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the<br />
daily<br />
More library hours<br />
unlikely, dean says<br />
By BRIAN E. BOWERS<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
The <strong>University</strong> library system will<br />
probably not be able to lengthen hours<br />
or increase its book collection as had<br />
been recommended by the<br />
Undergraduate Student<br />
Government's Academic Assembly,<br />
the assistant dean of libraries said.<br />
Charles H. Ness said because of<br />
budget restrictions, <strong>University</strong><br />
libraries may have to make do with<br />
even less than they have. Increases of<br />
any kind are not likely in the near<br />
future.<br />
"At a time when we are asked to<br />
raise hours, we are concerned about<br />
having to cut hours and services," he<br />
said.<br />
"We would really like to do<br />
something, but it comes at a time<br />
when we are trying to maintain what<br />
we have built up."<br />
The assembly's recommendation,<br />
resulting from a survey taken last<br />
term, was primarily concerned with<br />
lengthening the libraries' 98-hour<br />
week. . '<br />
The assembly recommended the<br />
libraries stay open until 9 p.m. on<br />
Saturdays and open at 11 a.m. on<br />
Sundays.<br />
It also recommended full reference<br />
services be available when the library<br />
is open, and that study space be<br />
increased, said Bob Gallagher,<br />
assembly member in charge of the<br />
survey.<br />
Ness said hours could be expanded<br />
if the <strong>University</strong>'s budget is<br />
favorable, but it is doubtful that the<br />
libraries will get the required funding.<br />
"The best we can do right now Is<br />
provide extended hours during final<br />
exam periods," he said. The libraries<br />
have done that in the past.<br />
Ness also questioned whether the<br />
survey gave a true representation of<br />
the need for extended hours. He said<br />
many students may have answered<br />
yes when asked, "Do you see a need<br />
for extended hours at Pattee?" only<br />
because it would be more desirable<br />
than having it closed.<br />
If hours cannot be lengthened,<br />
Gallagher said, the library should try<br />
to rearrange its schedule.<br />
He said he thinks students are more<br />
likely to use the facilities later in the<br />
day. - N<br />
.<br />
"They should make it so most<br />
students would get the optimum use<br />
out of it," he said.<br />
However, Ness said he would rather<br />
extend hours than rearrange them.<br />
If hours were rearranged,'<br />
librarians may riot be able to work<br />
during the new hours. Also, students<br />
who now use the libraries during the<br />
old hours would not be able to.<br />
Dorm contracts:<br />
About 950 to be denied housing, official says<br />
By JOYCE WASHNIK<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
About 950 students who requested residence hall<br />
space for next year will not receive dorm contracts,<br />
the manager of the Assignment Office for Campus<br />
Residences said.<br />
William Mulberger said residence hall space will<br />
be assigned to 87.2 percent of the male students and<br />
87.3 percent of the female students who submitted<br />
dorm contracts this year.<br />
"That's more than we expected, particularly with<br />
men," he said.<br />
Last year, only 82 percent of the men who applied<br />
were given residence hall space. ><br />
Comparing last year's requests for dorm contracts<br />
with this year's, Mulberger said, "Overall, the<br />
requests are down a bit." And because of that, there<br />
were fewer cancellations.<br />
Chris Calkins, president of the Association of<br />
Residence Hall Students, said he had expected the<br />
percentages for contract acceptance to be lower thi s<br />
year than last year because of predictions for a large<br />
freshman class.<br />
Stan Latta, assistant director of the Office of<br />
Residential life Programs, also said the number of<br />
contracts accepted was higher than he had expected.<br />
"I would have guessed we would have canceled<br />
more this # year," Latta said.<br />
He said ne based his prediction on projections he<br />
had received in February concerning the number of<br />
students submitting their $45 advanced payment fee.<br />
"Apparently a lot of people decided not to submit<br />
their contracts," Latta said.<br />
The names of those students who did not receive<br />
contracts will be posted in each residence hall area<br />
by Thursday. A letter will also be sent to each<br />
student's home along with the return of the $45<br />
advanced payment check, Mulberger said.<br />
Although more students than expected will receive<br />
dorm space, Mulberger said he was not able to make<br />
a predicition about how many students will be placed<br />
in temporary housing in the fall.<br />
Space shuttle coming in for a touchdown<br />
By ROBERT LOCKE<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE,<br />
N.M. (AP ) — Space shuttle Columbia ,<br />
diverted by wild desert winds from its<br />
scheduled landing yesterday, will try<br />
again today in a suspenseful thirdflight<br />
finale that could force the ship to<br />
bypass New Mexico and return nonstop<br />
to Florida instead.<br />
It all depended on the morning<br />
weather and the condition of Northrup<br />
Strip on this barren Army missile<br />
base. NASA expected to make the<br />
decision by 7 a.m., EST — with a<br />
hoped-for landing four hours later.<br />
In space, 141 miles above Earth,<br />
astronauts Jack R. Lousma and C.<br />
Gordon Fullerton had food, fuel and<br />
power to last four days and a NASA<br />
official said, "We're in excellent<br />
shape." The crew took the news in<br />
stride.<br />
"Sorry about that," Mission Control<br />
said.<br />
"That's the breaks of space, I<br />
guess," said Lousma.<br />
MB<br />
i«u><br />
Eugene Kranz, chief of flight<br />
operations, said in Houston that a<br />
landing today at 11:07 a.m. EST —9:07<br />
a.m. at White Sands — would be<br />
preferred. If the Northrup Strip were<br />
unsuitable, the shuttle would land at<br />
the Kennedy Space Center at Cape<br />
Canaveral, Fla. A Florida landing<br />
would come at 11:13 a.m. EST, or one<br />
orbit later at 12:47 p.m.<br />
"The ground track would go clean<br />
across the United <strong>State</strong>s, west to east ,"<br />
Kranz said.<br />
"We're going to play the weather<br />
real fine," Kranz said. A plane will be<br />
sent aloft both in New Mexico and<br />
Florida to test the winds. It was such a<br />
flight, by Shuttle l astronaut John<br />
Young that sealed yesterday's wave<br />
off.<br />
*¦<br />
Kranz said the sandstorm that<br />
caused the postponement also brought<br />
some damage to the runway, but that it<br />
could be repaired overnight.<br />
The runway at Cape Canaveral,<br />
15,000 feet long, was ready and fully<br />
equipped. Columbia has never made a<br />
paved-runway landing, but the<br />
Dancin' ;<br />
Performing as part of Women's Awareness Week, international dancers Renee Gaither<br />
(3rd engineering) and Debbie Griffin (9th-biology) dance 'Krici Krici Ticek' — which<br />
means 'chirp, chirp bird' — in the HUB Ballroom last night.<br />
alternative is another try at windwhipped<br />
Northrup, and NASA officials<br />
were pessimistic that conditions would<br />
improve.<br />
The Kennedy runway is not far from<br />
pad 39A where the shuttle was<br />
launched March 22.<br />
It was the first time in 20 years of<br />
space flight that a landing was<br />
postponed. Kennedy Space Center, at<br />
Cape Canaveral, is NASA's third<br />
choice for Flight 3. The main runway<br />
'MM<br />
in California is waterlogged and out of<br />
service.<br />
Equipment at Northrup Strip,<br />
hastily assembled to handle a shuttle<br />
landing, may have suffered some<br />
damage from the winds but the gusts<br />
still were too strong to make an<br />
assessment at midday.<br />
"We are really fighting the odds,"<br />
said David Novlan, chief forecaster at<br />
White Sands. "The odds are really<br />
stacked against us. It's going to take a<br />
great deal of luck to land the shuttle<br />
here."<br />
He said sand was carried aloft<br />
yesterday to 15,000 feet and added:<br />
'*One or two of these a year are not that<br />
unlikely around here."<br />
On the other hand, Kennedy Space<br />
Center was ready.<br />
"The equipment here is identical to<br />
the equipment at White Sands," said<br />
Ml<br />
Herman "Fritz" Widick, a Kennedy<br />
official. "The primary decision will be<br />
based on where is the safest place to<br />
land." Even so, he said, "The width of<br />
the runway is more forgiving in the<br />
desert."<br />
That's an understatement. The<br />
runway in Florida is surrounded by a<br />
moat.<br />
For the space agency, there would<br />
be one definite plus to landing at<br />
Kennedy. It would save eight days in ,<br />
the "turnaround" time needed to get<br />
the ship airborne again. Officials had<br />
moaned that the original shift in<br />
landing sites, from Edwards to White<br />
Sands, had added four days.<br />
At the scheduled time of landing<br />
yesterday, as they passed over New<br />
Mexico;Lousma said "it's pretty gusty<br />
looking down there... I guess we kind<br />
of agree with your decision for today."<br />
¦<br />
0<br />
20*<br />
Capcom Brewster Shaw replied:<br />
"The vis (visibility) on the surface is<br />
about zero. The last gust report we got<br />
was 48 knots," a vigorous 55 mph.<br />
Columbia was less than an hour and<br />
a half from its landing — and minutes<br />
from firing its engines to leave orbit —<br />
when the decision was made.<br />
John Young, commander on the first<br />
space shuttle, flew a wind-testing<br />
mission and reported he couldn't see<br />
the end of the runway. First he<br />
recommended a shift in runways, then<br />
said:<br />
"I think we ought to knock this off."<br />
"OK, John, we copy and we concur,"<br />
said Mission Control.<br />
"Sorry, about that, guys," Young<br />
replied.<br />
The astronauts were out of radio<br />
range at the time. They were told a few<br />
minutes later, at 11:02 a.m. Mountain<br />
Time. They were supposed to land at<br />
12:27 p.m.<br />
Then NASA's Jack Riley announced<br />
from'Mission Control in Houston:<br />
"The probabilities are high the<br />
space shuttle will land at Kennedy<br />
Space Center, which is forecast to have<br />
the best weather.<br />
Tuesday March 30, 1982<br />
Vol. 82, No. 143 36 pages <strong>University</strong> Park, Pa. 16802<br />
Published by students of The <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania <strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />
Intellectual climate<br />
criticized in report<br />
done by task force<br />
By CAROLYN PIUCCI<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>'s intellectual climate<br />
may be stimulating enough for some<br />
students, but many <strong>University</strong><br />
students do not receive as much<br />
intellectual stimulation as they could,<br />
said the chairman of a task force<br />
assigned to study the intellectual<br />
climate at <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>. '<br />
M. Lee Upcraft said, "There is a lot<br />
of room for improvement in the<br />
intellectual climate as it is easy for<br />
students to leave here without<br />
accomplishing anything."<br />
Further, the task force's report,<br />
titled "Improving the Intellectual<br />
Climate at <strong>University</strong> Park," has<br />
concluded the climate is not as strong<br />
as it should be and faculty and<br />
students are dissatisfied with<br />
academics.<br />
The Academic Support Service<br />
Task Force's report defines<br />
intellectual development and also<br />
lists 12 tentative recommendations<br />
that may help improve the<br />
intellectual climate at the <strong>University</strong> ,<br />
said M. Lee Upcraft, director of the<br />
Office of Residential Life Programs.<br />
The task force included what it<br />
thought were five important areas of<br />
concentration for intellectual<br />
development and a complete<br />
education, Upcraft said.<br />
The first area is the acquisition and<br />
comprehension of knowledge in the<br />
student's area of study; the second is<br />
the moral, ethical and spiritual<br />
development of a student and his or<br />
her values; the third is the<br />
appreciation of aesthetics,<br />
specifically art, drama, literature and<br />
music; the fourth is a better sense of<br />
critical thinking such as using logic;<br />
and the fifth is the integration of all<br />
knowledge that is learned.<br />
The acquisition and comprehension<br />
of knowledge is now the only area<br />
evaluated by the <strong>University</strong> before a<br />
student graduates, Upcraft said. The<br />
task force also examined what could<br />
be done to enhance the other four<br />
areas.<br />
After the task force, which was<br />
appointed by Vice President for<br />
Student Affairs Raymond O. Murphy,<br />
drew up the five areas for intellectual<br />
development , it interviewed about 50<br />
people in the <strong>University</strong> community .<br />
The task force asked if the<br />
intellectual climate is challenging<br />
enough and if it provides<br />
opportunities for students to expand<br />
their learning horizons. It also asked<br />
which <strong>University</strong> programs should be<br />
improved to enhance the five areas of<br />
intellectual concentration , Upcra ft<br />
said.<br />
The people interviewed included<br />
resident instruction deans, faculty,<br />
resident assistants, the<br />
Undergraduate Student Government<br />
Senate Committee on Academic<br />
Affairs, USG's Academic Assembly<br />
and <strong>University</strong> Scholars, Upcraft<br />
said.<br />
Although nothing definite has been<br />
decided, Upcra ft said the<br />
administration is concerned about the<br />
intellectual climate. He said the task<br />
force will investigate the<br />
recommendations further and hopes<br />
to have a list of concrete<br />
recommendations by the end of<br />
Spring Term.<br />
The recommendations made at this<br />
time include:<br />
o Starting more programs such as<br />
the Freshmen Seminar Program in<br />
the College of The Liberal Arts.<br />
• Providing more support for<br />
honor societies and academic clubs.<br />
• Promoting more involvement<br />
with interdisciplinary programs such<br />
as the Black Studies and Women's<br />
Studies programs.<br />
• Having more academic news<br />
rather than just politica l news in<br />
campus publications.<br />
• Starting a senior seminar<br />
program to help seniors integrate the<br />
knowledge they have acquired.<br />
• Promoting aesthetic programs<br />
such as the Artist Series.<br />
o Improving the tenure and<br />
promotion system.<br />
• Reorganizing the advising<br />
system.<br />
• Increasing recognition of<br />
outstanding students.<br />
• Promoting and supporting more<br />
activities by the Office of Student<br />
Affairs.<br />
• Strengthening programming in<br />
terms of value development.<br />
Please see REPORT, Page 3<br />
inside<br />
• If finding a job for one person<br />
is tough, trying to find Iwo for a<br />
couple can be twice as hard...Page 4<br />
• Thirteen House members introduced<br />
a resolution yesterday<br />
calling for U.S.-Soviet negotiations<br />
aimed at a gradual reduction of<br />
nuclear armaments Page 6<br />
• North Carolina beat Georgetown<br />
63-62 last night in the NCAA<br />
basketball championship finals<br />
Page 10<br />
weather<br />
Increasing cloudiness and breezy<br />
today, high around 60 degrees.<br />
Mostly cloudy and windy with showers<br />
developing early tonight and<br />
continuing into tomorrow morning.<br />
Chance of a thunder shower, low<br />
around 44 degrees. Becoming partly<br />
cloudy and breezy tomorrow afternoon,<br />
high in the mid to upper<br />
50s.<br />
—by Mark Stunder<br />
index<br />
Business/careers..,<br />
Comics/c rossword<br />
Midweek<br />
News briefs<br />
Opinions<br />
Sports<br />
<strong>State</strong>/nation/world<br />
15<br />
14<br />
10
2—The Daily Collegian Tuesday, March 30, 1982<br />
collegian notes<br />
• <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> Students for Life will<br />
meet at 7 tonight in 308 Willard. Officers<br />
will be elected.<br />
• The Science Fiction Society will<br />
meet at 7 tonight in 219 Boucke.<br />
• The Agriculture Student Council<br />
will meet at 7 tonight in 301 Agriculture<br />
Administration Building.<br />
• Free <strong>University</strong> will sponsor "The<br />
Satisfying Vegetarian Cooking Course"<br />
at 6 tonight in S207 Human Development<br />
Building.<br />
• The bicycle division of the Outing<br />
Club will sponsor an open bicycle shop at<br />
7 tonight in 8 Intramural Building.<br />
• College Young Democrats will meet<br />
at 7:30 tonight in 318 Willard.<br />
• The Lutheran Student Parish is<br />
sponsoring a Bach's lunch with Anita<br />
Bealer at noon today in the Eisenhower<br />
Chapel. Following the half-hour recital, a<br />
reception will be held in the chapel's<br />
informal lounge. The event is free and<br />
everyone is welcome.<br />
• All new and prospective members of<br />
the Our Store Food Co-op will meet<br />
tonight at 212 E. College Ave. (in the<br />
walkway between Kranich's Jewelers<br />
and The Tavern Restaurant). Everyone<br />
is welcome to see how a co-op works.<br />
Refreshments will be served.<br />
• The Undergraduate Student Government<br />
will sponsor "Inquisition '82,"<br />
the final USG presidential and vice presidential<br />
debates, at 7 tonight in the HUB<br />
Ballroom.<br />
• The Graduate Student Association is<br />
renting <strong>University</strong> garden plots for the<br />
growing season. The cost is $7.50 per plot,<br />
and students can sign up from 1 to 4 p.m.<br />
weekdays in 305 Kern. Student identification<br />
is required.<br />
• An exhibit of books by Caribbean<br />
writers is'on display in the Black Studies<br />
Room of Pattee. The display will continue<br />
daily to the end of the term.<br />
• Volunteer Income Tax Assistance is<br />
available from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.<br />
weekdays on the HUB ground floor.<br />
• The film "How to Say No to a Rapist • Greek Week '82 is holding "Assasand<br />
Survive" will be shown during sec- sin" sign-ups in the Panhellenic/Interfond<br />
and third periods today in the HUB raternity Council Office, 203-B HUB.<br />
main lounge in coordination with Worn- . Everyone is welcome to sign up until<br />
en's Awareness Week. Friday.<br />
police log<br />
• A man told the <strong>State</strong> College Police • <strong>University</strong> Police Services received<br />
Deparment that a rape allegedly oc- a false fire alarm from the Hammond<br />
curred in a bathroom at 1000 Plaza Drive Library on Sunday night.<br />
on Saturday between midnight and 2 xhe incident is under investigation,<br />
a,m / , police said.<br />
The incident is under investigation,<br />
police said. —by Joe Kteln<br />
Several winners in Alpha Chi Omega<br />
sorority's third annual Push-up-a-thon<br />
were not mentioned in yesterday's Daily<br />
Collegian.<br />
i Phi Mu sorority won the sorority team<br />
event with 116 push-ups total. .<br />
Cindy Robinson (3rd-liberal arts) won<br />
^,<br />
] %Ss*~ -<br />
Clarification<br />
the female independent individual event<br />
with 71 push-ups.<br />
Eighth floor Sproul won the male independent<br />
team event with 723 push-ups,<br />
and Peter Placke (10th-€nvironmental<br />
engineering) won the male independent<br />
individual event with 262 push-ups. '<br />
classes Now<br />
Forming<br />
St. John's Methodist Church Tues. & Thurs. 5:30-6:30 Call Nancy 237-9232<br />
W.Beaver Ave. &S. Burrowas St. 11:00-12:00 Call Angel 865-6415<br />
Park Forest Locations:<br />
Call Kathy 238-3207<br />
Gcsncrra<br />
ALL COTTON AND CONTEMPORARY<br />
SLACKS, SWEATERS, SHIRTS<br />
MICHAELS CLOTHING CQ<br />
FRASER si. - aefltfe/jfc,<br />
MINI MALL tM T» '6f} 238-4050<br />
o*<br />
*3t* r&* *3r*+8e**3r<br />
t^V *
Report discusses intellectual climate<br />
[Continued from Page 1.<br />
In addition to the recommendations, the overall tone<br />
of the report suggests that the <strong>University</strong>'s intellectual;<br />
climate has a lot of room for improvement, Upcraft<br />
said. The report also said students lack an awareness of<br />
what educational opportunities are available for them<br />
outside the classroom.<br />
Upcraft said he thinks the problem occurs partly!<br />
because society places emphasis on success, and most' <strong>University</strong> students are eager to graduate and start<br />
making money in their respective fields. The <strong>University</strong><br />
attracts predominantly middle-class students who are<br />
more career-oriented than academic-oriented, he said.<br />
A member of the task force, Margo Allen, said she<br />
thinks students' concerns are not always centered on'<br />
expanding their interest.<br />
- "Students really are not concerned; they could care,<br />
less about some specific opportunities they could take'<br />
advantage of that would enhance their intellectual'<br />
horizons," said Allen, who is also academic coordinator<br />
in the Office of Special Programs and Services.<br />
<strong>University</strong> Scholar Faith McDonough (lOth-accounting)<br />
said, "The opportunity to be challenged is here, but<br />
if students want to be challenged they have to take the<br />
opportunity. Students who just want to slide by can<br />
because it is easy to do."<br />
Students are aware of the need for an education, said<br />
Robert E. Dunham,<br />
^<br />
vice president for undergraduate;<br />
studies.<br />
Dunham, who was interviewed by the task force, said,<br />
"Students are very concerned about jobs, but a university<br />
in the best sense of the word is more than just a job<br />
securing institution."<br />
: Concern for employment after graduation is very<br />
prominent, said Brian Hagenbuch (lOth-entomology). ;<br />
"A lot of people I know are just 'let's get this over with<br />
and get out and get a job.' The primary goal of a lot of.<br />
people is to get a job, and I think the budget constraints<br />
are partly responsible for that attitude," he said.<br />
; Dunham added, "I think we need to make students<br />
t who come here aware of the difference between high<br />
school and college, how to be a scholar, how to set their<br />
own intellectual pattern and how to get more out of<br />
college if they know what they want."<br />
UMVERSITY CALENDAR<br />
SPECIAL EVENTS<br />
Tuesday, March 30<br />
Pass/Fail<br />
CDPC seminar, Resume Preparation, 4th period, 109 Boucke.<br />
CDPC seminar, Job Search for the Non-Technical Major, 5th period, 109<br />
Boucke.<br />
CDPC seminar, Interview Skills, 6th period, 109 Boucke.<br />
Lutheran Council for Campus Ministry, "Bach's Lunch," featuring Anita<br />
Bealer, noon, Eisenhower Chapel.<br />
Colloquy meeting, 7 p.m., 320 HUB.<br />
Circle K meeting, 7 p.m., 314 Boucke.<br />
Science Fiction Society meeting, 7 p.m., 219 Boucke.<br />
<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> Students for Life meeting, 7 p.m., 308 Willard.<br />
Christian Science Organization lecture, 7:20 p.m., HUB Reading Room. Robert<br />
