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M. Gold plays bridesmaid at GW Invite

(04/06/00 9:00am)

The Penn men's golf team finished a respectable second in a large field of 29 teams at the George Washington Invitational this past weekend. Still, nobody had to tell freshman golfer Peyton Wallace that second place is the first loser. "We certainly expected to win," Wallace said. "The field wasn't as strong as it was in East Carolina [two weeks ago]." The Quakers were forced to play in poor conditions during the Sunday-Monday tournament. They were met with rain on Sunday and strong winds on both Sunday and Monday. "The holes that seemed easy in the practice round became extremely hard on Sunday," junior Kyle Moran said. The rain that came on Sunday soaked the fairways, which prevented the ball from rolling. In addition, the greens had been recently aerated, so the tiny holes on the green caused for a bumpy ride for the Quakers' putting. On Sunday, the Red and Blue shot a combined 313 behind the good play of Wallace, Endel Liias and Chad Perman. The three freshmen each fired an opening round of 78. Kyle Moran posted a 79, and Mike Russell put up an 85. The Quakers certainly finished stronger than they started. On day two of the tournament, the squad shot a combined score of 304. Moran led the team over the two days by posting a 74 on the second day. Russell had the best score of the day with a 73, and Wallace duplicated his first-round score of 78 on the second day of competition. Liias shot 79, and Chad Perman shot 81. The team finished in a tie with Providence and five shots in back of first-place Iona. "We could have played better, and if we played better, we would have won," Moran said. Although the Quakers can blame some of their errors on the conditions, Wallace believes the team should put the onus on its own shoulders. "We made some stupid mistakes. We couldn't make a lot of putts," Wallace said. "It's not our fault that the greens were like they were, but everybody else was putting on them." With the Ivy League Championship coming within two weeks, Penn coach Francis Vaughn seemed a little bit upset with his team's performance. "He was pretty unhappy," Wallace said. "He drove the van home fast and didn't say a whole lot." Another probable reason the Quakers came up a little short this weekend can be attributed to a lack of experience. Russell, Wallace and Liias were participating in the starting five for the first time ever. Throw freshman Chad Perman into the mix, and Penn was left with four relatively inexperienced players out of the five starters. If the Quakers hope to win the Ivies in two weeks, they most likely will need their senior captain Rob Goldfaden, as well as senior Rob Hunt and junior Todd Golditch to be in the lineup. The Quakers' underclassmen certainly do not lack talent, but just like Michigan State's basketball team showed Monday night, talent plus maturity equals championship. Hopefully for the Quakers, Vaughn will be able to solve the equation for success this weekend as the Quakers travel to Annapolis, Md., to play in the Navy Invitational.


W. Golf finishes 17th out of 17

(04/06/00 9:00am)

Progress never comes easily, especially for a first-year varsity program taking on established competition. The Penn women's golf team found this out firsthand last weekend, shooting a two-round combined score of 812 (404-408) en route to a bottom-of-the-barrel 17th-place finish at the William and Mary Invitational. The tournament took place Saturday and Sunday on the 5,862-yard, par-71 Blackheath Course at the Ford's Colony Golf Club in Williamsburg, Va. "We're kind of disappointed with [our play in] the tournament," senior captain Natasha Miller said. "We placed last -- which we've done before -- but we feel like we haven't played to our full potential." James Madison won the 17-team, 36-hole competition with a two-day score of 616 (309-304). Host school William and Mary finished in second place with a total of 626 (313-313). The Quakers were competing in the toughest field of any tournament in their short history, a field that included national powers Yale, James Madison and Methodist College. Penn coach Francis Vaughn, who also coaches the men's golf team, has set the team's goals in terms of enjoyment and improvement, not scores and tournament finishes. But until this weekend's tournament, the Quakers had seen a steady improvement in their scores dating back to last fall. In last October's Rutgers Invitational, the Red and Blue carded back-to-back sub-400 rounds en route to a two-day score of 772 (391-381). This score was a drastic improvement over the 857 that the Quakers shot in the first tournament of the fall, the team's debut outing. After Rutgers, the team looked to keep building on its success, asserting that sub-400 rounds are a reasonable expectation for future tournaments. While they came short of reaching their goal at William and Mary, the Quakers still have a positive outlook. "It's a little setback, but we'll bounce back from it," Miller said. "We just need to regroup and work on the things that need to be worked on." The Quakers' final competition of the spring will be at the Ivy League Championships, to be held April 15 and 16 at Metedaconk National Golf Club in Jackson, N.J. Before the final tournament, though, the Quakers hope to iron out some of the kinks in their games -- especially long putting -- and generally regroup as a team. "We need to step up our practices and get the most out of our time at the Philadelphia Cricket Club," Miller said. "We want to go into the Ivies with a positive attitude." The Quakers should have the use of five team members at the Ivy Championships, something they have not had at their disposal all year. Having a fifth competitor should bode well for the Quakers' scores, because only the four best scores per day count toward the team total. "It's one thing if you have a bad day and you don't have to count your score," Miller said. "It's another thing if you have a bad day and every score has to count."


Providing a mix of theory and poetry

(04/06/00 9:00am)

Blending the academic and the absurd, Jed Rasula, a professor at York College in Canada, and Steven McCaffrey, a professor at Canada's Queens University, presented their co-edited publication, Imagining Language, on Tuesday night at the Kelly Writers House. The two took turns reading their poetry, describing the anthology's production and explaining their theories of language to the 25 Penn students, staff and Philadelphia residents in attendance. The anthology, which was released 1 1/2 years ago to widespread academic acclaim, is a collection of language experiments from the last 3,000 years. Rasula described the work as "a huge gathering of empirical data about language." Since its release, the anthology has become a popular tool for exploring language theory -- the relationship between language and meaning -- and for teaching language all across academia. The authors said their book's success can be attributed to the wide range of subjects it addresses. Indeed, the anthology combines sociology, linguistics, literature and phenomenology in an exhaustive examination of the way in which language has evolved over time. "There was a really positive response from inside the institution, largely because it resists being pigeon-holed," McCaffrey said. "This was a project that could not be aimed at any one constituency." But, despite the project's breadth and intellectual focus, the work is considered approachable by its readers -- as are its editors. In their readings and published works, both authors maintain a degree of playfulness. "The distinction between something either serious and world-building or something humorous is not such an important one in a lot of our work," Rasula said. "A lot of this reflects things that happen by accident with language, and that can be funny." Rasula said the notion for the project developed when he was working for Ripley's Believe It or Not -- a company best known for its wax museums around the world -- on extraordinary uses of language, which perhaps set a precedent for the tone the work would later take. Though the audience laughed occasionally and seemed to appreciate many of the authors' absurd examples, the presentation did not lose its academic focus. The lighthearted and amusing aspects of the presentation, such as the poems of meaningless mutterings and nasal noises, were generally illustrative of more theoretical and serious notions on language. McCaffrey said their work on imaginative languages is celebrated for encouraging a re-introduction to language, one that could soon bear serious academic fruit. "Randomness in language can precipitate a completely different, and sometimes more productive and enlightening, relationship with language," McCaffrey explained.


