.
"There's no formal time for
students to get together and talk about
what students are interested in," said
senior Leslie Williams, one of the
conference's coordinators.
"On To Genesis," chosen as the
conference's theme, signifies "the
beginning," said senior Julie Schwartz, another coordinator of the
conference. It is the process of individual development, an important
element of occupational therapy, but
is also seen as representative of the
beginning of statewide student
communication.
Schwartz said that the idea of
holding a statewide conference arose
after students met at a conference in
Pittsburgh last November.
Gail Fidler, one of the guest
speakers and a frequent lecturer at
the University, referred to the conference as "an excellent idea," adding "two heads are always better
than one. The more persons that come
together, the more incentive there is
to develop a greater collective
identity."
Besides listening to various guest
lecturers who spoke about issues such
as professionalism, two-career
families, working with people and
helping them meet their own needs, a
major part of the conference were the
"cracker barrel sessions," small
somewhat informal discussion groups
with faculty members.
"It's opening your eyes to things
you yourself didn't see," Williams
said.
The third coordinator, fourth-year
occupational therapy student Lynetta
Domke, said that the conference was
special because it was a "professional
activity. It's the first state-wide
conference where we're able to make
contacts with our peers."
Schwartz said that occupational
therapists have yet to establish
themselves as a recognized
"profession" since they do not operate
autonomously. "It's Important to
organize things and do what
professionals do."
One student from Temple said an
important feature of the conference is
to have "an opportunity to find out
what different schools have to offer."
"We may be working with these
people someday,'' she added.
Smokey Joe's
Salutes
ZBT
DU
FRATERNITIES
5AE
&
SORORITIES
TTKA
With
2-1 Rock
Wed., Mar. 26th
PAGE J
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(the Bailo
Pmnstjluama.;
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l-SEND THIS AD TO YOUR FAVORITE| FRENCH RESTAURANT:
ATTENTION
QUADROPHILES:*
■
|S
I
.To gain entrance to the 1st Annual •
•Quad Arena you must:
:
!
Dear La Terrasse,
•" I. Come to the Assignment Office HRN to draw*
\
a numbered ticket March 2405 9-7 PM
•
Why aren't your
"special dinners"
as good as the
ones at the Dining I
Service?
• 2. Read and memorize Quad Areiu Chapter in I
I Room Selection 1980-81.
•
I 3. II your number is low enough ( no. 1000 •
•
better have a £ix\l Iriend vvho drew no 3 !
I who wants to live with him), \ou may enter J
• the Quail Arau rVbTlellaml Hall
*
!>
t
Saturday March 29. 9-6.
•
• #Definition: Penn students wlio want to live in«
•
the Quad more than anywhere else. •
KE
UlPMMIUUUlMPflMl]
STUDENTS HELPING STUDENTS
WANTS YOU!!
I
All undergrads in all colleges are
eligible to advise next year's
freshman class.
Applications are available: -Your school office.
The Undergraduate
Accounting Society
TfeoMuu. wiik DEIOITTE HASKINS ft SELLS
H(i Void Kedku - Dtiata o| Rcciuili^
Wh tdumd EM ■ Vortm in ckige ok Vvwrntdt
(Ml folml (KoiiK - Wkaih* qvukate
-on LOCUST WALK for FAS ONLY,
Monday and Tuesday between 1 1:00 am and 2:00 pm
2» W li.i,-: \- -
Tuesday, March 25 at at 4:00
Franklin Room, Houston HoN
.1 Hill |i'.il III
WINE & CHEESE AFTERWARD!
Mini—.W2-OH I I
SAC FUKD6D
APARTMENTS
41(1 * PINK ST. Beautiful 4 bedroom
house needs 2 female roometee Available
6180 Call 387-5190
3551
SUMMER-sublet. baaulilul. furnished. 3
windows, porch elflci*ncy-4038 Locustnaxl lo Urban Outfitters available altar
graduation-till Aug 31 lurnltur* lor salerant nagollabla- Call 382-2086 Morning
belore 8 30 evenings alter 10-till 1
3876
A1VIAZING
BARGAIN
Elegant
39th St. Apts
I
Magnificent Design
Dishwashers, Garbage
Disposals
Butcher Block Counters
exposed brick-beamed
ceilings
shag carpct-oakf loors
custom designed sleeping
lofts
exquisite Bathrooms and
Kitchens
4-5 Bedrooms
{finest Newly Renovated Apti
71 block to HIRIte. Offer for,
limited time only.
