harassment investigation is continuing - penn libraries · beliets and personality can really a...

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Inside: 'A Season to Remember 9 ' C T9 Ai ^ fmmbeb 1885 Vol. CM. No. 116, PHILADELPHIA, Tuesdav. Smtmhcr 25. I«>lt6 CopyngN IMS Th» Darfy Pennayfraofrn Admissions essays: the bane and burden of U. applicants By DEBBIE ABRAMS If you were given the opportunity to spend the evening with any one person, living, deceased, or fictional, whom would you choose and why? "1 would spend the evening with Bugs Bun Lifestyles ny because he. more than any other figure, embodies what it means io be an American," wrote College freshman Pat O'Donnell. "He never asks himself whether he will succeed or fail, he only asks how he will go about succeeding." "I would want to meet with myself after I was dead," wrote College freshman Patricia Jackson. "I would want to know what was going to happen in the future." These were responses submitted by two of last year's applicants in their admissions essays. Often a source of frustration for col- lege applicants, the dreaded 500-word essay is a way of individualizing the application pro- cess, according to admissions office spokesmen. With as many as three students competing last year for one admission slot, the I nivershy admissions department looks to the personal essay portion of the application for Informa- tion about applicants that will make them stand out. "There's an increasing awareness that students need to differentiate themselves from the thousands and thousands of other students applying to the school," said Admit- sions Associate Dean Dan Lundquist "If a student feels good about the applica- tion, then that's the best indication ol suc- cess," I undquist said. In addition to the question asked above, ap plicants are given a choice of two other topics to write about. Another option, a popular one for applicants, aska: "What is your definition of success and how do you hope to achieve if" College freshman 1 \? Dominik chose this one. "I was pressed for time and that was the one that required the least thought." Dominik said. "1 talked about what I saw myself doing 10 sens from now what 1 thought success arm in relation to what I'd be doing." she added "I s.n.i basically it wasn't important how much money I made. I don't need BMW's and a vacation home in Aspen. I just want to be happy " 1 undquist said he feels an essay that ex- emplifies the student's beliefs increases the chances of getting admitted. "A craftily written essay that uncovers a student's beliets and personality can really help a student," Mid I undquist The third cssas question choice is: "What is the best puce ot advice you have ever received?" "I said that the best advice was given to me by my mom and my teacher, who really push- ed me to apply foi Japan-United states Senate Scholarship," ntid College freshman Whitney Morrill. "The timing for the applica- (Continued on page f) Lauder, Fischer to fu nd floor of project By I M Kit GOLDBERG Estee Lauder President and Chief Executive Officer Leonard Lauder and real estate developer Arthur Fischer have agreed to fund third- floor interior construction on the Lauder/Fischer Building, which would otherwise have remained incomplete. The two Wharton School alumni had each originally donated $1.5 million for the project, which will be located behind the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. Because budget limitations threatened to postpone completion of the third floor, leaving a temporary "shell" of walls, electrical wiring and duct work, the donors decided to split the additional $500,000 needed to finish the work. Lauder's portion of the supplemen- tal funding will come out of the in- terest accrued on his original gift, which has been growing since 1983 in a special account set aside for Univer- sity use. Lauder retains control over how the interest is spent. Fischer will give his share of the money as an addi- tional gift. The 20,000 square-foot facility will provide office, classroom, seminar and special-use space for both the Wharton Real Estate Center and the Lauder Institute of Management and International Studies. Each program currently functions out of several campus buildings, but directors of both said yesterday that they foresee more focused operations in the new building. Lauder said last night that the deci- sion to augment the gifts was a pragmatic one. "Rather than leaving the third floor unfinished and having to go and spend two to three times more to do it later, we thought it was a financially sound decision to spend the additional money now," Lauder said. The plan for the building now pro- vides common classroom space and two amphitheatres on the ground floor, Lauder Institute faculty and ad- ministrative offices on the second floor and Real Estate Center offices on the third floor. Real Estate Center Co-director Bill /ticker said yesterday that the ex- panded office space will benefit both programs. "Both groups' faculty were going to have to be in a less than adequate (Continued on page 8) Harassment investigation is continuing Going North Andy Frltdman/Daily Pennsylvanian PENN STUDENTS WEREN'T the only ones who made the journey to Cornell this weekend for the game. Admissions Dean Lee Stetson (left) and President Sheldon Hackney went up north to watch the Quakers defeat the Big Red. The two ad- ministrators took a break from their duties to par- ticipate in the festivities going on inside the locker room building. itv LESLIE RKRR Differing accounts and a shortage of witnesses have hindeied Public S.iietv's investigation of a racial harassment incident that occurred tin-. month outside the Quad. Melinda Gee, a telephone operator at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, was on her way home from work at approximately 12:05 a.m. November 7, when she was reportedly hit by a bottle containing urine and was called derogatory names b\ I male in a Quad room. Detective Supervisor Michael Car- i oil said yesterday that setbacks in the search for the offender include differ- ing identifications of the room from which the bottle was thrown and lack of witnesses to the incident. Carroll said that Gee indicated a second-floor Morgan dormitory room as the one from which the bottle m thrown, while a witness said the room was on the third flom Bui lice said last night that she is positive thai the room she identified is where the parson who haraaawil her was itandini She afau MM that she was told two weeks ago that the witness had "decided it was the se- cond floor." ( .uroll also said that interviews with Quad residents have not led to any additional information about the offender's identity Residenti of the two Quad rooms identified told Public Safety officials that they ware noi Involved in the inci- dent, and do not know who was. Other Morgan resident! were also unable to |iv« detectives new information Public Safety is Still asking that any witnesses to the incident, including a female who was seen talking to the male standing in the window, contact ( .uroll. For the city, garbage is a growing dilemma By BETTY CIACCHI The problem facing Philadelphia trash disposal is a lot of garbage. Waste disposal is reaching a critical point in the city, which currently col- lects and disposes of approximately 840.000 tons of trash per year. On average, each Philadelphian produces 16.7 pounds of garbage a day. This month. Mayor Wilson Goode proposed Council Bill 1005, the city's Solid Waste Management Plan, in an effort to efficiently dispose of all the (rash. The planned legislation calls for the construction of a $170 million trash- to-steam plant at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard in cooperation with Ogden Martin Systems of Philadelphia, Inc. The plant, owned and operated by Ogden Martin, is expected to service the city for 20 years and will process 70 percent of the trash the city collects every day. The city's sole obligation is to pro- vide the plant with a steady trash stream for 20 years. "This bill is the single most impor- tant measure I have submitted. . .to you for action in my term as mayor," Selling Out Retail stores change owners but hope for same clientele By JENNY NOTZ Although several Philadelphia department stores have altered their appearances in the last year, store representatives insist the changes do not signal a decline in the city's retail market. John Wanamaker Department Store is expected to be sold to Wood- ward & Lothrop, Inc. by the beginn- ing of next year. In addition, Gimbel's was sold to Stern's last sum- mer and Bamberger's has assumed the Macy's name. New York-based Ron Baron also attempted to gain owner- ship of Strawbridge & Clothier last May. Bill Dombrowski, a spokesman for Carter Hawley Hale, Wanamaker's current owners, explained last week that the firm's "reasons for selling weren't tied to Philadelphia." Dombrowski called the upcoming sale to Woodward & Lothrop a "strategic decision" made by Carter Hawley Hale, which also owns several department store chains including Neiman Marcus and Bergdorf Goodman. Wanamaker had sales of more than $450,000,000 in fiscal year 1985 and has not experienced financial dif- ficulties. According to Dombrowski, the firm would have agreed to con- tinue ownership if they had been unable to find a suitable buyer. "Philadelphia is a good market," Dombrowski said, adding that at- tributing the number of recent retail changes to the city is "an injustice to the Philadelphia market." Woodward & Lothrop, which will gain ownership of all 16 John Wanamaker stores, is expected to pay approximately $177 million for the chain. The prospective buyers are current- ly considering a variety of changes in Wanamaker stores, including a (Continued on page 7) Davadl Mayor Wilson Goode at his press conference announcing MgaarsyOalty Panotytvantan his new anti-drug policy J. Stuart Olckitrtn/Daily Pennsylvania* Trash a 'city crisis' Goode stated in his testimony before the City Council Rules Committee on November 12. "Bill 1005 is so important because it proposes the only available, realistic, safe and affordable solution (Continued on page 5) Goode hands down new drug policy By DAYID LASKO Mayor Goode announced his com- prehensive anti-drug policy at a press conference yesterday. Although the program's actual details have yet to be established, Goode said it will contain three main parts. The policy will be "organized around three components: education and prevention, treatment, and law enforcement and criminal justice," Goode said, adding that the new pro- gram is based on policies that have worked in other parts of the country. According to the mayor, the city will push for an "all-out education and media campaign" to convince young people not to use illegal drugs. Goode said that the newly formed Corporate Alliance for Drug Educa- tion, made up of sports teams, businesses and government represen- tatives, will be a major part of the (Continued on page 5) <.

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Inside: 'A Season to Remember9

' C T9 Ai ^ fmmbeb 1885 Vol. CM. No. 116, PHILADELPHIA, Tuesdav. Smtmhcr 25. I«>lt6 CopyngN IMS Th» Darfy Pennayfraofrn

Admissions essays: the bane and burden of U. applicants By DEBBIE ABRAMS

If you were given the opportunity to spend the evening with any one person, living, deceased, or fictional, whom would you choose and why?

• "1 would spend the evening with Bugs Bun

Lifestyles ny because he. more than any other figure, embodies what it means io be an American," wrote College freshman Pat O'Donnell. "He never asks himself whether he will succeed or fail, he only asks how he will go about

succeeding." •

"I would want to meet with myself after I was dead," wrote College freshman Patricia Jackson. "I would want to know what was going to happen in the future."

• These were responses submitted by two of

last year's applicants in their admissions essays. Often a source of frustration for col- lege applicants, the dreaded 500-word essay is a way of individualizing the application pro- cess, according to admissions office spokesmen.

With as many as three students competing

last year for one admission slot, the I nivershy admissions department looks to the personal essay portion of the application for Informa- tion about applicants that will make them stand out.

"There's an increasing awareness that students need to differentiate themselves from the thousands and thousands of other students applying to the school," said Admit- sions Associate Dean Dan Lundquist

"If a student feels good about the applica- tion, then that's the best indication ol suc- cess," I undquist said.

In addition to the question asked above, ap plicants are given a choice of two other topics

to write about. Another option, a popular one for applicants, aska: "What is your definition of success and how do you hope to achieve if"

College freshman 1 \? Dominik chose this one. "I was pressed for time and that was the one that required the least thought." Dominik said.

"1 talked about what I saw myself doing 10 sens from now — what 1 thought success arm in relation to what I'd be doing." she added "I s.n.i basically it wasn't important how much money I made. I don't need BMW's and a vacation home in Aspen. I just want to be happy "

1 undquist said he feels an essay that ex- emplifies the student's beliefs increases the chances of getting admitted.

"A craftily written essay that uncovers a student's beliets and personality can really help a student," Mid I undquist

The third cssas question choice is: "What is the best puce ot advice you have ever received?"

"I said that the best advice was given to me by my mom and my teacher, who really push- ed me to apply foi ■ Japan-United states Senate Scholarship," ntid College freshman Whitney Morrill. "The timing for the applica-

(Continued on page f)

Lauder, Fischer to fu nd floor of project

By I M Kit GOLDBERG Estee Lauder President and Chief

Executive Officer Leonard Lauder and real estate developer Arthur Fischer have agreed to fund third- floor interior construction on the Lauder/Fischer Building, which would otherwise have remained incomplete.

The two Wharton School alumni had each originally donated $1.5 million for the project, which will be located behind the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. Because budget limitations threatened to postpone completion of the third floor, leaving a temporary "shell" of walls, electrical wiring and duct work, the donors decided to split the additional $500,000 needed to finish the work.

Lauder's portion of the supplemen- tal funding will come out of the in- terest accrued on his original gift, which has been growing since 1983 in a special account set aside for Univer- sity use. Lauder retains control over how the interest is spent. Fischer will give his share of the money as an addi- tional gift.

The 20,000 square-foot facility will provide office, classroom, seminar and special-use space for both the Wharton Real Estate Center and the Lauder Institute of Management and International Studies. Each program currently functions out of several campus buildings, but directors of both said yesterday that they foresee more focused operations in the new building.

Lauder said last night that the deci- sion to augment the gifts was a pragmatic one.

"Rather than leaving the third floor unfinished and having to go and spend two to three times more to do it later, we thought it was a financially sound decision to spend the additional money now," Lauder said.

The plan for the building now pro- vides common classroom space and two amphitheatres on the ground floor, Lauder Institute faculty and ad- ministrative offices on the second floor and Real Estate Center offices on the third floor.

Real Estate Center Co-director Bill /ticker said yesterday that the ex- panded office space will benefit both programs.

"Both groups' faculty were going to have to be in a less than adequate

(Continued on page 8)

Harassment investigation is continuing

Going North Andy Frltdman/Daily Pennsylvanian

PENN STUDENTS WEREN'T the only ones who made the journey to Cornell this weekend for the game. Admissions Dean Lee Stetson (left) and President Sheldon Hackney went up north to

watch the Quakers defeat the Big Red. The two ad- ministrators took a break from their duties to par- ticipate in the festivities going on inside the locker room building.

itv LESLIE RKRR Differing accounts and a shortage

of witnesses have hindeied Public S.iietv's investigation of a racial harassment incident that occurred tin-. month outside the Quad.

Melinda Gee, a telephone operator at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, was on her way home from work at approximately 12:05 a.m. November 7, when she was reportedly hit by a bottle containing urine and was called derogatory names b\ I male in a Quad room.

Detective Supervisor Michael Car- i oil said yesterday that setbacks in the search for the offender include differ- ing identifications of the room from which the bottle was thrown and lack of witnesses to the incident.

Carroll said that Gee indicated a second-floor Morgan dormitory room as the one from which the bottle m thrown, while a witness said the room

was on the third flom Bui lice said last night that she is

positive thai the room she identified is where the parson who haraaawil her was itandini She afau MM that she was told two weeks ago that the witness had "decided it was the se- cond floor."

( .uroll also said that interviews with Quad residents have not led to any additional information about the offender's identity

Residenti of the two Quad rooms identified told Public Safety officials that they ware noi Involved in the inci- dent, and do not know who was. Other Morgan resident! were also unable to |iv« detectives new information

Public Safety is Still asking that any witnesses to the incident, including a female who was seen talking to the male standing in the window, contact ( .uroll.

For the city, garbage is a growing dilemma

By BETTY CIACCHI The problem facing Philadelphia

trash disposal is a lot of garbage. Waste disposal is reaching a critical

point in the city, which currently col- lects and disposes of approximately 840.000 tons of trash per year. On average, each Philadelphian produces 16.7 pounds of garbage a day.

This month. Mayor Wilson Goode proposed Council Bill 1005, the city's Solid Waste Management Plan, in an effort to efficiently dispose of all the (rash.

The planned legislation calls for the construction of a $170 million trash- to-steam plant at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard in cooperation with Ogden Martin Systems of Philadelphia, Inc.

The plant, owned and operated by Ogden Martin, is expected to service the city for 20 years and will process 70 percent of the trash the city collects every day.

The city's sole obligation is to pro- vide the plant with a steady trash stream for 20 years.

"This bill is the single most impor- tant measure I have submitted. . .to you for action in my term as mayor,"

Selling Out Retail stores change owners but hope for same clientele By JENNY NOTZ

Although several Philadelphia department stores have altered their appearances in the last year, store representatives insist the changes do not signal a decline in the city's retail market.

John Wanamaker Department Store is expected to be sold to Wood- ward & Lothrop, Inc. by the beginn- ing of next year. In addition, Gimbel's was sold to Stern's last sum- mer and Bamberger's has assumed the Macy's name. New York-based Ron Baron also attempted to gain owner- ship of Strawbridge & Clothier last May.

Bill Dombrowski, a spokesman for Carter Hawley Hale, Wanamaker's current owners, explained last week that the firm's "reasons for selling weren't tied to Philadelphia."

Dombrowski called the upcoming sale to Woodward & Lothrop a "strategic decision" made by Carter

Hawley Hale, which also owns several department store chains including Neiman Marcus and Bergdorf Goodman.

Wanamaker had sales of more than $450,000,000 in fiscal year 1985 and has not experienced financial dif- ficulties. According to Dombrowski, the firm would have agreed to con- tinue ownership if they had been unable to find a suitable buyer.

"Philadelphia is a good market," Dombrowski said, adding that at- tributing the number of recent retail changes to the city is "an injustice to the Philadelphia market."

Woodward & Lothrop, which will gain ownership of all 16 John Wanamaker stores, is expected to pay approximately $177 million for the chain.

The prospective buyers are current- ly considering a variety of changes in Wanamaker stores, including a

(Continued on page 7)

Davadl

Mayor Wilson Goode at his press conference announcing

MgaarsyOalty Panotytvantan

his new anti-drug policy

J. Stuart Olckitrtn/Daily Pennsylvania*

Trash a 'city crisis'

Goode stated in his testimony before the City Council Rules Committee on November 12.

"Bill 1005 is so important because it proposes the only available, realistic, safe and affordable solution

(Continued on page 5)

Goode hands down new drug policy

By DAYID LASKO Mayor Goode announced his com-

prehensive anti-drug policy at a press conference yesterday.

Although the program's actual details have yet to be established, Goode said it will contain three main parts.

The policy will be "organized around three components: education and prevention, treatment, and law enforcement and criminal justice," Goode said, adding that the new pro- gram is based on policies that have worked in other parts of the country.

According to the mayor, the city will push for an "all-out education and media campaign" to convince young people not to use illegal drugs.

Goode said that the newly formed Corporate Alliance for Drug Educa- tion, made up of sports teams, businesses and government represen- tatives, will be a major part of the

(Continued on page 5)

<.

PAGE 2 IMI I) MM IM NNsv I \ AM \\ - Tuesday. November 25. 1986

V National Charities across nation overwhelmed by needy

They arc the new poor. Across the country, organizations lhat are preparing Thanksgiving meals for Ihe needy say they are struck by in- cic.ising numbers of families and youngsters who are calling for help.

In k.uis.is City and Phoenix, in Chicago and 1 ittle Rock, (he gyms, churches and armories where the poor and lonely gather for Thanksgiving will be filled this year with I lie sounds of children.

In the farm and oil belts, the pro- blem is especially pronounced.

"The typical person we're work- ing with now, compared to maybe a \c.ii or two years ago, are the new unemployed," said Jess Duncan of the Salvation Army in New Orleans

Two agree to share car after 4-month contest MOUNT Vl-RNON. III. - After

enduring 139 days of rain, heat and cold in a parking lot to win a new car b> being the last person to hold onto it. the final two strong-willed coiiicst.inis struck a deal yesterday to ihare the prize.

Kim Hulbcrt and Brad Neador were among the S3 contestants who first laid hands on the $9,100 Buick Skyhawk at lylcr's Jefferson Motors on July 9.

Undet the rules, they had to hold onto the cat lor 14 hours a day, 8 a.m. to 10p.m., seven days i week. They could switch hands touching the car but were forbidden to lean 04 sil on it.

Ili.it was tour months ago. The last of the 51 other contestants dropped OUI mote than a month ago. but Hulbert, 23. and Neador, 24. siuck it OUt.

The pair endured temperatures ovei 100 degrees, sunburn, torren- tial rams and a wind chill of minus 20.

State New \X. governor calk divestment a priority

HARRISBURG — There is not enough legislative support to force divestment Of state funds from South Africa this sear, but Lt. dm elect Mark Singel said yester- day that the move would be made early next year under the new administration.

Singel (D-Johnstown), speaking at a Capitol rally of state workers protesting apartheid, said he and Gov.-elect Robert Casey favor im- mediate divestment of all state funds in businesses that maintain operations In the white-ruled government.

"It is time to turn the political rhetoric into decisive and bold political action, and we intend to do that." Singel said.

Thanksgiving alone becomes group feast

UPPER ST. Cl AIR. Pa. - Peg Ohmer couldn't face Thanksgiving dinner alone, so she placed a newspaper advertisement asking so- meone to join het at church and dinner. Now she has do/ens of peo- ple to share her holiday meal.

Ohmer, whose husband plans to be m Taiwan on business, placed a personal advertisement in The Pitt- sburgh Press on Saturday.

"Will be alone on Thanksgiving Day. Let's go to church and din- ner," the advertisement read.

Ohmer said she has received nearly two dozen replies from others in Pennsylvania and West Virginia who will be alone on Thanksgiving. Now she is looking for a restaurant to handle the crowd.

"The time has come for something like this," she said Sun- day. "There arc a lot of people out there who don't live close to their families, who don't want to be a fifth wheel at a friend's house, but don't want to spend a holiday alone."

Ohmer said she was determined to enjoy the holiday even if her hus- band, Paul Ohmer Jr., an engineer, would not be home. Her son, Paul Ohmer III. 28, lives in Dallas and other relatives live in Chicago.

Weather Mostly sunny this morning. Part-

ly cloudy in the afternoon. Highs in the mid 50s. Cloudy tonight with ratii developing toward morning and continuing tomorrow.

i

Official disputes Reagan's claims about Iran WASHINGTON - A top-ranking State

Department official yesterday bluntly challeng- ed President Ronald Reagan's assurances that there has been no recent evidence of Iranian in- volvement in terrorism, while Reagan defended anew his decision to approve arms shipments to Teheran.

"I don't like to have to differ with my presi- dent, but I believe there is some evidence of Ira- nian involvement with terrorists," Deputy Secretary of State John Whitehcad said during an extraordinary appearance before the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

Whitehead testified as Reagan said. "I didn't make any mistakes" and declared (hat "I'm not

firing anybody." The president then sat down with members of his Cabinet and top advisers to weigh new moves, amid a crescendo of calls by members of Congress for a White House shakeup.

In statements that left some House committee members stunned. Whitehead, the No. 2 State Department official under Secretary of State George Shultz, also suggested pointedly that Congress rein in the National Security Council, and said publicly that his department was disen- chanted with the unit.

In his nationally broadcast speech November 13, Reagan defended his policy of selling arms to Iran, saying that "since U.S. government

contacts began with Iran, there's been no evidence of Iranian government complicity in acts of terrorism against the United States."

Whitehead contradicted that yesterday. Responding to the committee's questions, he

said: "There continues to be terrorist acts in Iran of the type that we find to be reprehensible."

State Department spokesmen had been saying for weeks that while Iran remained on a list of nations officially identified as "terrorist- sponsoring states." they would not provide evidence that nation has sponsored any recent terrorist acts.

On Friday, however, Whitehead, and other

State Department officials speaking privately, linked Iranian-sponsored groups to the kidnap- ping of three Americans seized in Beirut since September 9.

They are Frank Reed, director of a private school in Beirut. Joseph Cicippio, acting con- troller of the American University in that city and Edward Tracy, a writer.

A department official, speaking on condition he not be identified, said the United States was initially unsure who was responsible for some of the recent kidnappings because a group unknown to terrorism experts — the Revolu- tionary Justice Organization — had claimed responsibility.

British bank divests from South Africa

JOHANNESBURG. South Africa — Barclays Bank of Britain, citing financial and political pressure, said yesterday it sold its last shares in its South African affiliate for about $230 million. It was the biggest divestment yet by a foreign company.

A consortium of South African companies signed the deal last week to buy Barclays' shares in Barclays Na- tional Bank of South Africa, the country's largest commercial bank.

"The Barclays PLC sale of shares must have an impact on the South African economy." Basil Hersov, chairman of Barclays National. i< id a news conference. "It is certainly not a perilous matter, but it is cause for serious concern in terms of psychological impact."

The London-based Barclays Bank PI ( once owned 100 percent of the local affiliate but since 1973 had reduced its share to 40.4 percent. Its final pullout is the first by a major British company but follows withdrawal by numerous American companies, most recently General Motors, Kodak and IBM.

The value of the divestment and number ol employees involved 26.000 — made it the largest so fai However, officials of the local al filiate said the existing Stafl operations will be maintained

South African bankers, speak i| on conditti n of anonymity, said they feared barclays' withdrawal would encourage pullouts by other British companies. Britain is the largest foreign investor in South Africa, with $8.5 billion, compared to about $1.3 billion in American investments.

"Barclays are longstanding friends of South Africa," said local manag- ing director Chris Ball. "They're not doing this to punish South Africa. They're doing it because they're under political pressure which is converting into financial pressure."

In London, Barclays spokesman Geoffrey Kelly said the sale was made chiefly because of the affiliate's poor economic performance and un- favorable prospects for the South African economy.

But he told The Associated Press, "I think certainly political factors come into it.

"The lack of progress toward en- ding apartheid has itself had impact on the South African economy," he said. "It is also true that the threat to our business in the U.K. and the U.S. is one of the factors, but not the prime factor."

In Britain, anti-apartheid groups have protested outside Barclays' bran- ches to push for divestment.

"Neither South Africa's balance of payments nor its foreign exchange reserves will be affected by the tran- saction," said Gerhard de Kock, governor of South Africa's Reserve Bank. He said the sale "is not ex- pected to exert any adverse effect na- tionally or internationally on the South African banking system."

However, Hersov called the move "a major disinvestment," adding that "disinvestment does not progress change."

The buyers are led by Anglo American Corporation, the country's largest mining company, and two of its affiliates, De Beers Consolidated Mines Ltd. and Southern Life Assurance Co.

Barclays gave the sale price as 527 million rand, or $234 million at yesterday's exchange rate.

Peres will cooperate with committee, but won't discuss Iran

Oaved Rigbarg/Daily Pennsylvania!)

Sour Grapes It's tough to lose, especially when it's the Bit. GAME and your team hap- pens lo be the Bis; Red. Bui some people insist on wearing their anger on their shoulders like a cheap T-shirt. Don't sweat it. friend.