Students to 'take back the night'

(04/06/00 9:00am)

Abuse survivors will speak on College Green tonight during the annual rally. The annual "Take Back the Night" rally will be held tonight, concluding a week-long series of events focused on violence and sexual abuse against women. The rally, part of a national program, will be held for the seventh time at Penn tonight, with a march across campus followed by a survivor speak-out on College Green. Since attendance hit an all-time low last year, organizers have tried to revamp this week's program with more activities, such as panel discussions and workshops, and more advertising, including a supplement in The Daily Pennsylvanian. The rally will begin at 6 p.m. with keynote speaker Elena DiLapi, director of the Penn Women's Center, speaking about violence against women. Organizer Craig Abbs, a research coordinator in the School of Social Work, said the goal of the event was to "raise awareness that this is a problem that is extremely common." He also said the issue is particularly relevant to college students. "College age students from ages 18 to 23 -- they are at the highest risk [of sexual violence]," he said. He also said that 30 percent of college women and 16 percent of college men are victims of some sort of sexual violence. The violence against women rally will be followed by a march and a discussion group. A separate rally will be held specifically against sexual violence, where Sally Brown, a local community activist, will be the keynote speaker. This will be followed by a speak-out, in which victims and survivors are invited to talk about their trauma and recovery. Professional crisis counselors will be present throughout the speak-out. "It is very intimidating to talk about something so personal," Abbs said. But he said he hoped "Take Back the Night" would create an environment in which women and victims of sexual violence could be comfortable sharing their experiences and receiving support. DiLapi said she hoped the rally would "create a campus that's intolerant of sexual violence." She also said that some of the topics addressed would be wife battering, dating violence, acquaintance rape, harassment and childhood sexual abuse. She said the speak-out "was created as a place for empowerment for survivors" and to "honor the courage of survivors." She added that she hoped both men and women would come out to show their support and relate their stories.


Panel: Students need to report sex attacks

(04/06/00 9:00am)

Police officers, students and counselors joined together at Civic House last night for a panel discussion on sexual violence at Penn. The event was part of "Take Back the Night," a week-long series of programs and discussions designed to raise awareness of sexual violence against women. The six panelists in attendance included representatives of the Division of Public Safety, the Office of Student Conduct, Counseling and Psychological Services and the Penn Women's Center. Before an audience of 10 students and Penn staff members, the panel members discussed the roles of their individual organizations in preventing sexual violence at Penn and providing assistance for its victims. "We are totally victim-driven," said Patricia Brennan, interim director of the Special Services sector of the Division of Public Safety. She went on to describe the process by which victims of sexual violence can report a crime to one of Penn's support organizations, and she emphasized that they can receive confidentiality if they so desire. Kurt Conklin, the advisor of the campus group Students Together Against Acquaintance Rape, also stressed that Penn's support network is extensive. "We're really blessed at this university that there are so many resources for victims of crime," said Conklin, who works for Penn's Office of Health Education. However, much of the discussion focused on the fact that, for a variety of reasons, these support systems remain largely unused by Penn students since many incidents of sexual assault go unreported. "If you were to go by our office's statistics, there is no issue of sexual violence at Penn," OSC Director Michelle Goldfarb said. Several panel members emphasized that Penn's numbers are therefore not completely accurate, since it would be illogical to assume that such a large university could have so few incidents of sexual assault. "It is one of the most under-reported matters on campus? and because it's under-reported, it's also under-addressed," Goldfarb said. Panelists and audience members agreed that more needs to be done to encourage women to come forward when they have been assaulted. And they said the fact that women have been hesitant to report such crimes in the past has only added to the problem. "We need people to come forward and say to these victims, 'You're not alone here,'" Brennan said. She and the other panelists also emphasized the importance of reporting sexual crimes even if victims cannot provide proof to back up such claims. "It's hard to prove, and in our system it ought to be," Goldfarb said of sexual allegations. "But that doesn't mean there's no point in coming forward." Craig Abbs, an employee of Penn's School of Social Work who sat in on the discussion and organized this evening's "Take Back The Night" event, said it is important to support people who come forward to report a sexual crime. "We need to let victims know that regardless of whether or not there is any legal evidence to prove your case, you will always be believed," he said. And according to University Police Officer Stacy Livingston, who coordinates the department's free Rape Aggression Defense seminars, it is imperative that organizations continue to assist the Penn community. "Being a teenager in the year 2000 is nothing like it was for me in the 1970s," Livingston said. "But one thing remains the same: You're responsible for your own safety."


Baseball explodes for 33 runs as Gregorio hits for the cycle

(04/06/00 9:00am)