CHESTNUT NEAR 4$nj - Urge apt.-ready
now-laundry-wall kept bldg also small apt.
ready for may* renting now for sept -6-7
rooms and 2 baths also 18.2 bedroom
apis -enclosed lira towers 844-7272 or 3878870
3626
2.3.4 ROOM apartments Some with
fireplace*. NeerU. of P. Gr3-8754
3627
UNIVERSITY CITT EFF., 1 Br. sal* adult
bldg. Utlla. Inc. 471-S076.
2694
•w
*r
■»4"F
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
Vary Large Renovated Apia.
1-2-3 Bdrms.
$255 J320.
ELEVATOR BLDG
LAUNDRY FACIL
40th & Baltimore
«4th & Walnut
FV
>2W6-
"
RENT A CAVE
ON CAMPUS
We have a huge, spectacular, very special.
really unusually renovated. 5 bedroom. 2 bath.
2 level residence «ith all manner of esoteric
features like real brick, wooden beamed
ceiimg rough cast pleeter, open etainway.
carpal ing. new formica kitchen with garbage
disposal and new applicancea. new
bathrooms DuiIMn bar. fumlehed. end only
$575 monthly includes heal and how water.
Com* see something different.
Also, some really huge
renovated three, four, five and
six bedroom apartments, and
houses in excellent condition.
We also hava efficiency, one,
and a few two bedroom places
left.
t$170-$175 Perbdrrr
39th & Pine to 44th & Walnut
University Housing Co.
EV 2-2986
Finest apartments on campus.
EV2-2986
1-2 A 3 Bedroom apartments available now.
From $180. Contact LIZ 0 OONNELL RE
EV7-S160
3S99
AFT. 40th & Plne-ona Br 1195 Call 664
6688
3557
LARGE, BRIGHT, three bedroom apartment. available immediately Call 386-2380
3256
RENOVATED
3 BEDROOMS
Thick shag carpeting available
Available Sept 1. Large rooms Eat-in
lormlca kitchen. Gargage disposal t "i
ceramic title baths
Lsrge balcony
Intercom
Oak floors. Many closets
Paneled Irving room
Furnished
Air
conditioned ($10. extra) Plna to Locust
43rd to 45th Dishwasher optional
$420
EV2-2989
FOR
SALE
MISCELLANEOUS
LIVE-IN. In beautiful northern suburban
home. In exchange lor sitting dullas
Sundsy evenings to Friday morning.
Required lo be at home Sunday evening
and each school day, except Friday, from
about 3 p.m. lo loilowmg morning. No
weekends required. Call Mr. K, 8:30-4:00
p.m. (Monday thru Frldayl 646-5950
TELEPHONE SALES-Olnner Tour
is
looking tor enthusiastic people to work
from Center City office Have fun while
making money. Day or Evanlnga 547-4930
34 76
JOBS! LAKE TAHOE CALIFORNIAI Little
exp. Fantastic tips! Pay! $1600-3800
summer
Thouaands needed
Caalnos.
Restaurants, Ranch**. Crullers, Rafting,
etc
Send
$4.95 for Applications/lnlo/Belerrels LAKEWOBLD 179, Box
60129, Sacramento. CA 95860
3667
ACCOUNTING MAJOR. Junior year,
wanted lo serve as campus repreaentatlve
lor Gross'Lambers CPA Review to run in
Philadelphia this summer Selected
campus rep. will receive the review course
fr**of charge. Pleas*call 732-1525
3647
PARKINO-Monthly I Block Irom Super
Block $30-* month. Apply at 4043 Walnut
St_
2496
-EASTERN REACH" Is booking lor April
originals. Springsteen, beetles, etc Frats
and parties New sound, Lowratea. Will
RHODIN 382-80_58.
3552
HOUSE FOR RENT-Cheslnul and 43rd
vicinity 4 plus bedroom house Renovated.
Porch deck, beck yard $375 plusEV6-0476
3.463
FOR YOU WHO read the Holy Koran would
you Ilka lo know what God through the
prophets Noah, Ibrahim, Muse, Daud and
Isa. Send for the Free Bible Correspondence Course today Addraas: One God,
One Way. P O Box 775 Havertown. Pa.