W. Jeffery, C.S.B., member Christian Science Board of Lectureship, on<br />
"Christ: The Light Shining In the Darkness."<br />
College Republicans meeting, 7:30 p.m., 117 Boucke.<br />
PANHEL Panel Disscussion, Women's Awareness Week — Career Awareness,<br />
7:30 p.m., HUB Gallery Lounge. ELizabeth Kelley, Alumni Fellow, speaking<br />
on careers, followed by Graduate School Panel Discussion.<br />
Tau Beta Pi tutorial sessions, 7:30 p.m., 106 Osmond.<br />
College Young Democrats meeting, 7:30 p.m., 318 Willard.<br />
Finance Club lecture, 7:30 p.m., 214 Boucke.<br />
Artists Series, The Sound of Music, 8 p.m., Schwab Aud.<br />
Phi Beta Lamba lecture, 8 p.m., 217 Willard;<br />
Campus Crusade for Christ meeting and film, "Football Fever,"<br />
Forum.<br />
However, Mark Fiorina (3rd-pre-medicine) said,<br />
''The <strong>University</strong> is very good at getting you into the area<br />
you want to be in and be happy with it. The students here<br />
seem to be more interested in a varied education and<br />
hot just getting a job."<br />
: To help students get a varied education and improve<br />
the intellectual climate, Chris Hopwood, president of<br />
ihe USG's Academic Assembly, said he sees the assembly's<br />
role as increasing students' awareness about what<br />
the <strong>University</strong> has to offer.<br />
- The assembly should advise, suggest and recommend<br />
to students what they can do to improve and enhance<br />
their education, said Hopwood, who was also interviewed<br />
by the task force.<br />
! "Students must know the assembly is here and can do<br />
its best, but students should realize they have to be<br />
responsible in their classes, studies.and majors," he<br />
said.<br />
However, students have so many opportunities that<br />
they heed some guidance to help them make their own<br />
decisions, Allen said.<br />
"There are so many things students can be involved<br />
in, and we should work harder at finding out where they<br />
have an interest," she said.<br />
Allen said part of her job is to try to keep students<br />
aware of what opportunities are available at the <strong>University</strong>;<br />
some of the time her job includes pushing and<br />
directing students to a specific area of involvement.<br />
"We can often times impose things on them, but we<br />
can't make them want to expand their intellectual<br />
horizon," she said.<br />
Also, Dunham said, "We are conce'rned about scholarship<br />
and stretching the ability of students as far as we<br />
can without reaching our limits, but so far we have not<br />
reached those limits. We have some students and others<br />
in the <strong>University</strong> community who do not want to be<br />
stretched and go beyond their intellectual ability."<br />
To help students reach their intellectual ability,<br />
faculty members should change their attitudes about<br />
teaching methodology, Allen said. If students know that<br />
professors want to teach, she said, she thinks students<br />
and faculty may have a different kind of commitment to<br />
each other.<br />
On the subject of faculty attitudes, Hopwood said he<br />
thinks faculty members should try to motivate students<br />
rather than dictating knowledge to them.<br />
8 p.m., 102<br />
Hagenbuch said when the professor involves the<br />
students in discussions he gets more out of classes and<br />
enjoys question and answer sessions. He also said he<br />
likes it when professors try to get away from technical<br />
jargon and instead talk about a subject's relevance.<br />
However, those types of attitudes do not always<br />
motivate the student enough to want to learn, Hopwood<br />
said. Students and professors need more two-way dialogue<br />
during classes.<br />
Dunham said he thinks more interaction between<br />
students and professors and an overall better environment<br />
would help the intellectual climate.<br />
In addition, Upcraft said he thinks academic advising<br />
at the <strong>University</strong> should be on a professional level such<br />
as advising already employed in the College of Business<br />
Administration and the Division of Undergraduate<br />
Studies.<br />
However, finding the best advising procedure is<br />
difficult, he said, because students need different levels<br />
Jof advising during their college career.<br />
; For instance, a freshman basically needs core advising<br />
on course selection while an upperclassman needs<br />
more professional advising on post-graduate work, he<br />
said.<br />
Dunham said he thinks the <strong>University</strong> should look at<br />
advising in terms of student needs—what students need<br />
at different stages, how to provide the options and how<br />
to make students assume responsibility to seek answers<br />
-to their questions.<br />
; Dunham said he has heard complaints from both<br />
students and faculty about advising — students complain<br />
that faculty are not available and faculty complain<br />
that students do not come in.<br />
; <strong>University</strong> Scholar Jacqueline Breines (9th-finance)<br />
said one bad thing about advising is that very few<br />
advisers will call students on their own initiative.<br />
; The <strong>University</strong> should throw out the label of advising<br />
and start all over again,'Dunham said.<br />
' Hopwood said, "Right now advising is a sham because<br />
advising should be more than just helping students<br />
choose courses."<br />
'. Advising should also make students think about what<br />
they want from their education, he said. When students<br />
enter the <strong>University</strong> they should have a strong idea of<br />
what kind of education they hope to have obtained<br />
before graduation, Hopwood said.<br />
AUTOMi WE TUESDAY<br />
Ccm^etitwe<br />
fy atueA,<br />
&t U44& Z&1&<br />
1980 Plymouth Arrow Hatchback $4950<br />
4 cylinder, automatic transmission, radio, radial tires,<br />
very clean<br />
1978 Monza 2 — 2 Hatchback $3200<br />
V-6 engine, automatic transmission, power steering,<br />
radial tires, brown with tan interior<br />
1978 Datsun Shortbed Pickup $4450<br />
5 speed transmission, 39,000 miles, step bumper, air<br />
shocks, red with black interior, extra-clean<br />
$4250<br />
1978 Datsun 200 SX<br />
5 speed transmission, stereo, power mirrors, blue with<br />
black interior<br />
1979 Datsun 280 ZX<br />
1978 Datsun 210 GX Hatchback<br />
1973 Datsun Shortbed Pickup<br />
LEITZINGER IMPORTS<br />
3220 W. College Avenue<br />
<strong>State</strong> College<br />
238-2447<br />
$9950<br />
$3450<br />
$1650<br />
w<br />
EVERY<br />
SMALL<br />
PIZZA<br />
f|f7g7 REGULARLY »3.75<br />
\J M r (no coupon necessaiy)<br />
Delivery hours;<br />
«n, r « „ 1A 4:30-lam Mon-Thurs<br />
— TODAY ONLY -<br />
434 E. College lAve. 4:30-2am Friday<br />
O^l OAf \f \ ^ noon-2am Saturday<br />
^»5 f -^4DD 12 noon-1 am Sunday<br />
A DRV der<br />
*" w»*» 3w- Gabriel<br />
.¦MYirYll- ^ ¦•«« one*wm f»«u#iugg«w>"tin tnnno» wICUvl i^^ i<br />
-nrt1L" u 1MM IMiMirtc w mil IM tow««> (HVW C *<br />
CTm rrP<br />
CU> ' r mttaiwennot mciudM Pi* r* mi. v)r* »t oireoodingoulKti SHOCKb Ol 51 HUTS<br />
See Your Favorite Service Station or Garage<br />
AUTOMOTIVE<br />
SUPPLY<br />
<strong>State</strong> College A Bellefonte<br />
238-050 1 M%&. 355-5497<br />
J5EH<br />
COMPANV<br />
The Daily Collegian Tuesday, March 30, 1982—3<br />
%\?*^ y \l h<br />
^s JlrTi<br />
\&Jto> « O" f Sowers ^^<br />
J?37-W3~ 5min. pick up parking<br />
PUBLIC AUCTION<br />
Saturday, Apri l 3, 1982 - 10:00 A.M.<br />
THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY<br />
SALVAGE WAREHOUSE<br />
UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA 16802<br />
Don Heggestaller and Lewis Gorman, Auctioneers<br />
All items are subject to prior sales to <strong>University</strong> deparments. All Items will be sold "as<br />
Is." Terms — cash. The <strong>University</strong> will not be responsible for the security of Items after<br />
the auctioneer has awarded the Items to the highest bidder. The <strong>University</strong> reserves the<br />
right to reject any or all bids for the automobiles.<br />
OFFICE EQUIPMENT<br />
Manual typewriters; Monroe calculators; adding machines; Remington 25 elect,<br />
typewriter; NCR cash register; 3 M 400 microfilm reader & printer; Dlebold 4 dr. legal-size<br />
file safe; 2 ea. 10 dr., 3x5 card flies; steel desks; stencil files; IBM magnetic tape selectric<br />
typewriter; 2 ea. Wrlghtline 4 dr. tab card files; AB Dick 167 duplicator; AB Dick offset<br />
master maker (Model'675); IBM card verifier (Model 59); Xerox telecopier; 3 M Thermofax<br />
copier; AB Dick 530 mimeograph; AB: Dick 226 Fluid Duplicator; Gestetner 366<br />
mimeograph; AB Dick 455 mimeograph; fluor., flexible-arm, clamp-on desk lamps.<br />
POWER TOOLS & EQUIPMENT<br />
14" LeBlond engine lathe; Van Norman, model 12 Vertical milling machine; Pratt &<br />
Whitney jig borer; 14" South Bend lathe; 9" South Bend lathe; Hobart 40-amp arc welder;<br />
Haban 5'sickle bar mower.<br />
MISCELLANEOUS EQUIPMENT<br />
Beseler Glossomatt 1217 KH. print dryer; Coxco Model SP 110 cassette tape slide projector;<br />
Pako 26W print dryer; IBM 1402 card punch; IBM 1401; processing unit; IBM 2415<br />
magnetic tape unit & control; IBM 114 disk drive; 2 ea. 6' Crane cast iron gate valves; cast<br />
iron radiator; fluorescent light fixtures; misc. gages; various 3-ph. elect motors; wooden<br />
chairs; soda-acid s/steel fire extinguishers; steel doors; wooden doors with formica<br />
tops; transit with tripod; H & C wye levels with tripods; K & E Dumpy level with tripod; 4<br />
ea. Akron 3-deck elect, ovens; s/steel food serving line equipment; centrifugal blowers;<br />
Meyers model SM4 spreader; two-wheel trailer w/mounted compartment.<br />
AUTOMOBILES & TRUCKS<br />
1972 Chev. C-50, 16,000 GVW Truck with a 12-ft. alum, box van; 1970 Chev. Custom 20<br />
Sportsman 12-passengervan with a V-8 engine; 2 ea. 1977 Ply. Volare sedans; 1 ea. 1976<br />
Old. sedan; 2 ea. 1978 Chev. Chevettea; 1 ea. 1978 Dodge Aspen; 1 ea. 1978 AMC Concord;<br />
2 ea. 1979 Chrysler Newports; 1 ea. 1980 Chev. Citation; 1 ea. Chev Impala.<br />
THE VEHICLES WILL BE SOLD AT 12:00 NOON<br />
BIDDERS MUST REGISTER AND RECEIVE A NUMBER TO BID<br />
daily Collegian<br />
Phil Gutis<br />
Editor<br />
Board of<br />
Managing Editor<br />
Editorial Editor<br />
Associate Editorial Editor<br />
Assistant Editorial Editor<br />
Assistant Managing Editor/Night Operations<br />
Assistant Managing Editor/Campus<br />
Assistant Managing Editor/Town<br />
Assistant Managing Editor/Features<br />
Campus Editor<br />
Town Editor<br />
News Editors<br />
Sports Editor<br />
Assistant Sports Editors<br />
Arts Editor<br />
Assistant Arts Editor<br />
Photo Editor<br />
Assistant Photo Editor<br />
Contributing Editor<br />
Graphics Editor<br />
Wire Editor<br />
Copy Editors<br />
Managing Editor/Weekly Collegian<br />
Assistant Managing Editor/Weekly Collegian<br />
Board of Opinion<br />
Tuesday, March 30, 1982<br />
Vol. 82, No. 143<br />
©1982 Collegian Inc.<br />
Paul Rudoy<br />
Business Manager<br />
Editors<br />
Sharon Taylor<br />
Board of Managers<br />
Assistant Business Manager<br />
Office Manager<br />
Assistant Office Manager<br />
District Sales Managers<br />
National Ad Manager<br />
Assistant National Ad Manager<br />
Advertising Training Manager<br />
Co-op Managers<br />
Marketing Manager<br />
Creative Director<br />
Layout Coordinator<br />
John Allison<br />
Anne Conners<br />
Suzanne Cassidy<br />
David Medzerian<br />
Iris Naar<br />
Mark Featherstone<br />
Diane Rowel I<br />
Jenny Clouse<br />
Lisa Hill<br />
Jackie Martlno<br />
Leslie Zuck<br />
Ron Gardner<br />
Keith Groller<br />
Pete Waldron<br />
Elaine Wetmore<br />
Debbie Krivoy<br />
Renee Jacobs<br />
Barb Parkyn<br />
Paula Froke<br />
Vlada Raicevic<br />
Maryann Hakowski<br />
Dina DeFabo<br />
K.E. Fishman<br />
Mary Beth Horwath<br />
Becky Jones<br />
Karen McManiman<br />
Margaret Ann Walsh<br />
Laurie Penco<br />
Ellyn Harley<br />
Tim Beidel<br />
Cindy Cox<br />
Eugene Grygo<br />
Mike Poorman<br />
John Schlander<br />
Judy Smith<br />
Michael Conklin<br />
Colleen Waters<br />
Susan Ingrahm<br />
Jon Kaplan<br />
Bill Overmyer<br />
Owen Landon<br />
Donna Streletzky<br />
Monique Rura<br />
Chip Schneller<br />
Jodi Shubln<br />
Sue Largman<br />
Tracy Meyer<br />
Barry Reichenbaugh<br />
Have we got some ihe rnllaniitin<br />
news for you- d-iy OOIiegian
¦<br />
What you'l need to know<br />
By JIM WICKIZER<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
Now is the time to start filling out<br />
all those applications and sending out<br />
resumes.<br />
Although the <strong>University</strong>'s Career<br />
Development and Placement Center,<br />
408 Boucke, does not recommend that<br />
students pay to have their resumes<br />
prepared, a variety of firms are available<br />
for students who either, don't<br />
have the time or the confidence to do<br />
it themselves.<br />
7 would like (customers) to bring their<br />
transcripts. Some students don't know how<br />
marketable their courses are. '<br />
Dick Hess, associate director of the<br />
center, said there is no single correct<br />
way to write a resume.<br />
"There are as many formats of<br />
resume writing as there are people,"<br />
Hess said.<br />
Students who are unsure about how<br />
to prepare a resume should see a<br />
career counselor for help — free of<br />
charge, he said. The center offers<br />
resume workshops fourth period on<br />
Tuesdays and sixth period on Thursdays<br />
at 108 Boucke, as well as by<br />
individual appointments.<br />
The center does not recommend a<br />
particular private resume services to<br />
students, he said. But such services do<br />
exist.<br />
' Linda Price, area director for Best<br />
Resume Services, 103 E. Beaver Ave.,<br />
said Best Resume offers 20 years of<br />
experience as well as marketing professionals<br />
and researchers to a student<br />
searching for a job.<br />
"We're a marketing firm. We market<br />
a person's assets against their<br />
liabilities. We're selling a product —<br />
that person," she said,<br />
Best Resume Services, established<br />
in <strong>State</strong> College four years ago as the<br />
first resume service in the area, will<br />
take a client all the way through a job<br />
search, Price said.<br />
"First, the student will go through a<br />
one-hour interview with me," Price<br />
said. "You don't have to bring anything<br />
to the interview."<br />
On the basis of the interview, Price<br />
and her co-workers develop the resume.<br />
.<br />
Best Resume Services offers a special<br />
student package that includes 50<br />
copies of a typeset resume for $69.95,<br />
Price said.<br />
"No financial commitment is<br />
s — Ruth Aitken<br />
of Aitken Associates<br />
needed until you've proofed their resume,<br />
and you're happy with it,"she<br />
said.<br />
The company works with' students<br />
from a variety of majors, many of<br />
whom later refer their friends to the<br />
service.<br />
"Fifty percent of our business is<br />
client referrals," she said. "We built<br />
our success on our service."<br />
Ruth Aitken of Aitken Associates<br />
(formerly House of Resumes), 124 S.<br />
Patterson St., said she charges a $50<br />
base fee plus $25 a page to construct a<br />
resume. The base fee includes a free<br />
rough draft and consultation.<br />
If student writes the draft under her<br />
instructions, the fee is $25 less, she<br />
said. A student doesn't need to bring<br />
anything with them when they come<br />
for an interview with her.<br />
In addition to the base and per page<br />
fees, Aitken will type and moderately<br />
critique a resume for $12.50.<br />
Aitken, a 10-year veteran of resume<br />
writing and author of a book about<br />
resume writing, said many students<br />
are not aware of a resume's worth to a<br />
potential employer. .<br />
"I would like them to bring their<br />
transcripts," she said, "Some stu-<br />
Center to begin programs<br />
for 2-career couples<br />
By REBECCA CLARK<br />
Collegian Staff Writer .<br />
If finding a job for one person is tough, trying<br />
to look for a couple can be twice as hard.<br />
Questions such as: "Can we both find a job in<br />
the same location?"; "What area of the country<br />
do we want to work in?"; "Do we want to get<br />
married right after graduation?"; and "If we<br />
get. married, when do we want to start a<br />
family?" have arisen for John Dreyfuss (10thnuclear<br />
engineering) and Darlene Buscaglio<br />
(12th-communications studies) and other dual<br />
career couples at the <strong>University</strong>.<br />
According to a recent article in Journal of<br />
College Placement, the number of dual career<br />
couples is increasing — possibly because the<br />
number of working women has increased by 205<br />
percent since 1947.<br />
- After graduation, Dreyfuss wants to go into<br />
"research either in private industry or government<br />
while Buscaglio will be enrolled in<br />
Georgetown <strong>University</strong>'s paralegal program<br />
from September to January.<br />
•They have discussed the problems and future<br />
effects of having different careers, but stressed<br />
they have not fully thought out all the questions<br />
about having dual careers "because things are<br />
still so up in the air."<br />
Although they do not want to give up their<br />
individual career goals, neither Dreyfuss or<br />
Buscaglio thinks the situation will pose a problem<br />
because after getting experience, each<br />
hopes to be marketable in any geographic area.<br />
"We still have a long way to go because we<br />
both need experience in the careers we've<br />
chosen," Buscaglio said. "Because I have the<br />
chance to make a good living and use my<br />
education, I'm going to make the best of it."<br />
And Dreyfuss said, "At this point in time, we<br />
are striking the happy medium —rather than<br />
splitting up, we are letting each other follow our<br />
separate career paths and goals.<br />
"I'm taking a chance of letting her slip away,<br />
but she needs to get a feel for her career — she<br />
needs to get assertiveness. Experience is the<br />
key. Once we both get experience; once we both<br />
get more of a taste of what our career is like,<br />
there is a good chance that we will get back<br />
together," he said.<br />
Some problems with having to deal with the<br />
dual career situation — such as being separated<br />
when a mate works in a different location,<br />
deciding between individual career goals and<br />
career goals as a couple and deciding when to<br />
start a family — seem to be inevitable.<br />
To help students deal with these problems,<br />
the Career Development and Placement Center<br />
had a program last term in which career<br />
counselors helped student couples anticipate<br />
possible problems that might result from dual<br />
careers and advised couples on how to deal with<br />
those problems.<br />
Counselors Mary Surridge and Mark Guido<br />
started counseling student couples in dual careers<br />
last term and will hold dual careers<br />
seminars beginning today.<br />
The program will start with a dual career<br />
"Job Search" at 1 p.m., followed by "Employer's<br />
Perspective" at 2:30 p.m. and "Couples'<br />
Perspectives" which will start at 4 p.m. All<br />
three programs will be held in the HUB Gallery<br />
lounge.<br />
"We try to get the couples to eliminate the<br />
idea that they both will find jobs that are<br />
suitable and that will be in the same geographical<br />
location," Surridge said.<br />
Guido said although counselors try to help<br />
student couples deal with dual career conflicts,<br />
no concrete questions and answers exist about<br />
what students can do when they are faced with<br />
dual career problems.<br />
Instead, Guido said, "We have students learn<br />
about the issues and develop strategies on how<br />
to deal with them."<br />
The best way for student couples to approach<br />
these problems is to tell each oilier what they<br />
want in a job, where they want to live and how<br />
they feel about family matters such as when to<br />
start a family, Surridge and Guido said.<br />
"We stress that each couple has to determine<br />
for themselves how they will deal with their<br />
problem," Surridge said. "Both students should<br />
understand what each is willing to compromise<br />
in choosing a job — how much each is willing to<br />
give up and how they are going to approach<br />
Employers."<br />
B s a<br />
dents don't know how marketable<br />
their courses are,"<br />
Vickie Eschelman, typist and resume<br />
interviewer for A-l Copy service,<br />
224 Fraser St., said they'll do<br />
anything with a resume that a customer<br />
wants.<br />
"We'll do your resume from scratch<br />
if you don't know what you want,"<br />
Eschelman said, "We'll type, copy,<br />
edit, interview you, everything."<br />
The firm charges $50 to do a resume<br />
from scratch, but the resume could<br />
cost as much as $100.<br />
"Whatever we do with your resume,<br />
the charge is for the time it takes us,"<br />
she said. "We guarantee our work.<br />
"We make all kind of corrections<br />
free of charge," she said. "Some<br />
places will print it with mistakes;<br />
nothing gets out of here unless it's<br />
right."<br />
If the resume only needs to be<br />
printed, the service can have it ready<br />
in two hours. The cost: 6 to 8 cents a<br />
page to have it copied on quality<br />
paper!<br />
Bill Brickley, jobwork supervisor<br />
for Collegian Productions, 7 Carnegie,<br />
said a student needs a rough draft, of<br />
his resume in order for the Collegian<br />
to print it.<br />
"We don't feel we're qualified to<br />
advise students as to the format they<br />
should choose for their resume, 1 '<br />
Brickley said. -*<br />
Collegian Productions charges $15<br />
for the first typeset page and $10 for<br />
the second page.<br />
"This week for the first time we'll<br />
be able to offer students 50 copies of<br />
their type-set resume for only $22," he<br />
said.<br />
One thing the Collegianservice does<br />
differently than most services is that<br />
it emphasizes in bold letters the student's<br />
best qualifications, he said.<br />
"The interviewer can clearly see<br />
what you think your best qualifications<br />
are," he said. "It's neat, orderly<br />
and professionally done."<br />
Brenda Dumomd, assistant manager<br />
of Kinko's Copy Center, 256<br />
E.Beaver Ave., said they charge $2.50<br />
a page for resumes.<br />
Kinko's has a l-cent-per-copy deduction<br />
after 100 copies.<br />
Kinko's offers an unlimited number<br />
of formats and makes corrections<br />
instantly at no charge, she said.<br />
Photo by Nathan Lador<br />
^Counselors Mary Surridge and Mark Guido of the Career Development and Placement Center discuss plans for an upcoming program. The two<br />
began counseling student couples In dual careers last term and will hold dual careers seminars beginning today<br />
; Dreyfuss said if two people are meant to be<br />
together, they will work out dual career questions.<br />
; However, Dreyfuss said that as graduation<br />
nears, decisions get tougher to make.<br />
- "As time draws near, things get desperate,"<br />
he said. "If we are sure of marriage, we are<br />