The Quakers scored in all but one inning at LaSalle and set a team record for runs scored. Usually in baseball, a number as big as 33 is seen only on the back of a player's uniform, not on the scoreboard. But at La Salle's De Vincent Field yesterday evening, after over four hours of play between the Quakers and the Explorers, a 33 shined unexpectedly in the runs column for the Penn baseball team. The amazing tally for the Quakers (12-10) in their 33-13 walloping of the Explorers (3-22) shattered their old team record of 29 runs in a game, wowing even veteran coach Bob Seddon in the dugout. "Unbelievable. I've never seen anything like this," said Seddon, who is in his 30th year of coaching the Red and Blue. "We just pounded the ball." Chief among the Penn pounders was senior Jeff Gregorio, who was moved from his usual catcher position into the designated hitter slot for the 3:30 p.m. start against La Salle. Gregorio responded to his new role by hitting for the cycle with two singles, a double, a triple and a grand slam homer in the top of the ninth inning that capped off the 33-run barrage for the Red and Blue. In all, the senior was responsible for 11 of Penn's 27 runs batted in and six of his team's season-high 27 hits in a night that he will not soon forget. "It was probably the best game I've ever played, hitting-wise," Gregorio said with a chuckle in his voice. "The ball was huge today. It was a really great day to hit." Two of Gregorio's fellow seniors also contributed greatly to the record-setting batting performance by the team. Shortstop Glen Ambrosius contributed five hits and five RBI in six at bats, and center fielder Kevin McCabe tallied four hits in eight at bats while driving home three runners from the leadoff position. In all, eight of the Quakers' nine starting batters recorded at least one hit, as did two of Penn's five substitutes who entered the game. "The whole team just played really well today," Gregorio said. "Midweek games we usually come out flat, [but] I hope this kind of attitude and this kind of intensity continues. Every guy seemed like they came to play today." With the wind blowing hard to the fences, the grass cut short and fast on the ballfield and facing a demoralized La Salle pitching staff that had been slammed for five straight losses coming in, yesterday definitely had the makings of a Penn hitter's dream. It started well enough for Ambrosius, who drove a runner home on a double, and for Gregorio, who popped in an early RBI single. But it was Chris May's second homer of the season on a two-run shot -- bringing the Quakers up 4-0 -- that served as a sign of things to come. The signs even looked good on the mound for the Red and Blue, where junior Matt Hepler forced his first two batters into ground outs and caught the next looking at a third strike to retire the side. After a promising start, however, the Quakers quickly lost ground in the second inning. Penn managed only one hit for no runs in the top of the second and took to the field after Ambrosius flied out to center field, leaving McCabe on second base. If the first inning was cake for Hepler, then the second must have been like brussels sprouts for the starter. Hepler gave up four hits to the first five batters he faced in the inning, and by the time he was relieved by junior Brian Burket, the score read 7-4 in favor of La Salle. Two more runs scored on the combination of a fielding error -- the second of the inning -- and a wild pitch before Burket could retire the side with the home team up, 9-4. "It was definitely a combination of everything," Gregorio said of the nine runs given up in the single inning. "Pitching has to be there all the time, but when you give them five outs in an inning [because of errors], it's causing the? pitchers [to] get frustrated. It's a trickle-down effect." Penn's batters slowly closed the five-run deficit while the Quakers' bullpen kept La Salle's bats at bay. After tying the score, 9-9, with four runs in the fourth inning, the Red and Blue re-took the lead in the top of the fifth when third baseman Oliver Hahl scored on a wild pitch. From there, Penn never looked back. The team scored two more unearned runs in the fifth, then unleashed 21 runs over a span of four innings to close out the game. Penn's relief pitchers were also a dominant force, allowing no runs from the third through the seventh innings when Dan Fitzgerald replaced eventual winner Greg Lee after two innings of work. Fitzgerald allowed only one hit in the seventh, but gave up four runs in an eighth inning that saw two more fielding errors by the Quakers. Paul Grumet pitched the ninth inning for Penn and preserved the 33-13 final score by allowing the Explorers no additional runs.


Penn groups rock with Israeli pop star

(04/06/00 9:00am)

Dischord and Quaker Notes learned Hebrew songs for the concert. The Israeli flag flew proudly last night as a crowd of all ages -- students and non-students, Americans and Israelis alike -- gathered to watch Israeli pop star David Broza perform at the Harrison Auditorium in the University Museum. The show -- which was sponsored by Hillel, the Undergraduate Assembly and the Consulate General of Israel in Philadelphia -- marked the culmination of the campus-wide Israel Day, an annual celebration of Israeli society and culture. The Israeli Music Festival packed in several hundred fans of Broza from all over the city. But before he took the stage, Penn Israeli dance troupe Yofi!, and two a cappella groups each performed. With an electric guitar wailing in the background, Yofi! danced to one of its standard songs, "Pitom Kam Adam." Yofi! member and College freshman Micah Liben described opening for David Broza as "a huge honor." Dischord took the stage next, followed by the all-female Quaker Notes. Both a cappella groups worked hard to learn the necessary Hebrew to be able to sing their numbers in the language for the show. Organizer Jesse Rubenfeld, a College and Wharton sophomore, arranged their songs and backup music. "We worked pretty hard," Rubenfeld said. "They put in a lot of time." Rubenfeld, who originally intended the festival to be composed entirely of student performances said he'd like to have more a cappella groups perform at next year's event. After the stage was reset, Broza, garbed entirely in black, made his entrance -- and the audience made it clear through their rousing applause that he was who they had come out to see. Despite feedback problems with the sound system, Broza did not hesitate to start his set, stopping only to tell the audience, "It's good to be back here." His last performance at Penn was in 1997 at Irvine Auditorium, and he also played in Harrison Auditorium about 15 years ago. Broza, 43, has been compared to American musicians like Billy Joel and Bruce Springsteen. He has gained international renown during his 20 years as a performer and sings in several different languages. Broza opened himself up to requests and sang his repertoire of folk, blues and rock. The audience members, almost all of whom were familiar with his songs, responded by shouting out numerous suggestions and later proceeded to sing along. Breaking only occasionally to converse with the audience in English, Broza sang every song in Hebrew except one. Midway through his performance, he sang a Spanish song off of his first Spanish album, which will be released tomorrow when Broza performs in Madrid. Those who attended clapped and sang along to Broza's last song of the set, "M'tachat Hashamayim," or "Under the Sky." Applauding in response to Broza's "thank you," the audience members begged for an encore with a standing ovation. Broza then returned to the stage to sing "Yiyeh Tov," or "It Will be Alright," one of his most popular songs. At one point during the song, Broza even stopped singing and, in typical rock star fashion, allowed the crowd to finish off the line. College freshman and Yofi! member Marjie Rosenfelt said she was amazed by the performance. "I was so moved," she said. "He's among the greatest."