19083.
3480
SERVICES
BEFU0DLED7 Pspers rewritten and edited.
Reasonsbie rates Personsl writing instruction given if desired Cell THOMAS
PLATT-549-6809
3559
SUBLETS
IBANEZ ARTIST: 6-strlng solldbody: 2
piece double cutaway, coilcuttera.
humbucklng pickupa: exc cond , 9 mos
old. w/hardsheil caae— Martin m-36 6
string accoustlc, exc. Intonation, virtually
never b—n played 6 mos. old, w/deluxe
herdsheil case Call *v*s 382-6093
3555
JOIS CRUISESHIPSI/SAILINQ
EXPEDITIONSI/SAILINO CAMPS. No sx
perience Good Pey
Summer
Cereer
Nationwide, Worldwide1 Send $4 95 for
appllcation/into/relerral* to Crulaeworid
179 Box 60129. Sacramento. CA 95860
3651
PORTABLE ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER. us*s
cartridge ribbon.
Excellent condition
$100,000 386-4818 evenings, ask for
LYNNE
3556
HELP WANTEO-Pehgious school teachers
for Rodeph Shalom Suburban and
Metropolitan lor fan session. Must lovs
Judaism and kids, snd went to introduce
them to eech other. Grad atudants
preferred 627-6747-loraoollcatlons
3481
S"U MMVR — SUBLET: ~Saf7 locaTlon"
2
bedrooms, large living room,
furnished.
4023 Locust, 3rd floor 387-8583
3S34
•COME TO THE MOUNTAINS -Top
summer co-ed camp in Poconos June 25August 22. Wsterfront IWSII. Drama.
Canoeing. Sailing. Bike Leader. Water Ski.
Athletics Good s*|ery Call Pine Forest
Camp 224-2100 or write 110-A Benson
East. J*nk.mown PA 19046
3702
PRESTIGE TYPING 6 TUTORING SERVICE: Professions! typing, IBM Seleclrlc II,
theses, manuscripts, foreign languages,
medical, raaumes. etc TUTORING: French
and Spanish, Speedy, reasonable Near
Campua location Call 482-1796
3462
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST: Experienced,
dissertations,
textbooks, manuscripts,
loreign lenguege. slstistical typing. IBM
Seleclrlc II R*f*r*nc*s MARILYN STARR,
849-6270
3616
DIAMOND NEEDLES eblereo Cartridges «l
Discount Prices Shur*. Pickering, Empire,
Slanton, Audlo-Technlea, Qrado. & ADC
For fast service, call toll free 800-221-0900
9am loBpm
3161
HELP
WANTED
QROWINO CHERRY HILL. N.J. Export
firm looking for part-time employee with
some scientific backgound. Call I609) 4293323GIMM-YOUNG CO
3574
SENIOR STUOENT^Grad In Chemistry for
pert time work-experimental project 3878870
3484
GENERAL COUNSELORS WsIS, Co-ed,
over-nighl camp. Pnoenlxvllle, Pa.
Excellent salaries. Cell Mr LEVI, 215-7322923 slier 6 00 p.m.
3603
DOOM FOR RENT In 3 br U.C HSE use of
mod bath, kit 6 Liv area all utilities incl
349-79*9 $160.
358«
SUMMER-lurnlshed. 2 bedroom apartment
with
fall option
41st snd Locust
Available May 15 Call 367-7648
3550
TYPIST
PROFESSIONAL TYPING: IBM Seleclrlc
Top quellty rush work possible $10
minimum (9-5) 735-1730. (6-9)446-3102
3473
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST, resume end
Ph u specialist Expertise In all fields.
Excellent Iscully reference. Ouelity
copying and olfset printing available
DORIS, 477-4861
3614
TYPIST. IBM SELECTRIC
Specialist,
Dlsserlst lo n s ,
Manuscripts.
Alphanumeric*. Figures, and Tablea
expertly completed. Excellent references
DIANE,477-0797.