willing to sacrifice our career goals and geographical<br />
preference."<br />
; Some students who are confined to a geographic<br />
area because of personal commitment<br />
fear that employers might not consider them<br />
for jobs. So, they find it difficult to decide how .<br />
much to tell potential employers about their<br />
geographical perferences and personal involvement,<br />
Surridge said.<br />
Because it is illegal for employers to ask job<br />
applicants about their marital status, recruiters<br />
who come to the <strong>University</strong> rarely ask<br />
What employers want to know<br />
By JIM WICKIZER<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
Landing a full-time job after graduation<br />
requires preparation and<br />
thought in order to sell oneself to<br />
potential employers.<br />
Linda Price, area director for Best<br />
Resume, 103 E. Beaver Ave,, said a<br />
student should analyze the company<br />
he or she wants to work for to see what<br />
its interested in.<br />
"Ninety percent of the companies<br />
want to be impressed, only 10 percent<br />
read for- qualifications," she said,<br />
"Sometimes it's very difficult for a<br />
person to pick out his best qualifications<br />
and (he or she) should seek<br />
professional help.<br />
"Grade point average is the not the<br />
most important factor to getting a<br />
job; that's not all the employer is<br />
interested in," she said. "From the<br />
time.you're born, you're developing a<br />
product."<br />
Employers are interested in motivated<br />
people, such as students who<br />
worked their way through college, she<br />
said. .<br />
Experience gained through a summer!<br />
job in a .related field makes a<br />
person more marketable as well, she<br />
said.<br />
"We've bad an increase of students<br />
coming in for resumes for summer<br />
jobs," she said: "A lot of people in top<br />
management positions worked their<br />
way through school and they appreciate<br />
the fact that the person worked<br />
hard." she said.<br />
"An employer doesn't care what<br />
your grade point average is as long as<br />
you paid for your education," she<br />
said. "They'll take someone with a 2.0<br />
or 2.5 grade point average over a 3.0 if<br />
he's worked part-time in the summer<br />
and shows that he's motivated.<br />
"A lot of companies just want a<br />
degree," she said. "They want to<br />
train people themselves."<br />
Dick Hess, associate director of the<br />
Career Development and Placement<br />
Center, 408 Boucke, said the top 50<br />
companies in the country might have<br />
similar employement placement patterns,<br />
but it is hard to try to isolate<br />
them.<br />
- These companies look at the<br />
strength of the individual compared to<br />
the strength of the j ob, he said. "An<br />
'<br />
employer tries to get at your interests<br />
and skUlaand then tries to relate them<br />
to the prime success' factors of his<br />
company."<br />
. "Employeers look at each individual,"<br />
Hess said, "They can't have rank<br />
and order to them." '•<br />
And Ruth Aitken, of Aitken Associates,<br />
124 S. Patterson St., said most<br />
students need a, good resume to get a<br />
job, but they're confused * length, he's concerned with content,"<br />
shesaid.<br />
!<br />
To keep up with marketing trends,<br />
Aitken surveyed 152 recruiters duringWinter<br />
Term 1980 to ask what<br />
they looked for in a resume.<br />
"Only 40 percent said they prefer'ed<br />
one-page resumes, while the other 60<br />
percent said they preferred two-pages<br />
or more," she said.<br />
about what Price said students used to em-<br />
to put in a resume/<br />
phasize activities on resumes, but<br />
"The one-page resumerecommend' they don't anymore.<br />
ed by most texts and - professional . "It's now what you can do.for the<br />
"Grade point average is the not the most<br />
important factor to getting a job; that's not .all<br />
the employer is interested in. From the time<br />
you're bornr you're developing a product '<br />
students about marriage plans, Surridge said.<br />
But sometimes recruiters will ask similar questions<br />
such as: "Is there anything that would<br />
prevent you from taking a job? "<br />
Although businesses are not establishing programs<br />
to help entry-level dual career couples<br />
find jobs in the same area, they have become<br />
aware that problems of graduating dual career<br />
couples do exist, Guido said.<br />
"But there is not a real move to ways of<br />
helping couples to live in the same geographical<br />
area," Guido said.<br />
; Even though Guido said employers have not<br />
—Linda Price, area director for Best Resume<br />
resume consultants is not the best for<br />
job seekers," she said. .<br />
"The standard advice job-seeking<br />
students hear at this time of year is,<br />
keep the resume short — one page if<br />
possible," Aitken said. "That's not<br />
what I tell my clients, though." ,<br />
Aitken, whose own resume runs six<br />
pages, said it's a myth that prospective<br />
employers wiD frown on longer<br />
resumes. She said that although resumes<br />
must look good, be well-organized<br />
and easy to read, there must be<br />
enough in them to tell employers the<br />
important things about applicants.<br />
. "In most cases,, an employees<br />
doesn't know what he .wants until he<br />
sees-it," she said. "People are programmed<br />
to believe there's just one<br />
way to write a resume." -<br />
Besides, she said, "Very few job<br />
seekers can tell useful things about<br />
themselves in one page: Maybe you<br />
can get away with a one-pager if<br />
you've just graduated in a technical<br />
field where there is a strong demand<br />
for your skills. But If you're in a field<br />
like human services, I wouldn't bet on ;<br />
it.<br />
"An employer is not concerned with<br />
The Daily Collegian<br />
Tuesday, March 30<br />
company," she said, "It's very competitive<br />
out there, A lot of people are<br />
on the streets because they don't know<br />
what employeers want,"<br />
A person with military experience<br />
who goes on to college and receives a<br />
degree is the top-of*the-line recruit,<br />
Price said.<br />
Aitken had this advice for the newly<br />
graduated job seekers: "Nobody can<br />
do a better job.on your resume than<br />
you. The tricks are to study * various<br />
examples for design, content arid format<br />
and to select descriptive words<br />
appropriate for your objective and<br />
professionally relevant experiences.<br />
"Then draft and type until you<br />
achieve a pleasing resume which feels<br />
good and is an honest representation<br />
of your past."<br />
Aitken said it' takes a student an<br />
average of 15 to 20 hours to write a<br />
good resume and suggested these tips<br />
when writing a resume:<br />
"Make sure your resume is easy to<br />
read, that it follows a logical order, it<br />
is selling your degree and that your<br />
degree comes closest to your career<br />
objectives/.' she said.<br />
ployees, they have begun to help their more<br />
established and executive employees' spouses<br />
find jobs when relocation occurs, he said.<br />
' ; According to a recent article in Time magazine,<br />
several executive relocation services are<br />
how helping executive dual career couples find<br />
jobs in the same geographic area as well as find<br />
. new homes for them.<br />
: Even though these companies try to help<br />
relocated executives' mates find jobs, Guido<br />
said, companies are moving slowly in setting up<br />
programs to help established and entry-level<br />
dual career couples.<br />
However, because the trend is toward dual<br />
made a "real move" to help couples, some have<br />
set up an informal help extension service that [ careers, Guido said, businesses are beginning<br />
helps spouses of entry-level employers find jobs to deal with the problems of dual couples and<br />
in the same area.<br />
the future "is hopeful" that businesses will<br />
' Although most companies have not set up continue to deal with the problems of dual<br />
formal programs to help their entry-level em-> career couples.<br />
% '
t:<br />
LENI BARCH/LEE FACETTI<br />
Financial Aid, Calendar Conversion, and<br />
Collective Student Action is of utmost importance<br />
to you, as a student, and therefore forms<br />
the basis of the BARCH/FACETTI platform.<br />
Students must vocalize their concern for<br />
financial aid reductions. At the same time we<br />
must expand our options in coping with reduced<br />
financial aid. BARCH/FACETTI has already<br />
laid the groundwork for instituting<br />
alternatives by: implementing an ongoing jobs<br />
file, negotiating with the Downtown Businessmen's<br />
Association, sponsoring a mentorship<br />
program between Alumni and students, and<br />
creating a financial aid review committee.<br />
Students' concerns over the Calander Conversion<br />
can be recognized and vocalized to the<br />
Board of Trustees through the U.S.G. President.<br />
A review board will be established for<br />
assessing the viability of a waiver system for<br />
those caught in the transition, the impact on<br />
the educational quality at P.S.U., as well as, the<br />
logistical problems that may arise for handicapped<br />
students and others.<br />
An enrollment of 30,000 students at P.S.U.<br />
can constitute a significant coalition in.achieving<br />
student goals within the <strong>University</strong>, <strong>State</strong><br />
College, <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania, and America. U.S.G.<br />
must act as a vehicle for articulating student<br />
issues within the larger context of economic<br />
and political reality. U.S.G. can be that vehicle<br />
through BARCH/FACETTI by assessing and<br />
addressing those issues affecting the entire<br />
student body. These interests are, in many<br />
cases, shared with the Administration, Faculty,<br />
and Borough Officials. U.S.G. collectively with<br />
other organizations must develop and<br />
strengthen the ties with these factions.<br />
Through Cooperation and not confrontation,<br />
our goals can be recognized.<br />
Vote for a team that has worked for your<br />
interests in the oast!<br />
VOTE BARCH/FACETTI<br />
Fraternity<br />
JOSEPH T. CLOUSE<br />
I believe that it is important for Fraternities to maintain a close<br />
relationship with as many <strong>University</strong> activities as possible ... especially<br />
the Undergraduate Student Government. Since fraternities<br />
make up a major portion of <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> students, it is essential to be<br />
well represented in any area that can affect us, whether it be positive<br />
or negative. Above all, I am a God-Fearing American citizen who<br />
believes In the American way of life; and I go to The Den on Tuesdays<br />
and the Skellar on Fridays.<br />
JON DAVID McCULLOUGH<br />
EXPERIENCE, It is an essential element when serving the students<br />
as a USG senator, Throughout this past year, my work as a senator has<br />
involvd'd me with SOFAR as an area coordinator. I've also worked on<br />
the Calendar Conversion. Communications Committee to better<br />
inform students of the upcoming change. I have dedicated myself to<br />
the fight against financial aid reductions and to a smooth calender<br />
conversion. Now I need your help to continue my work FOR YOU!!!<br />
MARK NAIDOFF * ,<br />
As Town senator, I've worked to represent student needs. I'm one<br />
of the Business Departments Board of Directors, a member of police<br />
services, political affairs and <strong>University</strong> Concert Committee. This<br />
broad range of experience enables me to best serve the students.<br />
As Fraternity senator, I'll focus on representing the specific<br />
concerns of my constituents, such as calendar conversion and<br />
financial aid. Because of my experience and dedication within USG,<br />
I'm the most qualified candidate for Fraternity senator.<br />
MICHAEL PAUL<br />
Hello, my name is Michael Paul and I would like to be one of the<br />
next USG Senators from the Fraternity District. I am a fourth term<br />
Business Administration major. Located at Skull House I will always<br />
be available for your input. Financial Aid, Teaching Assistants and the<br />
Semester Change are all areas where we can make a difference if we<br />
work together. Vote March 31 and April 1.<br />
Town<br />
RICHARD ANTHONY GARCIA<br />
As a Student Senator, I would like to serve as a go-between for the<br />
represented student township constituents and the U.S.G., to be<br />
accessible to hear their complaints and Ideas and at the same time<br />
promote the <strong>University</strong>'s Undergraduate Student Government and Its<br />
organizational policies to them.<br />
ROSS KATCHMAN<br />
The biggest problem with the USG Town Senate is a lack of<br />
communication between senators and their constituents. As a member<br />
of OTIS (Organization for Town Independent Students), I believe I<br />
have a good understanding of the problems and needs of town<br />
students. I hope to make the Town Senate a more visible and active<br />
organization that speaks for the town student population instead of<br />
just sixteen individual senators.<br />
SCOTT M. KELLEY<br />
—The problem with the present USG is that its perceived as a<br />
political organization, actually it's a service organization.<br />
—More time and research must be spent before the calendar<br />
conversion issue can be decided.<br />
—Financial aid cuts fundamentally unfair — USG must still voice the<br />
needs of the students opposition to them.<br />
—Pattee library should have longer hours to fulfill the students needs.<br />
—Finally, USG, needs more involvement so it's possible to use its<br />
power to meet the demands of the students.<br />
DANIEL R. KWEDER<br />
I will maintain close contact with my constituents as an accessible,<br />
and effective liaison between the town area students and the<br />
USG. While promoting the usefulness of USG for the town area<br />
students.<br />
Above all, through my work and my vote, I shall emphasize the<br />
complaints, concerns, and opinions of the town area students.<br />
The USG Is the students government. With your help it will work<br />
better for youll!<br />
JOHN J. LOMANNO<br />
Being a student counselor I am aware of the many problems that<br />
confront the <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> Student. I feel that students living off campus<br />
are not adequately represented. Furthermore I feel that many of the<br />
students are unaware of the beneficial activities the Undergraduate<br />
Student Government has to offer. Upon being elected I will be an<br />
accessible liaison between the Undergraduate Student Government<br />
and the off campus student.<br />
LAURA W. MORRISON<br />
Since the town area Is much more diverse and lacks the unification<br />
that the dorm areas possess, the need for a strong senator is<br />
essential. I want the students to know who their senators are, what<br />
they are doing, and to be able to use them as their link into the student<br />
government. Because I have been secretary for the East Resident<br />
Association for the past year, I understand how the governmental<br />
system here at <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> operates; therefore, I believe I am qualified<br />
for the position and will able to represent the students quite<br />
effectively.<br />
MARTY NORCINI<br />
The senate needs a creative, spirited voice faithful to promoting a<br />
better <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> atmosphere. Being a four-year veteran of the air<br />
force, I have developed qualities necessary to the office of town<br />
senator: responsibility and leadership. I am sure that my professionalism<br />
and devotion to the senate will be beneficial to the entire <strong>Penn</strong><br />
<strong>State</strong> community.<br />
q~pmm w TMffl<br />
President/Vice-President<br />
JIM KRAUSSISTEVE LUNGER ANDY LEISNERIBOB NOLEN EMIL PARVENSKY/JIM McJUNKIN<br />
USG is a student service organization, first<br />
and foremost.<br />
USG is a representative/reactive' student<br />
group, second.<br />
USG can be better; to be the best student<br />
government, student leaders have to mold<br />
these two aspects of student government<br />
together effectively. Jim Krauss and Steve<br />
Lunger can do that.<br />
(1) Breakdowns in communications, both<br />
internally and externally (i.e. a lack of<br />
student Input).<br />
. (2) A lack of a formal organizational<br />
pattern, structure, or guidelines.<br />
(3) A lack of perceived credibility among<br />
students and the administration.<br />
All of these poblems have plagued USG in<br />
past years. It's time for a change! It's time for<br />
someone to do something about these problems.<br />
KRAUSS/LUNGER can make the difference<br />
between a floundering organization and<br />
an effective, representative student service<br />
government.<br />
For too long, USG has been a single issue<br />
organization. USG must avoid haphazardly<br />
diverting valuable resources to these personal<br />
whims without necessary student support.<br />
Many of these situations arise due to a lack<br />
of continuity in the personnel of USG. We'll<br />
strive to get more freshmen and sophomores<br />
involved, so USG can maintain certain levels of<br />
underclass participation. '<br />
Both Jim Krauss and Steve Lunger are<br />
qualified, experienced, and ready to serve the<br />
student community. We're ready to serve, now<br />
we need YOU to give us an opportunity!<br />
VOTE FOR JIM KRAUSS AND STEVE LUNGER<br />
FOR USG!!!!!!<br />
Four major goals of the Leisner-Nolen administration<br />
are; forming a task force of concerned<br />
<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> 'students, establishing a<br />
General Assembly of student organizations,<br />
dealing with all facets of higher education<br />
cutbacks, and conducting a fund raiser to<br />
benefit Pattee Library.<br />
The Task Force, which already has a potential<br />
50 members, will serve as a pool of volunteer<br />
manpower.. They will be the backbone of<br />
all future USG endeavors, the success of which<br />
will depend on them. They will also serve as a<br />
form of Public Relations for USG, something<br />
that is sorely needed.<br />
The General Assembly will be composed of<br />
all registered student organizations at <strong>Penn</strong><br />
<strong>State</strong>. The Assembly will meet once a term and<br />
will serve as a forum for various viewpoints, as<br />
well as a place for organizations to solicit<br />
membership.<br />
Our administration will continue to fight<br />
education aid cutbacks. Just as importantly,<br />
we will work to educate students on the effect<br />
of cutbacks and how to cope with them. We<br />
will also solicit more scholarships from businesses,<br />
since it is in their interest to do so.<br />
Finally, we will set up a USG scholarship fund.<br />
A fourth goal of our administration will be to<br />
hold a fund raiser for Pattee Library. The library<br />
is something we all have in common and it's<br />
continued well being is to all our interests.<br />
Andy Leisner and Bob Nolen are the only<br />
alternative to a tired and ineffective USG. Join<br />
us and together we will make it work.<br />
Senators<br />
DEBBIE RIEBMAN<br />
USG is only as effective as we make it. As a Senator for the past<br />
two years, I have seen the highs and lows of student government. USG<br />
reached a high by awakening students to financial aid cuts. I think<br />
USG can go much higher. I will work as a Senate leader to smooth the<br />
transition after elections and to motivate new Senators to work with<br />
me on more campus-wide issues and services.<br />
STEPHEN A. RIPP<br />
'Why am I running? Students have a limited voice in <strong>University</strong><br />
affairs. USG is the link between the student's opinions and the<br />
administration in Old Main. For two consecutive years I have worked<br />
as a USG Senator from North Halls to improve these relations, in<br />
addition, this past year I chaired a committee that solicited over 1,500<br />
summer jobs from <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> alumni.<br />
USG works, and the <strong>University</strong> will change, but we need your help.<br />
Thanks<br />
RAYMOND G. SCHAFER<br />
During my 11 terms at <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>, I have faced many of the<br />
problems that students encounter at the <strong>University</strong>. Being In an<br />
engineering discipline, I am familiar with the College of Engineering<br />
and difficulties such as scheduling courses, class size etc. In my role<br />
as a USG Town Senator, I hope to work both inside and outside the<br />
organization to help solve these and other problems that students<br />
encounter. Thanks for your consideration.<br />
LAURA SCHECTER<br />
If I am elected senator for the town area, my main concern would<br />
be getting the townspeople more involved with the student government.<br />
I would be available to listen to and try to find a solution for<br />
complaints of my constituents. A major problem seems to be CATA,<br />
the bus system, and I beleive that representatives of the student<br />
government should have seats on their board and offer input from the<br />
students point of view. I would also take an active part in any<br />
programs and try to come up with some innovative fundraising events.<br />
ERIC TENCATE SCHNATTERLY<br />
As a USG Senator I would emphasize direct student representation,<br />
seeking to promote the greatest amount of student input.<br />
Because of my past experience with the USG, serving as senator and<br />
committee member of both Transportation and the Student Appointment<br />
Review Board during the 12th Congress, I need not spend<br />
precious time for orientation, but rather can devote all effort s towards<br />
obtaining the greatest amount of relevant student issues and acting<br />
on them. Please allow me to address the issues that concern you!<br />
Centre Halls<br />
PATRICK J. BUCKLEY<br />
As member of the Federal Liaison staff of Political Affairs, I have<br />
gained valuable knowledge on how the USG functions. U elected as a<br />
senator of Centre Halls, I will use this knowledge when attending<br />
C.H.R.A. and senatorial meetings, when organizing students opinions<br />
and when representing my constituents. I am enthusiastic, hardworking,<br />
and productive — so vote and allow me to prove myself.<br />
BRAD DESCH<br />
Centre Halls we're in this together. The days of resume motivated<br />
and "donothing" senators are over. As a freshman senator from<br />
Pollock Dorms, I'm a part of the change. A leader in SOFA R Week,<br />
student rights, and student awareness I have the experience needed<br />
to serve Centre effectively. Planning to live here for three years, I have<br />
the time to help build the strongest student governent anywhere.<br />
Centre Halls we're in this together.<br />
ELIZABETH A. SAYLOR<br />
I, Beth Saylor, would continue the present effort by USG to<br />
increase its credibility and effectiveness among the students and<br />
administration. My underclassman ranking and my considerable<br />