JERUSALEM — Foreign Minister Shimon Peres tried yesterday to defuse pressure on the Israeli govern- ment to disclose its role in shipping U.S. arms to Iran, promising to report to a watchdog subcommittee in Parliament.

He flatly refused, however, to give information about any Iranian arms deal when he appeared before the Foreign Affairs and Security Commit- tee, an unwieldy, 26-member body where deliberations are rarely kept secret.

He promised instead to brief the six-member subcommittee on Armed Services.

The development came amid con- cern that an angry U.S. Congress could make Israel a scapegoat for the U.S. administration's sales.

The political uproar in the United States over the arms shipments has just begun to spread to Israel, where many Israelis accept that arms deals are not a subject for public debate. The full 120-member Knesset, or parliament, scheduled a debate for to- day on the issue.

"There has never arisen a more bit- ter enemy of the Jewish people and, in my opinion, of human civilization, than the Khomeini regime," said Ab- ba Eban, a former foreign minister who presides over the Knesset committee.

He referred to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Iran's revolutionary patriarch.

President Reagan has said he authorized a third country, reportedly Israel, to ship arms to Iran to try to form links with Iranian moderates.

The Jerusalem Post quoted uniden titled Israeli defense officials as ex- pressing concern that Congress could act against Israel for its role.

"We can expect to see almost all bilateral military negotiations grind to a standstill for a while and a hostile climate developing toward Israel in Congress," one unidentified source was quoted as saying.

Congressional wrath could disrupt such projects as financing and building the Lavi jet fighter, permis- sion to sell to Honduras Kfir jets which contain U.S.-built components and granting Israel (he status of NATO countries in bidding for defense contracts. The Jerusalem Post quoted the officials as saying.

Morris Draper, U.S. consul in Jerusalem, sounded surprised, however, when asked if the controver- sy had affected U.S.-Israeli relations.

The relationship "is very good. I don't expect it to be damaged," Draper said in remarks broadcast on Israel army radio.

A government official said in an in- terview that Peres told Eban's com- mittee "it is not Israel's policy to sell arms to Iran."

But Peres refused to answer specific questions raised during (he closed- door session, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Skiers trapped, highway blocked after flood SNOQUALMIE, Wash. — Flooding caused by

heavy rain and melting snow forced dozens of families from their homes yesterday and blocked the only highway to a mountain resort where about 1000 weekend skiers were stranded.

Railroads were cut off east and west of Seattle by Hooding and mudslides, including one mudslide that cut a 300-foot-deep gap through 60 feet of track. Interstate 90, the state's major east-west highway, also was closed for part of the day.

Another storm weather system was expected to hit the coast Tuesday, the National Weather Service said.

Officials declared emergencies in King County, around Seattle, and in Lewis County south of Tacoma. Several towns also declared emergencies.

One firefighter was killed Sunday when he was hit by a train while helping evacuate a nursing home

threatened by flooding. Plans had been made to airlift the skiers off

Mount Baker, near the Canadian border north of Seattle, where they were isolated Sunday, but Neil Clement, spokesman for the Whatcom County Department of Emergency Services, said yesterday that apparently wasn't necessary.

"It looks like the road is intact, but it's strewn with large debris, including boulders and stumps," Clement said. "Boulder Creek is aptly named."

Boulder Creek surged over state Route 542 leading to the mountain after a culvert that carried the creek under the road was blocked about 28 miles east of Bellingham and five miles west of the town of Glacier, he said. Bulldozers and backhoes were put to work to clear the highway.

But Leslie Salisbury of the state Department of Transportation said the road probably would re-

main blocked until tomorrow, and a heavy tractor was to be used to ferry food and other supplies to the skiers.

About 80 families were evacuated when the Sno- qualmie River flooded at least 200 houses three feet deep in this (own abou( 25 miles southeast of Seat- tle, and roads were under as much as eight feet of water, officials said.

Linda Allen said she left when rescuers "came by in a rowboat and stuck the nose of the boat in the door."

The river hit 59.21 feet early yesterday at Sno- qualmie, more than five feet above flood stage, before beginning to recede, and later in the day hit a similar stage downstream at Carnation, said Rochelle Ogershok of the King County Department of Public Works.

Study: balance ecology and industry in Alaska WASHINGTON — An Interior

Department study recommended yesterday that Alaska's energy-rich Coastal Plain be opened to full-scale petroleum development so long as its fragile ecology and teeming wildlife are protected.

"The area is clearly the most outstanding oil and gas frontier re- maining in the United States and could contribute substantially to our domestic energy supplies," according to the study mandated by Congress in 1980.

At the same time, the study warned that "oil and gas development will result in widespread, long-term changes in wildlife habitat, wilderness environment and native community activities."

Environmental groups, saying development and protection are not compatible at (he Coastal Plain, said

they would work to persuade Con- gress to bar oil and gas drilling in the frozen tundra.

"We think we can kind of have it both ways," Assistant Secretary William Horn told a news conference. "You have here the potential for super-giant oil fields. . .We see substantial economic and substantial national security benefits."

The study said geologic tests in- dicate that as many as 9.2 billion bar- rels of oil could be recovered from the 1.5 million-acre tract along the Arctic Ocean and adjacent to the 18 million- acre Arctic National Wildlife Reserve.

This production level would rival the nearby Prudhoe Bay fields that ac- count for about 20 percent of the na- tion's production and would represent about 589 days supply at current con- sumption levels.

The Fish and Wildlife Service study

was forwarded to Interior Secre(ary Donald Hodel. who plans to make a formal recommendation to Congress early next year following a public comment period and hearings in Alaska and Washington.

Horn said that if Congress is asked to open the Coastal Plain, the depart- ment will seek "authority to impose restrictions to ensure environmental integrity during oil and gas opera- tions. Development must result in no unnecessary adverse effects, and unavoidable habitat losses should be fully compensated."

A final recommendation for even limited development would touch off a major battle between environmental groups and lawmakers like Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), who calls the Coastal Plain the "Saudi Arabia of North America."

"The wilderness values far

outweigh the oil and gas values," said the Wilderness Society's Susan Alex- ander, who says the plain's wildlife populations make it "America's Serengeti Plain."

The Coastal Plain is home to a wide variety of wildlife, from migratory snow geese to a herd of musk oxen, an animal once hunted nearly to extinc- tion. But the debate will focus on the Porcupine caribou herd, which spends up to two months a year on the plain calving and seeking relief from insects.

Horn said officials were uncertain of how much the caribou would be harmed, but he added that steps would be taken to minimize the damage. One step, he said, would be to hold off leasing prime calving grounds until all other sites are of- fered to oil companies.

Guards Mil man trying to escape over Berlin Wall BERLIN — East German border guards fired

dozens of shots yesterday at a young man trying to climb over the Berlin Wall to the West and he fell to the ground covered with blood. Western authorities said. They said he probably died.

Another East German succeeded yesterday in escaping to the West by setting out on a raft into the Baltic Sea, where he was picked up by a passing ship, West German police said.

The 36-year-old man on the raft identified himself as a nephew of Karl-Eduard von Schnitzler, Communist East Germany's pro- paganda chief and the leading commentator on state-run television, sources told The Associated

Press. A West Berlin witness to the wall shooting

reported hearing shouts of "Halt, stand still," followed by 30 to 50 shots on the eastern side of the wall at about 1:30 a.m.. West Berlin police said.

The witness said he saw someone climb to the top of the wall, then collapse and fall back into East German territory, according to police.

"I got you, you pig," an East German border guard shouted at the bloodied form sprawled on the ground, police said. They said the man was covered with a tarpaulin and carried away.

In Bonn, the Intra-German Relations Ministry issued a statement saying the would-be escapee was a man and was "probably killed." Police spokesmen in West Berlin also told The Associated Press the man most likely was dead.

The witness also reported an apparent protest by an East German guard, who shouted at fellow guards and angrily threw his hat to the ground, police said. The guard was disarmed by his colleagues and escorted away, they said.

Police said the witness was able to watch what happened through a crack in the 14-foot high, concrete structure in the West Berlin district of

Frohnau. It was the fourth time in 12 days that East

German guards have shot at fleeing people, said West Germany's chief government spokesman, Friedhelm Ost. Some of the people have manag- ed to escape.

France, Britain and the United States, which have administered Berlin's Western sectors since World War II, demanded an end to "brutal force" by East German guards at the wall. Ost condemned the shooting as a "bloody deed."

The West Berlin Senate, or city legislature, also protested.

mm

THE IJAin PENNSYLVANIA!* - lursdav. November 25, IVM PACE i

Lifestyles Dixon Palmer dances to spread the word about his people

Th e Kiowa India By ELEENA DELISSER

Dixon Palmer is a native American Indian of Kiowa and Choctaw Indian descent. He wears cowboy boots, flannel shirts and likes McDonald's.

He lives in Anadarko, Okla., which is less than three miles away from a popular tourist attraction called In- dian City USA.

But Palmer, who came to the University Museum to perform his native dance last week, also makes traditional Indian war bonnets. That is his contribution to spreading awareness of the native American presence in the United States — something that is important to the 66-year-old Kiowa Indian.

In order to show the American public that native Americans are just like everyone else. Palmer explained his need to perform at a demonstra- tion for schoolchildren last Thursday.

Children especially do not unders- tand this idea. Palmer said. The com- monly held misconceptions the public has are due to stereotypes presented through the media.

"We try to explain to them our songs and the way we dance," Palmer said. "After we talk to them they realize that our dances are sincere."

Palmer said (hat children often laugh when he and his troupe first ap- pear because they do not understand the significance of their presentation.

"But, hey, sometimes we don't understand all that you are doing either," Palmer joked.

It is Palmer's hope that by seeing his troupe perform, the children will be more tolerant of cultural differences.

Randy, Palmer's son. said he believes there is a changing attitude towards native Americans and that the public is starting to become better acquainted with Indian culture.

"Ten years ago, there were children who thought that [Indians] were going to scalp them or carry them away," Randy said.

"If we did not perform these dances we would soon lose I hem,"

*s

Brtt Flaharty/Daily Pennsylvaman

Palmer performed his dances in his native American garb last week in Ihe University Museum

Palmer said. Palmer's dance troupe, which has

toured the country, is a four-member group made up of him, his son. Ran- dy, his brother. Cms. and his nephew, Lee Tsatoke.

"We come here and show our dances as part of our culture," Cms added

Dressed in the colorful, lavish costumes of their native American culture, Palmer and his troupe per- formed ceremonial dances to the chanting of Kiowa songs and the beating of a drum.

Organized by the University Museum's International Classroom, a program designed to introduce school children to the art and culture of dif- ferent parts of the world, "Southern Plains Indians Days" was featured at the museum during a special four-day presentation.

Renown for his teepee painting and his feathcrworking talent, Palmer painted and built a teepee depicting the calendar of the Kiowa. It is on display in the museum's inner courtyard.

Performing a wide range of ceremonial dances including those which test agility and bravery and raise morale, Palmer explained the significance of the dances to his elementary school audience.

Performing the Shield Dance were Palmer's son. Randy, and nephew, Lee, who pretended to fight each other. Both men used a spear as a weapon and a shield made out of buf- falo hide.

"[It) gives young soldiers who have never been in a fighting scene a chance to practice hand-to-hand combat," Palmer said.

According to Palmer, his Kiowa ancestors were aggressive and not easily intimidated. Kiowa war chiefs such as Satank, Kicking Bird and Stumbling Bear are remembered for their bravery during the time when the American government consigned all Indian tribes to reservations.

Palmer started making the feather costumes and accessories at an early age, and he and his older brother, Gus, taught themselves the tribal ceremonial dances. When he was 12 years old. Palmer gave his first pro- fessional performance in an inter- tribal competition.

Palmer, whose expertise is mainly in his feathcrworking and teepee pain- ting, has made traditional native American head wear for celebrities such as Loretta Lynn and Willie Nelson.

When he is not performing or shar- ing his heritage with non-native Americans, Palmer returns to his home in Anadarko and to his craft of making bonnets and costumes.

Palmer's craft is a tedious one. It takes many weeks to make a bonnet, and the process is complicated. Palmer uses eagle feathers in the headdresses he makes because of their suitability and hardiness.

Admissions essay writing is source of applicant agony

Application essays help to individualize applicants

(( ontinurd from page I)

lion had fallen at a wrj but] academic period, it required a lot of work, it was like completing another college application."

Ihe advice paid oil foi Momll when sin- received the scholarship.

In addition to the required cssav. the I nivcriit) admit sion application also provides optional ones lor zealous applicants who like to write.

"For my optional essay. I did a )oke math proof," said Inginccring freshman Mike Casale. "I started out with "i" as a homonym for 'why', and I did take math until I got to the end. I I unshed up with "j

h cosine." or "y = b cos" [why = became]. It work- ed. I got in."

Creative eatayi are only one method through which students ex- press themselves. Lundquist said he also receives sink's of artwork, photography, music tapes and video tapes

"I've got boxes of the stuff." I tin

' 'There's an increasing awareness that students need to differentiate themselves from the thousands and thousands of other students apply- ing to the school,'' said Admisssions Associate Dean Dan Lundquist.

dquist said. "Students are going far beyond the tradition."

Other creative extremes include sending singing telegrams, fortune cookies which toietell "admissions fortunes," and handmade Universit) diplomas with the applicant's name inscribed.

But lundquist stressed that cleans its and personality alone cannot get a student admitted. "When everything else is there — academics, good letters ol recommenda- tion, etc. . that creativity can be a nice extra touch." he said.

When the Admissions Office reviews applicants, they look at school grades and test scores lirst. When the pool is narrowed, the admissions staff spend approximately 15 to 45 minutes reading the essays. What an applicant has to say can make or break his chances of getting into the University.

Applicants who take risks when writing their essays often stand a better chance when it comes to getting in.

"I thought very few people would think of meeting themselves after they were dead." Jackson said.

Although there were several parts to her essay, she said the most creative part of her essay concerned what would happen to her body after she dies. "I talked about the medical aspect of what the body goes through." she said.

When the admissions panel chooses the essay topics. Lundquist said they try to pick questions that help the reviewing board get to know the students. Individualizing essay questions are selected during an informal brainstor- ming session, according to Lundquist, but many students are afraid to take risks in their writing and end up with similar essays.

"A lot students sound the same in their essays," Lund- quist said. "They begin to sound like robots instead of 13,000 individuals. It's easy for them to get boring."

Then again, if applicants do not like the given topics, they are invited to write on subjects of their choice.

"A lot of students want the structure." said Lundquist. "It's easier to feel more confident when you know you're within the confines. At Penn we design a form for 12,000 candidates to use each year. Our questions are there to prompt students, to encourage them — not to create anx- iety or stifle creativity."

Mask&Wig to cut record

By ROSS KERBER Mask and Wig will perform a

benefit show tonight in the Houston Hall Auditorium in order to record acts for an upcoming album.

The troupe will perform a range of previous material for the album, said co-head writer Chip Butter- man. Some of the titles he men- tioned yesterday include "Tui- tion" — a Fiddler on the Roof derivative, "Test Tube Baby," and "Pennsylvania!" — as per Oklahoma!.

These titles suggest the even split between University-related material and outside gags that But- terman said will fill the record.

The planned LP is being produc- ed by College junior Jim Shmalo. He said last night that the tentative title is "Mask and Wig, Live on Campus." Tentatively slated for a late January release, the album will be part of the troupe's centennial celebration next year.

Butterman said the troupe wanted an audience on the record "because performing live is more milieu than doing it in the studio."

Proceeds from tonight's show will benefit the city's homeless. The performance starts at 7:30 p.m. with a suggested donation of $2.

Thank God for Thanksgiving Students welcome holiday break with vacation plans

By BETH REIN HARD After a bounteous autumn

harvest in the Plymouth Colony back in 1621, William Bradford, the governor of the colony, called for a day of thanksgiving marked by celebration and feasting.

More than 350 years later, after students at eastern institutions of higher learning have taken bounteous exams, a brief vacation is set aside when students com- memorate a day of thanksgiving marked by partying and pigging out.

Thanksgiving Day is a traditional national holiday which falls on the last Thursday of November, celebrating the harvest and other blessings of the past year.

But College freshman Leslie Cooper described the occasion as "when you get together with all your relatives who you haven't seen since last Thanksgiving."

"I do the typical, what- everybody-does-for-Thanksgiving thing," she said. "We rotate in my family — from my grandmother's, to my house, to my aunt's — and we have this big table with every

imaginable Thanksgivingish food." But Cooper, who hails from Liv-

ingston, N.J., is a vegetarian and abstains from the traditional turkey entree. Instead, she eats salmon.

Jay Baker, a College junior, said his Thanksgiving dinner will be "the classical Thanksgiving gather- ing of aunts, uncles and grandparents."

According to Baker, the holiday break comes at an appropriate time in the hectic school year. "It's ac- tually the perfect time to go home," he explained. "It's just long enough before finals that you don't have to be studying, yet close enough to finals that if you feel pressures you can [relieve them at home].

Californian Jennifer Gwartz wasn't planning on going home for Thanksgiving, but she said she miss- ed the west coast sunshine and made plane reservations at the last minute.

Gwartz, a College freshman, con- tinued that though she often skis with family and friends over the holiday break, this year she won't because she is sick of the cold.

Undergraduate Assembly Chair-

Thanksgiving is a time of feasting and partying for most students, but

there are some who just want a little rest and relaxation

man Eric Lang said he sees the historical and traditional significance of the holiday.

" Besides the Fourth of July, Thanksgiving is the one truly American holiday," said Lang, a College and Wharton senior.

He added that his Thanksgiving table at home consists of "food, food and more food."

But Rodney Romanoff said his Thanksgiving dinner is not like others'. "My mom is the worst cook," Romanoff explained, adding that he would rather eat popovers

from his favorite Boston restaurant than eat the customary Thanksgiv- ing dinner.

Romanoff, a College freshman from Riverdale, N.Y., said his family's Thanksgiving tradition in- volves going out for dinner in Boston and going to see local col- leges in the middle of the night.

An act of Congress in 1941 established Thanksgiving as the fourth Thursday in November, but College freshman Sharon Block said her family celebrates the national holiday a day later.

"We always drive to my grand- parents' house in Connecticut so we have Thanksgiving a day late because of all the traffic," she explained.

Block, who is from Long Island, N.Y., said that Thanksgiving means "pilgrims and indians."

"Mom gets out the turkeys I made when I was about eight years old and puts them on the table." she added.

Since many University students arc far from home, not everyone will be making the pilgrimage back. Matt Winslow said he will not be

going to his grandmother's house this week to eat the standard Thanksgiving fare as he has in the past.

"It's a pain to fly," explained Winslow, who is planning on stay- ing with friends in New York over the holiday vacation. "And it's part of being away."

I aruk Bilen won't be going home this Thanksgiving cither — his home is thousands of miles away in Istanbul.

Bilen explained that because he went to an American high school in Turkey, he was familiar with the traditions of the feast day.

"We knew that it meant something [for the American teachers) and that they eat turkey," he said.

Bilen, a College freshman, said he will spend Thanksgiving visiting friends at other schools in the U.S.

"It didn't mean anything before except that we had a day off," he explained. "But now it should mean something because all my friends are American. If something is im- portant to everyone around you, you can't be ignorant of it."

PAGE 4 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN - Tuesday. November 25. 19t*

Campus Events A listing of University news and events

OCJPUS

NOTICE TODAY TODAY S EVENTS are toed datfy

as* a paid puttc serve* 01 th« UrMmry of Pennsylvania, and are attmnmred tor the UmvwsHy by T>h Oa*y Pvnnsytvanan There a no» charge 10 authorised Umvemly- aflfcaMd groups tor Mngt of FREE events Lutings may be mailed or ufaced m person at The Daly Pttinsytvanian Business Office. 4015 Walnut Street, from 9 am to 5 Jp.m Monday through Friday Campus Events will nol be .ictepted by phone 25 word limit The Oaafy Pennsylvanian reserves

tMeJ right to edit Campus Events itceording to space limitations

TODAY ABORTION-Penn Pro-Life Asso I iation meeting Tuesday 7 00 p * Harrison Room. Houston Hajl All members please attend

ABSOLUTELY LAST FILM Co-Op mailing this month See two new lilras and maybe some old ones T uesday 7pm 14th floor lounge MHt

Ali INTERESTED IN BBB come set Depl chairman and advi-

sors Inlro meeting Tuesday November 25th, 4 30-5 30 H H Srrfith Penniman Room Biological Basis ol Behavior Undergraduate Society

A ORGAN RECITAL will be held in Irvine on Tuesday. November 25 from 12 05-12 30pm Free1 Bring your lunch1 Curtis Organ Society 898-2848

BADMINTON CLUB AN welcome Weighlman Gym tonight, 8-10 p m Any questions call Ion B 386-1631 or Abby 386-6205

COMMUNITY OUTREACH core group meeting in the upper lobby of High Rise East at 5 30

FOR WOMEN ONLY Rambam Maimonodies Book of Mitzvol topic The Positive Commands lime 7 00 pm HRN 2nd ftoor lounge No background neces- sary All are welcome

HEBREW UNIVERSITY OF JERUSALEM A representative from the Office of Academic Affairs will be on campus Nov 25 Interested call Esther lo schedule an appointment

MASK AND WIG show tonight Help us cut our album Houston Hall. 7pm Tickets on the walk and at the door Proceeds benefit Philadelphia's homeless

SPEND WINTER BREAK ON the Beach in Eilat1 Student tours to Israel Dec 21 to Jan 26 Don't miss out' You II have the time of your life! For more info call Esther 898-8265

PENN UNION COUNCIL weekly meeting Houston Hall Ben Frank- lin Room 5 p m Everybody welcome Don't miss it!

STARBLAZERS' Event Horizon Science Fiction Club needs you! Our meeting is Tuesday, 11'25 in Houston Hall 301 at 9 p m

TOMORROW* A WORKSHOP MEETING lor Curtis Organ Restoration Society Irvine, 7-9 p.m.. Wednesday November 26 Welcome1

898-2848

FREE MICROCOMPUTING SEMI NARi Bits & Pieces Macintosh Questions and answers Wednes- day. Nov 26. 12-1 pm . 1st floor conference room Van Pelt Library Sponsored by Computing Resource Center Info 898-1780

FUTURE MATH/ACT SCI MAJORS Prudential PaC Holmdel. NJ wiH make presentation on Monday. December 1, 4:30 p m . in CPC Boardroom (4th floor) Further info Ray (222-7660)

PENN MODEL RAILROADS MEET in Towne Building room B—2. at 8 00 pm Get into training

AMERICAN SOCIETY of Maga zine Editors offers summer intern ship for |unior with reporting editing and writing background Must apply by 12-3-86 Details CPPS Books under Journalism "

ATTENTION UNDERGRADE ATES from Souther California December 5th deadline for resumes is approaching for parti- cipation in Summer Job Fair in LA 1-6-67 For details, see Barbara T , CPPS

CITIBANK Information session lor credit training and relationship management November 25, 7-9 p.m., Ben Franklin Room. Hous- ton Hall CPPS

L.F ROTHCHILD, Unterberg. Towbin Information session on linancial analysis December* 1. 7-9 p m . Smith Pennman Room, Houston Hall CPPS

THE UNIVERSITY OF IOWA College of Law will be recruiting on campus on Tuesday. Novem- ber 25th Please sign up in CPPS with Jan

Campus Briefs A summary of University news

U. police investigating costly jewelry robbery

University police are investigating two unrelated burglaries — one involving the loss of thousands of dollars worth of jewelry.

Lt. Steven Heath said yesterday that a University stu- dent reported $5700 worth of jewelry stolen from her Van Pelt House apartment at 4:22 a.m. Sunday. She pro- vided University police with an inventory of the jewelry missing from her apartment.

According to Lt. Heath, the complainant's roommate said that at approximately 3 a.m. she saw a male in the apartment, and asked him what he was doing. He mumbled something and then left the area, according to the roommate.

She gave a brief description of the man to the police. The complainant added that the door to the apartment

was not closed prior to the incident. Although credit cards and money were in plain sight at

the time of the burglary, only the jewelry was taken, Lt. Heath said.

The other burglary was discovered at 10:39 a.m. on Sunday when the complainant arrived at an office in the David Rittenhouse Laboratory and saw that the door window had been shattered. He immediately contacted University police.

Lt. Heath said that the police and the complainant entered the second floor office and discovered that two desk drawers had been forced open.

The complainant will provide Public Safety with a list of any stolen items.

— Beth Reinhard

Thieves rob student of wallet at gunpoint

A University student was robbed at gunpoint outside an apartment in the 500 block of South 46th Street at ap- proximately 3 a.m. Saturday.

According to Lt. Steven Heath, the complainant said that when he walked to the doorway of his apartment, he saw two men loitering near the door. He added that although he was apprehensive, he walked between them into the lobby.

The complainant said one man followed him closely and produced a nickel-plated hand gun. Upon demand, he gave the man his watch and wallet, adding that the other man remained outside the door to the lobby and then both men fled on foot.

The complainant also contacted Philadelphia police, but the search has produced no results, Lt. Heath said.

— Beth Reinhard

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3 Ben Franklin Room, Houston Hall

7-9 P.M. Sign up with Kathleen

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Four arrested on theft charges Items taken from Quadramics members

THK DAILY PENNSYLVANIA!* - TUCMJ«>. N.,»«-rahcr 25. \>m, PAGE 5

By BETH REINHARD University police arrested and

charged four men on counts relating to theft shortly after they were discovered rifling through coats, wallets and other items taken from a Houston Hall room Friday night.

Ll. Steven Heath said yesterday that at approximately 10 p.m. Friday. University police responded to a report of four men searching through coats and wallets on the 3400 block of Walnut Street. The men fled the scene upon the arrival of the police.

Sgt. Thomas Messner along with Officers Thomas Rambo. Lawrence

Salotti, Rafael Melende; and Maureen Behl pursued the men on foot and in cars, apprehending them at several locations. The men were transported to University police head- quarters for processing and then to the West Detective Division for a follow-up investigation.

The four have been charged with criminal trespassing, theft, receiving stolen property and conspiracy.