M. Track goes to Princeton with eye on Heps

(04/06/00 9:00am)

The two-time defending Heps champ Tigers will also host Penn State and Villanova. The members of the Penn men's track team don't need a scoreboard to tell them how they're doing. The Quakers are more than pleased with their first two performances this spring, and the fact that neither has been officially scored has not been particularly bothersome. But to provide more of a measuring stick of how Penn stacks up against its competition, this weekend's meet at Princeton will be the first one scored this season. This will be the first peek the Red and Blue will have at the Tigers, considered by most to be Penn's peskiest adversary in its quest to win the Heptagonal Championships. The Orange and Black have been victorious in the last two outdoor Heps. Saturday holds particular importance to pole vaulter Josh Coleman, who will compete against Princeton's top man in the event, Jonathan Jessup. Coleman is coming off a solid outing at last week's Raleigh Relays in which he placed 10th in an extremely deep field. At Raleigh he was able to withstand a brisk wind that caused several of his counterparts to no-height. The junior from Arroyo Grande, Calif., realizes that any successes achieved by the vaulting unit at this stage are something of a bonus. Senior mainstay Bob Reynolds continues to take time away from the team, and junior Luke Stokes remains out of action with an injury. "We're definitely hoping for a big finish," Coleman said of the vaulters, hoping that the squad fuses at just the right time. Despite a couple of absences down South, though, the entire team seems consistently focused on the task at hand, while perhaps being ultimately driven by what is a rather distant goal. "I've seen a difference in the excitement level," said junior sprinter Laethe Coleman, who acknowledges that hosting Heps this year may very well serve as a motivating factor all season long for Penn. Coleman, of no relation to Josh although the two are roommates, feels that he is in the midst of something special, not only from a team perspective, but also personally. "This is really looking like a breakthrough season for me," said Coleman, who seems to be shedding the self-termed mediocrity that characterized his career in the past. "I have a lot more confidence than I've ever had." Coleman is not only proud of his accomplishments on the track this spring, but takes equal pride in his maturation in the locker room as he now views himself as one of the leaders who can spread the overall optimism now surrounding the Quakers. Assistant coach Tim Beach, who Coleman partly credits for his progress and one of the sprinter's staunchest supporters, agrees that a better spirit now pervades Franklin Field. He says the competitors feel good about themselves but they should be cautioned about not becoming complacent. "We have good athletes in all areas," Laethe Coleman said. "We're really a well-rounded team." With their current enthusiasm, the Quakers want to use these next few meets, beginning with Saturday's at Princeton, as preparation for what promises to be a thrilling 2 1/2 week stretch in West Philadelphia in which Penn will play host to the Penn Relays and Heps. "I'm very excited about this season. There's nothing like track and field," Laethe Coleman said.


Busy weekend for Penn Greeks

(04/06/00 9:00am)

Penn Greeks will speak out against sexual abuse, help fund a breast cancer research center and promote Holocaust awareness -- all in a single weekend. Greek Weekend -- an annual tradition for the InterFraternity Council, the Panhellenic Council and the Bicultural InterGreek Council -- will include philanthropic projects, social events and a guest speaker for Holocaust Remembrance Day. This is Penn's second Greek Weekend. The event started in 1998, but was canceled last year after the death of Phi Gamma Delta alumnus Michael Tobin. "[Greek Weekend] is an opportunity to do something good for the community and at the same time have a really good time," said IFC President and Alpha Chi Rho brother Andrew Mandelbaum, a College junior. And according to IFC Executive Vice President John Buchanan, a Phi Kappa Psi brother, Greek Weekend is intended to showcase the strengths of the Penn Greek system. "We aim to expose the rest of the campus to all the different things that the Greek community does at Penn," said Buchanan, a College junior. To mark the beginning of the weekend, Greeks will be participating in the annual Take Back the Night rally, which protests violence against women, particularly sexual abuse. The rally is sponsored by Penn women's groups, and Panhel is co-sponsoring it this year for the first time. "Being the largest women's organization on campus, it's important that we stand up with [other women]," said Panhel President Jennifer Chanowitz, a College junior and Sigma Delta Tau sister. "We want to give the events our numbers and make them feel strong and powerful." On Saturday, the Greeks will take to the streets -- along with Penn's UC Green organization -- to pick up garbage and plant flowers in University City. The effort is part of an Ivy League-wide community service program called IvyCorps. "We'll be? trying to make the neighborhood more beautiful and more presentable," Chanowitz said. The weekend's main attraction is Saturday night's Dance for a Cure -- sponsored by the IFC, Panhel and the BIG-C -- in which participants must collect $20 in sponsor money in order to attend. The money will go toward the construction of the Rena Rowan Breast Health Center, Panhel's official philanthropic cause. Greek Weekend's final event will be an IFC-sponsored program for Holocaust Remembrance Day on Monday. At the program, a former skinhead, who is also a former member of the White Power movement will speak about racism and anti-Semitism. Other events include a Junior Panhel Powder Puff football game, a Greek Shabbat dinner, a Greek coffeehouse and an IFC-sponsored field day for the children in the PennPals mentoring program.


Penn sees boom in RA, GA applications

(04/06/00 9:00am)

The number of applicants for resident advisor and graduate associate positions in the college houses increased dramatically this year, with 40 percent more RA applications and 20 percent more GA applications than last year. The students selected for positions were notified by mail before spring break. Those who received offers from multiple college houses have time to decide which to accept before committing. "I've always liked working with people, and the college house system is a great way to get to know people," said College junior Robin Rolewicz, who will be a first-year RA in Harrison College House next year. Two hundred and seven students applied for the 90 RA positions, compared with 144 applicants last year, according to Director of College Houses and Academic Services David Brownlee. And Brownlee's office has received 114 applications so far from students interested in becoming GAs. The application process for GAs is rolling and applicants are accepted until all 111 positions are filled. "We're still looking at GAs and still getting applications from them, because the graduate school [admissions] process takes longer than the undergraduate," said Associate Director of College Houses and Academic Services Pamela Robinson, who coordinates the application process for RAs and GAs. Perhaps the greatest perk of the position is the fact that all RAs and GAs receive free housing and a free meal plan. Although the exact number of RAs and GAs renewing their contracts was not immediately available, Robinson said there were more openings for RAs this year than last because many of those currently holding the positions are graduating seniors. "There was, as usual, a very high caliber of candidates," Robinson said. Once students apply for GA and RA positions, their applications are reviewed by the appropriate house deans, who select promising applicants for interviews. Depending on the house, candidates go through one or more interviews, conducted by a panel of faculty, administrators, students and staff, who then make the selections. Robinson said the college houses look for RAs who are "very enthusiastic about undergraduate life in residence, who themselves come from diverse backgrounds in which they have often held leadership positions." She noted that students applying for RA positions frequently have worked as camp counselors. Robinson said she was particularly pleased with the number of applications submitted online using a system established two years ago. The system allows house deans to begin reading candidates' applications immediately after they have been submitted, speeding up the selection process.