knowledge of the workings of USG offer a small step towards this<br />
goal. I also hope to further USG's actions towards financial aid<br />
cutbacks and realize the need to increase student awwareness<br />
concerning the semester system switch. I would like to take an active<br />
role in the best interests of those students I would represent.<br />
East I<br />
KEITH E. BURRIS<br />
A senator Is a representative of the students, if I am elected, I'll be<br />
voicing your opinions and viewpoints in regard to university policies.<br />
Rather than make a promise I won't be able to keep, I'll make one that I<br />
can: so that I can represent you well, I will give of my time to make<br />
myself available to you and listen to your views. Your voice WILL be<br />
heard if vou vote for me.<br />
GREGORY J. TOUHILL<br />
From the moment that a student enters <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> he or she faces<br />
many serious problems. Financial aid cuts, the proposed change from<br />
the term system to semesters, the simultaneous departure ot the<br />
Oswald administration, and overcrowding of dorms are all problems<br />
that one faces. The student government of <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> represents<br />
everyone at <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> and Is currently working on the abovementioned<br />
issues. As a USG Senator, I would bring my experience of<br />
living In the Towers for the past three years to represent the Towers. I<br />
am against the simultaneous change of the semester system and the<br />
transition of administration. I also do not favor Reagan's aid cuts as<br />
they stand. The USG Senate Is a means by which the students can<br />
voice and act upon their complaints against <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>. I would be<br />
accessible to my constituency and try to best represent them.<br />
East II<br />
DARRYL B. DAISEY<br />
As your USG Senator this past year I have stood up for East Halls<br />
on many occasions. I feel senators should represent their areas first,<br />
then USG. I think after three years I know the people and their needs<br />
as well as how to get things done In the area.<br />
This year I have established communications with many student<br />
organizations and administrators. I feel this will make me an even<br />
more effective senator for the comlna vear.<br />
g<br />
Student Government can and must deliver<br />
more effective services to the students of <strong>Penn</strong><br />
<strong>State</strong>. With continuity and long-term planning,<br />
we can achieve this goal.<br />
We feel the new executives must address<br />
the following issues as an obligation to present<br />
and future <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> students.<br />
FINANCIAL AID — We will continue fighting<br />
aid reductions, exploring every possible avenue.<br />
RISING TUITION — The radical trend in<br />
financial aid reduction makes the upcoming<br />
tuition hike an even greater concern. We support<br />
the organizing of P.S.A.S.R.U. (<strong>Penn</strong>sylvania<br />
<strong>State</strong> Association of <strong>State</strong> Related<br />
Universities), which will finally bring effective<br />
student lobby to Harrisburg.<br />
CALENDAR CONVERSION — Through Academic<br />
Assembly, we will utilize student council<br />
aid from each college to examine the<br />
conversion's affects individually, thus breaking<br />
an insurmountable task into more easily<br />
manageable parts.<br />
MINORITY AFFAIRS — The Minority recuitment/retention<br />
system at <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> is a farce.<br />
We must promote <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> to minority<br />
communities by actively attracting students to<br />
the university and helping them feel unalienated<br />
once here.<br />
STUDENTS RIGHTS — We will establish a<br />
Students Rights Committee to investigate<br />
students' accusations of academic violations,<br />
and see that appropriate action is taken.<br />
INTERNAL AFFAIRS — To provide effective<br />
student services, U.S.G. must increase internal<br />
communication between ALL branches of student<br />
government.<br />
LONG-TERM PLANNING — U.S.G. must<br />
formulate strong, consistent long-term goals<br />
concerning perpetual issues, e.g. tuition, financial<br />
aid, minority, recruitment/retention, and<br />
student/administration relations, which every<br />
U.S.G. administration must deal with.<br />
<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> students must decide, for themselves,<br />
what issues are crucial and who will<br />
take proper action. THE DECISION IS YOURS<br />
VOTE Parvensky/McJunkin<br />
DONALD L. DAVIS<br />
During my first year here at <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong> I have grown<br />
concerned and interested in the problems and relationships of the<br />
students at the college. I have tried to do my part to enrich life here at<br />
<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> as an active member of a number of student organizations<br />
such as WDFM, WEHR and the Race Relations Board. I have become .<br />
involved in many phases of student life here at <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>. I am also a<br />
member of the Black Scholars program and have participated in many<br />
of the special activities and programs here such as the IFC Dance<br />
Marathon and Brotherhood Day preparation. Not only am I well<br />
acquainted with the various functions and branches of the USG but<br />
I'm a humanist who feels that government should work for the<br />
individual in society as well as the group or broader issue. As a<br />
candidate and a student I will work for you, with you and never in spite<br />
of you. Together we can Insure that USG works as an instrument for<br />
the entire university community.<br />
RONALD L. HICKS, JR.<br />
Do you know what a USG Senate is?? Many don't, thus demanding<br />
a change: a new face that is determined to expand communication to<br />
you about USG. A member of the <strong>University</strong> choirs, <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong><br />
Singers, fencing club, and Alpha Lambda Delta, and a two-year<br />
resident of East Halls, I have heard the students' needs and Intend to<br />
voice them.<br />
Bring USG to you by electing me to the USG Senate.<br />
BETH REISMAN<br />
The office of U.S.G. senator is one that carries with it the utmost in<br />
responsibility. I feel that I am a qualified, mature individual, and I will<br />
do my best to represent you the student. One of my major objectives<br />
will be to enhance the quality of campus life. My past experience<br />
includes serving my high school as Student Government President In<br />
addition to being the <strong>State</strong>n Island representative. With sincere<br />
thanks for your support, I am looking forward to serving you with great<br />
enthusiasm.<br />
ANNETTE TORCHIA<br />
My main priorities in running for the USG Senate consist of<br />
maintaining close contacts with the constituents, and making the<br />
USG's uses and services more accessable to students and their<br />
needs. My previous experience in dealing with student governments<br />
has given me valuable insight to the workings of organizations and the<br />
input required to get things done. By use of these assets acquired, I<br />
will earnestly strive to promote the best interests of the constituents<br />
of East Halls, and serve to voice their opinions and needs to the<br />
Undergraduate Student Government.<br />
East III<br />
DARNELL K. DAISEY<br />
As an East Halls Senator for the last 1Vfe years, I have agressively<br />
sought input from the student body and strongly voiced student<br />
concerns to both USG and the administration.<br />
If re-elected I would continue my efforts to improve student<br />
representation to administrative committees. I also hope to continue<br />
my role as an information source. My long experience in student<br />
government and in dealing with the administration hopefully gives me<br />
enough knowledge to answer many questions about this university.<br />
KELLI CHESTNUT<br />
As a senator, my tivst objective would be to derive a suitable<br />
alternative to the present means of submitting dorm contracts. I<br />
would also try to achieve a more personal relationship, than presently<br />
exists, between myself as a senator and the students I would<br />
represent. Already, students have come to me with their suggestions.<br />
To serve the student would be my main reason for existing. Let me<br />
work for you.<br />
i<br />
Nittany Halls<br />
CHARLES J. BLACKWELL<br />
It is my belief that the student body deserves a voice in the<br />
direction of their lives here at <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>. I believe that voice should<br />
come from one of their own kind. A fellow student who cares about<br />
their problems, someone who is tired of seeing "Joe Public" being<br />
kicked around by biased personnel. I am that voice. I feel that with the<br />
views of the students who elect me into office, all Undergraduates will<br />
be heard, all matters brought before the Senate for approval- or<br />
disapproval will be reviewed carefully, with all parties involved taken<br />
into full consideration. Don't you think it is time "YOU" were heard?<br />
THOMAS K. MILLER<br />
Establishment of an effective student lobby in Harrisburg and<br />
Washington to work not only for student aid and education but also<br />
for other vital concerns such as low-cost off-campus housing and<br />
public transportation.<br />
—A student voice in the selection of the new <strong>University</strong> President<br />
—An end to discrimination against sororities and other archaic rules<br />
and regulations<br />
—Ajatlonal solutions to dorm lines<br />
—Bntfer maintenance and facilities In Nittany.<br />
North Halls<br />
KAREN M. MOORE<br />
WE ARE ... PENN STATE. Is this familiar chant a reality or just an<br />
Ideal? Do we, the students, truly have the power to influence the<br />
decisions of the administration? I believe that the treasured voices of<br />
the students are somehow silenced, one fine example being the<br />
controversial semester switch. If I am elected senator, my goals are to<br />
inform the students of their opportunities. Come on P.S.U. students.<br />
Let's make the chant a reality.<br />
iHJUPH<br />
MATTHEW W0LF0RD/ 1<br />
ROBERT McGONIGLE<br />
Who are your senators? They re making<br />
decisions about giving away money they've<br />
made from you, but unless you belong to an<br />
interest group of some sort, you're probably<br />
not getting any of it. And you can. We believe<br />
that as President and Vice President, we<br />
should concentrate our initial efforts on smaller<br />
problems; getting your senators to go out<br />
and meet their students, finding out what<br />
those students want for their individual areas,<br />
and if feasible, getting it done for them. No<br />
USG has effectively taken that first step in<br />
recent years.<br />
If you were to see things done, even small<br />
things, you may be motivated to voice some<br />
support. That's where the power is. Bill Cluck<br />
has dealt with some critical issues: financial<br />
aid cutbacks, the calendar conversion. He has<br />
opened some doors, but he's done a lot of on<br />
his own. We would like to continue with what<br />
he's done; however, we don't look forward to<br />
turning blue -in the face talking to that brick<br />
wall called Old Main unless we thought we<br />
could get something accomplished. Without<br />
more support, we wouldn't, regardless of how<br />
right we happened to be. Old Main might be in<br />
a position to take us more seriously, though, if<br />
they thought they were listening to the students<br />
and not just USG. We really think that to<br />
get that kind of support, USG has to prove<br />
itself. Let's face it, if Rob and I couldn't prove<br />
our credibility with you students, we sure as<br />
hell couldn't prove it with Old Main. And how<br />
do we prove anything with you? Through your<br />
senators. Let's aet back to the basics.<br />
RITA Y. CHUANG<br />
My purpose for running for Senator is to act as a messenger, to<br />
bring up issues at U.S.G. meetings, that concern the students in North<br />
Halls. I would also act as a messenger between North Halls' students<br />
and <strong>University</strong> administrators. One of my goals Is to make sure that<br />
the people in North Halls are well Informed by the <strong>University</strong> regarding<br />
issues that effect them. Such issues include the semester change and<br />
financial aid cuts.<br />
Pollock Halls<br />
JOAN M. WASSIL<br />
I've gained valuable experience in the USG as an appointed<br />
Senator. I hope to continue to actively participate in the planning and<br />
* operation of programs that benefit the student body.<br />
Students are sometimes unaware of relevant issues, and I will<br />
meet them to disseminate information and to hear their needs and<br />
opinions. I strongly encourage this interchange, which will enable me<br />
to properly represent undergraduates by vocalizing and voting for<br />
their concerns.<br />
South Halls<br />
DAVID H. BRANDSCHAIN<br />
My goals are:<br />
1) to strengthen communication between USG and the student body<br />
by newsletters, open forums etc.<br />
2) to continue support of programs like;<br />
a)SOFA R — its momentum must be maintained ...<br />
b)Summer Jobs Program —students must find alternate ways to<br />
finance their education.<br />
c)Health Expo, Horizons, bus services etc. — which aid students<br />
in their daily lives at <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>.<br />
3)To ensure that Calendar Conversion is effected smoothly and with<br />
the student body's best interests considered.<br />
JOSEPH W. LENZI<br />
JOHN E. SHAVINSKY<br />
The senate of USG is dedicated to the service of the students.<br />
Furthermore, each senator must represent the feelings, attitudes, and<br />
opinions of those whom he or she represents. To that end, I do hereby<br />
announce this platform.<br />
1)To urge the administration to reassess the calendar conversion<br />
in view of the recent unrest.<br />
2)To lobby for continuing opposition to financial aid reductions.<br />
3)To provide additional student services through direct senate<br />
sponsorship.<br />
SANDRA DEE WILLIAMS<br />
If elected to the position of USG Senator, there will be ample<br />
communication between the Senate and my constituents. Currently,<br />
the USG's Secretary, I found my enthusiasm was directed more<br />
toward the position of Senator; where I could become actively<br />
involved in the various issues facing the undergraduates.<br />
I am a person of dedication; I would not be one who was "too<br />
busy" to fulfill the obligations I would have in retaining such a<br />
position.<br />
West Halls<br />
MARC WARREN WATREL<br />
USG needs to establish credibility among administrators and<br />
students. An organization establishes credibility by consistently<br />
proving to be useful and viable to whomever it serves.<br />
If re-elected, my experience as an USG senator would be useful in<br />
helping establish consistency and credibility, as I already understand<br />
the workings of USG and know what helps and hinders it.<br />
I plan to continue to oppose the financial aid reductions and I will<br />
continue to support the proposal of a USG scholarship.<br />
USG is here to help students and to be the voice of the students in<br />
the face of the administration. I can help make that voice strong and<br />
heard.<br />
ANITA DOMALIK<br />
QUALITY SHOWS ... I'm a member of USG's Academic Assembly,<br />
which works on tutoring, academics, and Calendar Conversion; I'm<br />
the Assembly's liaison to the USG Senate, a member of the Race<br />
Relations Board, .and USG Political Affairs, fighting hard against<br />
financial aid cuts. THREE ORGANIZATIONS -THREE ISSUES: Education,.Getting<br />
along with people, Economic survival — The issues<br />
West Halls cares about. This is what YOUR USG Senate should work<br />
for. It will, if you elect ANITA DOMALIK.<br />
CHARLES T. SEDLACKO<br />
As your representative, I will be receptive to all your ideas and<br />
complaints. Not only will I work hard to promote new programs to the<br />
USG, but I will also pass on and publicize all USG programs to my<br />
constituents of West Halls. I will encourage an active involvement of<br />
all students in these programs in a bold attempt to remove the<br />
alienation of the students from their government.<br />
LARRY MAKOWSKI<br />
Endorsements? Experience in PSU student politics? None. I am<br />
not running for office to add any'flashy titles to my credentials or to<br />
move up <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>'s ladder of student political success. I am<br />
running in a sincere attempt to use my past experiences and training<br />
to better inform West Halls students about what's going on in this<br />
university and voice their concerns to the USG and administration.<br />
Promises? To represent my constituency and fulfill obligations.
state/nation/wor<br />
I<br />
Parties lack majority after election<br />
By RICHARD BOUDREAUX<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) - The<br />
centrist Christian Democrats and their extreme-right<br />
challengers, both falling short of a<br />
majority in El Salvador's election, scrambled<br />
for coalition partners yesterday to govern the<br />
war-weary country.<br />
The U.S. ambassador called together leaders<br />
of all six parties that participated in Sunday's<br />
election in an apparent bid to build harmony for<br />
a common front against leftist guerrillas.<br />
The insurgents pressed their bloody siege of<br />
the city of Usulutan, 70 miles southeast of here,<br />
in one of the biggest attacks of the 2%-year-old<br />
civil war in this Central American nation. At<br />
least four soldiers were reported killed yesterday.<br />
In Washington, the Reagan administration<br />
sent a new signal on negotiations to end the<br />
conflict. Secretary of <strong>State</strong> Alexander M. Haig<br />
Jr. said the constituent assembly elected Sunday<br />
should "hold out the hand of conciliation" to<br />
guerrillas who are ready to join in the democratic<br />
process.<br />
The left boycotted the election, saying its<br />
candidates would have been risking assassination<br />
by El Salvador's right-wing "death<br />
squads."<br />
Arch-conservative Roberto d'Aubuisson said<br />
hours after the meeting with Hinton that his<br />
Republican Nationalist Alliance (ARENA ) and<br />
the four other opposition parties had agreed to a<br />
coalition, and claimed victory.<br />
"We have won! We have won!" he told a<br />
jubilant crowd at his party's headquarters.<br />
But National Conciliation Party spokesmen<br />
said no decision had been made on a coalition<br />
and said none would be until the party's 10member<br />
executive council met, possibly today.<br />
"What d'Aubuisson says is his problem," said<br />
Dr. Armando Rodriguez Eguizabal. "No decision<br />
has been taken. We haven't met. There is<br />
nothing now."<br />
D'Aubuisson claimed the opposition parties<br />
had united at noon — an apparent reference to<br />
the luncheon meeting with U.S. Ambassador<br />
Deane R. Hinton.<br />
"We are a majority and we're going to fulfill<br />
the desire of the people," d'Aubuisson said.<br />
He did not explain how such a calculation<br />
could be made or announced with only about<br />
one-fourth of the polling places reporting.<br />
The former army intelligence major promised<br />
to "respect the will of the minority" and<br />
vowed to "lead and control a government of<br />
national unity."<br />
As returns continued to come in yesterday,<br />
the major parties' shares of the vote held<br />
steady. The Christian Democrats of Jose Napoleon<br />
Duarte, president of the current U.S.backed<br />
civilian-military junta, had 40.5 percent<br />
of the nationwide tally, and ARENA had 29.2<br />
percent.<br />
Each of the two parties predicted it would<br />
form a majority coalition with one or more of<br />
the smaller conservative groups in the 60-member<br />
assembly, which is to name an interim<br />
government and write a new constitution leading<br />
to general elections, probably next year.<br />
Haig calls election a defeat for guerrillas<br />
By GEORGE GEDDA<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of <strong>State</strong><br />
Alexander M. Haig Jr. led a chorus of U.S.<br />
praise yesterday for El Salvador's national<br />
elections, declaring that the "awesome courage"<br />
of Salvadoran voters was an "undeniable<br />
repudiation" to leftist guerrillas.<br />
Haig said he is confident the new constituent<br />
assembly "will find ways to hold out the hand of<br />
conciliation" to adversaries who are prepared<br />
to take part in the democratic process.<br />
In a rare appearance in the <strong>State</strong> Department<br />
press briefing room, Haig said Sunday's results<br />
are both a military defeat for the guerrillas as<br />
well as a political repudiation.<br />
"Despite their clear intent to disrupt the<br />
elections, the guerrilla forces were, unable to<br />
shake either the people or the security forces at<br />
t<br />
wM<br />
il / * '*&&),<br />
their moment of greatest vulnerability," Haig<br />
said.<br />
Both Haig and deputy presidential press<br />
secretary Larry Speakes hailed the heavy voter<br />
turnout.<br />
"We think it is a victory for the people of El<br />
Salvador," Speakes told reporters at the White<br />
House. "In the face of strong guerrilla tactics to<br />
prevent them from going to the polls, they went<br />
out in what appears to be record numbers.<br />
"It's a failure of the guerrillas to disrupt the<br />
commitment of the people to participate in the<br />
democratic process," Speakes said.<br />
On Capitol Hill, House Majority Leader Jim<br />
Wright, D-Texas, said the heavy voter turnout<br />
proves beyond a doubt that the terrorists and<br />
the guerrillas do not speak for the people of El<br />
Salvador.<br />
"We should call upon the guerrillas to lay<br />
down their arms and join the brave people of El<br />
V ^ LJF<br />
V"*<br />
t<br />
AP Laserphoto<br />
Congressmen Mickey Edwards, R-Okla. (left), Morris Udall, D-Ariz. (center), and<br />
Bruce Vento, D-Minn.,. speak informally to the media at the Three Mile Island<br />
visitor center near Middletown. Udall, chairman of the Interior Committee, held a<br />
hearing for citizens before a tour of the plant yesterday.<br />
y<br />
Salvador in the peaceful search for a better<br />
future under the orderly processes of constitu<br />
tional democracy," Wright said.<br />
House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. D<br />
Mass., said he was happy about the elections<br />
adding they had shown the "masses down there<br />
appreciate the freedom of elections."<br />
But O'Neill said the House "would have to see<br />
who the victors are first" before deciding on<br />
future aid to El Salvador.<br />
Haig, however, indicated he was confident<br />
American assistance would continue even<br />
though it was uncertain whether the new government<br />