3644
PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER, specializing In
dissertations, theses, manuscripts, tapes
end romance languages FLORA CARLIN
279-2211
3678
PROFESSIONAL
TYPING-ressonable
rates Thesis, scientific reports, etc sccursia. faat service 634-2262
3620
DISSERTATIONS INDEXED BETH BROWN
243-7I33 (dey) 386-4279 (eve)
3703
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST: Expertise in all
areas. Exceptional quality
Reasonable
rales IBM Seleclrlc II Linda. 483 8999
TYPIST, PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS.
electric executive. Accurate, dependable
expertise Statistical theses, dissertations
manuscripts, term papers ROZ'. 4773305
3558
PROFESSIOANL TYPIST. Law Briefs,
theaas,
doctorates,
manuscripts,
statistical typing references Reasonaibe
rates Mrs Kelmarvf 698-2922
3581
WANTED
1 HR. PERCEPTION test needs additional
L.H Femsies lor completion. Call 6622626 M-F, 9-5
3582
CLASS RINGS 10K (High School, others)
you never wear Paying $60 large. $25
small, Immediate cash HENRY EILERS.
7109 Circle View Drive, St-Loul*, Missouri
63123
3263
NEEOED: Female to live In university
housing lor only first semester of 1980 I
sm going sbrosd fall semester and need
someone with whom I can arrange a
mutual trade agreement Call 382-5293 as
soon aa possibH
PACK I
THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIA!*, Monday, March Z4, 19*0
How Sweet it is, Laxmen Cage Hens, 6-5
Eisenbrandt Tallies Two in First Win
Ben Alman
Co-captain Tim Dachille (4) was a defensive force behind Penn's (-5 win over
Delaware.
Batmen Face Diplomats;
Devine Hurling Expected
By DAVID ELFIN
The Quaker diamondmen didn't
have to battle Bower Field's showers
Saturday. The doubleheader against
Philadelphia Textile was called off
Friday afternoon because of the
torrential downpours and high winds.
But Bob Seddon's Red and Blue (52) travel to Lancaster, Pa. this afternoon (2 PM) for a game against
Franklin and Marshall. Senior hurler
Bruce Ballard, who was scheduled to
pitch the first half of Saturday's
twinbill, will miss today's game
because of a job interview in Kentucky. In his place, Seddon will send
undefeated freshman pitcher Kevin
Devine against the Diplomats.
Devine, a native of Closter, New
Jersey, began his career in Little
league and continued through high
school, pitching, as well as playing
centerfield and shortstop. Devine
earned AU-Bergen County honors as a
sophomore and junior, but suffered
through a disappointing senior
season.
"We had a really bad team,"
Devine said. "I didn't pitch much and
I kind of had an off season." What
Devine didn't say was that his injured
BOBSEDDON
Play Ball
arm caused his off year. "I watched
him play last spring," Seddon
remarked. "We were aware of his
ability and we knew he just had an
injured arm."
Devine enjoyed a fine summer with
his 1979 Connie Mack team and
arrived in West Philadelphia fully
healed. The 18-year old Engineering
student is also a soccer standout and
was named most valuable player of
last fall's Quaker JV booters. Devine
is sure to move up to a varsity halfback slot this autumn.
Devine has gotten off to an impressive 3-0 start this young baseball
season with victories over a powerful
South Florida Emery-Riddle and
Haverford. "When I beat South
Florida I was really happy," Devine
said. "The wins have given me confidence in my ability to be a good
college pitcher. I started the season
expecting to see a little action, but the
other guys didn't start off as well as
they were expected to so I've gotten a
lot of work."
According to Seddon, "Kevin has
pitched well. He has the ability and he
has shown good poise. He beat a good
team in South Florida. He wants to
pitch. He's a very competitive kid in a
low-key quiet way. He just has to keep
that hungry feeling.
"Right now, I'd have to say he's
gotten off to the best start of any
freshman pitcher I've had since Andy
Muhlstock (who went on to pitch in the
Chicago Cubs' farm system)."
Devine credited assistant coach Bill
Wagner for much of his early success.
"In high school, I used to throw with
my arm, and so I had a tendency to
get a score arm," Devine commented.
"Wags has changed my motion to a
more overhand one which has eased
the pressure on my arm.''
And Devine has eased the pressure
on the rest of the Quaker pitching staff
with his fine start.
EXTRA BASES- "Tomorrow's
game is most important just to get a
game in," Seddon said. "Unless they
have an overpowering pitcher F&M
shouldn't be that tough. Not if we play
ball."