Police recovered several items, in- cluding coats, wallets, identification and credit cards belonging to eight people who had left their belongings in Houston Hall room 237 during a

Quadramics performance of Amadeus. All the complainants were involved in the Quadramics produc- tion, and were able to identify their stolen property.

College senior Jennifer Tcplitzky. whose coat was stolen and retrieved, said she 'thought that the stuff was supposed to be watched" during the performance.

She added that some of the wallets and money were not retrieved.

Erica Kamin, a College freshman, said her overcoat was discovered in- side a construction site, and others" coats were strewn over the street.

Trash disposal creates messy problem (Continued from page I)

to the city's most pressing problem — its trash crisis," Goode said.

"It is so important because it will provide us with the means of controll- ing our own destiny, solving our own problems within our own borders," he added.

Philadelphia has disposed of its trash in the landfills of neighboring towns for years. But nearby landfills have shut their doors to the city's trash trucks, with all current landfill contracts expiring on June 30, 1987.

The quantity of garbage is not the only difficulty the city faces. Since 1981, disposal costs have almost tripl- ed. Total costs for collection, hauling and buying landfill space skyrocketed from $20 million in 1981 to an estimated $54 million in the 1986 fiscal year.

Last week. City Council designated an additional $1 million for overtime for Streets Department employees, who worked extra hours to haul the city's trash to distant landfills.

The proposed facility, as well as recycling and resource recovery, is ex- pected to stabilize disposal costs by 1990 at a level below current expenses.

In addition, steam and electricity will be sold to the Navy Yard and the Philadelphia Electric Company. Revenues from energy sales are ex- pected to average $17 million annually.

But not all city residents support the mayor's plan.

Many South Philadelphians believe the plant will increase large truck traf- fic in the area, raise noise levels and endanger residents.

"That's a misconception by the community — the large trucks will not run through the area," Streets Department engineer Bruce Gledhill said last week.

"Clearly, traffic is of primary con- cern to South Philadelphia residents," added Streets Department Commissioner Harry Perks, who testified in the mayor's behalf at the City Council meeting.

Perks added that the closing of two main transfer stations — collection points for trash destined for the out- of-town landfills — would result in less truck traffic on South and

Southwest Philadelphia streets. "Big transfer truck trailers —

which haul to distant landfills — and other trash-carrying city and private vehicles will no longer be coming to and from these facilities," Perks add- ed. "The collection trucks serving South Philadelphia will go directly to the Navy Yard, rather than to the transfer stations."

Pollution is also a major concern to South Philadelphia residents.

According to the mayor's proposal, all federal and state air quality stan- dards and guidelines will be met or ex- ceeded by the Navy Yard plant.

Before the plant can be constructed or operated, more than 15 different federal, state and local governmental agencies will review the blueprints.

"We would have to comply with the most stringent of regulations," said Norman Glazer, director of engineering for Air Management Ser- vices, a division of the Health Department.

"This thing has to meet a lot of operation and maintenance re- quirements," Glazer added.

The plant design plan calls for str- ingent pollution control devices.

"The proposal, as I understand it at this point, calls for pollution con- trols," Glazer explained. "The con- trols are used in many facilities throughout the country and throughout the world."

The anti-pollution system consists of mixing chemicals with acids and gases in the air to form a dry residue. According to Glazer, the substance would pass through a large bag, similar to a vacuum cleaner, trapping the toxins.

Although exhaust from (he plant will contain some emissions, toxic levels will not exceed regulatory standards.

The mayor recently established the Philadelphia Public Health Advisory Commission, an independent group of medical experts, to address the health concerns of city residents. The commission's report will be released in the next few weeks.

"As mayor, I will not endanger the health or safety of our citizens," Goode said in his testimony. "If the commission recommends changes in

the design of the plant, we will make those changes. If it concludes that the plant presents undue risks to our citizens, then we will not build the plant."

Calling the environmental problem "not a neighborhood issue," Gledhill said the Streets Commission was "concerned with pollution no matter where |the plantl was located."

The city was also careful in its con- sideration of a plant site.

"Really we looked at close to a dozen sites since the late 1970s" before concentrating on the Navy site in late 1981. Gledhill explained.

The plant will be located one-half mile from the nearest residence, and out of sight of the closest neighborhoods. It will be easily ac- cessible by highways, and will be located close to a major steam user, the Navy.

"The economics involved was that the Navy was willing to be a customer. . .in the quantity necessary to build major facilities," Gledhill ad- ded, stressing the project's permanence.

"If the Philadelphia Shipyard ceases to exist, the Navy will pay the differential costs (incurred by building the plant]," Gledhill con- tinued. "The site was carefully chosen — it's no accident it's there."

No indications have been given as to when City Council will vote to ap- prove the mayor's plan, but Goode is urging a speedy decision.

Since the projected time needed for construction and start-up of the plant is 33 months, each delay means the ci- ty must continue to pay landfill and dumping costs.

"Even as we sit here, we incur an additional daily cost of $84,000," Goode said.

Until City Council reaches a deci- sion on Bill 1005, Philadelphia will continue to rely on other cities to store its garbage.

Massive public opposition and citizen lawsuits from the residents of nearby towns have shown that many Pennsylvanians feel that Philadelphia should keep its trash to itself.

Anti-drug plan contains three main parts (Continued from page I)

cooperative effort. The group will raise "private funds to carry out this policy," he added.

"The city will enlist the support of business and labor leaders, educators, neighborhood leaders, sports figures, entertainers and the media" to form a partnership to fight drugs, he said.

The policy's treatment aspect will help "every Philadelphian who needs

assistance for drug abuse," Goode continued.

The mayor also said that the Coor- dinating Office for Drug and Alcohol Abuse Programs will attempt to raise more private, state and federal funds to expand its treatment services for ci- ty residents.

CODAAP will also work to "develop an effective policy and pro-

gram for city employees with drug problems," Goode added.

The district attorney's office has proposed a special Drug Prosecution Unit to deal with drug offenders. The unit will help law enforcement of- ficials "handle drug cases in the same manner they handle career criminal and repeat offender cases," the

(Continued on page 7)

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®lje fimb ■"Peratstrhnmiaii DEADUNE

'///<' Independent .XeH\paper/f/ the I ni\er\ity of I'ennsylx 10 I'M Year of PuNicOtion

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PAGE* Tuesday, November 25. 1986

Ivy Champs.. . i When the Ivy League football season began, the

Pennsylvania Quakers had an awesome act to live up "lo — their own past.

Coming into this year, no undergraduate at Penn had ever seen a losing football season. No one saw

;the Quakers go 1-9 in legendary Coach Jerry Berndt's first season. All anyone could remember was winning four straight Ivy League titles to become the best team in a league in which they were once the doormats. Losing was unheard of in the Hermit era.

And many feared that when Berndt left Penn to coach at Rice, the dynasty he built would go with him. After all, how can you top near perfection?

With absolute perfection. When former Penn defensive coordinator Ed

Zubrow took over as head coach this year, hardly anyone expected the Quakers to top their perfor- mance of the last four years. Except Zubrow and many on the team.

Not only did Penn win its fifth straight Ivy title by defeating Cornell 31-21 in Ithaca Saturday, it also wrapped up a 10-0 season in the process.

That's right, 10-0. As in the first undefeated Penn football squad since 1904. As in perfect.

.. .And Losers As the Quakers concluded a perfect season on the

field Saturday, the crowd at Schoellkopf Field pro- vided a disgusting display of classlessness and viciousness.

The Cornell fans proved to be extraordinarily rude hosts. They continually showered the football team and the Penn band with iceballs — not snowballs, mind you, but iceballs — before, during and after the game. There is a place for friendly competition in the stands, but the Cornell crowd far exceeded the bounds of decency and good taste.

Thankfully, no one was seriously injured, although several band members who didn't duck were left bleeding from wounds inflicted by Cornell iceballs. The fans did not seem to realize that no matter how important the football game on the field was, it was just a game.

As it turns out, bombarding the football team turned out to be a mistake. "Throwing snowballs at us was the worst thing they could have done," Penn co-captain Steve Buonato said. "That fired us up even more. Going into the game, we said that the first thing we were going to do was take care of their players, and after that, if we had to go into the stands, we'd take care of [the fans] too."

But no matter what the effects were, there is ab- solutely no justification for the fans' actions.

Unfortunately, a large part of the blame must be

This year's Quaker squad was a true champion- ship team. Though it faced some extremely tough competition — including Navy — the character of the team never faltered even when it was forced to come from behind for a victory. Saturday's victory, in front of a hostile crowd at Schoellkopf Field, was just the latest example of the team's determined personality.

Many individual performers stood out on the squad, especially senior running back Rich Comizio, who topped 1000 yards rushing for the season and established an all-time Penn record with 2479 career yards, and junior running back Chris Flynn, who broke the team's single season all-purpose yardage record with 1620 yards. But, in the end, the undefeated season was the result of a team effort.

The 10-0 season is certainly an auspicious way to begin the Zubrow era. With the victory, the Quakers tied the 1969-73 Dartmouth teams for the most con- secutive Ivy titles. Each year, Penn has faced adver- sity and has managed to come out on top. And that's the stuff of true champions.

To the 1986 Ivy League champion Pennsylvania Quakers — thanks for the memories of a pefect season. And congratulations on a dream come true.

shouldered by the members of Cornell's Public Safe- ty department, who have a well-deserved reputation as cruel and incompetent police officers. The of- ficers stood idly by, allowing the barrage to continue despite repeated pleas for action by Penn students. By ignoring the Cornell students who hurled iceballs at people at close range, the officers needlessly ex- posed a lot of people to the risk of serious injury. One wonders exactly why they showed up to the game if not to protect people.

On the other hand, the Cornell fans were not the only rude people at the game.

It is one thing to tear down goalposts at your own school when you win a league title. But i( is quite another to attempt to rip out the goalposts when your team is on the road. Tearing down goalposts is a potentially deadly tradition, and Quaker fans should have shown more respect for the host school.

True, the hosts weren't being hospitable, but there was no reason to virtually sink to their level. There are plenty of acceptable ways to celebrate a major football victory; destroying property at another university is not one of them.

The Quakers proved themselves to be champions in every sense of the word on the field Saturday. The Cornell Big Red put up a valiant effort worthy of a fine 8-2 team. It's too bad that many fans marred what was an otherwise tremendous day for Ivy League football.

Letters to the Editor Student Condemns Mike Peters for Offending Church To the Editor:

Mike Peters' cartoon suggesting lhat a Catholic theologian is in as bad u lot as a hostage is an insult to all tatholies who still follow the Jeachings of the Church (DP, 11/19/86). (1 assume the cartoon was primed in response to the recent Reprimanding of Raymond Hun- Jhausen. Archbishop of Seattle, who *roke with the teachings of the fchurch in five major areas.)

1 Practising Catholics take it on the chin on your editorial page enough as

it is without your insinuating that the Holy Father is some sort of terrorist. A friend of mine from the New York chapter of Decency remarked that he saw no place where conservative Catholics could go who've had it with the warped notions of some church members who claim to be "moved in the spirit of Vatican II" and call for "constructive dialogue" offer. Behind the rhetoric of clergy like Ar- chbishop Hunthausen, it's easy to see the insidious rewriting of Catholic theology taking place.

Clergy like Archbishop Hun- thausen don't belong in the Church. Fortunately, the Pope's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith is work- ing to fight those would take our an- cient and blessed religion away from us. Clergy and laity who can't handle

what the Holy Father teaches always have the choice of leaving the church.

Please refrain from the highly in- sulting and divisive cartoons in the future.

I KI I)l Kit K W. GUNDI.ACH Wharton '87

Wharton Junior Comments on His Views of Reagan To the Editor:

(Re: Iran. DP, 11/14/86) Ronald Reagan makes me sick.

TODD SIFF Wharton '88

ATTENTION: NEW COLUMNISTS The Daily Pennsylvanian is currently accepting applications for positions

of bi-weekly columnists for the Spring 1987 semester. All members of the University community are strongly urged to apply. Ap-

plicants should submit sample columns which they feel best represent their abilities and an outline of the topics they intend to cover or general theme of their regular column — please be as specific as possible.

Deadline for applications is Saturday December 20. Applicants will be notified of final decisions before the conclusion of winter vacation.

Send applications — which should include writer's year, school, home ad- dress and telephone number — to Craig Coopersmith, editorial page editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian, 4015 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104.

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Jeffrey Goldberg

On the trip home tomorrow, many of you will take Am- Irak from 30th Street. On your way to the station, you may pass Grad Tower A. One year ago this week, a fellow student, Meera Ananthakrishnan, was stabbed to death in her room in Grad Tower A. As you're leaving for Thanksgiving, think of her.

When you get to the station, look around before your trai* leaves. Some of the people sitting quietly on benches will stay there for Thanksgiving. They've stayed there

most days. •

Meera Ananthakrishnan was murdered the day after Thanksgiving. She was stabbed to death by George Stump, who said he killed her because his mother didn't love him.

Ananthakrishnan was a graduate student in the Physics Department. Her friends described her as shy and studious. People who knew her said she was brilliant.

Stump pleaded guilty, but told a ^^^^^^^^^ judge last week that he didn't do it. He said he hated his mother and took his anger out on anyone in his way. Ananthakrishnan got in the way.

She was in the way because security in her building, Grad Tower A, was nonexistent, and she was in the way because she stayed on campus, alone, for Thanksgiving.

• Jurgis Rudkus sits in front of a plate of unheated

chicken, a mound of beans, once green, hiding the dish's cracks. He picks at the beans and talks about the plate. He said that the shelter ran out of paper dishes, so real plates — ancient Limoges, an awkward gift from a Rittenhouse Square matron bent on helping the poor — had to be used that day.

Jurgis Rudkus usually eats enough for two people, but tonight the chicken sits undisturbed. It's cold outside, and the cold, Rudkus says, kills his appetite. Which is all right, because the food is vile.

He granted me an interview on one condition — that I give him an appropriate pseudonym. It had to be a mean- ingful name, one relevant to his condition. Jurgis Rudkus, the protagonist in Upton Sinclair's The Jungle, is ap- propriate. The homeless Rudkus resembles Sinclair's Rudkus — both are well-built, both worked as laborers and both know suffering.

Rudkus has spent seven years bouncing from city to ci- ty, shelter to shelter. His skin is coarse, his head bald ex- cept for a few clumps of unwashed blond hair resting on

Jurgis Rudkus usually eats enough for two people, but tonight the chicken sits undisturbed. It's cold out- side, and the cold, Rudkus says, kills his appetite.

his ears. He is desperately lonely, extremely bright and slightly crazy.

Rudkus calls himself a vox clamanlis in deserlo, a voice crying out in the wilderness — "I just tell people I see that it's terrible to be poor, and it's bad to be sick and to not have a hospital. That's it. But people don't want to see me and hear me."

1 met Rudkus on campus last week. He occasionally eats at St. Mary's Church, but he told me to come see him at a Center City shelter because he felt that people were wat- ching him at Penn. Rudkus, who looks about 45, said he worked as a lumberjack in Oregon and once had a wife, but she died.

"When I lost her, 1 lost everything and I went to drink," he said. He was visibly upset when he talked about his wife. "I drank and drank, went up to Seattle, drank some more, and then I was committed."

• Last March, 1 received a ripped, almost illegible letter

from Meera Ananthakrishnan's father. It was postmarked Madras, India, and was mailed in January. In it, he asked me to mail him stories about the murder of his daughter. He also asked that I write about her life.

"She was to come home and be a most famous scien- tist," the letter read. "Meera to me was all the things of life."

He wrote that Meera was beautiful and that she was the

"She was to come home and be a most famous scien- tist, '*, the letter read. "Meera to me was all the things of life."

joy of her family. Mr. Ananthakrishnan sounded inconsolable.

• After he sank deep into alcoholism, Rudkus spent

several years in an asylum. He was released in the mid-70s and wandered east — "I thought I knew some people here." He now splits his time between New York and Philadelphia. He enjoys Chinese food and stays at a "great shelter" in New York on Mulberry Street bordering Chinatown. "The restaurants throw out a lot of food."

Talking to Rudkus can be difficult — he jumps from topic to topic. We were talking about lo mein and fried rice when he suddenly reached in his suitcase for a tattered paperback, a thick collection of Dostoevsky, and analyzed Crime and Punishment for me. Rudkus has read Dostoev- sky and Tolstoy and most medieval literature. Before our meeting ended, he recited passages from Dante's Inferno from memory and compared himself to Virgil.

"I sec hell everyday, you know. I see guys who you couldn't even find words for," Rudkus said.

The time had come for me to leave. He didn't want me to go; he enjoyed company and said that the other men eating in the shelter were all "stupid or crazy or both."

We walked out together — I to catch a bus, he to "take a stroll." As my bus approached, I asked him what he was doing for Thanksgiving. He told me he had no place to go. I told him I could find someplace for him to go in Philadelphia, with some students 1 know who are staying in town. He told me he didn't want to impose. I said he wouldn't be imposing. He told me no and walked away as my bus arrived.

• Most people have forgotten Meera Ananthakrishnan,

and nobody knows Jurgis Rudkus. Meera is yesterday's news. Jurgis is a nameless face on an occasional magazine cover story.

Thanksgiving is supposed to be a meaningful holiday, but it has become, for many, a crass excuse for gluttony.

It's difficult to think about a murdered student, and it's difficult to remember the homeless and the poor. But we must, if we are to remain a humane community.

Jeffrey Goldberg, a College senior, is the executive editor of The Daily Pennsylvanian. He suggests that dona- tions be made to the University City Hospitality Coalition, which cares for the homeless in the area. Make checks payable to "UCHC c/o St. Mary's Church. " Drop them off at the Christian Association, where more information on the group is available. Deadline appears alternate Tuesdays.

Send Us Mail

The Daily Pennsylvanian welcomes comment from the University community in the form of columns and letters to the editor.

Signed columns, letters and car- toons appearing on this page repre- sent the opinions of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the DP Board of Managers.

Please limit letters to two typewritten pages. The DP reserves the right to condense all letters. Send all material to Craig Coopersmith. editorial page editor. The Daily Pen- nsylvanian, 4015 Walnut Street, Philadelphia. PA 19104.

Quotatbn of the Day

' There's an increasing awareness that students need to differentiate themselves from the thousands and thousands of other students apply- ing to the school.'

— Admissions Associate Dean Dan Lundquisl

% jia% ] ̂emts^bmttan JEFFREY GOLDBE RG. EXECUTIVE EDITOR

FEUPE ALBUQUER QUE. MANAGING EDITOR JEFFREY METCAL F, BUSINESS MANAGER

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A,

Phila. department stores THK DAILY PENNSYLVANIA*! — Tuesday November 25. I«IU» 9KC.V. 7

(Continued from page I) substantial reduction in the size of the 1,800,000 square-foot store in Center City-

Woodward & Lothrop Spokesman Robbiee Snow said last week that most of the proposed changes to the store are only "speculation" at the moment.

Although the spokesman said it is "more than likely" the store will re- tain the Wanamaker name, she added that "the decision is not totally firm."

"Wanamaker's already has such a tradition behind it," Snow said. "It's such a solid name in the area."

According to Snow, her firm is "very excited about the deal."

"We hope we can help Wanamaker's to come back to where it has been in the past," she said. "We think we can make it profitable."

Snow called the Philadelphia market an exciting place to be right now, and said she believes the recent changes do not signal a decline in sales.

"There seems to be a lot of activi- ty," she said. "People are looking at coming in to do something exciting, to spruce it up."

The Gimbcl's name was not main- tained when the seven area stores were purchased by Stern's, an Allied Stores Corp. division, in August.

"We thought the Gimbel's name was not a significant name in Philadelphia," Stern's Senior Marketing Vice President Hal Fraser explained last week.

"We think that the name didn't mean what it had meant many years ago," he said, adding that the store was "run-down" at the time of its sale.

According to Fraser, one reason for Gimbel's failure was that the previous owners "undershot the market."

In response to this problem, Stern's hopes both to maintain Gimbel's customers and "broaden the base of our customer appeal to a little higher price level," Fraser said.

"We've done a lot to upgrade and improve the merchandise mix," he continued, adding that the new owners have included "a much wider

assortment of merchandise (and have] added staff to improve service."

Future plans include store renova- tions, which will begin next year.

Although Stern's increased its man- power, Fraser said that the store maintained all Gimbel's employees. He added that the change in manage ment has produced no problems among the workers.

"Running a department store is a massive job," Fraser continued. "We are now set for what we see is a reasonable degree of profes- sionalism. . .As we get into the holi- day season, we think we're ready."

More than 20 Bamberger's stores began using the Macy's name in Oc- tober. The department store has been a division of Macy's since 1929, and the name change was a corporate deci- sion that did not involve any manage- ment changes.

"The company has always been there," Macy's Spokesman Bud Pomeran/ explained last week. "It's just under a different name."

"We expect to continue to do outstanding business," Pomeranz said, adding that there will be no dif- ferences in store policy.

Despite a takeover attempt earlier this year by New York-based Ron Baron, Strawbridge & Clothier is not planning to change its way of business.

In response to the failed effort, "defensive measures" were taken by the board of directors. Sales Promo- tion Vice President William Timmons said last week.

"The position of the company is relatively safe from takeover [and] we intend to stay that way," Timmons continued.

According to Timmons, both the shareholders and the consumers are pleased with Strawbridge & Clothier's current ownership, and he does not foresee a change in store policy in the near future.

"The consumers say to us that they like what we're doing, and our business is relatively good," Timmons said. "It's not easy for a firm to come in from the outside and be successful."

Mayor's anti-drug policy (Continued from page 5)

mayor said. In addition, the police department

is currently cooperating with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration to increase the proportion of narcotics- related arrests.

The mayor said he is "convinced that, if these policies are im- plemented, with commitment and cooperation from all Philadelphians, we will be able to save our children and our children's future."

Officials will not allocate more city money to fight drug abuse this year, Goode explained, adding that they will try to obtain more federal and state funds. If funding is not available, the city will spend more of its own money, "perhaps in next year's budget."

During the conference, Philadelphia Health Commissioner Maurice Clifford said that the new policy is the result of "a 12-fold in-

crease in cocaine abuse" over the last five years.

With the current crack problem, the statistic could get drastically worse, Clifford said, adding that he hopes the new policy will "discourage ex- perimentation as well as [repeated] use of drugs."

Police Commissioner Kevin Tucker said his department is planning to in- crease the number of officers current- ly working in the drug enforcement unit.

The commissioner said he realized some time ago that "traditional policing was not the answer to the drug problem in our city," and the police force needs citizen cooperation to combat the problem.

In addition. District Attorney Ron Castille said that "[the city] is not winning the battle on drugs right now, but we're staying just about even."

"We welcome all of the help we can get," he added.

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Pipes lying behind (hr Phi Delia Thela fraternity house where the l.auder Fischer Building will be erected

Lauder/Fischer Building gets more funds (Conlinutit from page I)

amount of space," Zucker said.

Bui he also emphasized ihe value of interaction between (he Real Estate Center, which conducts research and undergraduate and continuing educa- tion classes, and the l.auder Institute, which is a multilingual, international management MA-MBA program in the College of Aris and Sciences and Wharton

"[The combined facility] allows for an interchange with Ihe I audcr In- stitute Students, which will be very good because real estate is not just a

national business — it's an interna- tional business," Zucker said.

l.auder Institute Director Jerry Wind also said last night that the two groups may eventually hold some joint seminars, and he added that the Real Estate Center will be "a terrific- neighbor."

At one point this year, the ar- chitects' plans had expanded the building to 24,000 square feet, and the preliminary estimate had swelled to almost SI million over budget. Accor- ding to Vice President for FaciJities Management John Anderson, elimination of the extra space and

other cost-cutting measures lowered Ihe estimate to approximately $3.25 million in an effort to meet the original budget.

Designs for the building, which will have separate entrances for its oc- cupants, are expected to be finished before Christmas. Construction on the site behind Phi Delta Theta frater- nity house, at the corner of 37th Street and Locust Walk, is slated to begin toward the end of March and last ap- proximately one year. The University has contracted with Lehrer- McGovcrn-Bovis International to serve as its construction management firm.

Crime Blotter A weekly listing of crime on campus

The following summary lists all crimes reported to the University's Public Safety Department during the week ending Sunday. November 23.

rOTAl C'KIMKS BY CATKGORY: Crimes tfaiasl ihe Person I Burglars I I hell 25 Theft of Auto 0

DETAIL LISTINGS OK CRIMES AGAINST PKRSONS

IIP 86, <:42 p.m., 3900 Block Locust. Male robbed Mupectj arrested.

DETAIL LISTINGS BY ARKA Number qfler location reports number of incidents in thai area I istingS Include onlv areas where two or more crimes weft reported. 34th In 36th Spruce to Locust (4)

11.17/86, 10:43 a.m.. Williams Hall, Computer and pans taken

II 20 86, 12:03 p.m., Williams Hall. Plaque taken from frame in hallway.

11/20 *<-. 5 24 p.m.. College Hall. Wallet taken from unattended backpack.

II 21 86, 10:05 p.m., Houston Hall. 4 males arrested for theft

37th to 38th I Spruce to Locust (3) 11/17/86, 7:47 p.m., McNeil Building, University

paycheck taken from unattended briefcase. 11/18/86. 5:32 p.m.. Vance Hall. Wallet taken from

vending area. 11/21/86. 10:54 a.m.. Vance Hall. Secured Huffy

taken on 11/13/86.

39th to 40th r Spruce to Locust (2) 11/23/86. 4:42 a.m.. Van Pelt House. Jewelry taken

from open room. 11/23/86. 4:41 p.m.. Van Pelt House. Money taken

from wallet left unattended.

36th to 38lh / Walnut to Market (31 11/17/86. 3:29 p.m.. Lot number 30, Hub caps taken

from lot. 11/20/86, 11:45 a.m.. lot number 27. Hood orna-

ment Stolen from vehicle eily called. 11/20/86. 2:08 p.m.. GimbeJ Gym, Secured bike taken

from rack.