in El Salvador would be headed by<br />
reformist President Jose Napoleon Duarte or<br />
by anti-reform rightists led by retired Maj.<br />
Roberto d'Aubuisson.<br />
Reagan expected to back nuclear talks<br />
WASHINGTON (AP) - President<br />
Reagan is expected to back a call for<br />
U.S.-Soviet negotiations to gradually<br />
reduce nuclear weapons at a news<br />
conference this week, administration<br />
officials said yesterday.<br />
The president has rejected a proposal<br />
sponsored by 20 senators and 154<br />
House members for an immediate<br />
freeze on nuclear arms, contending<br />
such a move would place the United<br />
<strong>State</strong>s at a disadvantage.<br />
Instead, the president is expected to<br />
follow the suggestions contained in a<br />
bipartisan resolution introduced last<br />
week by eight senators, including Majority<br />
Leader Howard H. Baker Jr., R-<br />
Tenn., and Minority Leader Robert C.<br />
Byrd, D-W.Va., the officials said.<br />
The resolution asks the administration<br />
to "propose to the Soviet Union a<br />
long-term, mutual and verifiable nuclear<br />
forces freeze at equal and sharply<br />
reduced levels of forces."<br />
"We'll probably endorse that proposal,"<br />
said an administration official<br />
who asked not to be identified.<br />
Another official, who also asked that<br />
his name not be used, said "a major<br />
new initiative" from the president was<br />
not expected, but that he would address<br />
the issue because "he recognizes<br />
many are concerned about arms control."<br />
The president is likely to be dealing<br />
with the theme at his news conference<br />
this week, which probably will be tomorrow.<br />
A time has not been an-<br />
nounced for the conference.<br />
Backing the resolution, originally<br />
proposed by Sens. Henry Jackson, D-<br />
Wash. and John Warner, R-Va., would<br />
allow the president to acknowledge the<br />
growing national concern over the<br />
arms race while still dealing with the<br />
Soviets from a position of strength.<br />
The administration has rejected So-<br />
viet President Leonid I. Brezhnev s<br />
March 17 offer to freeze deployment of<br />
medium-range nuclear missiles in the<br />
European part of the Soviet Union as<br />
not going far enough.<br />
The Brezhnev announcement was<br />
widely seen as the latest attempt to<br />
counter NATO plans to begin deployment<br />
of 572 medium-range Pershing II<br />
and Cruise missiles in Western Europe<br />
in 1983.<br />
Reagan -always has insisted that<br />
there be verifiable reductions in nuclear<br />
weaponry.<br />
NATO contends its new missiles are<br />
necessary to counter the more than 300<br />
Soviet SS-20 missiles already in place.<br />
ouse members support arms reduction<br />
By DON WATERS<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
.^tflft *, '<br />
WASHINGTON (AP) — Thirteen House members, including<br />
the chamber's Republican leadership and key<br />
Democrats on defense-related committees, introduced a<br />
resolution yesterday calling for U.S.-Soviet negotiations<br />
aimed at a gradual reduction of nuclear armaments.<br />
The measure is identical to one that received<br />
backing from the Senate's bipartisan leadership last week<br />
and which President Reagan reportedly will endorse later<br />
this week.<br />
The action also came on the eve of a special marathon<br />
debate on arms control that was scheduled by the House<br />
after supporters of a rival resolution called for an immediate<br />
worldwide freeze on nuclear weaponry.<br />
The leadership resolutions call upon the United <strong>State</strong>s<br />
and the Soviet Union to "engage in substantial, equitable<br />
and verifiable reductions of their nuclear weapons in a<br />
manner which would contribute to peace and stability."<br />
The administration contends that an immediate freeze<br />
would lock the United <strong>State</strong>s into an inferior position in<br />
nuclear forces, especially in Europe, where the Soviets<br />
i<br />
have deployed 300 medium-range missiles and the NATO<br />
alliance has deployed none.<br />
Pursuing this argument as he introduced the resolution,<br />
Rep. William Carney, R-N.Y., said:<br />
"A freeze at current levels would perpetuate the current<br />
instablity (in nuclear forces). This is not enough. A mutual<br />
and verifiable freeze must occur at equal and substantially<br />
lower levels of forces if it is to contribute to peace and<br />
stability."<br />
Joining with Carney as co-sponsors were House Republican<br />
leader Bob Michel of Illinois, GOP Whip Trent Lott of<br />
Mississippi, Chief Deputy GOP Whip David Emery of<br />
Maine, Reps. Samuel Stratton, D-N.Y., and Dan Daniel, D-<br />
Va., chairmen of the Armed Services subcommittees on<br />
procurement and military nuclear systems and on readiness,<br />
respectively.<br />
Also, Rep. William L. Dickinson, R-Ala., ranking Republican<br />
on the Armed Services Committee; Rep. John P.<br />
Murtha, D-Pa., a member of the defense appropriations<br />
subcommittee; and Reps. Robert Walker, R-Pa.; Matthew<br />
Rinaldo, R-N.J.; Edward Madigan, R-Ill.; Benjamin Gilman,<br />
R-N.Y.; and Richard Chaney, R-Wyo.<br />
Rollm along<br />
An Amlsh carriage rambles through scenic Lancaster County on a spring afternoon<br />
Congressmen attend hearing, tour TMI<br />
By RICH KIRKPATRICK<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
MIDDLETOWN, Pa. (AP) - A small group of<br />
congressmen listened to pro- and anti-nuclear groups<br />
and took a brief tour of the Three Mile Island nuclear<br />
plant yesterday, but stopped short of offering any<br />
cleanup commitments from Congress.<br />
Rep. Morris K. Udall, D-Ariz., presided over a twohour<br />
hearing marking the third anniversary of the<br />
TMI accident. Afterwards, he and other members of<br />
his group were briefed on cleanup by top officials of<br />
General Public Utilities Corp., which owns the plant.<br />
Udall said there was little hope for congressional<br />
action this year on any of the <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania proposals<br />
for spreading part of the estimated $1 billion cleanup<br />
costs among utilities around the country.<br />
"I think we owe the country and this area in<br />
particular a decision on this point," he said after<br />
completing the tour. "But this is an election year and<br />
partisan lines are going to harden shortly.... I would<br />
like to see an answer this year but in all honesty I<br />
can't tell you there will be one."<br />
Udall was joined by oneother member of the House<br />
Interior Committee's subcommittee on energy —<br />
Bruce Vento, D-Minn. Also present for the hearing<br />
and tour was Rep. Mickey Edwards, R-Okla. <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania<br />
Reps. Allen Ertel, D-Montoursville, and<br />
William Goodling, R-York, attended the hearing<br />
while Rep. Robert Walker, R-Lancaster, toured the<br />
plant.<br />
Udall said cleanup is going better than he expected<br />
and local concern about TMI "hasn't gone away as I<br />
expected it would."<br />
The plant was damaged on March 28, 1979, in the<br />
nation's worst commercial nuclear accident. A series<br />
of malfunctions and operator errors permitted the<br />
radioactive core to lose its protective coating of<br />
water and officials believe portions of the core<br />
melted.<br />
Vento said Congress cannot make a decision until it<br />
has more facts about the cleanup and the extent of the<br />
damage within the reactor.<br />
Although the utilities would like the federal government<br />
to pick up the bill for cleanup, "we're not going<br />
to buy that," Vento said.<br />
"There's no agreement about the nature of our<br />
responsibility at the national level with respect to<br />
this," he said. "We're not magicians. We can't make<br />
consensus when there is none."<br />
Officials of General Public Utilities Corp., which<br />
owns the plant, showed the congressmen a tube-like<br />
television camera that will be lowered into the<br />
damaged core to allow the first visual inspection<br />
since the accident. The group, was shown a videotaped<br />
test done on the undamaged Unit 1 reactor.<br />
Inside the plant, the congressmen were taken to a<br />
command center where a plant technician monitors<br />
eight remote-controlled television cameras that can<br />
scan the interior of the sealed containment building.<br />
The group was also shown concrete bunkers where<br />
radioactive resins from the plant's water filtration<br />
systems are stored.<br />
At the hearing, Jan Chwastyk of the Family and<br />
AP Laserphoto<br />
Friends of TMI, a pro-nuclear group, questioned why<br />
Udall comes to visit the plant on each anniversary of<br />
the accident, but has yet to convince Congress to help<br />
fund cleanup.<br />
The money used for the trips could help clean the<br />
radioactivity from the plant, she said.<br />
'*'<br />
"Talk has gone on long enough, and it has not been<br />
cheap," she said. "It is time for action."<br />
The Union of Concerned Scientists complained that<br />
the federal Atomic Licensing and Safety Board<br />
ignored or suppressed issues when it heard testimony<br />
on restarting the undamaged Unit 1.<br />
; UCS representative Robert Pollard said preliminary<br />
testimony from some Nuclear Regulatory Commission<br />
staff agreed with UCS contentions on some<br />
saf tey issues. But the testimony was either altered or<br />
not delivered at all before the board, he said.<br />
Members of Three Mile Island Alert and the York<br />
Environmental Alliance said they were at a disadvantage<br />
in the hearings because they had little<br />
money and could not match GPU's and the NRC's<br />
legal expertise.<br />
' 'There's nothing quite as sad in public proceedings<br />
as a mismatch," Udall .said. He said he hopes<br />
legislation will eventually be enacted providing funds<br />
to such groups in regulatory proceedings.<br />
Jack Stotz, former chairman of the Middletown<br />
Area Association, said people are frustrated that the<br />
cleanup has progressed so slowly. He questioned why<br />
Congress could bail out Chrysler Corp. and other<br />
companies and then ignore GPU.<br />
Polish group reports<br />
21 newspapers shut<br />
By THOMAS W. NETTER<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
WARSAW, Poland . (AP) - The<br />
chairman of the new, pro-martial law<br />
journalists association said yesterday<br />
that 21 newspapers have been shut<br />
down and 705 journalists purged by<br />
the military government.<br />
The figures on the press crackdown<br />
were provided by Klemens<br />
Krzyzagorski at a news conference<br />
for foreign reporters. He is the chairman<br />
of the Association of Journalists<br />
of People's Poland, which replaced<br />
the pro-Solidarity, 8,000-member Association<br />
of Polish Journalists that the<br />
government dissolved March 20. The<br />
dissolved group, known as SDP here,<br />
represented nearly all Poland's working<br />
journalists.<br />
Krzyzagorski said more newspapers<br />
might be closed due to "economic<br />
reasons." He also said new papers<br />
are being formed to replace some of<br />
those ordered closed and that some of<br />
the out-of-work journalists might be<br />
allowed to work at them.<br />
Among the publications closed so<br />
far is "Kultura," an influential and<br />
widely-read weekly.<br />
Poland's state-run press last year<br />
began demanding freedom from<br />
censorship, challenging the authority<br />
The Daily Collegian<br />
Tuesday, March 30<br />
of the Communist Party and criticizing<br />
the government as the Solidarity<br />
union-led reform movement gained<br />
ground.<br />
When Jaruzelski ordered martial<br />
law Dec. 13, most of the press was<br />
shut down and uniformed military<br />
announcers replaced civilian newscasters.<br />
Newspaper staffs were required<br />
to sign loyalty oaths in order to<br />
resume publishing, according to reporters<br />
and editors.<br />
The new association has promised<br />
to "remain within the framework of<br />
generally accepted principles of political<br />
culture and serving the interests<br />
of socialism."<br />
Krzyzagorski said 227 radio and TV<br />
journalists and 215 working in the<br />
publishing houses that print Communist<br />
Party dailies across Poland were<br />
among those purged.<br />
"We will act on behalf of newsmen<br />
who found themselves stranded and<br />
we shall defend them regardless of<br />
the fact if they belong to our association,"<br />
Krzyzagorski said.<br />
He criticized the leadership of the<br />
dissolved SDP for being "so enthusiastic<br />
during the political picnic in<br />
Warsaw in July and August 1981 when<br />
their duty was to tell the truth about<br />
events."<br />
t><br />
«* ,
c<br />
Trains collide near Philly, 26 injured<br />
BRISTOL, Pa. (AP) - A stalled Boston-to-Philadelphia<br />
passenger train was<br />
rammed by a locomotive that had been<br />
sent to help tow it yesterday, and 26<br />
people were injured, none seriously, authorities<br />
said.<br />
Three of the injured were admitted to<br />
Bucks County hospitals and were in satisfactory<br />
or stable condition, while others<br />
were treated for cuts and bruises and<br />
released.<br />
Amtrak spokeswoman Debbie Marciniak<br />
said the engineer of the six-car train<br />
reported it had stalled with engine trouble<br />
at 12:55 a.m., about 24 miles from its<br />
destination.<br />
A replacement locomotive sent to the<br />
scene rammed the front of the passenger<br />
Doctor links herpes virus to lipstick sample<br />
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A <strong>University</strong><br />
of <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania virologist has issued a<br />
warning about the use of store lipstick<br />
samples, after treating a college student<br />
who apparently caught herpes simplex<br />
by applying the makeup moments after a<br />
carrier had used it.<br />
Herpes is a disease that is usually<br />
spread by direct contact between people,<br />
but in this case the intermidiary was a<br />
substance, said Dr. Herbert A. Blough of<br />
the university-affiliated Scheie Eye Institute.<br />
Blough, who has been researching<br />
herpes for 10 years, said yesterday that it<br />
has never been reported to his knowledge<br />
that herpes could be transmitted by<br />
lipstick if the person were infected quickly<br />
enough.<br />
2 dead, 2 missing in Haitian boat accident<br />
HIGHLAND BEACH, Fla. (AP) - The<br />
bodies of two Haitian women were washed<br />
up on a beach here yesterday from a<br />
freighter that had capsized in the rough<br />
Atlantic. High seas, stiff winds and poor<br />
visibility forced officials to stop searching<br />
the ocean for two others missing.<br />
Six survivors struggled, to shore<br />
through 10-foot waves after their vessel<br />
capsized sometime before midnight yesterday.<br />
One man was hospitalized for<br />
exposure and the others were sent.to the<br />
Krome Avenue refugee camp west of<br />
Miami, where some 500 Haitian refugees<br />
are being held.<br />
Mike Kelley, a Coast Guard spokesman,<br />
said no distress signals or radio<br />
messages were received from the Esperancia,<br />
a motorized, wooden-hulled<br />
freighter.<br />
6-year-olcTs trial may move to Disney World<br />
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) -Thecase<br />
of a 6-year-old girl charged with bloodying<br />
the nose of a playmate may move<br />
from criminal court to Disney World<br />
under the auspices of a private arbitrator,<br />
officials said yesterday.<br />
A "citizen arbitrator" will sit down<br />
with the parents of first-grader Nancy Jo<br />
Burch and those of the 7-year-old alleged<br />
victim, Shirley Lynn Nickolls, and help<br />
them resolve the dispute, <strong>State</strong> Attorney<br />
Eugene Whitworth said. -<br />
"I may suggest that we all go to dinner<br />
and the movies together; bring the kids.<br />
We may all go to Disney World or something,"<br />
said Gary Weinstein, who will<br />
Boston inquiry studies harbor plane crash<br />
BOSTON (AP) - A state inquiry has<br />
found no evidence that airport officials<br />
knew runways were icy before a jetliner<br />
skidded into Boston Harbor, a legislative<br />
hearing was told yesterday. Airport operators<br />
called the charge "absurd."<br />
James J. Kerasiotes, state undersecretary<br />
of transportation, said "the entire<br />
airport was experiencing a worst case<br />
situation" when the DC-10 crashed due to<br />
the weather Jan. 23.<br />
Citing an inquiry by the Massachusetts<br />
Aeronautics Commission, he said, "We<br />
have found no evidence that anyone in<br />
Massport operations management had<br />
taken a comprehensive look at runway<br />
15R via the snow committee procedure<br />
French train blast mayr<br />
be terrorist attack<br />
LIMOGES, France (AP) — A bomb An official at the Limoges prefecture<br />
exploded aboard an express train racing (regional authority) described the explo-<br />
through the hilly countryside near Lim- ision<br />
as "a terrorist attack." There was<br />
oges last night, gutting one car. and ino<br />
immediate claim of responsibility for<br />
killing at least five passengers. Officials ia<br />
bombing.<br />
speculated that it was either a terrorist<br />
attack or an accidental explosion of a The blast hit the second car of the 15-<br />
terrorist bomb.<br />
car train about 15 miles northeast of the<br />
Twelve people were injured and two of .<br />
city of Limoges on a regular Paris-Tou-<br />
the injuries were described as serious.<br />
louse run.<br />
French television said police believed A spokesman for the state-owned rail-<br />
explosives being transported by terrorroad network SNCF said the train, a<br />
ists may have blown up accidentally. The favorite of businessmen, could Carry 450<br />
broadcast said authorities were question- people. But he did not know how many<br />
ing a young woman passenger. were aboard on a quiet Monday night.<br />
Two more Stevenson works to be published<br />
LONDON (AP) — Two previously unknown<br />
stories by Robert Louis Stevenson,<br />
discovered by a scholar at Yale<br />
<strong>University</strong>, are to be published this summer<br />
in the 19th-century novelist's native<br />
Scotland.<br />
. Konrad Hopkins, American founder of<br />
Wilfion Books in Paisley, Scotland, hopes<br />
to have the book on sale by June.<br />
The stories, "An Old Song" and "The<br />
Edifying Letters of the Rutherford Family,"<br />
were recently discovered in Yale<br />
libraries by Roger Swearingen, a world<br />
authority on the author of "Kidnapped"<br />
train, derailing the engine and the first<br />
car, Marciniak said.<br />
"The whys and how-fors I do not not<br />
know," Marciniak said, adding that Amtrak<br />
will investigate the accident.<br />
The accident delayed southbound Amtrak<br />
trains up to 45 minutes, spokeswoman<br />
Diane Elliott said.<br />
The train left Boston at 6:35 p.m.<br />
Sunday and had been due to arrive in<br />
Philadelphia at 1:23 a.m. yesterday,<br />
Marciniak said.<br />
One of the 11 injured people treated at<br />
Lower Bucks County Hospital was admitted<br />
in stable condition, a spokeswoman<br />
said. She identified the patient as<br />
Joseph Gibbs of Wilmington, Del.<br />
"Normally herpes does not have a very<br />
long life outside the body," Blough said.<br />
But in this case the waxy surface of the<br />
lipstick enhanced the virus' longevity,<br />
the researcher said, by keeping the virus<br />
concentrated and preventing it from<br />
quickly drying out.<br />
The Centers for Disease Control in<br />
Atlanta reported Friday that genital<br />
herpes — one of the places on the body<br />
that can be affected by the herpes virus<br />
— trails only influenza and the common<br />
cold as the nation's fastest spreading<br />
virus.<br />
About half of the herpes viruses go<br />
away by themselves, but others tend to<br />
cause repeated painful outbreaks that<br />
disrupt victims' lives, Blough said.<br />
"There probably wasn't even a radio<br />
on board, unfortunately," he said. "Our<br />
first warning that something was wrong<br />
was when the survivors swam ashore."<br />
It was the second fatal Haitian shipwreck<br />
off Florida's Gold Coast within five<br />
months. About 10 miles to the south, 33<br />
refugees drowned Oct. 26 after their<br />
sailboat broke up in rough surf.<br />
Federal authorities said they believed<br />
the 70-foot vessel was on a legitimate<br />
cargo mission, not carrying would-be<br />
illegal refugees.<br />
"At this point, as far as we know, they<br />
were on a regular run of an island coastal<br />
freighter. They apparently were coming<br />
to Miami to pick up cargo to take back to<br />
Haiti," said Beverly McFarland,<br />
spokeswoman for the U.S. Immigration<br />
and Naturalization Service.<br />
function as arbitrator.<br />
Nancy Jo was accused of striking Shirly<br />
Lynn in the face with a stick during an<br />
after-school spat, Feb. 4.<br />
The case ballooned into a national<br />
news story after a circuit judge ruled the<br />
6-year-old's case could be heard in juvenile<br />
court, rejecting a defense attorney's<br />
contention that a child is not sufficiently<br />
cognizant to commit a crime.<br />
Then defense lawyer Alan Wilhite fueled<br />
the headlines Friday by winning her<br />
a jury trial in adult criminal court.<br />
Under Florida law, she is entitled to such<br />
a proceeding.<br />
William C. Coleman, director of aviation<br />
for the Massachusetts Port Authority,<br />
which runs Logan International<br />
Airport, countered that "to say no comprehensive<br />
look at the runway was taken<br />
is absolutely absurd."<br />
And Coleman's boss, Massport Director<br />
David W. Davis, testified it was "the<br />
collective judgment of the people at the<br />
airfield to keep (the runway) open."<br />
Other witnesses told the Transportation<br />
Committee that the World Airways<br />
jet touched ground about halfway down<br />
the runway Jan. 23, and that its wing<br />
flaps may not have been in the correct<br />
position to stop the jet in the distance<br />
available.<br />
and Treasure Island.<br />
"An Old Song" is probably Stevenson's<br />
"very first work of fiction apart from a<br />
few childhood stories," Hopkins said<br />
yesterday in a BBC interview. Stevenson<br />
was about 27 when he wrote it.<br />
The story was discovered by Swearingen<br />
in art 1877 edition of "London" magazine,<br />
which printed the 16,000-word<br />
piece anonymously. He recognized it as<br />
Stevenson's because he had earlier found<br />
a manuscript fragment of it in the author's<br />
hand.<br />
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Speaker: Mark Bigatel , President of the<br />
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Topic: Real estate in the near future<br />
also:- Resume Books discussed<br />
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R-02B<br />
The Daily Collegian Tuesday, March 30, 1982—7<br />
The Accounting Club & Beta Alpha Psi<br />
Present<br />
Douglas McCormick<br />
Treasurer for the Pgh Pirates<br />
speaking on<br />
"Accounting for a Sports Entity"<br />
March 31, 7:30p.m., 121 Sparks Bldg.<br />