By GORDON ALTER
It was cold, it was snowing lightly, it
was windy, it was lousy.
It was Saturday afternoon and the
Perm men's lacrosse team (1-2) had
just left the field after capturing its
first win of the season, 6-5, over the
University of Delaware (0-2).
Geez, it was fun. This was a win
over a Delaware team which finished
15th in the national polls last year,
won the East Coast Conference
Championship, and posted a 13-2
mark-the best in Blue Hen history.
Seeing only five players gone from
last year's Delaware squad the
Quakers knew they had their hands
full coming into the game.
The first period started out slowly
as each team tried to adjust itself to
the mud quagmyre being passed off as
the playing field.
"The slop equalized things out
there," said Quaker Coach Charlie
Coker. After the first period Delaware
led 2-1, the lone Penn goal coming on a
pretty individual effort by David
Brush.
As the second period progressed
Penn began to warm to the task (at
least somebody was warm on
Saturday). At the 2:28 mark of the
period Penn's crafty verteran, tricaptain Peter Eisenbrandt, knotted
the score at two, beating goalie Mike
Moran for the first of his two goals on
the day.
Then with the score tied at 3-3 and
with time running out in the period,
Penn midfielder Dave Papenfuss
gave the Quakers an emotional lift
which may have turned the tide.
Papenfuss drove past two defenders
and then rifled a shot home from up
the slot to give Penn a 4-3 half time
advantage.
The teams traded goals In the third
period, giving the Quakers a
precarious one goal lead going into the
final fifteen minutes of play. Then
with Penn coaches and fans just about
down to their cuticles, sophomore
attackman Gary Smolokoff gave the
Quakers some breathing room.
With 4:47 remaining Smolokoff, who
played with intensity all day long,
picked up a ground ball in a crease
scramble and stuffed it home to the
delight of the Quaker contingent.
A minute later Delaware made it
close again at 6-5 with a goal but the
Quakers were able to hold on as
Eisenbrandt iced the game with his
own brand of the four comer stall.
Quaker Oats
SUPER MATMAN -Quaker wrestler HAL FULLMER was named to the
Ivy League honorable mention list in the 150-lb. class.
FRAT MAT-The ATO STRIKE FORCE was the winner of the intramural
wrestling Frat League. The Force was led by JIM TRAXINGER, JIM
OROURKE, and PETE LAZZOPINA. AEPI was second as THE CASTLE
placed third.
BIG HOOP MAMA-Dartmouth center GAIL KOZIARA of Chicopee,
Mass. has been named to the Region 1A Kodak All-America womens
Basketball Team.Koziara scored 34 points against the Quakers this season
and led the Ivies in just about everything.
KICKY WOMEN-The PENN WOMEN'S SOCCER CLUB played to a 1-1 tie
against the Rose Tree Soccer Club from Media, Pa. ALLISON TURKEL
scored for the Quakers.
WAMMO MEMOThe PENN ULTIMATE FRISBEE club took two of three
matches in Trenton yesterday. The Quakers were able to out-frisbee both
Villanova and Swarthmore, but could not defeat the mightly N.J. Plastic
Exchange team.
Wind Stifles Sailors
By BRYAN HARRIS
March winds can play some nasty
tricks on you, especially if you're a
sailor. This weekend at the Trux
Umstead Regatta at Navy, the Penn
sailing team found out just how nasty
the winds can get:
The Trux Umstead was schedule to
be a 72 race affair. Saturday,
however, gale force winds cancelled
the racing and the regatta began
yesterday and concluded after only 28
races.
"The results of the regatta are
inconclusive," said tri-captain Debbie
Rice. The races finished late and
were disputed. "As of now, it looks
like Navy will be the winner, followed
by Kings Point Penn finished about
twelfth."
The winds on Sunday were not of
gale force, but were described by
Rice as "flukey."
"In the morning the winds were
strong, but then they kept shifting.
They were light almost all day."
Most of the Quaker finishes were
around twelfth place with the exception of some fifth place finishes by
Marc Penny in his laser.
"We were psyched to race on
Saturday and then the race was
delayed," Rice continued. "The
rest of the day we had to just wait
around and by Sunday we had a bit of
a psyche problem. But right now I
have a lot of confidence in us. We
should do well in the Owen Trophy (at
MIT) and we should be able to take
the top spot in the Ivies."