'InTouch' with better advising

(04/06/00 9:00am)

The University unveiled a prototype of the newly revamped Penn InTouch program at a meeting Tuesday attended by student leaders and faculty representatives. Penn-In-Touch 2000 will allow students and their advisors to view and manipulate schedules in new and innovative ways. Among the new features that will be added is the ability to run schedules through a variety of "what-if" scenarios that allow students and advisors to easily prognosticate whether or not their classes fulfill a specific degree's requirements. This feature will initially be available for several majors in the fall. All four of the University's undergraduate schools and the Graduate School of Education will adopt the new changes, which cost a total of about $250,000. Some of the Penn InTouch changes have already begun. In late February, the Information Systems and Computing Office implemented the first phase, entitled "Advisor-In-Touch." Faculty advisors can currently access their students' records via a Web-based program whose interface is like that of Penn InTouch, but whose functions are limited: Advisors can merely view records and approve restricted courses. Next semester, however, students and advisors will have access to the new program whose database and programming algorithms will help facilitate the rather complicated task of cross-checking courses with those that are listed as requirements. The program will sort out courses according to the criteria of whether the class fulfills a general requirement or a specific requirement for a major or concentration. Designers and students hope the new Penn InTouch will improve the University's much-criticized advising system. "It'll help advisors and students and everyone who helped put it together," said Student Nurses At Penn President Lance Feldman, a Nursing sophomore. "It's a good start toward revising the entire system." Once in place, however, only those students majoring in Classical Studies, History, Math and Sociology will be able to use the "what-if" feature until programmers can fully test the feature for all majors in the database. Students will ultimately be able to see whether or not they meet the general requirements for their respective schools and see if their courses allow them to change schools or even pursue a dual degree. "I think ideally that students would have an opportunity to try out various scenarios before they even get into the advising office," said Wharton Interim Director of Academic Affairs Anne Greenhalgh, who oversees Wharton advisors. "The quality of the advising session will be greatly advanced."


Three students win natl. award

(04/06/00 9:00am)

This year is a record breaking one for Penn student recipients of the prestigious Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship. Awarded for excellence in the areas of mathematics, science and engineering, Penn boasts three winners of the highly competitive national award. According to John Keenan -- a professor of civil engineering systems and a member of the University's two-person selection committee, along with Assistant Dean for English Advising Alice Kelley -- this year marks a record for Penn in the number of Goldwater recipients. "It is the most we've ever seen before," he said. "In fact, last year's winner was Penn's first winner in five or six years." Penn's Goldwater scholars, who were nominated by the University based on their academic credentials, are College junior and physics major Daniel Sherman; Wharton and Engineering junior Clifford Haugen; and College sophomore Joshua Gruber, a biochemistry and physics major. Over 1,176 students were nominated by universities across the United States and Puerto Rico for the award. Of those nominated, 309 were chosen to receive the award. "Its an award that registers the potential of people [in research]," Sherman said, adding that it is encouraging to find that "the stuff I'm planning to do is worthwhile." Students who receive the award their sophomore year are provided with a two-year scholarship, while junior recipients receive one year of funding. The scholarships are intended to cover costs of tuition, fees, books and room and board, up to a maximum $7,500 per year. "The award is unique because it is geared toward people who are looking to participate in research," Keenan noted. For the application, students were asked to describe some research that they had either taken part in, or wished to participate in, as well as to provide a transcript and recommendations to the selection committee. Gruber, who has been involved in research since his high school days, has participated in medical and biological studies, including gene therapy and neuroscience. Haugen has done extensive research overseas examining marine park management technology. And Sherman's research background includes involvement in a study at a physics laboratory at the University of Louisville in Kentucky. Each student is already planning for his future, from continuing education and applying for such prestigious awards as the Thouron and Rhodes, to traveling to the Pacific Rim to conduct a hands-on study of sustainable energy sources. The organization that presents the award -- the Goldwater Foundation -- is federally endowed in memory of former Arizona Sen. Barry Goldwater. In existence for 12 years, the Goldwater Foundation has to date awarded 3,021 scholarships valued in total at approximately 31 million dollars.


Softball offense awakens in wins

(04/06/00 9:00am)

The Quakers won two relatively high-scoring games at Lehigh. The Penn softball team snapped out of its recent funk with an offensive explosion yesterday afternoon in Bethlehem, Pa. After producing just one win in their last eight contests, the Quakers swept host Lehigh, 6-5 and 11-8, with something that had been missing in their last few games -- runs. And their offensive potency could not have come at a better time. The Quakers (11-16-1) are heading into the most important part of their season as they square off against Yale and Brown this weekend to kick off their Ivy League slate. Thus, the two victories were extremely important for building confidence and momentum heading into Ancient Eight competition. "The Ivy League is up for grabs this season," said freshman pitcher Becky Ranta, who tossed a complete game in the opener yesterday. "We're on a roll now, and we'll hope to carry that into this weekend." The Quakers put their hitting shoes on in the opener. After falling behind 4-1 in the third, Penn's bats caught fire. Shortstop Crista Farrell had an RBI double in the fourth to bring the Quakers within two before the Red and Blue got a little help from Lehigh's fielders to tie the game in the fifth. Penn did not record a hit in the fifth, but two Engineers errors and a wild pitch helped produce the Quakers runs. After Penn and Lehigh exchanged runs in the sixth, senior first baseman Kari Dennis provided the game-winner in the seventh, driving home sophomore third baseman Jen Moore with a single to right-center field. Ranta, who gave up four earned runs on 13 hits, set Lehigh down in order in the bottom of the seventh to preserve the 6-5 victory. Ranta picked up her seventh win on the year. While the Quakers took advantage of some Lehigh miscues and picked up some timely hits in the first game, the second game was an absolute offensive barrage that was called after five due to darkness. In just five innings of play, the Quakers produced their highest run-total of the season, scoring 11 runs on 13 hits -- this coming from the same squad that scored only four combined runs in their last three defeats. "It's nice to score a lot of runs," Farrell said. "We've been leaving a lot of runners on base and losing by a couple lately, but today we did a good job getting a lot of clutch hits with two outs." In the second game of the twin bill, sophomore left fielder Clarisa Apostol led off with a single up the middle and was driven home with a three-bagger from freshman right fielder Deb Kowalchuk. Two batters later, Kowalchuk crossed the plate with a sacrifice fly from freshman designated hitter Heidi Albrecht. But Lehigh also had some extra pop in their bats. The Engineers cut the Penn lead in half with a run in the bottom half of the first, and after a Quakers run in the second, Lehigh took a 4-3 lead behind a two-run dinger from Tara Stine in the bottom of the second. After the Quakers and Engineers exchanged three runs a piece in the third, Penn put up three more in the top of the fourth to take a 9-7 lead -- a lead that it would never relinquish. The Quakers added two more runs in the fifth, and freshman pitcher Dina Parise got out of a bases-loaded jam in the bottom of the fifth to give the Quakers an 11-8 victory. Parise, who gave up four earned runs off seven hits in 3 2/3 innings, picked up her first collegiate win. But this was not a game for pitchers, as this slugfest produced four lead changes, 19 combined runs and scoring in every inning. The Quakers will look to continue this high level of offensive production when they host Ivy rivals Yale and Brown in consecutive double dips on Saturday and Sunday at Warren Field.