All interested students are welcome!<br />
TAX SEMINAR<br />
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WEP. MARCH 3 /<br />
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CARNEGIE-MELLON UNIVERSITY<br />
SCHOOL OF URBAN AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS<br />
INVITES YOU TO DISCUSS YOUR CAREER<br />
SiqN Up FOR<br />
FnidAy, Apml 2<br />
AT T||E PLACEMENT OfflCE<br />
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If you're thinking about a career in<br />
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about the opportunites available<br />
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School of Urban & Public Affairs. A<br />
remarkable variety of career opportunite<br />
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WilliAM J. STAIIIER<br />
DIRECTOR of AdiviissioNs<br />
Pk (412) 578-2164
inion<br />
For the 1982-83 Undergraduate Student Government<br />
presidential elections, The Daily Collegian<br />
endorses the team of Jim Krauss and Steve<br />
Lunger for president and vice president.<br />
Krauss and Lunger have displayed a realistic,<br />
mature — and above all, intelligent — view<br />
toward student government. They are not full of<br />
overly ambitious ideas or vague philosophies<br />
about, gee-whiz, what student government<br />
could really be.<br />
They see USG as, first, a service organization<br />
that must be run efficiently and, second, as a<br />
political organization that reacts to problems<br />
concerning students. The second priority is not<br />
necessarily subordinated to the first; rather,<br />
without the credibility of ,USG as a worthwhile<br />
organization, its political effectiveness is nil.<br />
Krauss and Lunger both have a considerable<br />
amount of experience in student government.<br />
Krauss has been involved with USG since his<br />
first term and has served in USG's department<br />
of political affairs, USG's Supreme Court and<br />
the USG Senate. As a USG fraternity senator, he<br />
sat on the senate Appointments and Review<br />
Board and chaired the constitution revision<br />
committee. He knows the inner workings of<br />
USG well.<br />
reader opinion<br />
Keep those terms<br />
I have been considering writing a letter to The Daily<br />
Collegian about the calendar conversion for a week now and<br />
after I read the letter by James B. Bartoo and James R.<br />
Dungan, I felt the time has come for me to put pen in hand and<br />
voice my opinion.<br />
When the rumors first arose about a calendar switch several<br />
years ago, I was totally against the idea — not because of the<br />
disadvantages of the semester system, but because of the<br />
advantages of the term calendar. Before I begin with the<br />
advantages, as I see them, I have to state that I have been in<br />
both systems.<br />
I went to the <strong>University</strong> of Pittsburgh (which although there<br />
are some differences , is close to the calendar President John<br />
W. Oswald wants) where I took a full term of engineering<br />
courses. I must say that I definitely preferred <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>'s<br />
calendar system.<br />
The "term" calendar allows a student to study a few<br />
subjects (usually four) , compared to six or more at Pitt. This<br />
means the student can concentrate more on each subject and<br />
this would (hopefully) enable him to learn the material more<br />
thoroughly. I realize that this means a faster-paced class, but I<br />
prefer it that way. The fast pace is, actually beneficial, as it<br />
teaches us to handle high-pressure, high-stress situations. I<br />
also prefer to learn the material in as short a period of time as<br />
possible and start learning new subjects.<br />
Another advantage of <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>'s current calendar is that<br />
there are four terms all the same length. Mr. Bartoo and Mr.<br />
Dungan say that the original intention was that people could<br />
use the Summer Term as a regular term, but that "institutions<br />
were not successful in changing the attendance pattern 0f ;<br />
significant numbers of students."<br />
Well, Mr. Bartoo and Mr. Dungan, I say to you: BULL! If the<br />
<strong>University</strong> had really wanted to change attendance patterns,<br />
they would offer courses that students can take to satisfy their<br />
degree requirements and I don't mean just basics like mathematics,<br />
economics and speech. I was going to enroll for<br />
Summer Term 1982 until I looked at the schedule of classes.<br />
There is not one course I can take! I have about 1% years left<br />
of school, and the <strong>University</strong> doesn't even offer Mechanical<br />
Engineering 31, 33 or 50, to name a few basic courses. The only<br />
undergraduate courses offered this summer are Mechanical<br />
Engineering 99, 411 and 4%. As for Commonwealth campuses,<br />
don't look for anything except Mechanical Engineering 22. The<br />
<strong>University</strong> is not helping matters by offering only the essential<br />
The USG endorsement<br />
Lunger, USG Centre Halls senator for two<br />
terms, has spent time working in other campus<br />
organizations — most notably the Liberal Arts<br />
Student Council, where, as president, he made<br />
the organization a credible group with liberal<br />
arts administrators.<br />
He was also the council's Liberal Arts representative<br />
to USG's Academic Assembly and<br />
the Residence Halls Advisory Board representative<br />
from East Halls. As a USG senator,<br />
Lunger was the senate liaison with the Association<br />
of Residence Hall Students.<br />
He and Krauss have earned reputations as<br />
two of the hardest workers in the senate.<br />
Of all the candidates, Krauss and Lunger<br />
appear to be the best representatives of students<br />
to the <strong>University</strong> administration — and to<br />
the rest of the world. They are calm and wellspoken;<br />
they act like intelligent college students.<br />
They do not come off like the hyperactive<br />
"student politicians" administrators loathe —<br />
and, of course, don't respect. Yet, Krauss and<br />
Lunger don't seem like goody-goodies who will<br />
be mere puppets in the hands of the administration.<br />
Where do. Krauss and Lunger stand on The<br />
Issues?<br />
They emphasize minority retention over recruitment,<br />
and have suggested creating a task<br />
force similar to the one, formed in 1975 to<br />
examine the problem as well as studying how<br />
other schools deal with minority retention.<br />
They're against the proposed financial aid<br />
cuts and want to continue efforts such as SO-<br />
FAR. They want to keep students aware of the<br />
calendar conversion and keep pressure on the<br />
administration to justify its actions. They want<br />
students to be involved in the selection of the<br />
new <strong>University</strong> president.<br />
But the difference with Krauss and Lunger is<br />
their realistic attitude toward The Issues. They<br />
understand that they can't do everything. They<br />
appear to be executives who will competently<br />
guide USG in the right direction, rather than<br />
standing dramatically on the helm of the ship,<br />
drinking in the glory ...<br />
Which would be a bit different than the<br />
current USG administration, led by Bill Cluck<br />
and Ken Reeves. Students shouldn't be looking<br />
for someone to replace Bill Cluck, they should<br />
be looking for a team to maintain and build on<br />
his accomplishments. The Collegian thinks Jim<br />
Krauss and Steve Lunger can do that the best.<br />
freshman/sophomore courses, and this does have an affect on Q\M^^^m^^S^<br />
the people who do want to enroll Summer Term! So, even iVRfl .^IPlllir ^<br />
though the Summer-Term was designed to be the same as the uV. ^/ ^^^^^ST<br />
other three, it isn't ...AND NOW<br />
I would like to know why should we change our calendar?<br />
Because "57 percent of colleges and universities. .. were on a<br />
semester calendar?" Is this change because everyone else is<br />
doing it?<br />
I'm sure President Oswald has a good many reasons, and<br />
there are probably even a few good ones that he has, but have<br />
YOU, President Oswald, really looked at the second and third<br />
order effects? (Maybe you should read Alvin Toffler's "The<br />
Third Wave.")<br />
Personally, President Oswald, I think the calendar switch g<br />
will do the <strong>University</strong> community grievous injury. More |<br />
faculty/student workload, fewer class offerings , bigger |<br />
classes, and physical plant problems are very important 1<br />
considerations, and I hope that this isn't another case of the 1<br />
students (and even faculty) getting the "shaft." I feel that |<br />
<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> offers an alternative in education. The semester |<br />
system is not for everyone and I resent being "shoe-horned" 1<br />
into this situation. '(,<br />
Another thing I resent is President Oswald saying, "The<br />
calendar matter is not before the <strong>University</strong> for decision. That<br />
final decision has been made." As was pointed out before,<br />
President Oswald is precluding any discussion on the matter,<br />
and I feel that this is a mistake. President Oswald, you call<br />
yourself a president, and a president is the head of a DEMO-<br />
CRATIC society, not a dictatorship. So, let's get this democracy<br />
going, and find out just who wants the calendar change.<br />
Paul D. Popovich<br />
March 18<br />
loth-mechanical engineering<br />
An 'A' for effort<br />
I'm not bad at athletic activities — just average. I wanted to<br />
make that clear before I told you about my gym classes last<br />
term and that I tried the best I could in both.<br />
By that I mean that I came to my first period Tuesday,<br />
Thursday and Saturday classes half and hour before everyone<br />
else came — every time — just so that I could drill by myself<br />
m<br />
KtfKSSi*^<br />
• • •<br />
And so what about the other candidates, you<br />
ask?<br />
Only two other teams come close to our choice<br />
— Leni Barch and Lee Facetti, and Emil Parvensky<br />
and Jim McJunkin. All four candidates<br />
are experienced in student government and<br />
have a great j deal of energy. But we think the<br />
presidential candidates, Barch and Parvensky,<br />
suffer from a tendency to ramble. They have an<br />
unrealistic perception of what they can accomplish<br />
in one year; they are filled with<br />
enthusiasm that may not translate into action.<br />
These four candidates are great as individuals<br />
working within student government — that's<br />
where they'd be most effective.<br />
Andy Leisner and Bob Nolen are running on<br />
two major issues — a task force of students<br />
eager to "do the dirty work of USG" and a<br />
general assembly of all student organizations —<br />
neither of which are realistic.<br />
As for Matt Wolford and Bob McGonigle:<br />
Neither have the experience or the knowledge to<br />
guide USG through what promises to be an<br />
eventful year.<br />
\ I<br />
Blood money comes easily for a plasma prostitute<br />
"Well, to start with, I'm a plasma prostitute."<br />
This is my standard, light-hearted response to<br />
the question of what I do for spare (and essential)<br />
money — and it seems to shock a lot of<br />
people. My forthrightness surprises even some<br />
people who have gone to Sera-Tec.<br />
For, unlike so many other means of acquiring<br />
income, going to Sera-Tec to donate plasma for<br />
a fee is commonly viewed as an act of desperation.<br />
It's a last resort when you can't afford a<br />
tube of toothpaste. .. not something to be proud<br />
of doing.<br />
Most of the donors at Sera-Tec (primarily<br />
college students) are eager to assure everyone<br />
that they wouldn't be "doing this" if they<br />
weren't really screwed to the wall for necessary<br />
funds.<br />
Perhaps I have an abnormal streak of mercenary<br />
in my system, but there seems to be no<br />
reason that a person should be ashamed of<br />
donating plasma at Sera-Tec.<br />
Human plasma is required by medical science<br />
for both therapy and research. For example,<br />
plasma and its various products are used in<br />
the treatment of burn victims, hemophiliacs<br />
and newborns with Rh-factor disease.<br />
Plasma is used for blood-typing, as well as<br />
diagnostic testing for such diseases as mononucleosis,<br />
syphilis and hepatitis. Plasmapheresis<br />
— the scientific procedure of collecting and<br />
processing human plasma — serves the needs<br />
of medical science.<br />
Plasma donors aren't being paid for their<br />
plasma but "are being compensated for their<br />
time," said Wayne Rossi, Center Manager of<br />
Sera-Tec's <strong>State</strong> College location.<br />
The usual $10 fee is reimbursement for the<br />
hours the donor spends at Sera-Tec — not<br />
payment for blood.<br />
Few donors, if any, would say that going to<br />
Sera-Tec is a healthy practice, although their<br />
plasma should eventually contribute to the<br />
health and well-being of other human beings.<br />
Donating plasma must entail some risk, or<br />
donors would not be required to sign a consent<br />
form when they undergo their initial physical<br />
exam. But how serious is that risk?<br />
The only health hazard that most donors seem<br />
concerned about is the possibility that their<br />
veins may become damaged. I know many<br />
plasma donors who have found that their arms<br />
don't really like being punctured on a continual<br />
basis.<br />
In response to such regular abuse, considerable<br />
scar tissue may accumulate and/or the<br />
vein(s) may collapse, forcing dcrors to take an<br />
involuntary vacation from Sera-Tec until their<br />
arms heal sufficiently and they can resume<br />
donating.<br />
However, Rossi said that the health risks of<br />
plasma-donating (even on a regular basis, over<br />
many years) seem to be negligible.<br />
"When you consider that we must do at least<br />
50,000 procedures every year, and have maybe<br />
one or two infections occur at the site (of the<br />
needle) each year, it's pretty incredible.<br />
"Considering the size of the needle and the<br />
length of time that it is in the arm, we've<br />
probably got better statistics than most hospitals,"<br />
Rossi said.<br />
Rossi cautioned that plasma donors who<br />
remove their bandages immediately after leaving<br />
Sera-Tec are taking a more serious risk of<br />
infection, but that's an unnecessary risk that<br />
the donors choose to take.<br />
Rossi added that donors who have regularly<br />
given plasma for up to 10 years have shown no<br />
ill effects — either in the volume of blood in<br />
their bodies, or the amounts of proteins in their<br />
blood.<br />
Dr. J. Robert Wirag, director of the Office of<br />
Health Promotion and Education at Ritenour<br />
Health Center, also says that Sera-Tec's <strong>State</strong><br />
College facility rates a clean bill of health.<br />
"We (at Ritenour) are convinced that they<br />
have a credible, high-quality operation. They<br />
have introduced controls to protect the health<br />
S.<br />
a<br />
Hitting the books, not the quads<br />
Each spring, thousands of <strong>University</strong> students take to the<br />
great outdoors in an attempt to secure a spot in the hallowed<br />
halls of Dormitoria. Frisbees fly, radios roar and sleepers<br />
snooze — at least until that becomes boring or Mother Nature<br />
spoils the fun. They try to make the best of the situation, but<br />
sooner or later, many students complain about the wasted time<br />
and the absurdity of lining up with 6,000 other contract-seekers.<br />
To some, dorm lines are party-time; but to others, lines are a<br />
necessary evil. In the past couple of years, it's tilted a lot more<br />
toward evil. Line-dwellers, expecting to be let go the moment a<br />
threatening cloud appears, lined up earlier this year than last<br />
year. Some of the 10 lines already had 500 students by noon<br />
Saturday; some early birds were in line Thursday afternoon.<br />
Considering applications aren't handed in until 4 p.m. Sunday,<br />
the situation is out of hand.<br />
The funny thing is that the evil is by no means necessary —<br />
nobody is making upperclassmen live in the dorms. So the<br />
solution is simple: move into an apartment, or push for an<br />
alternative to this ludicrous method of dorm contract allocation.<br />
I suggest pushing for an alternative pleasing to the majority.<br />
A system that uses some type of competition so students will<br />
have their fate in their own hands. One that doesn't waste a<br />
weekend and clog your sinuses. One that is sensible and<br />
constructive, not inane and destructive.<br />
In the spirit of this ideal, I offer the .grade point average<br />
system. No more concrete beds, windburnt faces or head colds.<br />
Just a simple "work hard in your courses, get good grades, get<br />
a contract" system.<br />
reader opinion<br />
Can't forget Norm<br />
Brian Bowers' recent article on the improved<br />
condition of former Nittany Lion mascot Norm<br />
Constantino has led me to wonder why.<br />
Why has Norm been forgotten? During his<br />
years at <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> as our school mascot, Norm<br />
devoted 98 percent of his time being involved in<br />
both <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> sporting events and fund-raising<br />
activities charity. Beyond this, Norm somehow<br />
found the time to teach martial arts to the<br />
handicapped.<br />
Norm gave of himself to the fullest extent, and<br />
for what in return? The glamor? No, the smiles.<br />
The Saturday afternoon smiles of <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong><br />
football fans; the faint smiles of the Sunday<br />
afternoon dance marathoners; and especially,<br />
The system of assigning rooms after a particular percentage<br />
of contracts are accepted would stay the same: students<br />
seeking their same room have first preference, reassignment<br />
to the same house, second, and change of assignment, third.<br />
Freshmen, sororities and interest houses would still be guaranteed<br />
dorm space. I am offering an alternative only to the<br />
contract allocation part of the system.<br />
Here's how it would work:<br />
If demand for space is greater than supply (as it always is) ,<br />
students with a cumulative grade point average in the top<br />
percentage of their college would get a room. That is, if 3,000<br />
males and 3,000 females turn in their $45 advance payment and<br />
only 2,500 male and 2,500 female spaces are available, females<br />
in the top five-sixths of the, females in their college (like-wise<br />
for males) would get a room. Males compete against males for<br />
available male space, and vice-versa for females.<br />
I have suggested using the individual colleges as a basis,<br />
rather than the <strong>University</strong> as a whole, because some colleges<br />
have higher average GPAs than others. I have suggested using<br />
cumulative GPA, father than, say, the average of the two<br />
terms preceding the spring term in which contracts are<br />
allocated, because it's a more accurate reflection of course<br />
success.<br />
So we would be using a student's cumulative GPA as of<br />
winter term, in whatever college he is enrolled in as of winter<br />
term.<br />
This system would take care of most contract-seekers. As for<br />
students transferring from another school — and who therefore<br />
have no GPA at <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> — they could obtain dorm space<br />
using a lottery system or they could be guaranteed housing.<br />
Those students make up only a small fraction of contractseekers.<br />
And that's all there is to this system. It strikes me as a lot<br />
more sensible than lines or lotteries. After all, this is a school,<br />
so grades seem the obvious thing to use as a competition. If we<br />
were here to learn how to best wait in lines, then the line system<br />
would make sense. But we're not, and it doesn't.<br />
John Schlander is a sixth-term journalis m major and a member<br />
of The Daily Collegian Board of Opinion.<br />
the thankful smiles of the handicapped that he<br />
touched.<br />
He touched over 84,000 of us, students and<br />
alumni alike, as our team mascot out at Beaver<br />
Stadium. It is time for us to use our <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong><br />
spirit, the spirit he instilled in us, to root Norm on<br />
to recovery. What happened to the talk of a<br />
benefit for Norm that was circulating around<br />
campus two months ago? Are we satisfied with<br />
believing that we truly tried? I think not.<br />
We must, as a student body, come together and<br />
organize a fund-raising event for our former<br />
Nittany Lion. I call on all the student clubs, all<br />
the sports teams, and all of the students to<br />
become active in this drive for Norm. After<br />
years of his rooting on our Lions, Norm now<br />
needs the support that he once gave. It is time for<br />
us to give our love and concern to Norm and his<br />
When it comes to diamonds<br />
€very worthy achievement takes time, and Mayers didn t become a<br />
diamond authority overnight. UUe know enough about diamonds to do<br />
things differently, and it makes a difference.<br />
UUe don't buy our diamonds from middlemen. UJe fly direct to Antwerp,<br />
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price savings on to you.<br />
UJe count our student customers among our greatest assests, and we<br />
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And we invest in our own people. Because when you're shopping for<br />
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Get to know us. UJhen it comes to diamonds, Moyeri ttands alone.<br />
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family by truly showing<br />
Lion."<br />
Htr P4ILY laiiEbiArJ<br />
that. "We want the<br />
Jeffrey T. Quintan, llth-pre law<br />
March 26<br />
me being w/o Man<br />
just past the $top sign on<br />
discri.MAN.ation Free-way<br />
and wanting to be<br />
ack-NOW-ledged<br />
for my pEr-foRm-Ance<br />
and not my body<br />
style my<br />
gears won't<br />
synchronize<br />
Right-<br />
(NOW!!!)<br />
till we turn on to<br />
title VII street<br />
drive to coopERAtion<br />
and meet on<br />
the middle-of-the<br />
—bridge; Oh<br />
beCause i am<br />
self-adJusting<br />
&<br />
self-propelling<br />
iam —<br />
;w/oman<br />
boulevard<br />
Janet S. Christman, 12th-EngIish/writing option<br />
Anthony Slomkoski III, 12th-economics<br />
March 25<br />
. Otk<br />
cAwin<br />
Letters Policy: The Daily Collegian encourages<br />
comments on news coverage, editorial<br />
policy and <strong>University</strong> affairs. Letters should<br />
be typewritten, double-spaced, signed by<br />
no more than two people and not longer<br />
than 30 lines. Students' letters should include<br />
the term, major and campus of the<br />
writer. Letters from alumni should include<br />
the major and year of graduation of the<br />
writer. All writers should provide their address<br />
and phone number for verification of<br />
the letter.<br />
The Collegian reserves the right to edit<br />