In the locker room after the game
Eisenbrandt recounted those final
frantic minutes. "We didn't know we
had it until the final whistle," he said.
"We needed that first win and we got
it. It feels good, we put it all together
today."
Coach Coker was especially pleased
with the effort considering the poor
playing field. "These guys are ready
to play no matter what the conditions," he said. "It's nice to get that
first win. Well continue to work hard
as we gear towards Baltimore next
week."
Not to be overlooked was the 25-save
performance of Quaker goalie Chuck
Leitner - many of the unbelieveable
variety, including several attempts
from point blank. Leitner was also
very adept at clearing the defensive
zone after a save, thus lessening the
pressure on the Penn defensive unit.
Another key to the game might have
been Penn's ability to stay out of the
penalty box. The Quakers had fifteen
power play situations to the Blue
Hens' eight on the afternoon. While
the Quakers capitalized on only one of
these opportunities, they were able to
keep the ball out of their defensive
zone and put pressure on the Blue Hen
defense.
Overall, what was most impressive
about this Penn victory was the poise
displayed in the nerve - racking
closing minutes.
One would expect a team which had
won only one game last year and had
dropped its first two contests this year
to be holding on for dear life in the
final seconds. However there's a quiet
air of confidence running through
Penn's team this year as the players
try to avenge last season's disappointment
LAX FAX: Papenfuss secured his
team scoring lead on Saturday with
another goal to bring his totals to
seven goals and an assist on the
season. He is followed in the scoring
department by Mark Hollis (4 goals, 2
assists) and Eisenbrandt (S
goals)
Delaware honorable
mention All-American Moses Marone
was held to just a goal and an assist as
he continued to chase his blistering
mark of a year ago when he tallied 29
goals and 21 assists
Delaware's
schedule gets no easier from here on
out as they will face four teams which
are ranked in the top fifteen including
number one ranked John Hopkins
Cantwell Beams In
East; Nationals Next
By BARRY LEVINE
This weekend's Eastern Regional
Gymnastics Championship was a
homecoming of sorts for Penn star
Barbara Cantwell. After a one year
absence from competing against this
region's best, the Philadelphia born
and bred gymnast returned to the
scene in spectacular fashion by
capturing fifth place in the all-around.
"It was really nice to be back,"
Cantwell said. "A lot of people
especially spectators, came over to
me and said that it was good to see me
back."
Cantwell gave the spectators plenty
of reasons to cheer her return. In
Friday's preliminaries, she performed well on vault and uneven bars,
but really shined in her specialities,
balance beam and floor exercise. She
qualified for the finals, Saturday, in
those two events.
In front of more than 5000 people in
the packed gym, Cantwell was the the
last woman up on beam. Performing
the most difficult routine of any of the
competitors, she had one fall in an
otherwise excellent effort. She still
received a 9.1 which was good enough
for fourth place. Had she not fallen
(and not lost the automatic half-point
that goes with a fall), Cantwell would
have easily won the event.
Cantwell came back in the floor
exercise. In an event that she has been
working on and improving in all
season long, she scored 9.25 and took
third place.
Fifth place overall may not sound
too impressive for a gymnast that was
ninth in the nation last year and has
only lost two all-arounds this season.
But competing in the toughest
regional, Cantwell beat everyone but
four Penn State girls, and they had the
advantage of being on their home turf.
As everyone found out, that is a big
advantage.
"They (Penn State) were definetely
overscored," observed Penn coach
Janet Cantwell. "But not only were
the judges giving them breaks, they
had the ideal starting times and orders.
"Barbie should beat most of the
Penn State girls in the nationals. It
David Gentile
BARBIE CANTWELL
Homecoming
will be in neutral territory."
Neutral territory is the campus of
Louisiana State University in Baton
Rouge. The Cantwells will head down
there on April 2 for the two-day event
(April 4-5).
"I'm pleased with how I did," said
Cantwell. "My goal was to qualify to
go back to nationals, and I did."
Another person that will be heading
to LSU is Yale's Sharon Livieri. The
freshman finished sixth in the allaround to earn the trip.