Busy weekend for Penn Greeks

(04/06/00 9:00am)

Penn Greeks will speak out against sexual abuse, help fund a breast cancer research center and promote Holocaust awareness -- all in a single weekend. Greek Weekend -- an annual tradition for the InterFraternity Council, the Panhellenic Council and the Bicultural InterGreek Council -- will include philanthropic projects, social events and a guest speaker for Holocaust Remembrance Day. This is Penn's second Greek Weekend. The event started in 1998, but was canceled last year after the death of Phi Gamma Delta alumnus Michael Tobin. "[Greek Weekend] is an opportunity to do something good for the community and at the same time have a really good time," said IFC President and Alpha Chi Rho brother Andrew Mandelbaum, a College junior. And according to IFC Executive Vice President John Buchanan, a Phi Kappa Psi brother, Greek Weekend is intended to showcase the strengths of the Penn Greek system. "We aim to expose the rest of the campus to all the different things that the Greek community does at Penn," said Buchanan, a College junior. To mark the beginning of the weekend, Greeks will be participating in the annual Take Back the Night rally, which protests violence against women, particularly sexual abuse. The rally is sponsored by Penn women's groups, and Panhel is co-sponsoring it this year for the first time. "Being the largest women's organization on campus, it's important that we stand up with [other women]," said Panhel President Jennifer Chanowitz, a College junior and Sigma Delta Tau sister. "We want to give the events our numbers and make them feel strong and powerful." On Saturday, the Greeks will take to the streets -- along with Penn's UC Green organization -- to pick up garbage and plant flowers in University City. The effort is part of an Ivy League-wide community service program called IvyCorps. "We'll be? trying to make the neighborhood more beautiful and more presentable," Chanowitz said. The weekend's main attraction is Saturday night's Dance for a Cure -- sponsored by the IFC, Panhel and the BIG-C -- in which participants must collect $20 in sponsor money in order to attend. The money will go toward the construction of the Rena Rowan Breast Health Center, Panhel's official philanthropic cause. Greek Weekend's final event will be an IFC-sponsored program for Holocaust Remembrance Day on Monday. At the program, a former skinhead, who is also a former member of the White Power movement will speak about racism and anti-Semitism. Other events include a Junior Panhel Powder Puff football game, a Greek Shabbat dinner, a Greek coffeehouse and an IFC-sponsored field day for the children in the PennPals mentoring program.


Teaching across state lines

(04/06/00 9:00am)

Penn's Nursing School offers distance-learning courses via computer. At a Memphis, Tenn., hospital, seven nursing students sit attentively while their professor lectures to them on subjects including pediatric oncology and pharmacology. But there's a difference here from a traditional nursing class -- the professor is broadcast live from Philadelphia on TV. Since 1994, Penn's Nursing School has offered students in far away places access to some of the school's specialized courses through cameras, video tapes and computers, all without having students step onto its campus. "We can ask questions and we can stop the professor if we don't understand something, just like if we were there," Cindy Burleson, a nursing student at St. Jude's Hospital in Memphis, said of the interactive broadcast. The program was originally started to increase the number of trained midwives in rural parts of Pennsylvania, explained Sister Teresita Hinnegan, a Penn Nursing professor and the director of the school's distance learning program. To this effect, the University began offering master's degree courses in midwifery at distance learning centers in the state. Now they teach in Allegheny, Scranton, Coalport and Hershey, Pa. The state pays the technological and tuition costs. Since then, the program has expanded beyond the state's borders. St. Jude doctors said the decision last fall to have Penn educate their nurses reflects the high regard they have for their colleagues in Philadelphia. "We have access to more than a dozen experts in pediatrics that we would not have otherwise," said Pam Hinds, of St. Jude's hospital. "We have a tremendous match with what's being offered and what we need." The Nursing School's distance learning program in Memphis currently offers two master's degree courses, midwifery and pediatric oncology, and St. Jude's covers the expenses. Students in Pennsylvania and Tennessee spend three to six hours a week watching lectures on their television screens while interacting with their professors in real time. During the rest of the week, the students -- who are already registered nurses -- conduct the clinical portion of their training under the direction of a Penn-appointed preceptor, who is selected by the Nursing School from a pool of applicants local to that area. "It's getting education out to people in rural areas who would never get to a campus at Penn or anywhere else, especially to women," Hinnegan said. "It's more difficult for women to leave their families." The midwifery course that Hinnegan began uses Pennsylvania's T1 Healthnet connection to link the distance learning lab in the Nursing Education Building with that of classrooms linked to the network across the state. A similar network links the Nursing School with St. Jude's. Kevin McGuire, technical manager of the distance learning center, said that the technology itself does not diminish the learning experience. "It's almost as if they're sitting in the same classroom," McGuire said. "After a while, you stop paying attention to the technology and pay attention to the people at the other end." When St. Jude's decided to expand its number of nurses trained in pediatric oncology -- the center treats the most cases of childhood cancer in the world -- they turned to Penn's Nursing School, which services the world's second largest number of childhood cancer cases -- at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. "It is helping them expand in terms of the numbers of patients and in the number of services," said Nursing Professor Jan Deatrick, who is helping coordinate the program. At St. Jude's, there is also a full-time instructor supervising the seven enrolled students. As the boundaries of technology are pushed further forward, popular expectations abound that flesh-and-blood professors will be replaced by pre-recorded lectures. But according to Hinnegan, given the nature of the nursing field, that won't ever happen. "Human interaction is very important in a profession that is hands on," Hinnegan said. "We're a relationship profession."