36th to 37th Locust to Walnut (2) 11/17/86. 11:34 iin.. Christian Association, Purse

laken from unattended backpack. 11/17/86, 4:08 p.m.. Christian Association, Money

taken from unlocked mom.

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THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIA!* - Tursdat. November 25. I9M PAGE •

Eckel finishes 68th at NCAA meet li was the sweetest 68th place finish

in Pcnn women's cross country history.

Quaker senior Sue Eckel completed her memorable season yesterday by finishing in 68th place in an immense field of remarkable quality at the Na- tional Collegiate Athletic Association

Women's Cross Country Champion- ship meet at the University of Arizona yesterday.

Eckel, the first Penn woman ever to qualify for the NCAA meet, finished in a time of 18:24.6.

The individual winner was Angela

Chalmers of Northern Arizona, who finished in 16:55.4. a full six seconds over Suzy Fabor of Wisconsin who tunshod in 17:01.5. The highest nor- theastern finisher was Kelly Groeteke of Yale who finished 24th in 17:38.8.

The Quakers did not qualify for the meet's team competition, won by

Texas 62-64 over Wisconsin. The highesi northeastern teams were Yale in 7th place with 201 points and Villanova which ended in l.'th, tied with Iowa, at 27s> points

- HOWARDZALKOWm

Burdick nets hat trick as Hockey Club loses, 7-5 (Continued from back page)

could have sounded the alarm right there and stopped a lackluster effort before it happened. But neither Michael J. Fox nor Kathleen Turner is a member of the Quakers, so Penn's wake-up call did not come quite soon enough, as Wharton took advantage of the Quakers' slow start to register a 7-5 victory. It was Penn's first loss to go with a tie in five games this season.

"We didn't really play as a team; we underestimated our opponent." senior left wing Greg Rogers said. "We didn't come out skating, and they hit us all over the ice. Our breakout was non-existent, and they beat us to the loose pucks. When you get beaten to the puck, they can get where they want to and dominate

play. We were especially flat in the first period."

Wharton wasted no time capitaliz- ing on this, scoring on its first shift of the game. They went on to put three more first-period goals past Quaker backup goalie Greg Porges, who was seeing his first action of the season, and Penn found itself in a 4-0 hole at the end of the period.

"[Wharton] was better than we ex- pected. They were in good shape and kept skating with us," junior wing James Galvin said. "We didn't con- centrate much; it wasn't a good team effort."

"We had an uninspired first period," senior defenseman Eric Kihlstrom said. "People didn't really seem to have their legs. [But in the se-

cond period] we realized things weren't going to get any better unless we picked up our level of play. We began to hit more and pick up a few goals."

The Quakers had twice rallied from two-goal deficits earlier in the season to avert losses, and, behind the of- fense of Galvin and freshman center Bryan Burdick, made another com- eback against Wharton. Both players tallied twice in the second period to bring Penn within 6-4 after two. Bur- dick then completed his second hat (rick of the season midway through the third period, converting the re- bound of a Rogers shot after a delayed penalty had been called dur- ing their two-on-one break, to make it 6-5. However, the Quaker surge came

up short, as Wharton tightened up defensively throughout the remainder of the game.

"After the game, we had a big discussion," Kihlstrom said. "This game should be a rallying point to prove ourselves for our next game It's a lesson learned; we have to have a positive altitude regardless of how we play and can't take anything for granted."

"We were reallv disappointed; it'll make us play harder the next time," Galvin said. "[The loss] will end up helping the team li establishes team character and who the leaders are. Up to this point, everything was cheery, because we hadn't lost yet. Hard limes are needed to build character and strength on a team."

UNG ABROAD IEXT SEMESTER?

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Temple beats Villanova to face UNLV in semis (Continued from hack page)

from their centers and will join Tem- ple and UNLV as the other half of the semifinal doubleheader.

Western Kentucky edged Texas Christian 96-90 and Memphis State defeated Michigan 82-76.

Center Marvin Alexander had 21 points and nine rebounds and ignited a second-half surge for Memphis State against Michigan, 82-76.

Dwight Boyd scored 18 points for the Tigers, while Vincent Askew and freshman Sylvester Gray added 15 each. Gary Grant led all scorers with 32 for the Wolverines.

Alexander scored six of Memphis State's first 10 points in the second half as the Tigers, who trailed, 31-28, at halftime, took a 38-33 lead after four minutes. Memphis State's big- gest lead of the half was 72-51 follow-

1986 football banquet (Continued from back page)

ing. Head Manager Kathy Nelligan was presented with a game jersey by the team.

"You can't possibly recognize all of the people who contributed to this [Ivy League championship) trophy re- maining at Pennsylvania for the fifth consecutive year," Zubrow said.

Selected by the players and coaches to be largely responsible for keeping the trophy at Penn for a sixth con-

secutive year were tight end Brent Novoselsky and Lista.

"This is a big thrill for me," Lista said, "to get selected by my peers as captain."

It was a time to look to the future. Can the Quakers "keep on revvin' in •87?"

"I don't know about that yet," Zubrow said, "but I'll be in my office tomorrow morning to start trying to find out."

ing a free throw by Alexander with 5:30 remaining.

A late 14-3 run by Michigan, which led by as many as nine in the first half, was not enough to challenge the Tigers' lead.

At Bowling Green, Ky., senior center Tellis Frank had a career-high 25 points and 12 rebounds, leading Western Kentucky past TCU.

Clinging to a two-point lead with 3:30 left in the game. Western Ken- tucky scored six straight points for an 89-81 edge with 2:41 left, and the Horned Frogs never trailed by less than six after that. Frank keyed the outburst with a jump shot and tip-in.

Kannard Johnson scored 22 points for Western Kentucky, while Jamie Dixon scored 31 points and Carl Lott 21 for the Horned Frogs.

TCU took a 53-49 halftime lead on the strength of a 24-9 scoring run that began with 7:41 left in the half and ended six minutes later with the Horn- ed Frogs leading 51-45. The Horned Frogs scored four ihree-poini field

goals during that stretch, including three by Dixon.

TEMPLE (80) Pearsall 1-2 0-0 2, Perry 5-9 2-4 12 Rivas 2-3 4-5 8. Blackwell 6-20 4-4 18, Evans 4-9 5-7 14, Branlley 2-3 2-2 6, Vreeswyk 6-11 3-4 19, Johnson 0-0 0-0 0, Dowdell 0-0 1-2 1, Katsikis 0-0 0-0 0 Total* 26-57 21-28 80

VILLANOVA (73) Plansky 2-4 1-1 5. West 7-12 0-0 19, Greis 5-11 0-0 10. Wilson 6-18 8-10 21, Jensen 4-14 1-4 13, Bekkedam0-1 0-0 0. Massey 1-6 0-0 2. Brown 1-10-0 2, Leslie 0-10-0 0. Maker 0-0 12 1 Totals 26-68 11-17 73.

Halftime— Temple 42 Villanova 38 Three- point goals—Temple 7-21 (Vreeswyk 4-8. Blackwell 2-10, Evans 1-3). Villanova 10-22 (West 5-7, Jensen 4-9, Wilson 1-5, Qreis 0-1) Fouled out—West Rebounds—Temple 35 (Blackwell 8). Villanova 37 (Wilson 11) Assists—Temple 12 (Evans 7). Villanova 13 (Wilson 5) Total louls—Temple 17, Villanova 22 Technical fouls—Temple Coach Chaney A-6500

(Continued from page II)

Twins name Kelly as field manager guided the team to a 12-11 record the rest of the season.

Minnesota finished 71-91, in sixth place in the AL West, four games ahead of last-place Seattle and 21 games behind division-winning California.

Kelly, who was born in Graceville, Minn., and now lives in Parlins, N.J., spent most of his 13 professional play- ing seasons in the minor leagues before becoming one of the most suc- cessful minor-league managers in the history of the Minnesota organization.

An outfielder, Kelly only had 127 major-league at-bats, hitting .181 with one home run and 11 RBI with the Twins in 1975.

His managerial debut came in 1977, when he was player-manager for Tacoma of the Class AAA Pacific Coast League. He managed Visalia of the Class A California League to divi- sion titles in 1979 and 1980 and guided Orlando to a first-half division title in the Class AA Southern League in 1981. His career minor-league managerial record was 338-282.

Angels release Jackson; front-office option open

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — Reggie Jackson was officially released by the California Angels on Monday, and the 40-year-old slugger said that if he doesn't sign with another club, "I'll step aside with dignity."

After meeting with Angels' Vice- President Mike Port for I'/J hours, Jackson issued a statement that said: "Things just didn't work out for 1987. As to what offers there will be in '87 depends on the other clubs.

"I'm prepared to play baseball physically and mentally. If it doesn't

come about, then I'll step aside with dignity."

Jackson, who served predominant- ly as the Angels' designated hitter in 1986, batted .241 in 132 games, with 18 homers and 58 runs batted in.

Jackson played five seasons for the Angels and 1986 was the final year on his contract.

"We discussed the possibility of post-baseball opportunties with the organization and agreed that time will dictate that possibility," Jackson said. "I appreciate Mike's honesty in letting me know my services could be beneficial."

Jackson failed to live up to his nickname of "Mr. October" in the playoffs for the AL West champion Angels. He went five-for-26, with no homers and just two runs batted in in the seven-game series with the Boston Red Sox. He also struck out seven times. He had earned the nickname for his postseason performances with the Oakland A's and New York Yankees.

In five seasons with the Angels. Jackson batted .239 with 123 homers and 374 RBI as the club won two divi- sion titles

He hit his 500th career home run at Anaheim Stadium on Sept. 17, 1984, becoming the 13th major league player to reach that milestone.

Sabres' Perreault retires after 17 years with club

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — Gilbert Perreault, no longer the Buffalo Sabres' star after 17 seasons marked by his rink-long scoring rushes, retired Monday with more goals than all but 10 players in NHL history.

Perreault, 36, met with his team- mates Monday morning after conferr- ing last weekend with Sabres manage- ment, said team spokesman John Gurtler.

He added that Perreault, who spent 12 weeks starting June 17 in retire-

ment only to return, was not pressured by Sabres management to quit.

The team's poor record, which has reached 4-13-3 and already resulted in Craig Ramsay taking over as coach, was prominent in his mind, Perreault said.

Crisp to be named head coach of N.Y. Rangers

NEW YORK (AP) - Terry Crisp will be named coach of the New York Rangers either today or tomorrow, according to a published report.

The New York Times said in to- day's editions that Crisp, now coaching at Moncton of the American Hockey League, will receive a two-

year contract offer from the Rangers of National Hockey League. General Manager Phil Esposito, who took over that post during the summer, has been coaching the Rangers on an in- terim basis since last Friday, when he fired Ted Sator.

The Times reported that unnamed sources in Rangers' management said Crisp was prepared to accept Esposito's offer. But Esposito said yesterday that he has another can- didate to interview.

Esposito did say that he would coach the Rangers tomorrow night against the Quebec Nordiques, but lhat a new coach would be signed, "probably by Wednesday."

Crisp played in the NHI. with Boston, St. Louis, the New York Islanders and Philadelphia.

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THK DAILY PLNNSYLVANIAN - Tuesday. November 25. 1986

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(Continued from back page) In all, freshmen, competing in their first collegiate meets, accounted for 35 percent of Penn's points in only their first meet. The future is bright.

Cooper, who last year earned a berth at an NCAA pre-qualifying dive-off, remains the Quakers' best hope for any points in the one-meter and three-meter diving events. Freshmen Steve Wiviot jumps to his side, and diving coach Jim Smith speaks highly of Wiviot.

"|Wiviot's| got untapped poten- tial," Smith said. "He's got only up to go. Don't forget, he's never before competed in the three-meter event."

If the first meet is any indication, Penn is most deep in the freestyle events, where McCloskey, Schnur, Merrick and Scott Gregorchuk thrive. Mattone leads the Quakers breaststrokers, and Jack Sklareski is

M. Swimming beats Cornell, 71-42 equally proficient in the backstroke and freestyle. However, Penn's lineups are constantly changing.

"(The reason lineups change is] because each (opponent] has different strengths, and experience is a factor in determining where a swimmer should be to combat those strengths," Gilbert said.

If chemistry is an integral part of enduring success, then the Quakers should easily achieve their goals this year.

"This team's a lot closer than in years past," McCloskey said.

It ought to be. Most of the up- perclassmcn live in the same fraternity house. In the lockerroom, chemistry plays its largest role when a teammate shaves. And when McCloskey shaved for the Big Red meet, he saw how positive it was for the team.

"The effects of shaving are 90 per-

cent mental," McCloskey said. "Shaving is key to getting psyched for a meet. And seeing that psyche spread through the team was just awesome. Everybody was affected. That's the amazing thing."

• Today Penn (1-0) welcomes

Princeton (1-0) to Sheerr pool at 4 p.m.

"They're real strong (swimmers]," Mattone said. "Hey, they've got potential Olympians."

In diving, the Tigers arc no weaker. They return two divers who are the elite of the EISL; both made it to the NCAA championships.

Saturday. Penn defeated the Big Red for the first time since Dec. 7, 1974.

Cornell was stunned. "Man. they were up for us. swimm-

ing on top of their game," Cornell swimmer Andy Hovel said.

"They were prepared more for us." teammate Rob Walikis agreed. "We weren't keying for them this year."

Last year Cornell was exuberant after its 67-44 win. This year the Big Red all seemed ill. What happened? Is it contagious? Gilbert explained Cor- nell's syndrome in non-medical terms.

"What tends to happen, tradi- tionally, is that a team that has won big the previous year takes a win for granted," he said. "In (Cornell's] case the team memory worked against them."

The Quakers were more than all right. For the first time in nearly a dozen years, Penn rode a wave of pride after a meet against the Big Red.

"My God, the last time we won I was nine years old," Mattone said.

Four records fall as W. Swim beats Cornell, 84-56

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(Continued from back page) Cornell never brought the deficit under 25 again.

Both captains were pleased with the results.

"We swam tough," said Querubin. "Everybody had their best times or

close to them," added Garrett. "This is a great start for the season."

• Flowing with confidence after the

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Cornell victory, the Quakers take to the water again against Princeton this afternoon. The Tigers present a more complex problem to the Quakers than the Big Red did; Penn has never defeated Princeton in dual-meet competition.

Last year, Princeton won easily, 83-57, and this season's squad is also talented.

"Princeton is tough again this year," said Assistant Coach Paul Gilbert.

But Penn appears stronger this year

than in the past. A host of strong new freshmen, including two former ail- Americans, has greatly improved the Quaker team. Add a year of ex- perience and practice for the returning swimmers and Penn could be very capable of overturning the Princeton dynasty.

"We have reason to believe that we can do very well this year (against Princeton]," said Gilbert. "We had a lot of good swims on Saturday. The women's team is looking for the next level of competition. They're ready to

move up. Penn definitely will get a chance to

move up against Princeton tomorrow.

In order to garner a victory, the Quakers must have an extraordinary afternoon. Gilbert said that the Quakers will try a most straightfor- ward strategy against the Tigers.

"Our tactic will be swimming faster than we ever have. But (Head Coach] Kathy (Lawlor), and I are very confi- dent. We have a great outlook for tomorrow."

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(Continued from back page) fans saw Yale, leading 17-14 at half, turn the ball over three times and manage only three first downs in the second half as Harvard came from behind to beat the Elis, 24-17, in the 103rd chapter of the storied rivalry.

Yet the biggest story was that there was no story. The game was mean- ingless, as Penn and Cornell played

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for the Ivy title in Ithaca, and it was poorly played by two bad teams; Har- vard (3-7. 3-4 Ivies) broke a four- game losing streak as both teams end- ed the season with losing records for the first time since 1958. Yale finished 3-7 (2-5 Ivies).

Kelly Ryan, Yale's junior quarter- back and one of the best passers in the Ivy League, had his difficulties coping with the gusting wind and completed only five-of-23 passes. In addition, his fumble and two interceptions in the second half directly resulted in Har- vard's comeback win.

The crucial score came in the third quarter when Crimson sophomore quarterback Tom Yohe hit fullback George Sorbara on a 53-yard touchdown pass to give Harvard the lead, 21-17. Yohe finished the day eight-of-16 for 164 yards and two touchdowns, both to Sorbara.

In New York, Columbia made the news by losing its 31st consecutive game, 45-7, to Brown. The loss mov- ed the Lions to within three of Nor- thwestern's collegiate record of 34 straight defeats. The 1986 Columbia team became only the second Ivy team to lose 10 games in a season; the 1985 Lions were the first.

Columbia certainly had a hand in its own demise, as it turned the ball over six times], on four interceptions and two fumbles, in the opening eight minutes. By that time, the Bruins (5-4-1. 4-2-1 Ivies) had built a 21-0 lead, and the game was over.

In fact, the excitement in the stands late in the game centered around whether or not Columbia would be shut out for the fifth time in the Ivies this season. Homer Hill saved the day by catching a 64-yard touchdown pass to close the Lions' deficit to 45-7.

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THE DAILY PKNNSYI.VANIAN — Itmfcy, November 25. IVS6 PACT 11

SCOREBOARD NFL NBA

AMERICAN CONFERENCE Eastern Division

W L T Pet. PF PA NY Jets 10 2 0 833 306 248 N England 9 3 0 750 326 200 Miami 6 6 0 500 321 293 Buffalo 3 9 0 250 232 273 Indianapolis 0 12 0 .000 144 322

Central Division W L T Pet. PF PA

Cincinnati 8 4 0 667 295 298 Cleveland 8 4 0 667 276 263 Pittsburgh 4 8 0 333 206 258 Houston 3 9 0 250 225 272

Western Division W L T Pet. PF PA

Denver 9 3 0 750 287 191 LA Raiders 8 4 0 667 255 226 Kansas City 7 5 0 583 263 263 Seattle 6 6 0 500 223 239 San Diego 2 10 0 .167 250 31

NATIONAL CONFERENCE Eastern Division

W L T Pet. PF PA NY. Giants 10 2 0 .833 244 174 Washington 10 2 0 833 283 210 Dallas 7 5 0 583 291 230 Philadelphia 3 9 0 .250 176 233 SI. Louis 3 9 0 .250 163 277

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Western Division W L T Pet. PF PA

LA. Rams 8 4 0 .667 218 193 San Fran 7 4 1 .625 280 178 N Orleans 6 6 0 .500 210 193 Atlanta 5 6 1 .458 208 218

Last Night's Game Miami 45, NY Jets 3

Sunday's Games San Francisco 20. Atlanta 0 New England 22, Buffalo 19 Washington 41, Dallas 14 N Y. Giants 19. Denver 16 Detroit 38, Tampa Bay 17 Houston 31, Indianapolis 17 Chicago 12, Green Bay 10 St Louis 23, Kansas City 14 Cincinnati 24. Minnesota 20 L A Rams 26, New Orleans 13 Seattle 24. Philadelphia 20 Cleveland 37, Pittsburgh 31, OT

Thursday's Game LA Raiders 37, San Diego 31. OT

EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division

W L Pet GB Boston 8 3 727 — Philadelphia 8 5 .615 1 Washington 5 7 417 3Vi New York 3 10 231 6 New Jersey 2 10 .167 6V4

WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division

W L Pet GB Utah 6 4 600 — Dallas 7 5 583 — Denver 7 5 .583 — Houston 6 5 .545 y/i Sacramento 4 7 .364 2% San Antonio 4 8 333 3

Central Division

Atlanta Chicago Milwaukee Indiana Detroit Cleveland

W 9 7 9 6 5 3

Pet 818 700 643 462 455 250

GB

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Pacific Division

LA. Lakers Seattle Portland Golden State Phoenix LA Clippers

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L 1 5 6 6 7 9

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Last Night's Games No Games Scheduled

Tonight's Games Houston at New York Portland at Washington Boston at Philadelphia New Jersey at San Antonio Atlanta at L A Lakers Utah at Golden State Phoenix al Sacramento L A Clippers at Seattle

Sunday's Games Philadelphia 114. Houston 104 Portland 108. Indiana 95 LA Lakers 127, Milwaukee 117

Saturday's Games Atlanta 97, Boston 96 Detroil 93, Cleveland 84 Golden State 97, New York 93 Chicago 93, Washington 84 Denver 132. Phoenix 120 Utah 96. New Jersey 78 San Antonio 109, L A Clippers 102 Milwaukee 107. Sacramento 99 Seattle 121. Indiana 111

Worrell wins NL Rookie award WHR VORK(AP)- It didn't take

St I ouis Cardinals' reliever Todd Worrell long to react Monday to the good news that he was the National L eague's Rookie of the Year — with a piece of bad news for the league's hitters

Worrell, who fell one vote short of being a unanimous selection in balloting by the Baseball Writers Association of America, announced that his bla/ing fastball and hard slider would be augmented next season hopefully by a battling changeup.

"When I get to spring training, I can concentrate on a changeup." Worrell said by conference call from Temple City, Calif. "I'm going to be talking to (pitching coach) Mike Roarke about throwing a changeup to lefthanded bitten."

That can't be good news for the hit- ters, considering that Worrell led the league in saves with .16. while fashion ing a tidy 2.08 earned run average.

"A good hitter will hit it (an off- speed pitch)," Worrell conceded. "But, if I did have any problems (last

season), they were against lefthanded hitters."

Worrell, a 27-ycar-old righthander, got 23 of 24 first-place votes, easily outdistancing San Francisco Giants second baseman Rob Thompson. Worrell. 9-10, collected 118 points in balloting by two writers from each of the league's 12 cities.

Thompson got 46 points on a fivc- thrcc-one basis, while utility man Kevin Mitchell of the New York Mcts was third with 22. including the other first-place vote.

Worrell said that winning the award was due in part to having "the right people in my life at the right time."

He credited Chicago While Sox Manager Jim I rcgosi for easing him through the transition from starter to reliever when Fregosi piloted the Car- dinals' American Association team at Louisville in I98S.

"I think that's when things all came together." Worrell said. "I think I would have gotten to the major leagues as a starter, but I don't think I would have been at my best in that role."

Worrell, who appeared only three

times in relief in three seasons prior to the transition in July 1985, made an instant impression on the Cardinals. By the end of August 1985, he was in St. Louis. He then posted a 3-0 record with five saves and a 2.91 ERA in 17 games.

In October, he was the winning pit- cher when Jack Clark homered off Tom Nicdenfucr of the Los Angeles Dodgers, giving St I ouis the NL pen- nant And he was the losing pitcher when umpire Don Denkinger's disputed call at lust base helped the kansas ( ity Royals win Game Six of the World Series I he Royals then won the Series the following night.

But Worrell compiled neither the number of regular-season ap- pearances nor the longevity necessary

in 1985 to lose his rookie status. In 1986. Worrell appeared in 74

games, posting a 9-10 record. He pit- ched 1034 ■ innings, gave up 86 hits, struck out 73 and walked 41.

Worrell was the fifth Cardinals' player, and second in a row, to win the award, since it was established in 1947. St I ouis out tickler \ nice Cot- emu was the 1985 winner.

NHL

WALES CONFERENCE Patrick Division

W L T P GF GA Philadelphia 14 4 2 30 86 45 Pittsburgh 13 6 2 28 86 70 N Y. Islanders 11 8 1 23 80 65 New Jersey 10 9 2 22 78 94 Washington 7 11 4 18 72 90 NY. Rangers 6 11 4 16 82 93

Adam* Division W L T P GF GA

Montreal 12 6 3 27 79 67 Quebec 10 8 4 24 86 70 Hartford 9 6 3 21 65 63 Boston 9 10 3 21 74 78 Buffalo 4 13 3 11 64 74

Last Night's Games Boston 3. Toronto 2 Calgary 6 Edmonton 5

Tonight's Games

Montreal at Quebec Pittsburgh at NY Islanders Los Angeles at Vancouver

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE Norris Division

W L T P GF GA Toronto 9 8 4 22 70 68 St Louis 8 7 4 20 66 66 Detroit 8 10 2 18 57 66 Chicago 5 12 5 15 70 94 Minnesota 6 11 2 14 74 80

Smythe Division W L T P GF GA

Edmonton 13 9 1 27 102 86 Winnipeg 13 7 1 27 79 65 Calgary 12 10 0 24 79 85 Los Angeles 8 12 2 18 84 92 Vancouver 5 14 2 12 62 84

Sunday's Games Chicago 5. New Jersey 3 Winnipeg 3. Los Angeles 2

Saturday's Games Boston 6. St Louis S Hartford 6, N Y. Islanders 3 Philadelphia 6. Toronto 1 Pittsburgh 5. Washington 4 Quebec 3. Buffalo 1 Detroit 4, Montreal 3 Calgary 8. N Y Rangers 5 Edmonton 5, Vancouver 2 Minnesota 6, New Jersey 2

Yankees obtain Rhoden

from Pittsburgh

PITTSBURGH (AP) - The Pitt- sburgh Pirates have conditionally traded 15-game winner Rick Rhoden and two other pitchers to the New York Yankees for promising pitcher Brian Fisher and two other players. General Manager Syd Thrift confirm- ed Monday.

The all-but-complcted deal, which requires Rhoden to work out a con- tract with the Yankees, comes a

month after the righthander renewed his request to be traded following a breakdown in contract talks with the Pirates.

Rhoden, a National league All- Star Game pitcher last season, would

be sent to the Yankees with righthander Cecilio Guante and lef- thander Pat Clements for Fisher. 24-year-old righthander IX>ug Drabek and an unnamed minor leaguer.

The trade is conditional on Rhoden, 33, reaching contract terms with Yankees General Manager Woody Woodward and owner George Steinbrenncr. Rhoden's agent, Tony

Altanasio. negotiated Monday with Woodward under a Yankee-imposed Wednesday deadline to complete the deal.

"The matter is out of my hands. It's between his agent and the Yankees," Thrift said in a statement.

The Yankees had no comment. Thrift expressed surprise that

Rhoden wasn't able to work out an immediate agreement with the Yankees. Rhoden has one more year remaining on a contract that would pay him $575,000 for the 1987 season.