letters for length, and to reject letters if they<br />
are libelous or do not conform to standards<br />
of good taste. Because of the numbers of<br />
letters received, the Collegian cannot guarantee<br />
publication of all the letters it receives.<br />
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Georgetown's 7-0 freshman Patrick Ewlng was called for goaltendlng on North<br />
Carolina's first four shots- last night in the championship game of the NCAA<br />
basketball tournament. Despite Ewlng's dominating performance of 23 points, 11<br />
rebounds and two blocked shots, the Hoyas came up short, losing 63-62.<br />
College title game<br />
is new 'Super Ball<br />
By WILL GRIMSLEY<br />
AP Sports Writer<br />
-' coaches, at least unaware of hidden<br />
bonuses provided by overly zealous<br />
alumni and benefactors.<br />
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -College Also, most coaches, even aware of<br />
basketball's Final Four is the Super such skullduggery, are hesitant about<br />
Bowl in tassles and bows. It's base- blowing the whistle, as Phelps did.<br />
ball's World Series with sneakers and They fear it would damage the sport<br />
mini-skirted cheerleaders instead of beyond repair.<br />
cleats and pin-stripes.<br />
The NCAA, sitting on a gold mine, is<br />
- By any measure, it is definitely pussy-footed in its enforcement prac-<br />
Super Ball. It's America's newest tices.<br />
sports addiction. It's young, it's loud, This is mentioned only to illustrate<br />
it's big and it's loaded.<br />
the bigness to which college basket-<br />
'. Forget that it comes off the nation's ball has grown.<br />
campuses, played by what the NCAA It's not exactly what Dr. James<br />
naively refers to as "student ath- Naismith had in mind when he hung<br />
letes."<br />
up those peach baskets in Massachu-<br />
It's a professional production, from setts ages ago.<br />
the mammoth spotlights hanging He intended it to be an intimate gym<br />
from the roof to the hardware floor. pastime for students who couldn't<br />
; It is played by agile, beanpole men make the football or track teams.<br />
who are recruited as assiduously as a The game flourished for years<br />
big corporation might search for a largely as a regional sport, secondary<br />
young<br />
¦<br />
executive.<br />
to high-pressure, high-budget foot-<br />
Like the Super Bowl and the World ball, surving a series of point-fixing<br />
" Series, it is show business and big scandals.<br />
bucks.<br />
Then suddenly it popped its seams.<br />
Notre Dame Coach Digger Phelps, The 1982 Final Four was shifted to<br />
in a sensational kiss-and-tell reve- New Orleans' Superdome, with a baslation<br />
last week, said the going rate ketball capacity of 61,000-plus. The<br />
among some colleges for top talent is national championship came of age.<br />
310,000 a year.<br />
The intimacy of the sport Was lost,<br />
. Oregon <strong>State</strong>'s Ralph Miller, named but the hungry coffers were satisfied.<br />
J'Coach of the Year" by The Asso- If college basketball is to be big, it's<br />
ciated Press, says the figure is con- got to have a big home.<br />
servative.<br />
You will see a lot of domes and<br />
"They were talking about that crowds of 60,000 and more in the<br />
much money 10 years ago," he said. sport's future.<br />
"Now we've got inflation."<br />
On the secret, under-the-table mat? The college basketball boom started<br />
\<br />
ket, the value of Georgetown's 7-foot<br />
, with the great UCLA-Houston games<br />
freshman, Pat Ewing, probably would in the 1960s, featuring UCLA's Lew<br />
be $100,000.a year. The pros would Alcindor and Houston's Elvin Hayes,<br />
give him $1 million.<br />
The television networks began to<br />
Most coaches, leveling, concede take notice. But the exposure didn't<br />
there are rampant abuses but claim<br />
j reach full weekend - and prime-time<br />
there are many more "clean" potential until recent years.<br />
a<br />
% I «<br />
¦3<br />
' '4. * O.<br />
North Carolina takes NCAA title<br />
By JOHN NELSON<br />
AP Sports Writer<br />
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Freshman<br />
Michael Jordan hit an 18-foot jumper<br />
Iwith 15 seconds left and James Worthy<br />
won the duel of dunks with Patrick<br />
Ewing to give North Carolina its first<br />
NCAA basketball championship under<br />
coach Dean Smith with a 63-62 victory<br />
over Georgetown last night.<br />
I Worthy scored a career-high 28<br />
points and his steal, coming on a giveaway<br />
pass from Georgetown's Fred<br />
Brown with 10 seconds left, insured<br />
North Carolina the national title and<br />
finally lifted the monkey from Smith's<br />
back.<br />
'. The North Carolina coach had taken<br />
six previous teams to the Final Four<br />
and came up empty-handed each time,<br />
but this time it was Worthy, Sam<br />
Perkins and Jordan who delivered the<br />
championship trophy into the hands of<br />
Smith in his 21st season as coach of the<br />
Tar Heels.<br />
'- The battle between the front line of<br />
North Carolina — 6-9 junior Worthy<br />
and 6-9 sophomore Perkins — and the<br />
7-0 Georgetown monolith, Ewing, projduced<br />
one of the closest title games in<br />
recent history.<br />
- Not since 1959 had there been an<br />
NCAA championship decided by one<br />
point. California won that title by beating<br />
West Virginia 71-70, but the past 22<br />
title games have, for the most part,<br />
been blowouts.<br />
This game was undecided until the<br />
very end. Eric "Sleepy" Floyd had<br />
given Georgetown a 62-61 lead when he<br />
worked into the lane and fired up a 10footer<br />
with 57 seconds to play,<br />
i North Carolina, already in a slowdown<br />
for the past four minutes, called<br />
time out with 32 seconds left, then<br />
worked the ball around the perimeter<br />
and Jordan threw up the game-winner<br />
from the left side.<br />
. As Georgetown brought the ball<br />
down court, Brown turned to his right<br />
and tossed the ball into Worthy's<br />
bands. Worthy then headed toward the<br />
Georgetown basket, and was intentionally<br />
fouled by Eric Smith with two<br />
seconds remaining. Worthy missed<br />
I J*<br />
mi<br />
"Sfew<br />
SSK<br />
, - AP Laserphoto<br />
North Carolina coach Dean Smith cuts down the net after winning his first NCAA title as a coach In seven trips to the Final Four.<br />
Smith's Tarheels squeaked past Georgetown, 63-62 last night In the championship game last night In New Orleans.<br />
two foul shots, but the victory had been<br />
sealed.<br />
. Smith, criticized as a coach who<br />
couldn't win the "big one," finally<br />
ended all that talk. As fans and photographers<br />
swarmed onto the court, first<br />
Worthy, then the coach, were lifted<br />
onto teammates' shoulders to begin<br />
the traditional cutting down of the net<br />
;at the Louisiana Superdome, where a<br />
crowd in excess of 61,000 watched.<br />
; "I'm very grateful to my players.<br />
We played probably the best team<br />
we've seen all year, along with Virginia,"<br />
said Smith. _<br />
the show, " however, belonged to<br />
'Worthy and Ewing, both of whom<br />
brought the crowd cheering to its feet<br />
with mammoth slam dunks. Worthy<br />
had four dunks in the second half,<br />
including one over Floyd, his junior<br />
high school buddy, that produced a<br />
'three-point play and pulled the Tar<br />
Heels within one point with 11:52 left.<br />
Winning hoop deja vu for UNC s Jordan<br />
By AUSTIN WILSON<br />
AP Sports Writer<br />
a«3it<br />
jpr- /
Watson on top of game<br />
heading toward Masters<br />
By BOB GREEN<br />
AP Golf Writer<br />
HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. (AP)<br />
— Tom Watson has it right where he<br />
wants it going into the Masters.<br />
"I like to feel I should be playing<br />
just a little better; I like to go in just a<br />
little nervous," Watson said early last<br />
week.<br />
And, despite the boost in confidence<br />
he gained from a playoff victory over<br />
Frank Conner in the Sea Pines-Heritage<br />
Classic, Watson still sees plenty<br />
of room for improvement heading into<br />
the defense of his title next week.<br />
He won. And he wanted that. He's<br />
the only two-time winner of the season,<br />
a major step in his goal of regaining<br />
his longtime position as the<br />
dominant player in the game.<br />
But there's still work to be done.<br />
Although he's golf's latest winner,<br />
he'd like to be playing a little better.<br />
Going into the Masters, the first of pro<br />
golf's major tests, there's one area<br />
that has him just a little nervous.<br />
"I feel like I'm tournament-tough<br />
and tournament-ready," Watson said<br />
before heading home to put the final<br />
touches on his Masters' preparation.<br />
"My iron play needs to improve,"<br />
he said. "I drove the ball well, and my<br />
putting was very good when it had to.<br />
R-154<br />
7<br />
Fun<br />
be. But I'm not hitting my irons well.<br />
My driving and putting saved me.<br />
"I'm going to have to improve my<br />
iron play if I'm going to have any<br />
chance of defending at Augusta."<br />
It was his iron play, iron play that<br />
suddenly turned erratic, that forced<br />
him to go to a playoff against the<br />
stubborn Conner.<br />
With a comfortable lead and apparently<br />
very much in control, Watson's<br />
irons turned sbur late in the final<br />
round at the Heritage.<br />
From a perfect position in the<br />
fairway, he dumped a short-iron shot,<br />
in a bunker oh the 13th and had to<br />
make a 12-footer to save par.<br />
He hit a 4-iron into the water on the<br />
14th and had to make an 8-footer to<br />
save bogey.<br />
From the fairway, he hit a tree limb<br />
with another short iron and had to<br />
scramble for par on the 15th. From<br />
the fairway, he hit a short-iron thin on<br />
the 16th, left it on the front apron of<br />
the green and 3-putted, a performance,<br />
he said, that "let the rest of<br />
the field catch up."<br />
So he goes into the Masters just the<br />
way he wants, a winner again, confidence<br />
up, the defending champion,<br />
the man to beat, and "just a little<br />
nervous."<br />
WOMEN'S AWARENESS WEEK<br />
MARCH 30th<br />
00 "Opportunites in Graduate Studies" HUB Gallery<br />
Lounge; a panel discussion with students<br />
currently enrolled in post-undergraduate<br />
education.<br />
8:30<br />
"Tips on Getting Ahead" with PSU Alumnae<br />
Fellow Elizabeth Kelly, Senior Consultant ,<br />
Planning and Allocations, United Way of<br />
America — HUB Gallery Lounge (sponsored by<br />
the Alumni Association)<br />
Sponsored by the Panhellenic Council<br />
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^ Mennonite<br />
Central<br />
V Committee<br />
237-1074<br />
A representative from Mennonite Central Committee, Mr.<br />
Rod King, will be on the <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong> Park campus<br />
(Eisenhower Chapel Lounge) tomorrow, March 31. Mennonite<br />
Central Committee (MCC) is the relief and service organization<br />
of the North American Mennonite and Brethren in Christ<br />
churches. Approximately.8CO volunteers are presently serving<br />
in over 40 countries in such areas as agriculture, education,<br />
nutrition, health care, social services and economic and<br />
technical assistance. MCC needs professionally trained Christian<br />
personnel who are committed to the Biblical principles of<br />
service, justice, peacemaking and love. Overseas volunteers<br />
serve a three-year term and North American volunteers serve<br />
a two-year term. If you are interested in learning more about<br />
MCC's philosophy, program and specific assignments,<br />
schedule an interview with the MCC representative by calling<br />
238-0292 or 865-7681<br />
Apartments Are Running Out<br />
Everywhere<br />
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THE CENTER Features:<br />
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Reno's Full-Service Italian Restaurant<br />
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by Benchmark ftealtv.lnc<br />
DU D<br />
The Daily Collegian Tuesday , March :tt> . \m>— i<br />
Ruthven working to recapture form<br />
By RALPH BERNSTEIN<br />
AP Sports Writer<br />
CLEARWATER, Fla. (AP) — Dick Ruthven spent the<br />
winter thinking of changes in his pitching style, and he's<br />
using spring training to try to perfect some of these new<br />
approaches.<br />
The Philadelphia Phillies right-hander had an excellent<br />
first half in last summer's first major league split<br />
season. He won six of his first seven decisions and<br />
appeared headed for the 20-game plateau that almost<br />
everyone in baseball had predicted for him.<br />
Then came the baseball strike, the 50 days without<br />
competition. When the game finally resumed, Ruthven<br />
had lost his sharpness. He was 8-3 when the strike closed<br />
the ball parks. He won only four more games, lost four<br />
and — more significantly — pitched poorly overall.<br />
He wound up 12-7 with an ERA of 5.14, the highest of<br />
his eight-year major league career. The dreams of April<br />
and May turned to nightmares in August and September.<br />
Ruthven, 31, said he and Phillies' pitching coach<br />
Claude Osteen are spending spring training trying to<br />
eliminate the bad habits he apparently developed after<br />
the strike. They look at films of the vintage Ruthven,<br />
add the mechanical adjustments and look ahead to the<br />
1982 season with that 20-game goal in mind.<br />
Ruthven, who came directly from the campus of<br />
Fresno <strong>State</strong> to the majors and pitched only part of one<br />
season in the minors during his organized baseball<br />
career, put his thinking bluntly.<br />
"I'm making changes to survive," said Ruthven, who<br />
Smart people read Collegian ads. Right?<br />
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Buy two of our bean burritos at the regular Burrito<br />
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Montreal). I just threw a bad pitch to (Gary ) Carter and<br />
he hit a home run (in the playoffs). That could happen to<br />
anyone."<br />
Ruthven appears very pleased working with Osteen,<br />
the club's new pitching coach.<br />
"The good thing about having Claude is that I feel<br />
he'll be able to keep me in the groove I work into during<br />
spring training. Usually I work myself into that<br />
(groove) with a lot of lousy outings. Eventually you feel<br />
better and start the season well ," Ruthven said.<br />
"I just went through spring training the second half<br />
last season. I guess I'm peculiar that it affects me that<br />
much. But it does, so I accept it and try to work it out.<br />
The thing that hurt was that after the strike we didn 't<br />
have a pitching coach who would say anything or ask<br />
you anything. He was a very nice man , but never said<br />
anything. I had him when I was at Atlanta and the samething<br />
happened."<br />
Ruthven also said he and Osteen agreed on the value<br />
of watching films. Ruthven noticed that he had extended<br />
the time he spent looking down before a pitch , and he<br />
couldn't throw very well that way.<br />
"It really feels strange" to be speeding up his head<br />
movement, he said. "I feel like I'm going to fall over<br />
backwards. But I have time to work it out , especially<br />
throwing on the sideline.<br />
"I'll be ready" for the April 6 season opening, Ruthven<br />
predicted.<br />
Manager Pat Corrales hopes so. Ruthven is his No. 2<br />
starter behind Steve Carlton. Ruthven has to win if the<br />
Phillies hope to be a contender in the National League<br />
East Division.<br />
Men's Discussion Group<br />
Gay / Bisexual now forming<br />
Meets Wednesday ni ghts at 8 p<br />
residences in town<br />
Call<br />
DATE & STEAK<br />
iBS<br />
st<br />
m. at private<br />
H O.P m.)<br />
S. Gayline (863-0588, 7-9 p<br />
f or more inf ormation and location.<br />
108 S•<br />
Pugh<br />
238-9161<br />
AT THE<br />
HlK S|'|-:c,<br />
^<br />
/.s<br />
* ARF4ty/<br />
><br />
is Loose i9
12—The Daily Collegian Tuesday, March 30, 1982<br />
Netmen's Christian a smash<br />
After only the first four matches for the men's tennis team,<br />
the lone freshmen in the starting lineup has found out adjusting<br />
to collegiate level tennis is not has hard as it seems.<br />
Virgil Christian is the only freshman playing for the Nittany<br />
Lions. Christian is more than just adjusting. Currently he is<br />
playing second singles for the Nittany Lions.<br />
Christian, who lives in the Pittsburgh area, will be going<br />
home when <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> will be away at Pitt this afternoon.<br />
'. Lion coach Holmes Cathrall said Christian's adjustment was<br />
a little hard at first.<br />
"(Christian) gets a littte nervous," Cathrall said. "But he is<br />
getting over it now.<br />
; "He was a little tentative. Tomorrow we are not playing a<br />
team of usual caliber and he should play well."<br />
- But only in his first season, the left-hander is playing second<br />
singles for the team, which has to be a tough role for the<br />
freshman, Cathrall said.<br />
"It's tough to put a freshman up that high," Cathrall said,<br />
"and expect him to come through. He has done a very good job<br />
Griffin BUGS' ace-up-the-sleeve<br />
By RALPH BERNSTEIN<br />
AP Sports Writer<br />
BRADENTON, Fla. (AP) — Pittsburgh Pirates fans should<br />
see a lot of pitcher Tom Griffin if manager Chuck Tanner<br />
means what he says at the club's spring training camp.<br />
"He can start, pitch long relief or short relief," said Tanner,<br />
"it will depend on the makeup of the team when we come north.<br />
I'll make my decision when I have an idea of what kind of statf .<br />
I've got to work with."<br />
Griffin was acquired at December's winter baseball meetings<br />
from the San Francisco Giants in exchange for Doe<br />
Boyland. The Pirates are his fifth major league club.<br />
Griffin said he was prepared for any or all of the three chores<br />
Tanner mentioned.<br />
"But I prefer starting. It's no secret," said the 34-year-old<br />
right-hander who was used exclusively in that role last year by<br />
the Giants. It .was the first season since 1974, at Houston, that<br />
Griffin wasn't cast at least part-time as a reliever.<br />
"I did it all at San Francisco, long, middle, short, and then<br />
last year I started all season long," said the 6-3 pitcher who<br />
worked three seasons for the Giants.<br />
He recorded eight victories, his highest win total since 1976,<br />
when he won nine pitching for Houston and later San Diego. He<br />
had a 3.77 ERA in the strike-shortened 1981 season, and<br />
registered his 1,000th major league strikeout.<br />
Griffin said he was surprised, not just that he was traded, but<br />
that the Giants dealt a number of pitchers from a staff he said<br />
was the third best in the National League last season.<br />
"A good pitching staff is a rare commodity in today's game,<br />
especially with the injuries that crop up," said Griffin, who has<br />
a 76-91 career major league record.<br />
Griffin said he has recovered from back spasms that ended<br />
his season Aug. 24.<br />
"I'm throwing loose and without any discomfort," he said<br />
before a workout at the Pirates' camp.<br />
Griffin explained that he pitched well for the Giants last<br />
season because it was the first time since 1974 that he could<br />
concentrate on nothing but a starting role.<br />
"I couldn't remember the last time I started all season long,"<br />
said the 210-pounder.<br />
AN IBANEZ CN250 Electric Guitar<br />
.and Crate-ll amplifier. Excellent<br />
condition. 3-yrs. old. Best offer. Call<br />
John 234-8798 after 6p.m.<br />
A RESUME in your future? We have<br />
a style for you — Collegian Production,<br />
room 7 Carnegie Building,<br />
10a.m. - 5p.m.<br />
BESELER 23CII ENLARGER with<br />
chassis - lamphouse baseboard<br />
$235. 238-6770<br />
FENDER BASS AND acoustic bass<br />
amp. Excellent condition. Call<br />
Doug, 234-0877 between 8-10pm<br />
FOR SALE OR swap. I Com-215<br />
Portable FM transceiver with accessories<br />
$325 or best offer. Licensed<br />
amateurs only. Male Boa Constrictor<br />
includes, extras. $115 or best<br />
offer. 234-2431 After 6pm<br />
GRAD DORM CONTRACT(male) for<br />
sale; price negotiable; call 865-2175<br />
HARLEY DAVIDSON SPORSTER<br />
1980.6600 miles, luggage rack, mag<br />
wheels, sissy bar, 1000cc. $2950.<br />
355-5360<br />
INSURANCE FOR YOUR car, motorcycle,<br />
personal belongings residence.<br />
For prompt, courteous<br />
service, phone 238-6633.<br />
MARANTZ 3-WAY SPEAKERS -new-<br />
$200/B.O. (the pair). Smith-Corona<br />
electric portable typewriter -like<br />
new- $150/B.O. Must Sell! Amy 234-<br />
1459 evenings<br />
MEN'S SCHWINN WORLD 10speed.<br />
Riden only 25 miles. Asking<br />
$130. Phone 237-4988<br />
ONE OR TWO bedroom, 8x30 trailer,<br />
extra room added on, plus utilities<br />
shed. Situated on nice lot; can<br />
remain on lot. Close to campus on<br />
bus route. Also close to supermarkels.<br />
Asking $1300. Call 234-2490<br />
PROFESSIONAL RESEARCH,<br />
WRITING. From $4/page. Catalog<br />
$1. Authors' Research, 600-C, 407<br />
S.Dearborn, Chicago IL 60605<br />
QUALITY WESTERN WEAR:Handcrafted<br />
Tony Lama, Nacona, and<br />
Justin boots-straw and fur hatsspo.t<br />
coats-leather vests-belt<br />
buckles-sqiw dance, clothing-ask<br />
to see Kenny Rogers collection. Hat<br />
Ta' Boot Western Wear-237-8725<br />
OUEST KA-'AK, EXCELLENT Con-<br />
¦ .:i>h..t includes paddle, flotation,<br />
and spray skirt. $300.00 Call 234-<br />
4217 after 5:00pm.<br />
SINGLE BED, CHEST of drawers,<br />
dinette set, end tables, table and<br />
four lamps, book shelf. 238-3208<br />
1976 OLDS CUTLASS- Good condition,<br />
tan in color, well kept. Call<br />
after 5pm. 355-4850<br />
COMING TO THE Scorpion In April •<br />
"The Core", "Cafe Ole", "House of<br />
Assembly", "The Nlghthawks."<br />
INDEPENDENT STUDY BY correspondence<br />
is moving to 128 Mitchell<br />
Building on April 12th. Office will<br />
be closed April 7th, 8th and 9th<br />
REHRI6 PACIFIC COMPANY Is a<br />
fast growing nationwide manufacturer<br />
of plastic shipping containers.<br />
We offer challenging engineering<br />
positions in all our locations leading<br />
'directly to plant management<br />
responsibility. Current opening exists<br />
for a plant engineer at our Erie,<br />
<strong>Penn</strong>sylvania location. Sign up now<br />
jrt your career planning and placement<br />
office for an on campus interview<br />
on April 15, 1982<br />
RHYTHM AND BLUES? Then see<br />
Billy Price and KRB at the Scorpion,<br />
'Wednesday, April 14th ' ¦<br />
SHERRILL MILNES WORLD'S foremost<br />
baritone in concert. Saturday<br />
-April 10 8:30pm. The Forum Harrisburg<br />
PA. Tickets $10 student, $10-<br />
. '$20-$25 Public. For information call<br />
<br />
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5&<br />
-v .<br />
f* •'* «.<br />
5* 1 '<br />
n*" 'c ¦**<br />
* * ¦**«$»£ ~^t»>&j *Jb,:\<br />
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K&M<br />
4 A-^. A*s!*^ l^j !^ «!'<br />
m<br />
"'• ' Jh<br />
:%<br />
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' -J -i\ * *\ ,*• \' - rsP^,<br />
11,4 -\ i t " * £ *•<br />
, .'