Election results to be in tonight

(04/06/00 9:00am)

There were few charges filed against candidates for UA and class boards. After seeing voter turnout skyrocket for this year's student government elections, the Nominations and Elections Committee will announce the fate of the Undergraduate Assembly and class board candidates tonight. The NEC announced yesterday that approximately 2,508 students -- about 30 percent of eligible voters -- participated in this year's elections, the first to be done entirely on Penn InTouch. The number is nearly double that of last year's election turnout, when 1,220 students -- 17 percent of the voters -- cast ballots. Election results will be announced after the NEC's Fair Practices Code hearing at Steinberg-Dietrich Hall tonight at 7 p.m. During the hearing, the NEC reviews any campaign violations brought to its attention by other candidates. There were few alleged violations this year. Senior class treasurer candidate Matthew Thornton charged the NEC itself with violating the FPC because of an incorrect link from the Penn InTouch election page to his picture. And three candidates were automatically disqualified from the races for not handing in their spending forms on time -- UA candidates Wharton freshman Christopher McLeester, College junior Maria Wormack and Sophomore Class Board candidate Nicole Shevins, a Wharton freshman. NEC members attribute the high turnout to the new and versatile voting platform -- Penn InTouch -- which allowed students to cast their ballots with little or no problems. "The first year on Penn InTouch was great," NEC Vice Chairwoman of Elections Teresa Lee said last night. "The UA will have more legitimacy," the Wharton and Engineering junior added, saying that the high voter turnout will give students a student government more representative of their interests than it has been in the past. Lee added that the freshman class was the most active voting group. Approximately 1,000 of the 2,508 students who cast ballots were first-year students. Of the 59 students running for the 25 seats for upperclassmen on the Undergraduate Assembly, 14 of them are incumbents seeking re-election. Eight seats on the 33-member assembly are reserved for next year's freshman class. Thirty-four candidates ran for the 16 available College seats. Of the 34 students, seven are College UA incumbents. There were nine students running for the four seats available for Engineering students on the UA, of which three are incumbents. Fifteen students ran for the four Wharton seats on the UA, making the race the most competitive in the elections. Of the 15 candidates, four are UA incumbents. One Nursing candidate is running unopposed for the one seat for his school. Results for the three class boards will also be announced after the hearing. Of the 56 students running for class boards, 10 students are incumbents seeking re-election. Due to the extension of the petition deadline and alleviated signature requirement for class boards, all positions have applicants with the exception of the Junior Class Board Nursing representative. This unfilled position will be filled by appointment by the NEC in the fall.


U. endowment lagging behind market growth

(04/06/00 9:00am)

Officials are planning a more aggressive strategy to combat low returns. Although the University's $3.19 billion endowment still ranks 12th in the country, Penn's investment portfolio has significantly lagged the market averages for the past two years, raising concern among the University's top financial officials. "No one is satisfied with the performance," said University Trustee Richard Worley, who chairs the committee that oversees management of the endowment. "This is a major setback -- a very disappointing result." In response to the weak performance, officials say they are planning a more aggressive growth strategy for Penn's investment portfolio -- a dramatic change from the conservative deep value orientation that Penn has held for more than 20 years. The endowment's poor performance -- including losses over the past six months totaling almost $80 million -- could have significant consequences for Penn's budgets over the next several years, University President Judith Rodin said. Over the past year, the total value of the University's investments has grown just 9.8 percent, while the S&P; 500 and other broad market indexes have been averaging increases of between 17 and 20 percent. According to figures from The Chronicle of Higher Education, the average college endowment grew by 11.6 percent last year. Harvard University has by far the largest university endowment at more than $14 billion, followed by the University of Texas system and Yale University. While Penn's has a 12th place ranking, it masks a low per capita ranking on account of the University's large student body. Penn now has about 50 percent of its portfolio in stocks, about 20 percent in bonds and about 15 percent in private equity and venture capital. Another 15 percent is invested in diversifying assets, such as real estate. "We don't have our heads in the sand," Chief Investment Officer Landis Zimmerman said. "There is a movement to the broad market and a shift away from our deep value bias." Despite the recent trend to invest in dot-com and Internet firms, Penn has eschewed investment in the high-flying technology sector, instead choosing to invest in more stable value stocks, blue chip companies such as Walmart or IBM. A policy of more aggressive growth could yield higher returns, but it brings with it greater risk. According to Zimmerman, in the past few months the University has increased its previously limited broad market holdings -- such as Wilshire 5000 index funds -- so that Penn now owns more small and mid-cap stocks, which have performed better this year. Broad market funds now account for about $400 million, or approximately one third of Penn's domestic stock holdings. Over the past several months, Penn has also reduced its portfolio of value stocks -- heavily weighted in the U.S. market -- by around $567 million. Investments in growth and international stocks have increased by $193 million during the same time period. And following a nationwide trend for colleges and universities, Penn has begun to move away from the safety of bonds and into the riskier private equity and venture capital markets, which typically offer higher investment returns. But perhaps the most significant change has been the replacement of two of its six independent investment managers with new ones who are more growth-oriented. "We picked a number of managers based on past prior performance and some of those managers underperformed," Rodin said. Still, many of Penn's current problems are as much rooted in policies institutionalized by Penn's former endowment manager John Neff as they are in the present. Widely regarded as one of the greatest investors of all time, Neff chaired the Trustee's Investment Board from 1979 to 1998. He volunteered to single-handedly manage the University's entire endowment, free of charge, and did so for all but the last few years of his tenure. In nearly 16 years, he took the fund from a paltry $200 million to more than $1.7 billion. Outside managers were brought in 1995, but they largely shared Neff's long-term, value orientation. Over the last few years, however, that approach has been less successful. As high-technology and Internet stock prices soared over the last two years, the value stocks which Neff championed trailed the market. "Value investing goes in cycles," Zimmerman said. "Sometimes it's great. Sometimes it's less good." Penn's historically deep value-bias has also hindered its involvement in private equity, venture capital and buy-out investments. Schools from Stanford University to Williams College have boosted their returns by entering these newer, riskier investment markets. But Penn has remained relatively underexposed, Worley said. And according to University Vice President for Finance Craig Carnaroli, Penn's limited involvement has caused it to miss out on a number of highly successful ventures and get locked out of others. "When you look at the the high returns our peer institutions are earning over the past few years, it is probably due to their early entry into the private capital markets," Carnaroli said, noting that there are now more institutional dollars chasing those investments than ever before. "A lot of [venture-capital] funds are now closed off," he added. Others now, he said, are restricting the amount of capital Penn can invest.