"From the time I was hired (last

November). I said I would honor Rick Rhoden's request to be traded to a contending ballclub if the deal was in the best interests of the Pittsburgh Pirates. I have kept my word and done that," Thrift said.

"I have fulfilled the only require- ment Rick Rhoden ever asked of me," Thrift said. "That is why I am sur- prised to read the newspaper and find out the deal is being held up apparent ly for financial reasons, even though Rick Rhoden is under contract for the 1987 season. Since he is a five-and 10 year man, he needs only to give his written consent and the deal will be consummated."

Thrift, who previously said he was looking for "good young arms" in ex- change for Rhoden, hopes to get one in the right-handed Fisher, 24,

Fisher is regarded as one of the brightest prospects in the Yankees' system. A former second-round draft choice of the Atlanta Braves, he was 9-5 last season with a 4.93 earned run average. He was 4-4 in 1985.

Drabek, 24, was 7-8 with a 4.10 ERA last season.

Rhoden was regarded as a Cy Young Award candidate last season until losing his final five decisions to finish 15-12. He was second in the Na- tional League in complete games (12) and was fourth in innings pitched (253 Vi) and in earned run average (2.84). He completed seven of his final 13 starts.

Obtained from the Los Angeles Dodgers in April 1979 for lefthander Jerry Reuss, Rhoden has a 121-97 career record. He was 16-10 for the Dodgers in 1977 and 14-9 for the Pirates in 1984.

Rhoden originally asked the Pirates to trade him last winter, but later said

he would be willing to remain if he was given a new contract. Rhoden and Attanasio met with I drift and other Pirates' officials for six-and-a-half hours on Oct. 6. but were unable to reach an agreement.

(iuunte. 26, was 5-2 with a 3.35 earned run average in <2 appearances last season, all of them in relief.

Clements, 24, was obtained lor the 1'ii.iies from the California. Angels in an August 1985 deal He was 0-4 with a 2.80 ERA in 65 games last season.

Twins name Kelly as field manager

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Tom Kel- ly, who replaced fired Minnesota Twins Manager Ray Miller on an in- terim basis Sept. 12, on Monday was named manager for 1987.

Kelly. 36. the Twins' third-base coach since 1983, becomes the first native Minnesotan to manage the team since the franchise moved from Washington in 1961 He is the 11th manager in Twins history.

The Twins also made three front- office moves Monday. Ralph Houk, 67, who managed the New York Yankees, Detroit Tigers and Boston Red Sox, was named vice president, baseball; Bob Gebhaid, 43, a former Twins pitcher and the farm director of the Montreal Expos for (he past five years, was named director of major league personnel; and vice president Andy MacPhail was named executive vice president, baseball operations.

Miller was fired when the Twins were in the American league West basement with a 59-80 record. Kelly

(Continued on page 9)

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SPORTS Page 12 The Daily Pennsylvanian Tuesday, November 25, 1986

1987 captains named at Football banquet

Lista, Novoselsky will lead Penn By D GEFEN

For the Penn football team, last night was the anticlimax of the 1986 season and the pro- logue to the 1987 campaign.

In the annual post-season banquet held at the University City Hilton, the leaders of the Quakers" perfect 10-0 team were honored, and next season's captains were named.

It was a night to honor the current Ivy League champions, the first Penn team since 1904 to go undefeated and untied. It was a time to reflect upon a season in which the Quakers lived up to expectations — and more.

"When you go into a football season, you really don't know what you have," Head Coach Ed Zubrow said. "I'm here to tell you thai what you have is a special bunch of people."

After some opening remarks by master of ceremonies Lou Tilley of KWY-Channel 3, Athletic Director Paul Rubincam, President Sheldon Hackney and Zubrow, it was time to hand out awards.

The freshman awards went to two players on offense — running backs Brian Keys and Steve Hooper — and one on defense, Gerry Meyer.

The Football Club Varsity Awards went to seniors, one on offense and one on defense. On offense, pre-season Division l-AA ail- American Marty Pelerson was chosen. The defensive recipient was Jeff Forma, whose in- leroeption on Saturday against Cornell pui [he Quakers in position to take the lead that they would never relinquish.

Next came the Reds Bagnell award for the most improved Penn player.

"Twenty-six players got votes for most im- proved player," said Zubrow in reference to the fact lhai the awards were decided by the players and coaches. "You think about that — 26 players on this football learn gelling votes for most improved player. That's why a team thai lost so many players and wasn't picked by a lot of people to go very far went 10-0."

The award went to quarterback Jim Crocic-

chia, who finished his career as Penn's third- leading all-time passer with 2390 yards.

"He was our passing leader, our total of- fense leader, our leader," Zubrow said. "Our leader in a 10-0 season."

The Bednarik Award, presented to the outstanding lineman, was presented by Chuck Bednarik himself. The recipient of this year's award was defensive tackle Mike Lista, who will undergo surgery this week for torn ligaments in his left knee.

The Edgar Church Award went to the senior voted by his teammates for contributing the most to his team. Center Steve Buonato, who anchored the offensive line that was able to help the Quakers break numerous rushing records this season, was the winner.

The evening's final individual award, the George Munger Award, was presented to the most valuable player on the team. Munger was on hand to present Ihe award to Penn's all- time leading rusher. Rich Comizio.

Comizio, who became ihe first Quaker ever lo rush for over 1000 yards in a season with 1104. stepped to the podium and immediately gave credit to (he guys up front.

"I would especially like lo thank the offen- sive linemen," he said. "Like Coach Zubrow said, all of the backs get the credit for all the work that's really done up front. For me, I had the easier part of the job. Jeff Sheftic, Tim Obara, Marty Peterson, Scott Ernst, Jim Pan- zini, Chris Wilkins and Steve Buonato — lhanks guys."

Then came time for the outgoing co- captains, Buonato and rover Brad Heinz, to give their farewell addresses.

"A lot of things contribute to a team's suc- cess," Buonato said. "One of the things that I fell contributed lo our success this year was the support we received from a lot of people, and Ihey deserve some recognition."

Buonato and Zubrow talked about (he equipment staff, the training staff and the managers, among others. Earlier in the even-

(Continued on page 9)

Dartmouth finishes Yukicaera with a victory Harvard comes from behind to defeat Yale; Brown pounds Columbia

By JON WILNKR No. ihe Ivy League title was not in the balance. No. bragging rights for the game were not at stake. Yes, the game meanl absolutely nothing in the Ivy League standings. But, for one man and one team, the Dartmouth-Princeton clash Saturday at Palmer Stadium meant everything.

It was Big Green coach Joe Yukica's final game.

Unfortunately, Yukica's farewell was over- shadowed by the Penn-Cornell war and the Harvard-Yale classic. But for the Dartmouth players, the game was a chance to send their coach home in style.

Mission accomplished. The Big Green (3-6 1, 3-3-1 Ivies) rolled over

ihe distraught Tigers (2-8, 2-5 Ivies), still reeling

Ivy Roundup

from iheir emotional 14-13 loss lo Yale last weekend. lo the tune of a 28-6 victory.

Dartmouth took the opening kickoff and marched 69 yards for the first score, a 13-yard pass from senior quarterback David Gabianelli to junior tight end Matthew Drury. Princeton aided the Big Green's cause as senior tailback Derek Wassink fumbled the ball away on the Tigers fourth play from scrimmage. Brett Mat- ihew recovered for Dartmouth and five plays later Gabianelli hit sophomore receiver Craig Morton for a 13-yard touchdown, and a 14-0

lead. That catch gave Morton the Dartmouth

record for single-season reception yardage with 1038 yards on 42 catches.

Princeton got on the scoreboard as junior Rob Goodwin kicked a 34-yard field goal to nar- row the Big Green's lead to 14-3.

Then Gabianelli struck for the third time. He connected with senior receiver Christopher Wanger on a 25-yard touchdown pass and a 21-3 Dartmouth lead.

Goodwin closed out the first-half scoring with a 45-yard field goal to make the score 21-6.

Gabianelli, 'completing 23-of-36 passes for 244 yards while setting a school record for touchdown passes in a season with 17, hit on his fourth and final touchdown to junior light end

Chris Keck from six yards in the third quarter to make Ihe final score 28-6.

"It was the last game for the seniors also," Yukica said. "We've played well for the last five games now, and we managed to finish in the top half of the league (fourth place), and after our 0-3 start, that's pretty good.

"During the game I was too worried about the offense to think about it [being my last game]. But the players didn't let me forget. They carried me off the field, and we had a cake Friday night. It hasn't sunk in completely, but I miss it already."

The victory gave Yukica a career record of 36-47-4 in nine seasons at Dartmouth.

In Cambridge, Mass., approximately 40,000 (Continued on page 10)

M. Swimming bests Cornell in opener,71-42 By BARRY 1)1 BROW

When the Penn men's swimming team (2-9 Overall in 1985-86) defeated Columbia and Dartmouth last year for its first victories over any Ivy schools in the belter part of a decade, the Quakers began an ascent toward respectability.

This year there is hope to complete the turnaround. The Quakers are aiming not only to climb above ihe .500 mark, but to be the Ihird best Ivy learn and fifth in the Eastern Intercollegiate Swimming League.

In its weekend 71-42 trouncing of Cornell, Ihe third-place team of a year ago, Penn warned the league that it is for real. The resurgence of ihe Quakers has been marked by hard work and backed by a swimming program, led by Head Coach Kathy Lawlor and Assistant Coach Paul Gilbert, that has brought in new blood, ideas and equipment.

Pan of any initial success that Penn has will be a result of off-

season practicing. According to junior Mike Schnur, the commit- ment made by the team this summer exceeded that made by previous teams.

"Well, we trained hard this summer — swimming and lifting [weights]," he said. "That wasn't really the case last year."

In addition to individual efforts, the Quakers began unofficial learn workouts around the second week of September, led by senior captain Mike Mattone. According to National Collegiate Athletic Association rules, a school cannot begin official swim practice until Oct. I.

"We're not allowed to work out officially," Mattone said, "so we had captain's workouts, unofficial workouts where we'd con- duct our own practices. They've helped us because we're in shape earlier [in the swimming season]."

Training has more importance in swimming over the long haul than in other sports. Much of the daily swim practice is devoted

towards developing strength and stamina. Polishing techniques can prove to be the difference between good and championship qualifying times if a swimmer has strength and grit.

And Lawlor's swimmers have lots of both. Lawlor was ap- pointed head coach of Ihe men's swimming team in the fall of 1983. Thus, she now begins her fourth year, a so-called critical year in evaluating her success because Lawlor's first recruits are now seniors. However, Lawlor was actually appointed late in the recruiting season and was only able to land Mattone, Jim Mc- Closkey and diver David Cooper that year. They form the heart and soul of the team, but they are the only seniors on the 25-man team. By contrast, approximately half are freshmen.

Before the Cornell meet, Mattone spoke of the freshmen as already "filling in the gaps." Indeed they have. Champ Merrick and Tien-Yu Sieh accounted for three of the Quakers' nine wins.

(Continued on page 10)

Ivies want spring practice Some coaches want modified workouts

NEW YORK (AP) - Several Ivy League football coaches want to ask their university presidents to allow a modified form of spring practice, the New York Times said in today's editions.

The coaches, concerned by a sharp dropoff in the level of play in recent years, will meet in January and would "definitely talk about spring practice and see what we can do. We've tried before several times," Harvard Coach Joe Restic said.

Coaches' recommendations would first go to athletic directors, then to college deans and ultimately to the presidents, who meet each summer.

Attendance at Ivy stadiums this season averaged 12,750, only 35 per- cent of capacity. Ivy League teams won only eight of 23 non-conference games.

Many of the non-conference games are played with Colonial League schools — Bucknell, Colgate, Holy Cross, Lafayette and Lehigh — which allow spring practice.

"It's not over-emphasis," Colgate Coach Fred Dunlap said. "It's teaching, giving kids a chance to im- prove their skills."

Temple tops Cats in NIT quarterfinal

Blackwell leads Owls' comeback

(AP) — Nate Blackwell scored 14 of his 18 points in (he second half Monday night as Temple defeated Big Five rival Villanova, 80-73, in a second-round preseason National In- vitation Tournament game at Villanova's duPont Pavillion.

Temple advanced to the semifinal round in New York's Madison Square Garden Friday night where the Owls will face fifth-ranked Nevada-Las Vegas.

Blackwell made just one-of-10 field goal attempts in the first half but, with the Owls trailing 61-60, the senior guard scored eight points dur- ing an 11-2 surge that put Temple ahead, 71-63. with 3:08 to play.

Villanova. I-I, held a 23-13 lead midway through the first half but Mike Vreeswyk came off the bench and sparked the Owls to a 42-38 halftime advantage with eight points, including two three-point field goals.

Vreeswyk finished with 19 points and Howard Evans added 14 for the Owls, 2-0. Kenny Wilson scored 21 points and Doug West 19 for Villanova.

Villanova defeated Howard in the first round, while Temple beat Virginia on the road.

Temple will face at Madison Square Garden in New York in a semifinal game Friday night. The Running Rebels, 2-0, advanced with a 90-81 victory over number-seven Oklahoma. Guard Freddie Banks led UNLV with 24 points.

Oklahoma's Tim McCalister led all scorers with 32 points before fouling out in the final minute of the game, played before a crowd of 14,836 at the Thomas and Mack Center. The Sooners fell to 1-1.

In other games, Memphis State and Western Kentucky got strong play

(Continued on page 9)

Defeat comes to Hockey club

By EVAN SPIEGEL If only the Penn hockey club had been able to see

into the future, it would have seen that the classic in- gredients for a letdown were present before last Thursday's contest against a team of Wharton graduates. For instance:

• The Quakers' last game had been a 6-4 victory over West Chester almost two weeks before, and Penn had had only one learn practice in the meantime.

• They were riding the crest of a season-starting four-game unbeaten streak.

• They were perhaps looking past Wharton towards an important game with Delaware, taking a victory over Wharton for granted.

• Penn was playing without its starting goaltender, senior Mike Landy. and several of its regular de fen semen.

It was definitely letdown city, when one looks back on it. If acting on hindsight was possible, Penn

(Continued on page 9) Kevin Rtch««*»/D«ilY P»nnsylvanian

C.W. Post players try to dig the puck out from under Penn left wing Zev Abrahmi

Diving In W. Swimming sinks Red, 84-56

By JAY SELIBER Swimming is supposed to be a

gentlemanly activity. After all, gliding back and forth through the water is not.an extremely vicious sport.

But don't tell that to the Penn women's swimming team.

"We swam aggressively," said co- captain Julie Garrett.

This may only be a figure of speech, but it accurately described the results of the team's first meet on Saturday, as the Quakers downed Cornell, 84-56. Penn looked very strong in the water, winning 12 of the 14 swimming events.

"We had a great meet," said co- captain Teri Querubin. "We had good times for a starling meet."

Indeed, Penn appeared to be in mid-season form, as four school records fell. Junior Sharon Doyle broke two marks, in the 200- and 500-yard freest yles. Freshman Sarah Ralston eclipsed the previous best in

the 50-yard freestyle, and the 200-yard medley relay team of Marianne Markey, Pam Freilich, Querubin and Ralston also establish- ed a new record.

"Sharon (Doyle] swam great, especially since she didn't shave," said Querubin. None of the Quakers had shaved to try to get an advantage over Cornell.

The scoring list reads like the Penn roster, with many multiple winners. Ralston won four events; Doyle, Querubin and junior Joni Young all won three races; and freshmen Marianne Markey and Freilich each won two events in their first collegiate meet. Freilich also contributed two second-place finishes.

After an early 8-8 tie, the Quakers pulled out to a large lead and never looked back, winning the next five races to make the score 43-18. After two more events, it was 52-27, and

(Continued on page 10)

^■^M

Page/2 A SEASON TO REMEMBER 25 November 1986

A Season to Remember A Supplement to

The Daily Pennsylvania,! November 24, 1986

Ed Gefen Editor

Tommy Leonardi Business Manager

Thomas Hill Editor

Andy Friedman Financial Manager

Special Thanks to: Rick Resnick, Teddie Barnhart, Oreta Richardson, Helen Sessoms, Rick Resnick, Ira Apfel, Maureen Delany, Barry Dubrow, Marissa Handwerker, Jay Seliber and Rick Resnick.

On The Cover: Penn's Scott Scungio (left), Brent Novoselsky (85), Steve Buonato (60) and Ken Saunders (17) celebrate one of Novoselsky's three touchdown catches in the Quakers' 30-26 upset of Navy. Photo by Tommy Leonardi.

CONTENTS

Ten Seconds The final few moments of the 1986 seasons contained many

thoughts and emotions at Ithaca. By Neil Weinberger. Page 3

New Coaching Staff Produces Winner A first-year coach and his staff led the Quakers to their first perfect

season in 82 years. By Thomas Hill. Page 3

Cornell By Rick Resnick Page 4

Dartmouth By Jonathan Bondy Page 5

Bucknell By Marissa Handwerker Page 6

Columbia By Rick Resnick Page 7

Centerspread Your own two-page pullout of some highlights from Penn

season. s perfect

Page 8

Brown By Dan Bollerman. Page 10

Navy By Jonathan Bondy. Page 11

Yale By Ed Gefen. Page 12

Princeton By Rick Resnick. Page 13

Lafayette By Marissa Handwerker. Page 14

Harvard By Dan Bollerman. Page 15

It All Adds Up to 10-0 The statistics of the 1986 Ivy League champions. Page 16

Additions to the Record Book (Previous records in parentheses)

Records Broken Team

Rushing Yards - Season: 2661 (2504. 1977)

Total Offense Yards - Season: 3951 (3779. 1973) Plays - Season: 713 (697. 1981) First Downs - Season: 213 (184. 1983)

Individual Rushing Yards - Career: 2479. Rich Comizio (2155. Adolph Bellizeare, 1972-74) Attempts - Career 484. Rich Comizio (470. Adolph Bellizeare, 1972-74) Yards - Season: 1104. Rich Comizio; 917, Chris Rynn (880. Gerry Santini. 1968)

All-Purpose Yards - Season: 1620. Chris Flynn (1390, Adolph Bellizeare. 1972)

Extra Points Made - Season: 34, Jim Grass (33. Tom Murphy, 1984)

Punt Returns Number - Season. 48. Chris Rynn (35. Chris Flynn. 1985)

Records Tied Team

Passing Touchdowns - Game: 4. Navy (seven times, last was Columbia. 19o3)

Individual Passing Touchdowns - Game 4. Jim Crocicchia. Navy (three times, last was Marty Vaughn. Lafayette. 1984)

Scoring Touchdown Passes Caught - Game: 3. Brent Novoselsky. Navy (three times, last was Karl Hall. Cornell, 1981)

25 November 1986 A SEASON TO REMEMBER Page/3

The Final Moments

Counting down the last ticks By Neil Weinberger

Ten. That's what the scoreboard clock

read Ten seconds left in the game. Ten

seconds left in the season. Ten seconds left until the dream that had been built day by day throughout the 1986 football season was to become a reality for the Pennsylvania Quakers.

The scoreboard also showed a score that was all too familiar to the Quakers and their fans. The one that had the Quakers ahead of the other team It read simply "Cornell 21. Visitors 31."

Nine. On the Crescent Side of Schoellkopf

Field, all you could see from the end zone to the thirty-five yard line were students Penn students Jubilant Penn students, who have tasted nothing in recent years but the thrill of victory, were ready to claim their fifth straight Ivy League championship by performing what has become a tradition at Penn — tearing down the goalposts.

Eight The Cornell fans sat in silence In eight

seconds, they would have to face the reality of what could have been. What should have been had it not been for the impenetrable Quaker defense and the unstoppable Penn offense.

They had their dreams. They had their fantasies But so did Penn And what Cornell didn't realize was that once the

Quakers tasted their chance at a perfect season, nobody was to deny them their just desserts.

Seven. The Cornell fans were violent and

frustrated Unable to beat Penn on the field, they decided to try to regain any pride they might have left. Snowballs abounded Tempers flared. A force of Big Red students gathered to defend their goalposts from the evil Quaker fans

But it was to no avail The game was just about over. The season was over For Cornell, the dream was over.

Six. But for the Quakers, the dream was

anything but over An old man wearing nothing but Red and Blue greeted his friend, who was dressed in Big Red garb, by pouring a bottle of champagne over his head.

"Welcome to Pennsylvania," he said

Five. Penn's fans began to count down. A

countdown to what they had been waiting for all season. Perfection. And then, only moments away, the Quakers and their fans could do nothing but wait.

"I'm watching the clock," one fan said. "I want to make sure it doesn't stop."

Four It was time to start celebrating. All the

questions had been answered. All the critics had been silenced. It was time to face the joyous reality of being 10-0.

"We had no doubt of losing," Penn linebacker Brad Hippenstiel said of

Saturday's game. "But even near the end. we couldn't celebrate because we knew there was the chance that we'd have to go back on the field.

"I wasn't convinced and excited until there were about three or four seconds left."

Three. Penn linebacker A J Sebastianelli had

three seconds before he could officially claim the Ivy League championship But it would be hours before he would realize it.

"It's gonna take some time for all this to sink in." he said. "We've been building to 10-0 all year, but Coach Zubrow had told us to take things one day at a time."

Those days were over. It had been only a matter of time until Penn claimed its fifth Ivy League Championship, and time had just about run out.

Sebastianelli summed it up well: "This team was destined to go 10-0."

Two Quaker running back Chris Flynn was

experiencing what he calls "the best feeling he's ever had."

And with good reason Sure the Quakers had won champion-

ships before. Sure they had gone unde- feated in the Ivy League before. But there they were, seconds away from the only improvement that they could have made on their past performances — a perfect season

One Penn Quarterback Jim Crocicchia took

the final snap of his collegiate career and fell on the ball He got up. raised his arms in the air. and let out a jubilant yell Then he stopped a moment to soak in the atmosphere and to cherish what had happened He looked around at the sidelines, the scoreboard and the fans.

"I'm never taking this off." he said of his number-seven jersey. "This has been a dream season

Zero. The final gun sounded It was over

The season of destiny was over For Ed Zubrow — a man who took on the responsibility of keeping alive an incredi- ble tradition, a man who performed the impossible task of taking a great team and making it better, a man who had taken his season day by day and never looked ahead to being undefeated — it was time to reflect on some achievements.

"To tell you the truth," Zubrow said "I didn't think about winning the champion ship until the last whistle blew But now. the emotion is so deep it hasn't even hit me yet. It is just great to be everything we had wanted to be.

"It's going to be a fun trip home " A fun trip indeed, for the Quakers

have no regrets about the 1986 season No matter how you look at it. you'll see that the Quakers had a perfect season They did just about everything possible

Except lose. 10-0. Say it one more time 10-0

"he Mentors

Staff makes fast adjustment By Thomas Hill

Saturday's Ivy-title-clinching win over Cornell was an emotional experience for all of the Penn

football players. The seniors all completed dream careers on the varsity with three Ivy titles to boast For the underclassmen, the Quakers' 10-0 record will be a wonderful memory and a perfect springboard into next year and the year after

But for every bit of satisfaction the players felt, the coaching staff may have felt it tenfold.

Penn was not supposed to repeat as Ivy League champions The Quakers returned only three starters on defense, and their modem-day version of Moses, former Head Coach Jerry Berndt. had left them to lead others to greater promised lands

Still, the expectations placed on new Head Coach Ed Zubrow were high simply because Penn had won four consecutive league titles. Winning the Ivies was commonplace. Anything less would imply that Zubrow was not as good a coach as Berndt Basically, he walked into what looked like a no-win situation.

The Quakers responded by doing the only thing which could prove the prog- ram had improved; they went

undefeated. "This year's team wrote a new chapter

in the book," Zubrow said "They rose the level of the program of the notch."

Which is all fine and good. Penn was a senior-dominated team, meaning that many of the players had tasted a championship before, but also that some of them had seen those championships come and go without ever getting a chance to participate. This year, they were determined to change that.

"I sat on the pines the last two years," said senior defensive tackle A.J. Sebas tianelii. "This year was my chance."

That can explain the bulk of the individual reasons why the Quakers won the title. But once those individual talents clash, a solid coaching staff is needed to hold the pieces together.

Now consider the following facts about this season's 1986 Penn football coach- ing staff. Ed Zubrow was in his first year as a head college coach. Defensive Coordinator Gary Steele was serving as defensive coordinator of a college prog- ram for the first time. Gary Schnell was in his first season coaching an offensive backfield And Ted Zazopoulos coached a college defensive line for the first time.

At least they had all coached at Penn before, Zubrow since 1981, Steele, Schnell and Zazopoulos since 1983.

Offensive Coordinator Dick Maloney, Defensive Backfield Coach Jeff Reine-

bold and Quarterbacks and Receivers Coach John Audino all came to coach the Quakers in January.

So how did this staff gel in time to mold Penn into a dominant force both in and out of the league?

"We tried to leave nothing unexa- mined." Zubrow said. "These were new guys, and we weren't going to do anything just because it had been done before."

So last January the staff set about its task of scrutinizing every technique it would use, from recruiting to running practices to maintaining lines of commu- nication in the football office from day to day. But it was not a complete tearing apart of the program which Berndt had established.

"We were very careful not to change the whole scheme," Zubrow said

Instead, they instituted a plan of mixing the best of the old with the best of the new It was a unique idea for a new head coach, but the Penn coaching staff faced a unique situation.

Usually, hiring a new head coach means the influx of all new assistants This Quaker staff was almost an equal mix of previous Penn assistants and new coaches.

Zubrow called the arrangement "an experiment in management."

He could have easily taken absolute control himself, or he could have been

partial towards the coaches with whom he had worked during the past three seasons He did neither

"We all recognize that each of us has to separate ourselves to make decisions." Zubrow said last week "We have enough respect for each other. In some areas. Gary Steele has the final say . . . but those guys realize that some- times I have the final say."