"Barbie and Sharon really showed
something about the Ivy League and
our sports programs," observed
Coach Cantwell. "The two of them
beat a lot of girls who get scholarships
and don't have to go to classes. They
proved you can be true studentathletes."
Being a student is now a prime
concern for Barbara Cantwell. "I
have to get ahead in my work before I
go away to nationals," said the
Wharton sophomore. "I had been
putting six or more hours a day into
gymnastics and that was prevented
me from putting as much time as I
would like to into my studies."
Golf Preview
From the Tees of S.C. to the Chills of Gulph Mills
By MARK SCHOEPPNER
With the advent of the spring
season, it's time for northeasterners
to break out their old golf bags, wipe
the winter residue off the clubs, read a
few Go!/ Digests and pray that this
year's season won't be as frustrating
as the last.
For Penn's golf team, it's the
ominous challenge of preparing for
the season in one short week of play.
During the nine day spring break
the team held intrasquad competition
in sunny Fripp Island, South Carolina
to determine who would play and
primarily, to iron out the kinks left
from a winter of inactivity.
"We played pretty well considering
none had played all winter," said
Coach Bob Hays. "Nobody scored real
well, but we played better than the
scoring might indicate."
Fripp Island sports the type of
course likely to send back many a
golfer to the pro shop to replenish his
golf ball supply. Sixteen of the 18 holes
contain water hazards and the course
is dotted with white out-of-bounds
stakes. "It was a good experience
because it made everyone conscious
of positioning the ball," Hays said.
This year the Quakers will position
their golf balls on a new course.
They move to hilly Gulph Mills
Country Club from Kimberton Golf
Club at which Hays is the pro.
Although living in the northeast
certainly limits a golf team s potential
the Quakers enter the season experienced and polished. From last
year's 10-5 squad ten players return,
including three year lettermen Steve
Sieg, Bill Neusidl and Scott Collins
and two year letterman Rich Grabow.
Co-captain Sieg, who will play
number one for the third straight
year, has led the team in sewing
average the last two years. This fall,
he finished second in a field of 115 at
the Army Invitational with 146 (71-75).
Rich Grabow, at number three,
finished fifth in the ECAC fall
Qualifier in a field of 95 players. "Rich
is a very intelligent player and thus,
very consistent," Hays remarked.
Last year, his score counted in every
match (5 scores out of 7 count).
The lone newcomers to the seven
man squad is freshman Steve Higuera
from New Jersey's Edgewood
Country Club. Higuera has already
moved right into the number two
position. "We feel he will be a great
asset to the success of this year's
team," said Hays.
Rounding out the experienced
starting seven will be juniors Steve
Corradi and Jim Good, and senior
John Ferrante. They hope to carry on
the successful tradition of fourthyear-coach Hays, the Quakers have
compiled records of 9-4 (1977), 14-3
11978) and 10-5 (1979). The Quaker
team has recorded 33 consecutive
winning seasons; the only title which
has eluded the team of late is the Ivy
Championship, which Penn has not
won since 1974.
Hays is optimistic about the Quaker
chances for regaining that coveted
title. "The championship has been
expanded to 54 holes (at Cornell),"
Hays said, "and our seniors are
especially determined, as it is their
final opportunity to win."
The first step on the road to the title
will be at Gulph Mills against Swarthmore, Tuesday. It will be a chance for
the golfers to notch their first victory
and to get acclamated to a course that
yields to an occasional errant shot.
MEN'S OOLF SCHEDULE
Photos By David Gladstone
Penn golfer Rich Grabow gives his mini-lesson. First - make sure the hair stays
in place while making a smooth backswing. Second - look mad while generating
elubhead speed. Third - dig a sizable divot and hit the photographer in the face
with It. Fourth - follow through gracefully while biting your own shoulder.
Home Course Gulph Mills C.C.
Tue i Mar 25 Swarthmore
Home
MM Mar 28 Rutgers/Army
Horn*
Tue . Apr 1 Princeton /Columbia
Columbia
Tue.. Apr 8 St. Joseph's/Delaware St. Joe •
Wed Apr 9 Lehigh
Home
Mon , Apr 14 Lafayette
Lalayette
Wed.. Apr 16 Navy/Temple
Home
Wed . Apr 23 Villanova/LaSalle
La Salle
Fri & Sat . Ivy Tournament
vale
Apr 25-26
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