Forum addresses alcohol abuse

(04/06/00 9:00am)

About 50 students gathered on Tuesday night to share stories about how alcohol abuse has affected their lives and brainstorm for ways that Penn can address the problem as part of the National Issues Forum program. The forum -- sponsored by the Sigma Chi fraternity, the Drug and Alcohol Resource Team and the Office of Health Education -- marked the first time that Penn participated in any national public forum program. The National Issues Forum program runs discussions on complex issues, like substance abuse or death, among students on 13 campuses, including Penn, across the country. "This is not going to be your typical unstructured conversation, nor is it going to be a debate," said Harris Sokoloff, Penn's director of the Center for School Study Councils at the Graduate School of Education, who introduced the program. "The aim is not to reach a decision, but to move closer to reaching a decision." Sokoloff then showed a video produced by the National Issues Forum explaining three different approaches to dealing with alcohol abuse. The first method was to demand individual responsibility by enforcing and tightening existing alcohol laws, the second was to treat alcohol abuse as an illness and the third was to promote social change through education. The students were divided into three groups, each led by five trained student facilitators. The groups discussed their feelings toward the three possible ways to address alcohol abuse. The discussion within each group was recorded and the results will be presented to Penn's Working Group on Alcohol Abuse. Although most of the participants were Sigma Chi brothers, the facilitators came from such diverse campus groups as Navy ROTC, the Queer Student Alliance and the Athletic Department. Participants' reactions to the forum were generally positive. "It definitely wasn't a waste of time," College freshman Dina Parise said. "I know more now than when I came in. I think more can be done, but I think it was definitely informative and educational." Many other participants also expressed a desire for more action to be taken to combat abusive drinking behavior, saying that a voluntary discussion forum was not sufficient. But Drug and Alcohol Resource Team President Molly MacDonald said it is difficult to get students involved in programs like the forum. "This is a self-motivated kind of thing," the Nursing junior said. "You can't mandate this." MacDonald said, however, that DART is currently working toward including a more comprehensive alcohol education session in the New Student Orientation program.


Good showing for W. Track at Raleigh Relays

(04/05/00 9:00am)

Although the meet was not scored, many Quakers did well against stellar competition down South. Despite the fact that many of their competitors counted them out, that did not stop the members of the Penn women's track team from having a surprisingly impressive performance as they competed against some of the best track programs in the nation at the Raleigh Relays this past weekend. Having teams such as Virginia Tech, N.C. State and North Carolina as competitors is enough to make any Ivy League team a little nervous. Overall, though, the Red and Blue gave a solid performance in many different categories. Penn assistant coach Tony Tenisci referred to the meet as "the Penn Relays of the South" and felt that, "The kids handled themselves very well in a meet with such high caliber teams." The Quakers had several standout finishes including a seventh-place finish in the triple jump(39'6.5") by Ruthie Neuhaus, a third-place finish in the pole vault by Liz Wittels, an 11th-place finish by Julie Siebert-Johnson in the javelin and a sixth place finish by the Penn 4x800 relay team(9:10.02). Senior captain Ruthie Neuhaus was pleased by her fellow Quakers' performances, as well as her own. "As a team, we did well. We stepped up overall and that is going to give us a good base for the meets to come," Neuhaus said. "Individually, I'm also happy because I have been jumping consistently well and that's important to me." Siebert-Johnson -- who thus far has had a stellar season, placing first last week at Penn's own Quaker Invitational -- did not feel she performed as well she wanted to with her 11th-place finish, but she was also competing against athletes who had already graduated college. The Raleigh Relays also allows athletes who do not attend college to participate. With some of these athletes using this meet as practice for the Summer Olympics in Sydney, they unquestionably had an advantage over some of the less-experienced intercollegiate competitors. Siebert-Johnson admitted that it was "definitely intimidating," but that her disappointing finish has motivated her to gear up for her next meet. With a time of 9:10.02, the 4x800 relay team proved that Penn has the talent and depth to compete well not only at the Raleigh Relays, but more importantly, in the Ivy League. Sophomore Samantha Desposito, a member of the relay team, was "excited by the good competition" in the race. More importantly though, Desposito is just as excited to race against other Ivies so that she can establish where Penn will stand in its own league. Up next for the Quakers is just that. The University of Pennsylvania Invitational will be held this Saturday. The meet will allow the team to get a feel for where they stand in the Ivy League, as they will face Cornell and Princeton. According to Tenisci, from here on in, "every meet is very important," especially with conference competition looming in the distance.


Scarlet Knights beat Lwt. Crew

(04/05/00 9:00am)

The Penn men's lightweight crew team opened its season with a loss to Rutgers this past Saturday. After a long day on the Raritan River in New Jersey, the Quakers returned home late Saturday night fully aware of their improvements since the fall and also cognizant of their weaknesses. "We've gained speed since the fall," sophomore varsity rower Joel Frankel said. "We just need to keep practicing harder." Penn coach Bruce Konopka was happy with his team's performance and recognized that Rutgers is a hard race with which to open the season. "Rutgers is a good team," Konopka said. "They just have a lower stroke rating than us." Penn commodore Michael Smolenski was also happy with the team's performance and recognized that Rutgers is a quicker team. "We did a good job," the senior said. "But Rutgers was just better." Penn's first varsity boat got off to a quick start and was able to keep up with the Scarlet Knights during the beginning of the course. But Penn was unable to keep up its speed and fell behind. "Our guys were rowing at a higher stroke rate than Rutgers," Konopka said. "But eventually the guys ran out of gas and slowed down." The Red and Blue were enthusiastic about their speed, but most agreed that they started out too fast. "We rowed too high [of a stroke rate] for this early in the season," Frankel said. "We're just not ready to row that high yet." Despite their loss, the Quakers remain optimistic about their improvements and about their overall performance. "We raced real hard," Smolenski said. "We just need to get the fundamentals back together and get stronger." The second varsity boat was not as successful and had trouble steering. Konopka blames this on the fact that the team could not practice on the Raritan River prior to the race. "The water tide was too low to practice before the race," Konopka said. "This contributed to the loss." Overall, team members seem to be using Saturday's race as a source of energy for the rest of the season. "Our main goal is the national races at the end of the season," sophomore junior varsity rower Paul Tomlin said. "This race was a building block toward the rest of our season." In response to this weekend's performance, Konopka hopes the team will refine its race tactics. "Once we work on our speed and strokes per minute, we'll be back on track," Konopka said. "We're ready to win." Next weekend, Penn will have an opportunity to win at Cornell against the Big Red and Harvard. At that race, the Quakers will have a chance to see if the speed they displayed against Rutgers will bring them a victorious season.