Zubrow did not wield his power unwisely When a decision needed to be made, he attempted to get all of the input before he made a choice In particular, he pointed to a meeting of the minds during training camp in August.

"We had a major personnel decision to make on offense." he said. "So we all sat up discussing it until we came to an agreement at 4:30 in the morning. Looking back. I think we made the right decision."

When a team is undefeated, all of the decisons a coaching staff makes look to be the right ones The rapidity with which this staff has come to be making all the right moves has been phenomenal Now only time will tell whether this year's moves were beginner's luck or the result of an unnaturally proficient and prudent staff

Zubrow has already made up his mind "If I've done anything right as head

coach so far," he said, "it's hiring that staff that I'm most proud of."

Page/4 A SEASON TO REMEMBER 25 November 1986

Week Ten Penn 31, Cornell 21

Quakers make it a perfect 10 By Rick Resnick

ITHACA. N Y - When the Penn football team invaded this quiet college town to face Cornell, the

Quakers knew it would be an all-or- nothing affair Both Penn and the Big Red had unblemished 6-0 league marks,

and only one would come away with the undisputed Ivy crown.

As far as the Quakers were concerned, the result was absolutely perfect.

Despite falling behind in an Ivy League game for the first time this season. Penn battled past Cornell. 31 21. in an exciting and emotional game in front of 22.000 rabid fans Penn finished the season with was a perfect 7 0 Ivy mark that boosted the Quakers to their record-breaking third consecutive undisputed Ivy champ ionship and their record-tying fifth straight piece of the Ivy crown

The Quakers also finished the 1986 campaign with a perfect 10-0 record, the first time Penn has had an unblemished mark since 1904

"You dream about a season like this." Penn quarterback Jim Crocicchia said "But I honestly can't say that I thought it would be a 10-0 season."

Crocicchia and the rest of the seniors leave Penn with a near-perfect Ivy record: three championship rings and an unprecedented 20-1 league mark (25 3 1 Overall)

All this talk of winning streaks and championships, however, would not be taking place if it weren't for a gutsy

performance by the Quakers against a very good Cornell team

The game was an epic battle with emotion running high Early on. howev er. Penn struggled and quickly ran into trouble

Penn punt returner Chris Flynn tried to smother a rolling punt He fumbled and suddenly Cornell had the ball deep in Quaker territory Five plays later. Jeff Johnson ran the ball two yards for a touchdown After less than five minutes of play. Penn was down, 7-0.

"We were worried about getting down because of a mistake in the kicking game or anything like that." Penn head coach Ed Zubrow said "We were the first team that had to battle back against adversity But there was no panic on our bench, we came back. When you talk about championship caliber teams, they are capable of doing things like that."

Penn was quickly in a good position to get the touchdown back The first play after Cornell's kickoff was a 42-yard pass play from a scrambling Crocicchia to Rich Comizio in the right flat Two plays later,

the Quakers were at the Big Red 26-yard line. But adversity knocked on Penn's door again

Crocicchia fumbled the snap from center, and Cornell's Gary Rinkus recov- ered, thwarting Penn's long drive.

After the Penn defense once again kept Cornell from getting a first down, the Quakers took over on their own 27-yard line And although Penn drove to the Big Red nine-yard line, the Quakers had to settle for a 33-yard Jim Grass field goal.

But the Quakers only had to wait another 2:07 to register their first touch

down. Jeff Fortna intercepted a Marty Stallone pass, and it took Penn only four plays to put the ball in the end zone Crocicchia (ll-of-21 passes.'204 yards, two touchdowns, two interceptions) found Scott Scungio for a five-yard touchdown pass, and a 10-7 lead

Meamwhile the Big Red were being

squelched by Penn's spectacular defen sive line. Despite injuries to starting nose tackle Dexter Desir and his backup. Mike Graves, the line held Cornell to a microscopic 12 net yards on the ground

"We started the game with Kyle Stephenson. Mike Lista and A.J. Sebas- ii.HI.'Hi up front." Zubrow said. "And we knew we would work in Ross Parsons. Dan Bauer and John Galik to allow us to move Lista over to nose guard. You don't go 10-0 without some depth Injuries would have been an easy excuse for us. but character people don't look for excuses."

The Penn defense shut out Cornell for the rest of the half, and the Quakers put another touchdown on the board to lead 17-7 at intermission. The touchdown

came on a bold fourth-down call when Crocicchia hit tight end Jim Miklos with a 31-yard pass.

"We were using a two-tight-end offense, and the tight ends cross." MiklM said "It usually shakes up the linebackers covering us. Usually one of us will be open I was just looking for the first down, the touchdown was an added bonus You've got to be happy with that "

lit didn't take long for the Big Red to strike back. From their own 42 yard line,

the Big Red had the ball, and Stallone dropped back to pass He found wide receiver Chris Hahn open near the right sideline. With Penn defensive backs James Fangmeyer and Tom Flynn converging, it seemed that Hahn would only gain a few yards. Instead, both defenders missed the tackle, and Hahn went all the way for a 58-yard touch down. Suddenly the score was 17-14.

Less than two minutes later, the Quakers had their 10-point bulge back From the Cornell 39 yard line, Penn was set to let Comizio run left, towards the wide side of the field But at the line of scrimmage, Crocicchia perfectly changed the play to go to the weak side .

Comizio's 39-yard run made the score 24-14, and it helped him become the first Penn rusher in history to run for over 1000 yards Comizio ran for 162 yards on 29 carries to finish with 1104 yards on the season and a Penn record 2479 for his career. The 100-yard plus effort was Comizio's fourth straight, and the 10th of his career. In addition, he ended up as this season's leading rusher in the Ivies

"It was great, you couldn't ask for a better way to go out," Comizio said. "All the pressure was there We were away, and it's good to come into someone's place with a crowd like that and be able to win the title outright "

"It was like a heavyweight fight out there, with both fighters knocking each other to the canvas, and both having the character to come back." Zubrow said. "And Penn had the character to come back that last time That's what makes the win so special."

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Tight end Jim Miklos scores after catching a fourth-down pass

touchdown, the Quakers did not come back right away After driving to the Cornell 36-yard line, they were forced to punt, and the Big Red took over on their own six-yard line So with 8:26 on the clock, and momentum and the crowd on its side, Cornell was 94 yards away from the lead, and a possible Ivy title.

Two plays later, that hope quickly vanished as Fangmeyer picked off a pass at the Cornell 41 -yard line. It seemed the Quakers were about to wrap things up.

"After allowing the long touchdown in the third quarter. I was as pissed off as I've been all year," Fangmeyer said. "I owed Stallone one. and I got him back "

Penn, however, still was not able to ice the game. The Quakers were quickly forced to punt, and Cornell took over on

its 12 yard line with 5:28 remaining The Big Red were unable to penetrate the Quaker defense, and they had to punt Then the Quakers wrapped up the game when Flynn ran 32 yards for a touch

down on Penn's next possession. "It was an outside designed play with

the option of going inside, and I decided to take it inside," Flynn said. "I got through the initial line, and then I just had to break one tackle, and I had the whole offense in front of me. I just had to follow the blocks After that I felt a lot better about the fumble "

The run helped Flynn reach the 89-yard mark on the day. and the junior now ranks seventh on Penn's all-time rushing list with 1430 yards Flynn

finished with 917 yards on the season, the second best total in Penn history —

behind Comizio. of course. And this season Flynn broke the Quakers' single- season all purpose yardage record with 1620 yards

And three minutes after Flynn's run, it was over, the first perfect season at Pennsylvania in 82 years — much to the delight of the Penn players and fans

"Every team starts out with the hope they can go undefeated," Penn defensive back Don Wilson said. "After we beat Navy, it was right there in front of us At various parts of the season we were pushed Today we were really tested I'm really proud, and I'm really glad the way the season ended up. 10-0. I still can't

really believe it. I'm just really happy."

PENN 10 7 7 7- 31 Cornell 7 0 7 7— 21

First Quarter C — Johnson 2 run (Aug kick), 4:11 P —Grass tg 33, 11:19 P" — Scungio 5 pass from Crocicchia (Grass kick), 13:26 Second Quarter P — Miklos 31 pass from Crocicchia (Grass kick). 13:43

Third Quarter C — Hahn 58 pass from StaKone (Aug kick), 446 P — Comizio 39 run (Grass kick), 6:43 Fourth Quarter C — Hahn 11 pass from Stallone (Aug kick), 2:37 ^" P — Flynn 32 run (Grass kick), 11:54 A — 22.000 (estimated)

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS BUSHING - PENN: Comizio 29-162,

Flynn 15-89. Klar 3-11, Otskszyk 1-3. Laurano 1-1, Bruni 1-0. Crocicchia 4-<-11). Cornell: Johnson 16-40. Malaga 2-18. Pugh 3-5, Hahn 1-(-1), Stallone 9+50)

PASSING - PENN: Crocicchia 11-21-204-2 ComeM Stallone 11-29-168-3

RECEIVING _ PENN: Flynn 4-33, MUdoe 2-47, Scungio 2-44, Comizio 1-42, N°voeetsky 124, Sounders 1-14. ComeM: Hahn 3-92. Mitchell 3-48. Buckley 2-12. Lutz 1-9. Johnson 1-5, Malaga 1-2.

"

25 November J 986 A SEASON TO REMEMBER Page/5

Week One Perm 21, Dartmouth 7

Zubrow Era starts out right By Jonathan Bondy

HANOVER. N.H. - Could new coach Ed Zubrow win? Would quarterback Jim Crocicchia be

able to lead the team? And could a defense with seven new starters stop anyone? These were the questions facing the Penn football team as it opened its 1986 season.

The answer was yes — to all of the above.

The Zubrow Era started on a winning note, as the Quakers began their Ivy League title defense by running over Dartmouth. 21-7. Literally running them over. The strength of the Penn offense was supposed to be its ground attack, and despite a soggy field that hampered footing, it was that, and more. The team rushed for 253 yards, led by senior tailback Rich Comizio. Comizio continued his assault on the Penn record book, running for 136 yards on 25 canies He became the Quakers' sixth all-time leading rusher, with 1511 yards.

"The (offensive) line was very suppor- tive," Comizio said. "We worked well as an offensive unit. I think we're way ahead of where we were last year, and that comes from experience and familiarity."

Penn set about establishing its running game right away. Early in the first quarter, Comizio and junior tailback Chris Flynn (87 yards on 12 carries) showed the Big Green — and the rest of the Ivy League — how dominant they can be. Taking over on their own 13-yard line, the Quakers scored in eight plays, gaining a 7-0 lead on a 20-yard run by Flynn. The drive showed the strength of a veteran offensive line and was a perfect example of the power football Penn wanted to establish — every yard gained on the drive came on the ground.

The rest of the first half belonged to the Quaker defense. The second quarter saw Dartmouth gain 13 total yards and just one first down. The result of good defense is usually good field position, and Penn was finally able to capitalize midway through the second quarter, taking a 14-0 lead on a two-yard run by Comizio.

But anyone who thought the game was going to be a blowout was in for a surprise. The Big Green would come back, and it was in the second half that Penn showed one of the true qualities of a championship-caliber team — resiliency.

After Dartmouth went 75 yards to narrow the score to 14-7, it would have been easy for Penn to fold, but it didn't. Instead the Quakers came back and drove all the way to the Dartmouth six-yard line, only to have Comizio fumble on the three

The fumble could have been one of the game's key plays — Dartmouth had moved at will the previous series, and momentum was clearly on its side. For a defense that was a pre season question mark, it was a big challenge. So all the Penn defense did was make Dartmouth lose one yard on three plays.

"I thought it was a sign of the character

of our defense." said defensive tackle Mike Lista. "We weren't fazed by the fumble at all. That [defensive series] was just us. getting them in three plays and out."

But the defense's day was far from over. On Dartmouth's next posession, quarterback David Gabianelli hooked up with split end Craig Morton on a 50-yard bomb to the Penn 42-yard line. Once again the defense held on three plays, forcing a punt.

'"I felt we had full control of the situation," defensive tackle A.J. Sebas- tianelli said "Our motto is 'bend, don't break,' and I think we showed that. After we were able to get a lead on them, we just wanted to get as physical as possible."

The offense also showed that it could come through when it had to. Midway through the final quarter the Quakers put together their most impressive drive of the day. Mixing the passing attack into the offense for the first time, Penn was able to go 82 yards to put the game away. The key play on the drive was a 37-yard screen pass to Comizio. who would later score on a 14-yard burst through the left side.

What was most impressive, however, was the way that Crocicchia was able to move the offense On the day he was eight-of-14 for 89 yards with no intercep- tions, but the numbers do not tell the whole story. He was able to lead his offense. He did not force passes He showed composure when rushed, and he completed passes when he needed to

"We felt in the end that Jim was the person we were going to go with as our starting quarterback," Zubrow said. "We want to let him lead the team."

Nineteen eighty five was a rough year for Crocicchia. He was inconsistent at times, and injured at others. Compari- sons with John McGeehan, Penn's all-Ivy 1984 quarterback, did not help He had to beat out Scott Morcott for the starting job during the pre season. But all that seemed forgotten.

"When we needed a, pass, he came through." center Steve Buonato said. "He did a good job of controlling the tempo on offense. There is a lot of weight on his shoulders, in terms of how we attack defenses, and I think he did a great job Jim's not one to be a follower — he's a leader He takes control of his offensive personnel very well."

In 1985 the defense was the strength of the team, with four all-Ivy players This year's team, however, struck struck more of a balance, as neither the offense nor the defense seems to have to bear the burden. Both units picked up for each other, coming through when they had to.

"I think that we did what we wanted to." linebacker Jeff Fortna said "We wanted to keep the tempo up, and we did. I think that our defense showed a lot of character out there."

Fortna was one of only four returning starters on the defense But what they lacked in experience, the Quakers more than made up for in enthusiasm. Aside from its one scoring drive, Dartmouth only gained 152 yards on offense. It was a game where several players had their

Tommy Leonardi/Oaily Pennsylvanian

Junior tailback Chris Flynn outruns two Big Green defenders

first chance to answer the doubters "My )°b was to wa,ch ,hc 9ame. That's "It's my first year to start," Sebastianelli a ®elA ,ecl'n9 for a coach °ur assistant

said. "I was untested, and it was my turn coaches really did the job, and that's the to shine. I knew that a lot of guys depended on me. I knew I could do it. but I had to show the guys."

But the person who may have had the greatest load on his shoulders never even stepped on the field. The fact that it was Ed Zubrow's first game as head coach seemed kind of lost in the excitement of Penn's win. But the players knew.

"You want to win no matter who's the coach." offensive guard Jim Panzini said, "but I'm happy for the new staff. I have all the confidence in the world in them All the jitters go out the window once you step on the field anyway."

Whether it is fair or not, Zubrow will be compared with Jerry Bemdt, who left to take over Rice University's football prog- ram. But if this first game was any indication. Zubrow did not have anything to fear. His Quakers were not pretty, but they more than got the job done.

"Our goal is to improve each day," Zubrow said, "and we got to the point where we couldn't improve without a game I was pleased to see both sides picking up the other really well.

way 1 want it to be

PENN 7 7 0 7 — 21 DARTMOUTH 0 0 7 0 — 7

First Quarter P — Flynn. 20 fun (Grass kick). 1021 Second Quarter P — Comizio. 2 run (Grass kick) 608 Third Quarter D — Morion 10 pass Irom Gabianelli (O Gara kick). 9 49 Fourth Quarter P — Comizio 14 fun (Grass kick). 11 56 A- 7920

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING — PENN: Comizio 25-136.

Flynn 12-87. Laurano 3-29. Klar 3-10. Bruni 3-3. Otokuyk H-2). CroocchM 4*10) DARTMOUTH: Torain 28 88. Dulresne 3 2, Phitlis 1-1. Morion H-1). Pollard 1-(-5). Ga- bianelli 4+21)

PASSING — PENN: Crocicchia 8 14-890 DARTMOUTH: Gabianelli 14-26-1634.

RECEIVING — PENN: Saunders 4 36. Comizio 241. Bnjm 1-6. Laurano 16 DARTMOUTH: Orury 4-42. Torain 4-26. Morion 3-79. Dufretne 2 14. Swwrc 1-2

Page/6 A SEASON TO REMEMBER 25 November 1986

Week Two Penn 10, Bucknell 7

Defensive stand halts Bisons By Marissa Handwerker

As the final gun sounded, one could hear the sighs of relief emanating from the south stands of Franklin

Field The Penn football team had just

defeated Bucknell. 10 7. on a sometimes damp, mostly wet Franklin Field turf. The victory gave the Quakers an 18-2-1 record at home over the past four seasons.

Although the four-time Ivy League champions continued to roll over their opponents, they certainly hit their fair share of scares But the Quakers always seem to come out of it okay

With less than five minutes to go in this game and Penn holding on to a 10-7 lead, the Bisons had a third-down-and- goal on the Quaker 17-yard line

Bucknell's attempt to score on first down from Penn's seven-yard line had been thwarted by the Quaker defense, as Bison quarterback Scott Auchenbach's throw fell incomplete Then second-and- goal from the seven turned into second- and goal from the 17 after the Bisons

were called for two consecutive illegal procedure penalties

"We just got screwed up a little bit in the formations." Auchenback said "The players had a tough time hearing in the huddle Other than that we would have scored "

But then came the Quaker blitz. On the next play. Auchenbach felt pressure from linebacker Jeff Fortna and threw a pass that hit off the chest of tackle Mike Lista before falling to the ground.

"We made too many mistakes when we had a chance," Bucknell coach George Landis said "Penn was pressur- ing us down there There are only so many plays you can run when you can't stop the blitz "

But on third down, the Bisons were almost able to do just that.

Auchenbach rolled out to the left and threw to the rear left corner of the end zone. Just as the pass was to meet the outstretched arms of Bison receiver Mike Morrow, Quaker cornerback Donald Wilson stepped in and batted the ball away.

Things got even worse for the Bisons when they attempted a game tying field

Kevin RJcherde/Darty Pennsytvanian

Tackle Mike Llmta prepare* to hit Bucknell quarterback Jim Given

goal on the next play Off the snap, holder John Carey could not control the slippery ball. The field goal attempt was aborted and Penn took over.

"I think they lost their composure a little," Penn nose guard Dexter Desir said. "It was a crunch situation, and they were a little uptight They haven't been in situations like that enough "

No one would have expected Auchen- bach to be in that situation at all. The freshman quarterback make his Bison debut only because of a shoulder injury sustained by Bucknell starter Jim Given in the third quarter Given had scrambled for 18 yards before being knocked out of bounds by defensive back Steve John son. The jolt ended up hurting Johnson more than it did Given, because Johnson suffered a spine injury that ended his season.

Auchenbach entered the game with Penn in front. 7-0, in the third quarter and started the Bisons' offensive comeback

"I was happy with the way the team came back in the end. happy with the way we fought," Landis said "Our freshman quarterback showed a lot of poise."

"We knew [Auchenbach] was good and we'd have to worry about him next year." Zubrow said "He did a great job "

In the first half, however, it was the Penn defense that controlled the flow of the game, pressuring the Bucknell offen sive line and forcing Given out of the pocket. Given — who had averaged almost 300 yards passing per game this season — completed eight of 10 passes for just 69 yards during the first two quarters. Meanwhile, Bucknell's explo sive tailback Earl Beecham was held to two yards rushing in the first half

"I compliment [the Penn| defense in that they're very strong up front." said Beecham, who had just 14 net yards on 15 carries in the game "They pressured us from the inside."

On the other side of the field the Penn offense — a.k.a running back Rich Comizio — was doing some pressuring of its own Comizio scored Penn's only touchdown with 8:41 left in the first half on an 11 yard run On the afternoon, he had 175 yards rushing. Add that figure to Comizio's 136 yards rushing in week one at Dartmouth and that brings him to 311 total yards on the season After the Bucknell game, Comizio had 1686 yards, which placed him fourth on the Quakers' all-time list

Sohpomore halfback Chris Flynn had 45 yards on 10 carries, while junior fullback Joe Laurano added 47 yards on nine carries

"Offensively, we're doing well, but we should have more points on the score board than we do." Comizio said "It's due to a lack of concentration We beat ourselves."

The Quakers' scoring problems could also be attributed to a less than stellar passing game Penn quarterback Jim Crocicchia attempted only 14 passes, completing just five of them.

"Being a quarterback, I'd love to throw the ball a little more," Crocicchia said "It's just a matter of going with what's working."

At Dartmouth, however, Crociccia was able to complete eight of his 14 pass attempts. •

"I think you have to look at the 'weather in both games." Comizio said. "We haven't been able to establish a passing game But we haven't needed it yet."

"There are a lot of things that have to happen to be successful throwing the ball." Crociccia said. "Sometimes we'll have breakdowns up front, by the receivers and a lot of times it's my fault There are a lot of factors that come into play

"We'll work on some things [at prac- tice] and try and get our passing game on track, so when we need it, we can count on it."

"In the first half we have to realize that the offense was driving the ball effective- ly." Zubrow said. "Until people stop us from running the ball — that is our gameplan."

In the second half, however, the Quakers' game plan faltered just a bit Coming Out of the lockerroom with a 7-0 lead, Penn managed just three points for the remainder of the game.

A Jim Grass 26 yard field goal with 3:53 left in the third quarter gave the Quakers a 10-0 lead But Bucknell looked like a different team in the second half. The Bisons moved the ball down- field aggressively and slowly chipped away at the Quaker defense.

Auchenbach's 11 yard pass to wide receiver George Long gave the Bisons their only touchdown just 50 seconds into the fourth quarter. A successful extra-point attempt cut the Quakers' lead to 10-7.

"Defensively, we had a drive where we didn't do what we had to do," Zubrow said. "But you have to give the defense credit when the chips were down."

Those were all the points the Bisons would put on the board Not that they didn't try for more — and almost get them.

"We showed our youngness (sic): we got excited and we made mistakes," Landis said.

BUCKNELL 0 0 0 7— 7 PENN 0 7 3 0— 10

Second Quarter P — Comizio 11 run (Grass kick). 6 19 Third Quarter P —Grass (g 26. 11:07 Fourth Quarter B — Long 11 pass from Auchenbach (Caldwell kick), so A- 15.241

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

RUSHING — BUCKNELL: Domimck ,2-19, Beecham 15-14, Given 5-11. Guyton 3-5 Auchenbach 1-4, Kutz 1-<-9) PENN: Comizio 26-175. Laurano 9-47. Flynn 10-45. Klar 2-14. Crochicchia 3-1.

PASSING - BUCKNELL: Given 10-12-101-0. Auchenbach 9-18-90-0. Carey M-f-14)-0 PENN: Croocch.a 5-14-21-0.

RECEIVING - BUCKNELL: Guylon 6-35. Morrow 4-70, Long 4-39. LiMia 2-24. Beecham 2-18. Kutz 1-5. Keener 1-<-14). PENN: Flynn 2-7, Saundera 1-12. Noveselsky 1-6, Comizio H-4).

■ ■

25 November 1986 A SEASON TO REMEMBER Page/7

Week Three Penn 42, Columbia 7

Ground attack tames Lions By Rick Resnick

With the cloudy skies above Franklin Field before game time, it wa no shock that the

Penn-Columbia football game was affected by showers. Yet the downpours were not your common, everyday rainstorms.

What was pelting the artificial turf throughout the game was a constant deluge of little yellow flags. But despite the heavy precipitation, the Quakers were able to brave the elements and storm past the Lions. 42-7.

The cause of the onslaught of yellow flags was some aggressive and sloppy play from both teams, especially the Quakers — who set a new Ivy League mark with 17 penalties. The Lions also did their part with 11 violations, thus helping establish a new two-team record of 28.

But not even Penn's record number of mistakes could keep the Quakers from dominating the gutsy, but severely over- matched Lions. The Quakers amassed a total of 522 yards, including 333 yards on the ground. Tailback Chris Flynn was the big gun for the Quakers, rushing for 142 yards on only 15 carries.

Flynn's rushing numbers more than tripled Columbia's total on the ground, as the Penn defense kept the Lions' runners to a microscopic 45 yards. To that point, the Quakers had not allowed a team to rush for more than 100 yards in a game, establishing a new Penn record in the process. And the Lions added to their dismal record, chalking up their 24th straight loss and 27th consecutive game without a win.

Flynn got the opportunity to be Penn's workhorse on offense when leading rusher Rich Comizio left the game after the first half. Comizio, who was suffering from bruised rubs and a bruised thigh, carried the ball only nine times for 45 yards.

But it wasn't the rushing attack that the Quakers were looking to establish early. After Columbia fumbled away its first possession. Penn took over on its 42-yard line and came out throwing. Although quarterback Jim Crocicchia's first two passes — both intended for wide receiver Ken Saunders — were incom- plete. Crocicchia kept on firing. It payed off as he hit Saunders for completions of 13 and 16 yards to put the Quakers deep in Columbia territory. A 12-yard pass to Rob Andrews brought the ball to the four-yard line, where Crocicchia then connected with Jim Miklos for a touch down After the kick by Jim Grass, Penn led. 7-0.

"We felt this week it was important that we establish the passing game right off the bat so Columbia couldn't load the line of scrimmage up against us and try to take the running game away." Penn head coach Ed Zubrow said "Our gameplan was to establish the pass to set up the run. It think it worked just that way. And it was a good day at the office for Jim Crocicchia (12 of 22 for 140 yards)."

"We wanted to use this game to give Jim some confidence." Penn center

Steve Buonato said "We thought that because of the situation at the beginning of the year when Jim and Scotty Morcott were going neck-and-neck for the posi- tion, he might be holding back a little in fear of throwing the interception. We told him. 'Jim. just throw the football like you know how ' It worked well."

After the touchdowfi pass, Columbia struck back quickly as Terry Brown returned the kickoff 56 yards. And after three John Chirico runs and a couple of Penn personal fouls — the flags were just starting to fly — the Lions had the ball first-and-10 on the Penn 12-yard line. But it was here that the Penn defense held, seemingly taking Columbia out of contension even though the game was still in the first quarter.

After an imcomplete David Putelo pass. Chirico ran for seven yards. But when John Pennywell was held for no gain on a run up the middle. Columbia was left with a fourth-and-three from the five, forcing the Lions to settle for a field goal. Or maybe not.

"Right now we are not as consistent as we'd like to be kicking the ball." Colum bia head coach Larry McElreavy said. "We don't have a number-one kicker. (Columbia kicker and soccer player Neil] Banks hurt himself in the first half of Friday's soccer game. For now we have to work with [second-string punter] Bill Walsh and (running back] John Chirico."

As a result, the Lions went for the touchdown. They came away empty.

"It was what we call a quick-91 three-step drop pattern." McElreavy said. "It was designed to go to the tight end. The tight end was open, but the tailback forgot to block the defensive end. There was nothing wrong with the call, just the execution."

It was actually Penn outside linebacker Brad Hippenstiel who flew in to hit Putelo and cause a fumble Inside linebacker Bruce McConnell recovered, and Penn took over on the eight.

"That was a really big play for us," McConnell said. "We expect things like that to happen. Ever since we've been here they have. Once Columbia got close to the goal line, the intensity really picked up. And Brad just made a really great play. That pretty much sealed their fate. From that point on, we knew that they wouldn't be going anywhere on us."

From that point on, the Columbia offense had little spark, and the main question was whether or not the Quakers could register a shutout. Other questions included whether or not the Quakers would break every penalty record in the books.

"I was very concerned with the penal- ties." Zubrow said. "I was concerned about Columbia bringing us down below the level we are capable of playing The penalties are a good example of how that can happen I was confident that the only thing that could stop us was ourselves. I was just worried that we were going to make an effort to do that."

While all the mistakes didn't really hurt the Quakers, it did take a while for Penn to get unfrocked After Grass missed a 39-yard field-goal try early in the first quarter, it was up to Comizio to put the Quakers on the board again. He capped

Kevin Richards/Daily Pennsylvanian Nose guard Mike Graves tackles Columbia's Joe Pollcastro

off a 51-yard drive with a two-yard run for a 14-0 lead.

The score remained the same at the end of the half, but once the third quarter started, the Quakers stressed the run, and ran all over the Lions. Tailback Jim Bruni ran one yard for a touchdown less than three minutes into the third quarter A little over two minutes later, Flynn — after having a 54-yard touchdown run brought back to the 24 because of a needless clip — ran four yards for another score The romp was on.

Flynn scored again early in the fourth on a 21-yard carry, but Columbia came back with some points of its own. Putelo found Homer Hill open breaking down the right side for a 65-yard touchdown strike.

"The same play worked at the end of the first half, but I just didn't throw the ball right." Putelo said "We knew that play would work, and we should have had another touchdown on it somewhere."

The Quakers would get the final work, as Penn marched 58 yards on 13 plays to finish the scoring. It was John Deering — a member of Zubrow's late-game, revolving-door running back system that saw a total of 13 players run with the football — who scored the Quakers' last touchdown Deering was not to be denied, running five times before his one-yard plunge into the end zone.

"Chris Flynn took up the slack for Comizio, and so did Jim Bruni," Penn guard Jim Panzini said. "Then when John Deering came in. he did the same thing. Whatever back we put in seemed to run well."

The fact that Penn did well was no

surprise to McElreavy. "Penn is a very physical football team,

a very good football team." McElreavy said. "We don't have a lot of team speed; we are playing on heart and enthusiasm From a talent standpoint we don't match up to Penn. We use Penn as a model It shows our players what they have to do, and how they have to make that commitment What goes around will come around. Our tum will come "

COLUMBIA 0 0 0 7— 7 PENN 7 7 14 14- 42

First Quarter P — Miklos 4 past Irom Ciocicchia (Grass kick). 7 44 Second Quarter P — Comi/io 2 run (Grass kick). * 45 Third Quarter P — Bruni 1 run (Grass kick). 2:47 P _ Flynn 4 run (Grass kick). 529 Fourth Quarter P — Flynn 22 run (Grass kick). 1:27 C — H.ll 6b pass from Putelo (Wai»h kick). 2 52 P — Deering 1 run (Grass kick). 10 23 A - 10.878 *•

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING — COLUMBIA: Chirico 9-45.

Pennywell 5-12. Brown 1-10, Gonu'c* 3 -1 Assitl 2-1. Puieto 1M-27) PENN: Frynn 15-142. Bruni 10-58. Comizio 9-45. Laurano 7-36. Deering 5-18. Bealo 1-10 Owks/yh 27. Sandier 1-7. Klar 13. Murcolt 13. Waller C 3 Conway 2-1, Crociccrua 10

PASSING - COLUMBIA: Pulelo 12-25-168-1 PENN: Crocicchia 12-22-140 1. Murcotl 2 2490

RECEIVING - COLUMBIA: Bolich 3 46 Hill 2 81. Chirico 2-11. Hicks 27. Penn, *eil 2-7. Brown 116 PENN: And-cws 3 42. Joyce 2-55. Saunders 2-30. Comizio 2-6. Novoselsky 129, Scungw 1-10. Solan 1-9. Bruni 1-4. Miklos 1-4

' IT" —

,

A Season to Remember September 20: PENN 21, Dartmouth 7 September 27: PENN 10, Bucknell 7 October 4: PENN 42, Columbia 7 October 11: PENN 34, Brown 0 October 18: PENN 30, Navy 26 October 25: PENN 24, Yale 6 November 1: PENN 23, Princeton 10 November 8: PENN 42, Lafayette 14 November 15: PENN 17, Harvard 10 November 22: PENN 31, Cornell 21

Highlights from a perfect season: Center — Penn head coach Ed Zubrow gets carried off the field by tailbacks Jim Bruni (left) and Chris Flynn (right). Clockwise from top right — Rover Brad Heinz (left) and cornerback Tom Flynn celebrate the Quakers' 34-0 drubbing of Brown; A.J. Sebastianelli, part of Penn s barking-dog defense, growls at Navy; Quakers working to stay on top — (back row) Steve Buonato, Scott Ernst; (middle row) Heinz, Jeff Shef- tic, Jim Panzini, Mike Heyse; (in the wheelbarrow) Chris Flynn; Chris Flynn glares at Brown; tailback Rich Comlzio adds to his single-season and career Penn rushing marks against Cornell.

Page-/10 A SEASON TO REMEMBER 25 November 1986

Week Four Penn 34, Brown 0

Tommy Leonardl/Daily Pennsyrvanian

Cornerback Donald Wilson (21) conies up with an Interception against Brown with the help of linebacker Brad Hlppenstlel (99)

Quakers easily pass first test By Dan Bollerman

PROVIDENCE. R.I, - For one of the two teams in the Penn-Brown football game, the contest was

billed as "their Super Bowl." For the other, it was a test of their

progression. In the end. the clash between the

Quakers and Bruins — the Ivy League's two top teams — wasn't even close Penn found out that it had progressed to

a very high level by virtue of its 34-0 whitewash of Brown.

"Our football team put together the type of game that we had been building towards for the first four weeks of the season," Quaker head coach Ed Zubrow said. "When you're all alone, you want a game with some implications (for the future). I'm very pleased with our

performance." "They don't seem to have any weak-

nesses." said Bruins' head coach John Rosenberg about the Quakers "They play the run well: they play the pass well on defense: they run the football well They are an outstanding football team."

Penn used its entire arsenal to stun Brown. The familiar elements of the 1986 Quaker gameplan — the rushing attack and stifling defense — were in full force on the grass of Brown Stadium But an effective high-percentage passing game, and a few trick plays — as well as six Bruin turnovers — made this contest different from Penn's three previous

games. Factor in the pre-game billing of the Ivy

League version of a clash of titans, the

first difficult game that the Quakers would face after three relatively easy contests, and this result would seem all the more improbable.

But for Penn, it was just another day at the office. For the Quakers, some things stay the same, whether the opponent is Brown, Columbia or whoever.

"Each week, we look to come out and dominate the line on each play," Penn defensive tackle Mike Lista said. "We think it sets the tone for the game We felt we did it, and I felt happy that we did."

The tone in the contest was power on both sides of the ball. The Penn defense held the Bruins to 35 net yards rushing — the fourth straight game that the

Quakers had held an opponent to under 100 yards on the ground — and 83 yards passing. Penn had to contend with Brown's big-play offense, led by quarter- back Mark Donovan and wide receivers Kieron Bigby and Dave Fielding.

"We felt that Donovan had been tremendously effective in making the big plays, but less so when teams were able to put him under pressure." Zubrow said. "We felt that if we were not able to put pressure on him that we would have a long afternoon."

"The pressure from Mike [Lista], A.J. [Sebastianelli], Dexter Desir. Brad Hippenstiel, Jeff Fortna and the people up front was the answer." Zubrow added.

Instead it was Donovan — who came

in as the Ivies' top-rated passer — and the Bruins who had the long afternoon Donovan was six-of-19 for 83 yards on the day. Bigby had one catch for 40 yards, while Fielding had no catches.

"I look at the personnel on that defense," Rosenberg said, "and they are outstanding. That's what did us in. If we could have rushed the football and made some progress, then we could have had a chance."

But the Quaker offense, like the defense, wouldn't let the Bruins have that chance. Tailbacks Rich Comizio (23 carries for 118 yards) and Chris Flynn (12-for 117) rushed for more than 100 yards in the game — the first time since 1977 that this feat had been accom- plished by two Penn players.

One of the game's few sloppy moments would occur late in the first quarter, as the two teams combined for three turnovers in 18 seconds. On a first-down play, Donovan was inter- cepted by Penn safety James Fangmey- er. Crockxhia was then intercepted by linebacker Brian Murphy. On the follow

ing play, running back Lane Wood fumbled, and Desir recovered for the Quakers.

Comizio and Flynn would continue to hammer away in the third quarter, as the Quakers added two more touchdowns. On the first possession, Penn went 60 yards in 10 plays for its fourth score After Comizio gained 13 yards on four

carries, Flynn bolted through the right side, whirled away from two tackles and scored from the 21, making the score 27-0.

For Flynn the 100-yard barrier was

exceeded for the second consecutive game, easily showing the depth that Zubrow is fortunate to possess

"We're trying to be a two deep team." Zubrow said.

So deep that Brown drowned.

PENN 14 7 13 0- 34 Brown 0 0 0 0— 0

First Quarter P — Novoselsky 24 pass Irom Cfocicchia (Giass kick). 9 21 P — Scungio 4 pass tiom Croocchia (Giass kick). II 56

Second Quarter P — Novoselsky 6 pass from Comizio (Giass kick). 2 35

Third Quarter P — Flynn 21 fun (kick lailed). 4 42 P — Flynn 14 run (Grass kick). 6 37 A- 11 500

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS BUSHING - PENN: Com,,* 23-118.

Flynn 12-117. Bruni 14-40. Laurano 6-17 Andrews 1-15, Oleksjyk 3-7, Klar 2-0 BROWN; Wood 8 60. Kurp 3-7. Onoyan 1 -5. Falcone 1-4. Simone 6-1. Gunn 1-(-3) Shapiro. 2(H), Donovan 3-( 28)

PASSING - PENN: Coocchia 9-15-98 1. Morcoil 4 4-35 0 Commo 1-160 BROWN: Donovan 6 19-83-2 Shapiro 0-4-0-1

RECEIVING - PENN: Novoselsky 3 46 Heyse 2-20. Andrews 2-22 Scungio 2-16 Laurano 212, Joyce 1 10. Solan iV Oteksjyk 15 BROWN: S.mone 2 23 Bigby 1 40. Zidhcky 1 -15. Kurp 1 -9. Solomon 1(4)

25 November 1986 A SEASON TO REMEMBER

Week Five Page/lI

Penn 30, Navy 26

Big fourth quarter keys upset

Francte Gardter/Daity Pennsytvaman

Tight end Brent Novoselsky make* a reception In the fourth quarter

By Jonathan Bondy

ANNAPOLIS. Md. - And on the fifth weekend, they passed. And they saw that it was good, so they

kept on doing it. After running through opponents for

four weeks, the Penn football team suddenly found itself in a situation where it had to go over one. That's right, the Quakers had to pass

And pass they did Quarterback Jim Crocicchia threw a

school-record-tying four touchdown passes to lead Penn to a 30-26 upset win over Navy. On the day. Crocicchia only completed 11 passes in 27 tries, not exactly overwhelming numbers at first glance. But it was the result that mattered.

All season long the passing game had played second fiddle to the Quakers' running attack. Led by tailbacks Rich Comizio and Chris Flynn. Penn was third in Division l-AA rushing, averaging 295 yards per game on the ground, but Comizio re aggravated a leg injury in the first quarter — sidelining him for the day — and Flynn was held to 63 yards. As a team, the Quakers gained 137 yards on 46 carries for a season-low average of 3.0 yards per carry

But Crocicchia's 191 yards passing were a season high. One hundred - twenty eight of those yards came in the decisive fourth quarter, when the Quak- ers turned a 20-10 deficit into a 30-20 lead in just over 11 minutes Four times Penn took possession of the ball, and three times it cashed in for touchdowns. Two of those scores were by junior tight end Brent Novoselsky.

"We saw on film that their free safety played really close to the line of scrim mage." Crocicchia said "We hoped we could get him to bite on the running plays, so that we could go deep As far as throwing to Novo. well he's a big target, and he's got great hands. I love throwing to him."

The success of Penn's running game, however, has cut down on Novoselsky's receptions. He caught 17 passes in 1985. but had only five catches going into this game He left Annapolis with four more catches for 82 yards, both career-bests He also had three touchdown catches, tying the Penn single-game record.

"I felt good about my performance." Novoselsky said. "But (Scott Scungio, Jim Miklos and I) have been an intricate part of the offense this year as part of the line We have always thought of ourselves as playing a key role. On offense, if all 11 guys don't do their job, you don't have a play."

While Crocicchia and Novoselsky were busy producing touchdowns, tailback Chris Flynn was getting pounded. The 180-pound junior was forced to do most of the running for the Quakers due to Comizio's injury. The Mids held him to 2.6 yards per cany, after he had been averaging 8.0. Comizio's injury, howev- er, opened the door for the forgotten member of Penn's tailback trio — Jim Bruni. He only ran for 11 yards, but his 29-yard touchdown catch with just two minutes left proved to be the winning

score '"(This game) gives me back a lot of

confidence," Bruni said "It's tough as the third tailback to get mentally and physically prepared, because you know you're not going to start. 1 just try to be ready at all times, to give my best whenever I get the chance to play."

It took a complete game by the offense, the defense and the special teams to give Penn its first win over a Division l-A team since the Quakers beat Rutgers. 7-6. in 1963.

For the first time this year the Quakers passed for more yards than they gained rushing. Each game, the talk was of Comizio, of Flynn and of the defense, and deservedly so. And before each game, these were the areas that other teams prepared for.

"I hope (we have some balance]." Crocicchia said. "I'll do whatever it takes to win The first couple of games we ran the ball well, and in the Brown game we moved the ball well through the air. It's just execution — so far we've shown we can do it.

"My line has a lot to do with it. they're working really hard. When you have eight seconds to hit the guy. you have to give the credit to the line I'm not doing anything different."

Maybe he isn't doing anything diffe rent, but the quarterback Crocicchia was against Navy has come a long way from the one he was in 1985 There were no foolish passes; he stayed in the pocket and scrambled when he had to But most importantly, when his team needed him most, he produced.

"Jim Crocicchia made all the plays." Head Coach Ed Zubrow said "(Quarter backs andreceivers] coach (John] Audi no works with him every day. Jim is an example of one player who improves every week (Against Navy] he had to play well, and he playe.-* the best he ever did."

PENN Navy

3 0 720- 30 7 6 7 6- 26

First Quarter N — Hollinger 20 pass from Byrne (Fun- doukas kick). 6 43 P —Grass Ig 42. 13 09 Second Quarter N — Fundoukas Ig 37, 3 36 N - Fundoukas Ig 22. 13.54 Third Quarter P — Novoselsky 7 pass from Crocicchia (Grass kick), 5:22 N — Smith 12 run (Fundoukaa kick), 14 04 Fourth Quarter P — Novoselsky 39 pass Irom Crocicchia (Grass kick). 3:48 P — Novoaelsky 3 pass Iron Crocicchia (kick tailed). 12.28 P — Bruni 29 pass from Crocicchia (Grass kick). 13 01 N — Smith 1 run (pass farled). 14.13 A - 23.959

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING - PENN: Flynn 24-63. Com-

I2k> 6-28. Laurano 7-25. Bum 4-11. Klar 1-5. Crocicchia 3K-4). Andrew! 1+5) NAVY: Smith 34-123, Brown 5-55. Holl 3-10. Saunders 1-1. Byrne 2-(-12).

PASSING — PENN: Crocicchia 11 27-191-2 NAVY: Byrne 17-29-177-2.

RECEIVING — PENN: Novoselsky 4-82. Flynn 2-24. Btuni 1-29. Joyce 1-19. Andrews 1-19. Saundert 1-9. NAVY: Smith 7-45. Ray 3-35. Saunders 2-33. Sniflen 2-29. Brown 2-15. HoHmger 1-20

W ^ "FT"flP — .... ...I) .... rrrr.

Page/12 A SEASON TO REMEMBER 25 November 1986

Week Six Penn 24, Yale 6

Needle stays stuck on winning By Ed Gefen

II was beginning to sound like a broken record.

"The Penn football learn won its suchand such consecutive game of the season, beating so and so on Saturday by a score of such-and-such. On offense. so-and-so and so-and-so combined to rush for this many yards, and quarter back Jim Crocicchia completed this many passes in this many attempts for this many yards On defense, so-and-so and so-and-so led a strong group of Quakers that limited so-and-so's running backs to under 100 yards again "

On this occasion those blanks were filled in as follows: sixth. Yale. 24. 6. Chris Flynn. Jim Bruni. 164. 12. 17. 192. Brad Heinz. Jeff Fortna. Yale

Yes. the Quakers took care of the visiting Elis. 24-6. on Franklin Field. Yes. it was Homecoming. Yes. this squad became the first group of Quakers to win the first six games of a season since 1947 Yes. milestones continued to be reached

"Going into the game, we felt that time of possession would be important." said Penn head coach Ed Zubrow. who became the Quakers' first first-year coach since Sol Metzger in 1908 to win his first six games. "We wanted to keep (Yale quarterback] Kelly Ryan off the field and keep him from getting a hot hand Our first drive of the game, which eats up seven minutes of the first quarter, and our second drive of the third quarter, which is seven-and-a-half minutes, were really big drives in the football game."

Ball control has been the hallmark of the Quaker offense this year, but against Yale. Penn wasn't able to send its very best, tailback Rich Comizio. who saw limited action because of his sore right hamstring. But Zubrow was able to have Chris Flynn greet the Elis on 31 occa- sions — 22 rushes, four receptions, four punt returns and one kickoff return Flynn's 221 total yards almost equalled that of the entire Yale offense. 228

Flynn picked up his first 32 yards on the Quakers' first drive, a 13-play. 79-yard series that culminated in a six-yard touchdown run by, you guessed it. Flynn Penn had all of the points that it would eventually need and led. 7-0.

At that point, it looked as though the Quakers would easily accomplish what they wanted by keeping Ryan off the field But the Elis came back with a drive of their own Ryan mixed up passes with runs by tailback Ted Macauley. and Yale controlled the ball for over six minutes in taking it from its 27 yard line down to the Penn nine. At this point, though, the Quaker defense stiffened, and Yale had to settle for a 25-yard field goal by John Duryea.

"In the past, we've seemed to have a little trouble at the start," said Penn co-captain rover Brad Heinz, "but we realized that they weren't a team to slough off We buckled down, and we held them "

Which was something that the Elis were unable to do with Flynn for most of the afternoon But Flynn wasn't all that Yale had to contend with on Franklin

Field, there was a guy named Crocicchia His passes found the mark on six out of eight first-half throws, enabling the Quak- ers to keep the Eli defense off balance, not )ust in the first two quarters, but in the second half as well.

"Every time we go out another part of our offense pops onto the scene." Crocicchia said "I don't think this week was any different. I think we showed a little variation in our passing game."

But the Penn quarterback was quick to give his teammates some credit — especially the five guys who protect him in the pocket.

"I cant say enough about [the offensive line)," Crocicchia said. "Right across the board, they're giving me about eight, 10 seconds to throw the ball.

"That's why we're doing anything offensively. It all goes back to the offensive line. If we're not successful up front, the offense isn't going to be successful. They're the key to us, the heart and soul."

Crocicchia pointed to one play as a prime example With the Quakers lead ing, 17-6, with five minutes to go in the third quarter. Penn had a third-down and-nine at the Yale 14. Crocicchia dropped back to throw, but his primary receivers were covered. But the Eli pass rushers were still being occupied by Penn linemen. So Crocicchia waited . . . and

waited. Finally he spotted Flynn waving his arms in the right flat He threw the ball to Flynn at about the 10, and the elusive tailback slid away from two defenders and got the first down.

"On that one play." said Crocicchia. victory cigar at his fingertips. "I could have stayed back there and taken orders at Burger King if I wanted."

Bruni took the ball in from the four, and it was 24-6.

From then on the game belonged to the Penn defense In fact, Yale was able to cross midfield only once in the entire second half That was because of a Penn penalty. And once the Elis got into Penn tenitory. Ryan tossed four straight incomplete passes, giving the Quakers the ball on downs.

"We came out in the second half and got our heads in the game, did what we planned to do the whole week and shut them down," said Penn linebacker Jeff Fortna.

"We're an aggressive team," he added. "We like to establish some dominance."

The defense forced the Elis into having to settle for another field goal in the second quarter With a first down at the Penn 11. the Yale offense was stopped and Duryea was called upon from 31 yards out.

This had followed a Penn field goal of

37 yards by Jim Grass earlier in the period.

Flynn's four-yard run on the third play of the third quarter gave the Quakers a 17-6 lead. It was set up by Bruni's 37-yard kickoff return and a 42-yard pass from Crocicchia to Ken Saunders. who made a superb over-the-shoulder catch at the Elis' seven.

Yale 0 6 0 0- 6 PENN 7 3 14 0- 24

First Quarter P — Flynn 6 run (Grass kick), 8 53 Second Quarter V — Duryea tg 25, 10 P — Grass tg 37. 3 06 Y — Duryea Ig 31. 12 48 Third Quarter P — Flynn 4 run (Grass kick). 1:11 P — Bruni 4 run (Grass kick). 10 50 A - 32.761

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING — Yale: Brice 15-98.

Macauley 7-12. Jenkins 5-11. Mercein 3-1. Ryan M-27). PENN: Flynn 22-124. Bruni 5-40. Comizio 8-22. Laurano 2-20, Klar 4-11. Olekszyk 1-3. Morcoil l-(-3). Crocicchia 3(-25)

PASSING — Yale: Ryan 13 331330 Brubaker 0-1-00 PENN: Crocicchia 12-17-192-1.

RECEIVING — Yale: Brice 4-29. Schulte 2-31. Alhanasia 2-23. While 2-16. Macauley 2-15. Szuba 1-19 PENN: Flynn 4 48. An- drews 3-38. Novoselsky 2-46. Joyce 2-18, Saunders 1-42.

Tommy Leonardi/Dairy Pennsyivanian

Linebacker Rick Inmkeep trie* to get a hold of Yale's sensational sophomore tailback Kevin Brice

25 November 1986 A SEASON TO REMEMBER Paqe/13

Week Seven Perm 23, Princeton 10

Quakers say 'a win is a win

Tommy Leonardl/Daily Pennsytvanian

Tight end Scott Scunglo (right) and tailback Chris Flynn (center) watch the action on the field Intently

By Rick Resnick

PRINCETON. N.J. - Defensive back Tom Flynn was one of many Penn football players who

acknowledged that the 23-10 win over Princeton was far from picture perfect but was a victory nonetheless.

"It wasn't pretty, but it was a 'W'," he said to no one in particular after the game.

He and the Quakers had just wrapped up a tougher-than-expected win over the Tigers at Palmer Stadium. And while it was a game marked with Quaker mistakes and turnovers, Penn's talent advantage — and the ability to make the big plays — kept its undefeated streak alive.

The game was a lot closer than the final score would indicate. Penn held a precarious 16-10 lead until tailback Chris Flynn (17 carries, 117 yards) darted for a 40-yard touchdown with only 1:29 left in the game. The Quakers' lead had only been six points because usually-reliable kicker Jim Grass missed to the left on a first quarter extra-point attempt Early in the game, that point seemed of little importance With five minutes left in the game, it appeared that Penn would be haunted by the miss.

It was at this point when the Quakers seemed to be in the process of putting the game away. They had the ball — second down and goal at the Princeton eight yard line — and the 16-10 lead when quarterback Jim Crocicchia dropped

back to throw. As he was being forced out of the pocket, Crocicchia tried to force a pass into the right flat. Unfortu- nately for the Quakers, the only receiver in the area was Princeton safety Dean Cain. Cain caught the ball at the six and found only 94 yards of open territory standing between him and a tie ballgame.

"My feeling then was Please score, please get it done now'," Princeton head coach Ron Rogerson said. "That was a great play, and it was just a breath away from breaking."

But much to the relief of Penn head coach Ed Zubrow, Cain did not find the end zone, as Quaker fullback Tom Klar made the tackle on the Princeton 43-yard line.

"I'm glad I was on the other sideline," Zubrow said, "or I might have run out and tackled him And I probably would have missed the tackle the way the day was going."

The day was going poorly for the Quakers, at least compared to previous Ivy League games. For the first time all season, an Ivy team rushed for more than 100 yards against the Quakers (Princeton finished with 158 yards) And for the first time, an Ivy team scored a touchdown against the Quakers in the first half. The Tigers did that on a stunning 49-yard run by Derek Wassink late in the first quarter to cut Penn's lead to 9-7. Yet while the Quakers struggled at times, they made the key plays when called upon.

And late in the fourth quarter, with Princeton 57 yards away from a potential

lead, the Quakers were certainly called upon to make some key plays

On fourth down with time running out, the Tigers were forced to go for the first down Quarterback Gary Weisglass dropped back to pass, but before he could throw, Penn outside linebacker Brad Hippenstiel charged in for a fero- cious sack. The Quakers took over the ball on downs, and two plays later. Flynn's long touchdown iced the game.

"The defense's performance at the end of the fourth quarter is something I think we are going to remember for a long time," Zubrow said. "The kids have been through a lot, but they got the job done."

Early in the game, with the Penn rushing attack running Princeton ragged (300 of the Quakers 350 offensive yards came on the ground), it looked like another easy day at the office for the Quakers. Wassink's long touchdown quickly changed that idea.

"Princeton's offense caused problems, we had been saying that all week while preparing to defend that thing (Prince- ton's Wing-T offense)," Zubrow said. "They were running it well. The long touchdown was a breakdown in two assignments, which let them go into the end zone. We always talk about trying to limit the gains and keep the opponent out of the end zone. That's why the long TD was so disturbing."

The play didn't bother Rogerson at all "I asked the kids to dig in deep and

find ways to make big plays." Rogerson said. "I told them that this was their chance to be heroes and make the heroic

plays And as you make big plays and good things happen, your self confidence builds. I think that happened to us in the ballgame "

"We kept beating ouselves offensively, and when things got tough, it was because we made our own mistakes." senior tailback Rich Comizio said "I don't think they were ever controlling our offense "

As the Penn offense sputtered, the Tiger offense started to gel Weisglass who got the opportunity to play when starting quarterback Brad Hammond suffered a broken scapula in the first period — led his team on a 17-play. 80-yard drive spanning 7 15 on the third and fourth quarters. But Princeton had to settle for a 24-yard field goal by Rob Goodwin, as the Penn defense would not allow a major score And it appeared that Princeton would get the touchdown after having the ball, first and 10. form the Penn 11-yard line.

"All day. when the offense wasn't working, the defense was coming up big," Chris Flynn said.

On the possession after the field goal, the Quakers were forced to punt despite driving to the Princeton 40-yard line. The Tigers started on their 13-yard line and ran four plays before fumbling to Brad Heinz on the 28-yard line. After a long Comizio run brought the Quakers two yards away from another touchdown. Penn was hit with an illegal procedure penalty. This penalty was the one that coerced Crocicchia into trying to throw for the score, and the throw resulted in Cain's interception. Indirectly, the five- yard violation almost cost Penn the ballgame.

"We've got to cut out the mistakes," Chris Flynn said "We've been doing it all year, and we can't be doing it against good teams It's all mental We have to start getting our act together "

Indeed, it wasn't the best game that the Quakers played all season. It certainly wasn't pretty. But for the seventh time in a row, it was a 'W.

PENN 9 7 0 7— 23 Princeton 7 0 0 3—10

First Quarter P« — Flynn 6 run (kick (ailed). 6:19 Pe — Grass Ig 32. 11 40 Pr — Wassink 49 run (Goodwin kick). 13.46

Second Quarter Pe — Saundors 10 pass (torn Crocicchia (Grass kick). 626

Fourth Quarter Pr — Goodwin (g 24. 1 24 pa _ Flynn 40 <un (Grass kick). 13 31 A — 18.500

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

RUSHING — PENN: Comizio 29-154. Flynn 17-117. Klar 6 24. Bwni 1-7. Andrews 1-3. Olokszyk 13. Crocicchia 2-<-8) Princeton: Wassink 10 92. Sanlillo 6-22. Weisglass 13 19. Filchell 6 9. Jachim 1-7. Hammond 1-6. Faiina 2-5. OiFelice 1-(-2)

PASSING — PENN: Crocicchia 6-16-50-2. Princeton: Weisglass 7-16-77-1. Hammond 0-1-0^).

RECEIVING — PENN: Saundors 2 27. Andrews 1-14, Joyce 19. Novoselsky 1-2. Flynn 1 -(-2). Princeton: Baker 2-13. Filch- ell 2-9. Rockelellor 1 23. Wassink 1 20. OiFelice 1-12

Page/14 A SEASON TO REMEMBER 25 November 1986

Penn 42, Lafayette 14

Leopards spotted early lead By Marissa Handwerker

A.J Sebastianelli didn't say it He didn't have to But the message was clear

'Don't mess with the Penn defense.' Lafayette was not paying much atten-

tion early in its game against Penn and was forced to learn the lesson during its 42 14 defeat at the hands of the Quakers on Franklin Field.

With just 4 31 gone in the first quarter. Leopard quarterback Paul Struncius completed a 12-yard touchdown pass to fullback Ryan Priest Penn had been unable to contain Lafayette's offense on the first possession of the game, and the Quakers found themselves down early. I hot made Sebastianelli. a defensive tackle, mad

But as the teams walked off the field, some choice mutterings could be heard from the Lal.iyette bench Mutterings that were not to the liking of Sebastianelli or the rest of the Quaker defensive unit for that matter And that made Sebas tianelli more than just mad It made him want to get even.

"It just gives me more incentive to play more aggressively." Sebastianelli said "We came to the bench and said. 'Hey. let's suck it up." "

"The feeling was that we had to turn it around," defensive tackle Mike Lista said

"We knew that Lafayette was capable of playing very good football; they're a big team," Penn head coach Ed Zubrow said "Our concern ws that we didn't want to have to be playing from behind "

But that concern was quickly erased after the Quakers' first score, because Penn never did look back.

The first of those points came on the Quakers' first drive of the game in which Penn marched 60 yards on 11 plays. The drive concluded with a four-yard touch- down run by Rich Comizio on a pitch to the right

Comizio singlehandedly gained 48 of those 60 yards on his way to becoming Penn's all-time leading rusher. Comizio surpassed Adolph Bellizeare — whose 2155 career yards were the standard for the past 12 years — in the third quarter Ironically, the run that catapulted Comi- zio over the hurdle was a rush down the left sideline for 30 yards — his longest of the season to that point.

"It feels great to see him get the record." Zubrow said "I think that he's breaking the record of a great back who'll be remembered around here for a long time, and I think Rich will be remem bered for a long time, too."

"It's good to have that behind me now." Comizio said "I think me. Chris (Flynn), Jimmy (Crocicchia) and Jim Bruni. we all are the 'glory boys', they call us. and all the guys up front do all the work — including the fullback And you've got to give a lot credit to those guys."

Not to mention the credit due to the defensive line as well, which was dwarfed by the team on the other side of the line of scrimmage Lafayette's offensive line averaged 272 pounds, the biggest line Penn had faced all year

Tommy Leonardi/Daily Pennsylvaman

Tailback Jim Bruni falls forward for a few extra yards

"They're a big offense, and the goal of our defense was to play a quicker, lateral game." Lista said. "They outweighed us by a lot. and if we got tied up with them, they would neutralize our speed advantage."

But that scenario never did occur as the Leopards were unable to find the end zone on their next seven possessions, while Penn increased its lead to 21-7 at halftime.

The Quakers' second score came at 3:30 of the second quarter. On first down from the Lafayette 13-yard line, Bruni took a handoff from Crocicchia and took the ball around the left side and into the end zone.

The Quakers scored again on their last possession of the first half. After shutting down the Lafayette offense for the remainder of the second quarter, Penn took over at its own 47 and scored on an 18-yard connection from Crocicchia to Brent Novoselsky with just 38 seconds remaining in the half. The touchdown gave the Quakers a confident 14-point lead at the break.

"We pretty much did what we wanted to do — run the ball and control the game offensively," Crocicchia said. "It happened because of our offensive line; they've alway dominated the line in every game we've played. If they keep dominating the line of scrimmage like they have been, we're going to be

successful. They want to win so bad and are really working hard to do it "

"One of the things we felt any team who plays Penn had to do was try and contain their running backs; we couldn't do it." Lafayette head coach Bill Russo said "They did a good job of running the football, and I think most of the rest of their game play stemmed around that."

Bruce Mclntyre. the Leopards top rusher and fifth in Division l-AA going into the game, was held to 80 yards on the day. Comizio was Penn's top rusher, gaining 132 total yards, while Flynn turned in 71.

After the Penn Band performed a public marriage proposal at haltt'me. the Quakers proposed something else in the second half That proposal was to continue their domination. And that proposal was accepted on both sides of the field. In the second half, the Leopards could manage just pne more score, although they did have plenty of opportunities. After the Quakers scored on the opening drive of the third quarter. Lafayette brought the ball down to the Quakers' 18. On a fourth-and-five play. Leopard quarterback Clayton Evans — who had been brought into the game because of his superior mobility out of the pocket — was sacked for a six-yard loss, and Penn took over.

It was on the next drive that Comizio broke Bellizeare's record. As the game

was stopped to award Comizio the game ball, he received a standing ovation from the 9210 fans at Franklin Field. Comizio also received personal congratulations from Bellizeare, himself.

"When I came back [onto the field) the referee was calling an official timeout, and he was looking at me, and I was asking him what ws wrong." Comizio said. "Then he told me to go and see the coach, and that's when I knew."

Lafayette's lone touchdown of the second half came on a 10-yard reverse pass from wide receiver Jim Johnson to wide receiver Philip Ng in the end zone, cutting the Quaker lead to 28-14.

Two plays later, with the ball on the Quakers 23-yard-line, Crocicchia hand- ed off to Flynn up the middle. Flynn got caught up at the line of scrimmage, however, and the ball popped free, catapultng backwards, over Crocicchia's head. A scramble for the loose ball ensued, with Crocicchia diving for the ball and coming away the winner, although not without suffering a bit for his efforts.

"You try and be ready for these things when they happen," Crocicchia said. "1 didn't think I was going to get to the ball because I had a 250-pound tackle on top of me."

Had the Leopards recovered the fumble, they would have been within 20 yards of the Quaker end zone. There might have been a whole different ballgame out there. Instead, Lafayette never found the end zone, again while the Quakers added two more touch- downs before the final gun sounded, for the final of 42-14.

And Lafayette's first score of the game seemed eternities away.

"We won't sit there and take it," Lista said. "All you have to do is cut us in the face once — you don't need to do it twice."

"I just point to the scoreboard." Sebastianelli added. "That's my talk."

And those are fighting words.

Lafayette PENN

7 0 7 14

7 0— 14 7 14— 42

m >*■ "Wr* »■»•»•»• '

First Quarter L — Pnest 12 pass Irom Struncius (Ftenzi kick), 4:31 P — Comizio 4 run (Grass kick), 9 06 Second Quarter P — Bruni 13 run (Grass kick). 6:17 P — Novoselsky 18 pass Irom Crocicchia (Grass kick), 14:22 Third Quarter P — Flynn 9 run (Grass kick). 2:39 L — Ng 10 pass Irom Johnson (Renzi kick). 13 24

Fourth Quarter P — Flynn 9 run (Grass kick). 3.36 P — Bruni 5 run (Grass kick). 13:35 A —9210

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING — Lafayette: Mclntyre 14-80.

Corfey 1-13. Priest 5-12. Bowman 4-8. Adams 2-0. Evans 7-(-3), Struncius 4-(-18). PENN: Comizio 23-132. Flynn 12-71. Bruni 8-54, Olekszyk4-50. Klar8-33. Morcott 1-15. Oeering 1-2. Crocicchia 1-0

PASSING — Lalayette: Struncius 5-14-49-0. Evans 1-4-6-1. Johnson 1-1-10-0. Barnes 0-1-0-0 PENN: Crocicchia 9-15-109-1

RECEIVING - Lalayette: Ng 3 32. Priest 1-12, Johnson 1-8. Winters 1-7. Mclntyre 1-6 PENN: Joyce 4-34. Novoselsky 2-37. Andrews 1-24. Bruni 1-8. Comizio 1-6

ilitr'- ■™

25 November 1986 A SEASON TO REMEMBER Page/IS

Week Nine Penn 17, Harvard 10

Defense ensures another win

By Dan Bollerman

west

Andy Friedman/Dairy Pennsylvanian

Linebacker Chris Evans takes down Harvard halfback Bob Glatz which gave him Penn*s single season

all-purpose yardage record, formerly held by Adolph Bellizeare.

But it was as fJ a large alarm clock had sounded over Franklin Field at halftime, as the second half resembled some of the more recent and more memorable contests that the Quakers and Crimson have played.

Both teams moved the ball up and down the field, ammassing over 300 yards in total offense in the half, and putting 24 points on the scoreboard between them.

But then how much truly good football did the Quakers play against Harvard?

About one quarter. That doesn't sound too good for Penn

What happened? Oh, the Quakers won. 17-10. upping

their record to 9-0 The wins by Penn

Think of great opposites The east coast and the

coast. Cambodia and the French Riviera Tequila and skim milk. The first half of the Penn-Harvard

football game against the second half of the same game.

That game was the perfect example of why the game of football is played in two halves, because the two halves were about as different as could be.

If you enjoy defense, then the first half was heaven. Only three points were scored, as Penn's Jim Grass booted a 25-yard field goal with 9:33 to play in the second quarter. The halfs only other highlight was Chris Flynn's 24-yard run

and by Cornell — which defeated Columbia. 28:0 — set up a head-to head matchup for the Ivy title in Ithaca. NY., the first time since 1968 that two teams unbeaten in Ivy play met to determine the Ivy champion on the final weekend of play

"You go into every seaon with the dream of having that opportunity [for an undefeated seasonmj." Penn head coach Ed Zubrow said. "You just can't go out and force a win to happen just because of how badly you want it to happen and how hard you've worked. You have to go out and play the game, execute and perform."

Both Penn and Harvard played the game, but the execution and perfor- mance of the two teams was less than stellar. Each team lost two fumbles, and Quaker quarterback Jim Crocicchia threw two interceptions.

It was the second of these which made the 25,650 fans in attendance very nervous. On the first play following a 30-yard field goal by the Crimson's Andy Maretz, Crocicchia was intercepted at the Penn 41 by comerback Don Heberle. who returned the ball to the Quakers' 20. Four plays later on fourth down and seven from the 17, Harvard quarterback Tom Yohe found wingback George Sorbara in the end zone for the touch- down. Sorbara grabbed the ball between defensive backs James Fangmeyer and Donald Wilson, and visions of the 1982 game between these two teams danced through the minds of all. In that contest, Penn beat Harvard, 23-21. on a second- chance field goal with no time on the clock, after blowing a 20-0 fourth-quarter lead

"We started to hit the receivers and move the ball." Harvard head coach Joe Restic said. "We ran the ball probably as well as anyone has against Penn this year."

The Crimson would get one last chance. Taking the ball with 7:25 to play on the Harvard 31. Yohe drove the Crimson to the Quaker 41. On third down and eight, Harvard backup quar- terback David Landau entered the game for the first time — not as a quarterback, but as a wingback. The play was designed to have Yohe take the snap, pitch the ball to Landau, who would promptly fire it back to Yohe who possibly would be open. Call it what you will; it was certainly confusing.

"Penn's front four or five was applying so much pressure that we had no blocking on the back side for that play, so it never really materialized," Yohe said. "I was open short, and we had a guy open deep."

But Quaker defensive tackles Mike Lista and A.J. Sebastianelli met Landau and dropped him for a 13-yard loss. Yohe's fourth-down pass was incom- plete, and Penn iced the game.

"I wasn't scared." Zubrow said. "What we were talking about on the sidelines was 'if they score, what's our two-point [conversion! defense going to be?' because we were going to come out and win the game. 17-16."

"It was a gutsy call," Lista said "When th« quarterback came in. we figured on a trick play. It felt good to get the sack "

All in all, the Penn defense sacked Yohe eight times for 49 yards in losses For a high number of sacks, this may seem like a low figure for lost yardage There is a very simple reason for this — the Quaker rush gave Yohe very little time to throw.

"We were getting a lot of pressure on him and moving him out of the pocket." Lista said "Yohe had to step up into the pocket to throw "

"[Penn's front four is) extremly tough, extremely quick and strong," Yohe said "Our offensive line didn't do a bad job. because we ran the ball well "

The Quakers outgained Harvard on the ground, 234-84. Leading the way was tailback Rich Comizio, who rushed for 132 yards on 23 carries, and both of Penn's touchdowns On the Quakers' first play from scrimmage in the second half. Comizio went down the left sideline for 41 yards, and the Penn single-season rushing record — formerly held by Geny Santini in 1968 of 880 yards — was his. Comizio's total of 942 yards left him only 58 yards away from becoming the first running back in Quaker history to rush for 1000 yards in a season.

Five plays after that scamper. Comizio crashed through the right side of the end zone for Penn's first touchdown Grass's point-after made it 10-0. Penn

"The way that we came out in the third quarter was a key," Zubrow said "We talk a lot about how important the first drive of the third quarter is on both sides of the ball and how important it is to the football game overall. We scored the first two times out in the third quarter and stuffed them on their first possession.

"Thank goodness we did." The Quakers would score later in the

quarter Taking the ball on its 20-yard line. Penn would go the 80 yards in eight plays, culminating with Comizio's rumbling in from the three. The big play would be a 42-yard completion from Crocicchia to tight end Brent Novoselsky that moved the ball to the Harvard 12 Then the fun started.

And it was all set to continue the next Saturday in Ithaca for the showdown to end all Ivy League showdowns

Zubrow was ready for it. "You can't think about being 10-0 until

you're 90."

Harvard PENN

0 0 10 — 314 0—

10 17

Second Quarter P — Grass Ig 25, 6:27 Third Quarter P — Comizio S run (Gran kick). 2:06 P — Comizio 3 run (Grass kick). 11:21 Fourth Quarter H — Maretz Ig 28. 4:25 H — Sorbara 10 past from Yoha (Marau kick). 5:34 A —25.650

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING — Harvard: Pusateri 6-42.

Sorbari 12-38, Glatz 3-21. O Neil 6-14. Con- nolly 1-3, Landau 1-<-13). Yoha 13 (21) PENN: Comizio 23-132. Ftynn 10-62. Klar 11-49. Olakszyfc 2-5. CrocKCh* 3+14).

PASSING - Harvard: Yoha 10-21-100 0 PENN: Crocicchia 7-15-106-2.

RECEIVING — Harvard: Sorbara 3-39. ONeil 3-9. Connolly 2-19. Boyle 1-24. Phillips 1-9 PENN: Novoselsky 3-65. Solan 1-18. Joyce 1-11,Bruni 1-7. Saunders 1-5.

Page/16 A SEASON TO REMEMBER 25 November 1986

The numbers add up to 10-0 RUSHING AH YdsAvg TD Lg

Rich Comizio 2011104 5.5 8 41 Chris Flynn 149 917 6.2 12 46 Jim Bruni 46 213 4.6 4 19 Joe Laurano 36 175 4.9 0 17 Tom Klar 41 160 3.9 0 12 S. Olekszyk 15 76 5.1 0 28 John Deering 6 20 3.3 1 6 Scott Morcott 3 15 5.0 0 15 Rob Andrews 3 13 4.3 0 15 Jim Beato 1 1010.0 0 10 Scott Sandier 1 7 7.0 0 7 Mike Waller 2 3 1.5 0 2 Tom Conway 2 1 0.5 0 1 Jim Crocicchia 24 -63-2.6 0 13 Totals Opponents

5302664 5.0 25 46 351 794 2.3 4

RECEIVING No Yds AvgTD Lg

B Novoselsky Ken Saunders Chris Flynn Tom Joyce Rob Andrews Rich Comizio Scott Scungio Jim Bruni Jim Miklos Ed Solari Joe Laurano Mike Heyse Steve Olekszyk

18 337 13 175 13 110 12 156 11 159 8 10C 5 5 3 3 3 2 1

70 54 51 35 18 20 5

18.7 13.5 8.5 13.0 14.5 12.5 14.0 10.8 17.0 11.7 6.0 10.0 5.0

6 42 1 42 0 27 0 39 0 24 0 42 2 39 1 29 2 31 0 18 0 12 0 12 0 5

Totals Opponents

TEAM STATS

971290 1181324

13.3 12 42 11.2 9

PENN Opp

FIRST DOWNS Rushing Passing Penalty

RUSHING YARDS Attempts Yards Gained Yards Lost Yards Per Attempt

% Yards Per Game PASSING YARDS Attempts Completions Had Intercepted Yards Per Attempt Yards Per Game

TOTAL YARDS Offensive Plays Yards Per Play Yards Per Game

PUNTING YARDS Punts Gross Average Punts Blocked Punts Returned Yards Returned Net Average

PUNT RETURN YDS Punt Returns Yards Per Return

KO RETURN YDS Kickoff Returns Yards Per Return

INT RETURN YDS Interceptions Yards Per Return

PENALTIES FUMBLES-LOST THIRD DOWNS Percent Converted

POSSESSION TIME .Time Per Game

213 141 139 64 60 56 14 21

2661 794 530 351

2821 1239 160 445 5.0 2.3

266.1 79.4 1290 1324

183 256 97 118 11 11

7.0 5.2 129.0 132.4 3951 2118

713 607 5.5 3.5

395.1 211.8 1620 2315

48 63 33.8 36.7

1 0 21 50 94 321

31.8 31.7 321 94

50 21 6.4 4.5

523 1026 28 51

18.7 20.1 80 135 11 11

7.3 12.3 96-830 62-560

20-8 23-13 63-145 44-143

43.4 30.8 335:30 264:30

33:33 26:27

1986 Penn football stats

Francis Gardlar'Daily Pennsylvanian Rich Comizio (40) received enough Mocking to lead Penn in rushing

PASSING Att Com Yds Pet Yds/A TD Int Lg

Jim Crocicchia Scott Morcott Rich Comizio

176 6 1

90 1200 51.1 6 84100.0 1 6100.0

6.8 11 11 42 14.0 0 0 39 6.0 1 0 6

Totals 183 97 1290 53.0 7.1 12 11 42 Opponents 256 118 1324 46.1 5.2 9 11

PUNTING No Yds Lg Avg I20 Bk Ret Yds Net

Dave Fassnacht 47 1620 48 34.5 28 1 21 94 32.5 Totals Opponents

48 1620 48 33.8 28 63 2315 36.7 14

1 21 94 31.8 0 50 321 31.7

SCORING TOUCHDOWNS

SCORING TD Pts KICKING Pat-Att FG-Att Pts

Chris Flynn 12 72 Rich Comizio 8 48 Brent Novoselsky 6 36 Jim Bruni 5 30 Scott Scungio 2 12 Jim Miklos 2 12 John Deering 1 6 Ken Saunders 1 6

Jim Grass 34-37 6-10 52 Totals Opponents

6-10 52 6-9 30

Totals Opponents

KICKOFF RETURNS

37 222 13 78

No Yds Avg Lg TD

Jim Bruni 10 208 20.8 51 0 Chris Flynn 14 270 19.3 27 0 Tom Gizzi 2 32 16.0 21 0 S. Olekszyk 1 13 13.0 13 0 Dan McNally 1 0 0.0 0 0 Totals 28 523 18.7 51 0 Opponents 511026 20 1 0

PUNT RETURNS No Yds Avg LgTD

Chris Flynn Scott Sandier S. Walterhouse

48 323 6.7 34 1 0 0.0 0 1 -2 -2.0 -2

0 0 0

Totais Opponents

50 321 21 94

6.4 34 4.5

SCORE BY QUARTERS 12 3 4 Total

PENN 64 62 79 69 — 274 Opp 28 12 28 40 — 108

Tommy Laonardl/Daily Pennsylvanian

Tackles leader Bruce McConnell

INTERCEPTIONS No Yds Avg Lg

James Fangmeyer 4 4310.8 16 Jeff Fortna 2 14 7.0 11 Chris Lencewicz 2 0 0.0 0 Brad Hippenstiel 1 2323.0 23 Tom Flynn 1 0 0.0 0 Donald Wilson 1 0 0.0 0 Totals Opponents

11 80 7.3 23 11 13512.3 37

Penn 21

PENN RESULTS Opp

at Dartmouth 7 BUCKNELL 7 COLUMBIA 7

at Brown 0 at Navy 26 YALE 6

at Princeton 10 LAFAYETTE 14 HARVARD 10 at Cornell 21

QUARTERBACK SACKS No

A.J. Sebastianelli 8 Jeff Fortna 7 Mike Lista 7 Brad Hippenstiel 7 Dan Bauer 2 Brad Heinz 2 Bruce McConnell 2 Ross Parsons 2 Dave Smith 2 Kyle Stephenson 2 Steve Castagnero 1 Dexter Desir 1 Mike Graves 1 Mike Henley 1 Rick Inskeep 1 Mike Morrissey 1 Parker Rhode 1

TACKLES

Bruce McConnell A.J. Sebastianelli Rick Inskeep Mike Lista Brad Hippenstiel Donald Wilson Jeff Fortna Brad Heinz James Fangmeyer Tom Flynn Dave Smith Dexter Desir Ross Parsons Mike Henley Mike Graves Steve Castagnero Paul Franklin Chris Lencewicz Chris Evans Steve Walterhouse Kyle Stephenson Chris Wilkins Mike Morrissey Dan Bauer Steve Johnson Keith Ramm Parker Rhode Gary Plummer Bill Caughell Tom Klar Jim Grass Tom McVittie Tom Gizzi Steve Olekszyk John Zinser Tony Owens Jim Crocicchia Rich Lober Jim Miklos Brent Novoselsky Bill Walenda Tony Deluzio Chris Flynn Joe Laurano

2 6 4 6 5 2 3 2 3 3 3 2 2 4 2 1

2 1

Sol Ast Ttl

27 70 19 66 17 61 22 55 35 34 22 38 21 33 17 34 12 29 16 18 10 17 6 18 3 17 20 1 15 5 3

12 6 8 5 6 7 5 6 4 4 4 5 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3

97 85 78 77 69 60 54 51 41 34 27 24 20 16

10 15 12 15

14 12 12 11 11 9 8 8 7 7 7 7 6 5 4 4 4 3 3 3 2 2

"SUM » 'I'liliily IMIIII **■