Bruins win IM hockey title<br />
By RYAN POOLE<br />
Collegian Sports Writer<br />
The <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> ice hockey club's mtra-<br />
'• mural division capped an exciting season<br />
last Thursday night as the Bruins upset<br />
the league-leading Flyers 7-4 in the<br />
championship game.<br />
A crowd of 200 boisterous fans cheered<br />
the Bruins on to victory in a seesaw<br />
battle that climaxed with two unrj<br />
answered goals in the final four minutes<br />
of the game.<br />
The Flyers dominated the first 10 minutes<br />
of the game as they continually<br />
pressed Bruins goalie Steve TyaHla. The<br />
momentum changed, however, when<br />
Bruin defenseman Bob Thomas, who<br />
0 played an excellent game, gave teammate<br />
Jim Horrox a perfect pass to send<br />
him in on a breakaway for the first goal<br />
of the game.<br />
•The first period, which was filled with<br />
exciting end to end action, ended with the<br />
Bruins leading 1-0.<br />
Early in the second period the Flyers<br />
'lOave Schweon tied the game momentarily<br />
with an unassisted goal. In less than<br />
minute, the Bruins took a 2-1 lead thanks<br />
to a goal scored by the league's regular<br />
season scoring champion Mike<br />
Strumphler. The second period ended<br />
with the Flyers' Dan Wormoyer netting a<br />
* goal to tie the score.<br />
Satalin new Dukes coach<br />
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Jim Satalin,<br />
ihead basketball coach at St. Bonaventure<br />
<strong>University</strong> the past nine years, was<br />
named yesterday as new coach at Duquesne<br />
<strong>University</strong>.<br />
He fills the Duquesne post left vacant<br />
by the firing of Mike Rice early this<br />
month.<br />
The sudden, surprise announcement of<br />
*Satalin's hiring was made by the Duquesne<br />
sports information department in<br />
telephone calls to the media. The 35-yearold<br />
Satalin is expected to visit Pittsburgh<br />
tomorrow for a press conference.<br />
Last week, American <strong>University</strong> coach<br />
Gary Williams turned down the first<br />
formal job offer made by Duquesne.<br />
Earlier, two other coaches withdrew<br />
their names from consideration before<br />
Duquesne could make an offer. They<br />
were Lou Campanelli of James Madison<br />
<strong>University</strong> and Jim Calhoun of Northeastern.<br />
* Satalin was not among the six candidates<br />
interviewed initially by Duquesne's<br />
search committee.<br />
But he was officially named to the<br />
(A.) GOLD! CLASS rings, coins,<br />
wedding bands, neckchains, etc.<br />
Paying to 100% of gold market!<br />
Don't sell before you see me! Buying<br />
over 10 years. Paying cash! Will<br />
pick up. 466-7713 Boalsburg<br />
$HEST OF DRAWERS. Reasonable<br />
price. Call Kumar, 237-3694 evening<br />
leave message<br />
¦<br />
COUPLE SEEKING ONE bdrm apt<br />
(preferably in house) allowing dogs.<br />
Denise 238-1419 or Jim 238-3337<br />
GOLD AND SILVER. Will pick up.<br />
Leland Enterprises 238-2553<br />
,»SE HOCKEY GOALIE equipment,<br />
used. Call.Roger 234-9917<br />
COUNSELORS - COED WEIGHT<br />
reduction NY overnight. Sports, drama,<br />
WSI'S, dance, music, general,<br />
kitchen. Camp Shane, 15 Eldorado,<br />
Weehawken, NJ 07087<br />
CRUISES, RESORTS, SAILING Expeditions!<br />
Needed: Sports Instructors,<br />
office personnel, counselors.<br />
Europe, Carrlbean, Worldwide!<br />
Summer Career. Send $8.95 for<br />
application, openings, guide to cruiseworld.<br />
93 Box 60129 Sacramento,<br />
CU. 95860.<br />
.<br />
INTERESTED IN MAKING 300-600<br />
dollars per week this summer? If so,<br />
meeting tonight 7:00, 308 Willard<br />
NEED EXTRA MONEY? Set your<br />
own hours. Sell Avon. Call now 238-<br />
7070<br />
PLANT ARTIST FOR occasional<br />
'free-lance art/add word. Call for<br />
appointment Plants By Suzanne<br />
238-5475<br />
SALES REP- HOLIDAY Inn <strong>State</strong><br />
' College is hiring 2 sales representatives.<br />
Starting wage base $1,000 per<br />
month plus commission on sales.<br />
Major Medical available, life insurance<br />
plus car allowance. Send resume<br />
for interview to Fran Mason,<br />
p.o. box 678 <strong>State</strong> College, Pa.<br />
16801<br />
SUMMER JOBS- HARD Workers<br />
needed. Like to travel. Earn $310 per<br />
week. For interview: 237-4668<br />
rWiBMiMiMaaflMBMBBBB<br />
AN EXCELLENT TYPIST and close<br />
to campus. IBM selecric, papers,<br />
resumes, letters, theses. Ton! 237-<br />
9468<br />
CAN'T TYPE? I can help! Let a<br />
professional secretary do all your<br />
typing quickly and reasonably. Call<br />
.Tip-top Typing 234-1189 after 12<br />
noon<br />
EXPERIENCED TYPIST WILL type<br />
letters, resumes, theses, papers,<br />
reports, business correspondence.<br />
IBM Selectrlc Barbara 238-7207<br />
IBM CORRECTING SELECTRICS<br />
for rent Unlimited Rent-Alls, 140 N.<br />
Atherton St. 238-3037<br />
JOB HUNTING? START with professional-<br />
looking letters and resumes.<br />
Also, reports, theses, etc. Convenient,<br />
on-campus location. Diane<br />
238-2179 or 863-0388<br />
The action increased in the third period<br />
as the Flyers took a 3-2 lead on a goal by<br />
Don Scott. The Bruins bounced back and<br />
tied the game on Jim Horrox's second<br />
goal of the game. He was assisted by<br />
Steve Vinkler and Mike Strumphler.<br />
It seemed as if an overtime period was<br />
lurking in the future as both teams<br />
seemed to hold each other in check<br />
midway through the third period.<br />
But the Bruins spoiled all hopes of an<br />
overtime period as they scored two goals<br />
within 48 seconds of each other. The<br />
unassisted goal of the Flyers' Roger Hill<br />
brought them within one goal with 4:15<br />
remaining.<br />
The Bruins spoiled all hopes of a Flyer<br />
comeback as they scored two insurance<br />
goals in the waning minutes of the game.<br />
At the termination of this brutal battle<br />
the Bruins mobbed their goalie Steve<br />
Tyahla to show him their appreciation of<br />
his gallant effort against the first-place<br />
Flyers.<br />
The championship game climaxed a<br />
30-game schedule for the eight team<br />
intramural league. The first-place Flyers<br />
were followed by the Kings, Rangers,<br />
and in fourth place the eventual league<br />
champion Bruins.<br />
The top 5 scorers were Mike Strumphler<br />
with 64 points, Andy Mayers (48),<br />
Louis Hebert (45), Dave Schweon (44) ,<br />
and Mike Donne (42).<br />
Duquesne post by the university president,<br />
the Rev. Donald Nesti, who orchestrated<br />
the firing of Rice after an 11-16<br />
season.<br />
Duquesne was reportedly offering a<br />
base salary of $50,000 to $60,000 in its<br />
attempts to hire a coach.<br />
At Duquesne, Satalin will have complete<br />
control of the basketball program,<br />
including finances and scheduling. Last<br />
Friday, Duquesne announced that Athletic<br />
Director John "Red" Manning<br />
would relinquish all duties regarding the<br />
basketball program.<br />
Satalin, who played at St. Bonaventure,<br />
had a 156-93 overall coaching record<br />
in nine seasons at the New York School.<br />
His team won the National Invitation<br />
Tournament in 1977 with a 24-6 record. In<br />
1978, the Bonnies made the NCAA playoffs<br />
with a 21-8 mark. And they made the<br />
NIT again in 1979, finishing 19-9.<br />
Last season, St. Bonaventure finished<br />
14-14 and lost to West Virginia in the<br />
Eastern Athletic Association tournament.<br />
NITTANY TYPING SERVICE only<br />
$.90/ double spaced page. $1.80/<br />
single spaced page. Call Scott 237-<br />
9172<br />
PROFESSIONAL SECRETARY<br />
WILL handle all your typing jobs<br />
accurately and efficiently. Call 359-<br />
2648 after 4pm<br />
PROFESSIONAL TYPISTS CAN<br />
type your paper quickly, cheaply.<br />
IBM Selectrlc with Greek symbols.<br />
Call 238-4087<br />
UNIVERSITY SECRETARY QUIT to<br />
type from home, theses, resumes,<br />
term papers, etc. Call anytime 238-<br />
2388 .<br />
GOING TO L.A. approx. April 5, rider<br />
needed to share driving and expenses,<br />
call Tom. 355-3584<br />
RIDE WANTED TO Syracuse this<br />
Friday, April 2nd. Share expenses.<br />
Please call Cissy 865-2844<br />
LOST AT AKL brown two tone ski<br />
jacket. Need keys desperately.<br />
Please call 865-7719 reward<br />
LOST: BLUE STRUGGLE-Gear<br />
down Jacket at Sigma Nu Saturday<br />
night. If found call 237-1521<br />
LOST: LADY'S GOLD watch on<br />
March 25. If found call 238-0305.<br />
Reward<br />
LOST: LIGHT BROWN gloves. Had<br />
them last on Sunday Shuttle. If<br />
found call John 238-7966<br />
LOST. GOLD WATCH between Pattee<br />
and Park Forest apartments<br />
(Sunday Shuttle Route.) If found<br />
Please call 238-2928<br />
MAN'S BROWN WALLET Lost on<br />
campus. Please return. Reward offered.<br />
Call Steve 238-0451<br />
RED CAP. "SHELTON—Witt Equipment<br />
Corporation". Lost Saturday<br />
night, 8:00 PM, near corner of Allen<br />
and Beaver. Incredible sentimental<br />
value. $20 reward. Call John 234-<br />
8852, 865-1828<br />
TUESdAV<br />
Wheel<br />
NiqhT<br />
"You'll bE SpiNNINq!"<br />
OpEN 4 pM<br />
118 S. GARNER<br />
TAKEOUTS TOO!<br />
"FOUND" NOTICES<br />
ARE PUBLISHED<br />
FOR THREE DAYS AT NO CHARGE<br />
BABY DIAPER BAG (floral) on 3/19.<br />
Claim by calling 238-0484 after<br />
6:30pm<br />
EYE GLASSES FOUND: East College<br />
Avenue-Saturday night. In<br />
blue case. Yours? Call Carol 5-9749<br />
FOUND: GOLD BRACELET in 104<br />
Chambers on 3/25. Call 865-9464 to<br />
identify and claim<br />
FOUND- NECKLACE WITH gold<br />
colored chain and blrthstone. 3/22,<br />
in rear of Stephens Hall, call 865-<br />
7123<br />
FOUND: Tl—55-H on 1st floor men's<br />
room Willard Building. Call Christopher<br />
237-4517<br />
FOUND WATCH ON IM fields, (Blue<br />
Band Field) Tues. 3-23 Phone 5-0274<br />
AAAAA CENTRE HALLS Brad<br />
Desch isn't making promises he's<br />
giving results. The difference Is<br />
experience. Vote Desch this U.S.G.<br />
election<br />
ABOUT RESUMES .... Isn't It<br />
about time you put yours In the<br />
hands of the professionals at Collegian<br />
Production? Room 7 Carnegie<br />
Building, 10a.m. - 5p.m.<br />
AHOY, THERE!! NEED ride to Phllly<br />
area April 1 or 2. Call Cindy 865-<br />
8239. Leave message If not in.<br />
Thanks!<br />
ATTENTION LADIES: HOW about a<br />
male stripper to excite your next<br />
party? Call 238-4891<br />
BAND NEEDS BASS player for sum<br />
mer. We have bookings at Skelter,<br />
Saloon, Gatsby's, etc. Call Dave,<br />
865-3904 or Pete, 234-8300<br />
BRIAN, YOU USED to be Into vectors,<br />
are now into atoms. Your<br />
brother has green eyes, I would like<br />
to talk with you again. Could you<br />
help? Please reply. Lisa<br />
B.L.T.-TO MY one and only space<br />
heater and bun warmer, Happy 20th<br />
Birthday! Love always, Laura (Neat,<br />
huh?)<br />
CHERYL- MY FAVORITE Kappa.<br />
Thanks for an excellent weekend<br />
and all the great times together. I<br />
love you. Red Racer<br />
Men's volleyball poll<br />
1.UCLA<br />
2. UCSB '<br />
3. USC<br />
4. PENN STATE<br />
5. Hawaii<br />
6. Pepperdjne<br />
7. Ohio <strong>State</strong><br />
8. San Diego <strong>State</strong><br />
9. Rutgers-Newark<br />
10. Long Beach <strong>State</strong><br />
NBA<br />
¦/¦Boston<br />
y-SIXERS<br />
Washington<br />
New Jersey<br />
New York<br />
x-Mtlwaukee<br />
Atlanta<br />
Detroit<br />
Indiana<br />
Chicago<br />
Cleveland<br />
San Antonio<br />
Denver<br />
Houston<br />
Kansas City<br />
Dallas<br />
Utah<br />
Pacltic Division<br />
Los Angeles 48 23<br />
Seattle 46 24<br />
Golden <strong>State</strong> 39 32<br />
Phoenix 38 32<br />
Portland 35 35<br />
San Diego 16 55<br />
x-cllnched division title,<br />
y-cllnched playoff spots.<br />
Sunday's Games<br />
SIXERS 116, Boston 98<br />
Indiana 102, Chicago 101<br />
Los Angeles 116, Kansas City 111<br />
Houston 94, Golden <strong>State</strong> 92<br />
Seattle 109, Portland 101<br />
New Jersey 113, New York 106<br />
Washington 104, Cleveland 101<br />
Last Night's Games<br />
Phoenix at Utah<br />
Today's Games<br />
Indiana at New York<br />
Detroit at Washington<br />
SIXERS at Milwaukee<br />
Golden <strong>State</strong> at San Antonio<br />
Atlanta at Chicago<br />
Dallas at Houston<br />
Seattle at Deenver<br />
San Diego at Los Angeles<br />
Kansas City at Portland<br />
NHL<br />
x-NY Islanders<br />
y-NY Rangers<br />
EASTERN CONFERENCE<br />
Atlantic Division<br />
W L<br />
55 16<br />
49 21<br />
36 34<br />
38 36<br />
30 41<br />
Central Division<br />
48 23<br />
35 35<br />
34 37<br />
32 39<br />
29 41<br />
15 55<br />
WESTERN CONFERENCE<br />
Midwest Division<br />
W L<br />
44 27<br />
40 30<br />
40 32<br />
25 46<br />
24 47<br />
19 52<br />
Wales Conference<br />
Patrick Division<br />
W L T GF GA Pts<br />
52 15 9 367 234 113<br />
38 25 13 301 288 89<br />
CO-ED SOFTBALL TEAMS interested<br />
in scrimmaging, call Linda at<br />
865-9705<br />
|Now Renting For<br />
a September<br />
I Foster Manor<br />
iX-large 1 Bedroom<br />
i Apartments<br />
¦ partially furnished<br />
234-8032<br />
18-0 280<br />
10-5 244<br />
12-4 230<br />
23-3 162<br />
9-3 160<br />
7-6 153<br />
23-2 112<br />
8-7 74<br />
5-2 68<br />
9-7 38<br />
Pet. GB<br />
.775 —<br />
700 5%<br />
514 1BV4<br />
500 19U<br />
423 25<br />
676 -<br />
,500 12V5<br />
479 14<br />
451 16<br />
414 18%<br />
214 32%<br />
Pel. GB<br />
620 —<br />
571 3VS<br />
556 4V4<br />
352 19<br />
338 20<br />
268 25<br />
676<br />
657<br />
549<br />
543<br />
500<br />
225<br />
1V4<br />
9<br />
DAVID—I HOPE you had a good<br />
birthday weekend; I enjoyed spending<br />
it with you. Love, your sister<br />
Ann<br />
EARTHLY MESSENGER, SPEAK<br />
unto me, 865-9049. Physical orspiritual<br />
standards? David H.<br />
EYE CONTACT: the magic number<br />
Is 237-8733. Sincerely, Michael<br />
GIRL IN WHITE and purple Jacket<br />
heading towards Burrowes yesterday<br />
morning, I'd love to see that<br />
smile again. Steve<br />
H.O.P.S. GAYLINE 7-9pm daily 863-<br />
0588. Information and raps on homosexuality<br />
and gay lifestyles.<br />
I NEED DIRECTIONS to the "View"<br />
for Sunday. What is the best time to<br />
be there?<br />
LET A.S.J. GRAPHICS Give your<br />
organization a token to remember<br />
this year by. The lowest possible<br />
prices on your sllkscreen. Don't<br />
Walt! Get your orders in now! For<br />
appointments and information call:<br />
¦J.D. 238-1563, 5:30 ¦ 8:00 pm<br />
LOST AT KDR 1/15 Purplish-Blue<br />
Stadium Jacket. Please call 865-<br />
0348. Reward. No questions asked<br />
LOST AT SKULL House Sat. nlte<br />
3/27 - Dark Blue Waistcoat. Would<br />
like it back. 865-4034<br />
MARCY: IT'S OVERl Congratulations<br />
on an amazing season and an<br />
even more amazing finish at Nationals.<br />
Congratulations on surviving 15<br />
years of gymnastics. And most of<br />
all- congratulations on being able<br />
to drink' againl Have fun in North<br />
Carolina, too. Love, the ex-roommates.<br />
MEN'S GYMNASTICS TEAM-Good<br />
Luck at N.C.A.A.'s!!! Love always,<br />
Holly and Lisa<br />
MUSICIANS: OPPORTUNITY<br />
KNOCKS! Last Spring's hottest<br />
new band Is reforming. Guitarists,<br />
keyboardists call now 234-0754<br />
NEED A ROOMMATE for the summer<br />
in Stone Harbor, N.J.? Call<br />
Sherri ¦ 237-5352<br />
PARES SPORTSWEAR - T'SHIRTS,<br />
baseball hats, visors, golf shirts,<br />
Jerseys, trophies. Best price! Call<br />
Cliff 237-9687<br />
PI KAPP PUSH-UP-A-THON team:<br />
Rocky was the Theme and you guys<br />
were a mean team. We know you<br />
are in shape because you guys are<br />
definitely great. Congratulations!<br />
Love, your Big Sister Pledges<br />
y-FLYERS 37 30 10 312 303 84<br />
y-PENOUINS 29 36 12 292 326 70<br />
Washington 24 41 12 306 329 60<br />
Adams Division<br />
x-Montreal 44 15 17 344 210 105<br />
y-Boston 41 26 10 306 271 92<br />
y-Buffalo 37 25 15 292 258 89<br />
y-Quebec 31 29 16 333 327 78<br />
Hartford 21 38 17 254 330 59<br />
Campbell Conference<br />
Norrls Division<br />
x-Mlnnesota 36 21 20 333 275 92<br />
y-Wlnnlpeg 32 30 14 307 316 78<br />
y-St. Louis 30 39 8. 303 337 88<br />
y-Chlcago 28 37 12 320 352 68<br />
Toronto 20 41 16 290 362 56<br />
Detroit 20 46 12 265 345 52<br />
Smyths Division<br />
x-EdmoMon 48 17 15 408 291 107<br />
y-Vancouver 28 33 16 273 278 72<br />
y-Calgary 27 33 17 315 337 71<br />
y-Los Angeles 24 37 15 302 342 63<br />
Colorado 17 48 12 234 346 46<br />
x-cllnched first place In dlvslon.<br />
y-clinched playoff spots.<br />
Sunday's Games<br />
St.Louls 8, Chicago 3<br />
Detroit 6, Toronto 4<br />
Minnesota 5, Hartford 2<br />
FLYERS 3, NY Rangers 1<br />
PENGUINS 6, Washington 5<br />
Buffalo 9, Boston 5<br />
Edmonton 6, Los Angeles 2<br />
Vancouver 5, Winnipeg 0<br />
Last Night's Games<br />
NY Islanders at NY Rangers<br />
Tonight's Games<br />
Buffalo at Quebec<br />
Hartford at Montreal<br />
Winnipeg at Minnesota<br />
Toronto at St.Louls<br />
Los Angeles at Calgary<br />
9VJ<br />
"* Exhibition baseball<br />
Sunday's Games<br />
Montreal vs. PHILLIES, ccd., rain<br />
St. Louis vs. Los Angeles, ccd., rain<br />
Atlanta 7, Cincinnati 2<br />
Toronto (SS) vs. New York (NL) (SS), ccd., rain<br />
Toronto (SS) vs. Houston, ccd., rain<br />
New York (NL) 4, rain<br />
'New York (AL) 3, 7V4 Innings<br />
Texas 1, Baltimore 1, tie, 9 innings, rain<br />
Detroll vs. Chicago (AL), ccd., rain<br />
Boston vs. Minnesota, ccd., rain<br />
Kansas City vs. PIRATES, ccd., rain<br />
Chicago (NL) 5, Seattle 4<br />
San Francisco 7, California 2<br />
San Diego 6, Cleveland 4<br />
Milwaukee 7, Oakland 1<br />
Yesterday's Games<br />
Late games not Included<br />
PIRATES 10, New York (NL) 5<br />
Cincinnati 2, Houston 0<br />
Los Angeles 7, Minnesota 2<br />
Baltimore vs. Atlanta, ccd., rain<br />
Montreal 10, Toronto 2<br />
Chicago (AL) 3, PHILLIES 2, 11 innings<br />
Boston 8, Detroit 0<br />
San Francisco vs. Milwaukee at Sun City, Ariz.<br />
San Diego vs. Seattle at Tempo, Ariz.<br />
Oakland vs. Chicago (NL) at Mesa, Ariz.<br />
California vs. Cleveland at Tucson, Ariz.<br />
Today's Games<br />
PIRATES vs. St.Louls at St. Petersburg, Fla.<br />
Baltimore vs. PHILLIES at Clearwater, Fla.<br />
PREGNANT? NEED HELP? For free<br />
pregnancy testing and confidential<br />
counseling, call Birthright 237-3163<br />
P.S.U. MIRRORS IN stock for next<br />
years football games. Buy now.<br />
40% off. Call 237-2638<br />
RAH RAH RAH! Good luck Lori!<br />
We're all behind you. Love in AOT,<br />
Your KD Sisters<br />
REGGAE! PHILADELPHIA'S OWN<br />
"House of Assembly" will be at the<br />
Scorpion on April 22-23. Reggae!<br />
"ROCKERS" THE SCORPION presents<br />
MCA recording artists "The<br />
Iron City Houserockers" April 8th.<br />
Be There<br />
ROCK N' ROLL with "Norm Nardlni<br />
and the Tigers" at the Scorpion this<br />
weekend<br />
SANYO PORTABLE CASSETTE<br />
player (walkman) with recharging<br />
package. Must sell 238-3904<br />
TERRY, STEVE, BILL, Tom and the<br />
rest of the men's gymnastics'team,<br />
good luck in Nebraska (corn)! You<br />
guys are the best! Love, Beth<br />
TO THE MERRY Mudmen: Your<br />
unexpected visit surely took us by<br />
surprise; thanks for 'showering' us<br />
with your unabated affection! Next<br />
time, may we partake in your'splendor<br />
In the grass'? Kim and Yvonne<br />
TUTOR NEEDED FOR Bio Chem 1.<br />
Call Pete 238-3059<br />
WANTED: FEMALE COMPAN-<br />
ION^) to backpack and hostel<br />
through Europe late June to early<br />
August. Call Melanie at 234-1173<br />
YOUR EYES ONLY: name time/<br />
place or leave number- you won't<br />
regret it! Eye Contact<br />
PAT'S TYPING SERVICE. Versatile<br />
very qualified, reasonable, expert<br />
enced resumes, letters, term pa<br />
pers, dissertations. Call 237-2461<br />
BEAUTIFY YOUR RESIDENCE. Earn<br />
beautiful sollfree plants. Have a<br />
plant partv. Call Kris 355-8781<br />
FOR BETTER MUSIC at lower rates<br />
at your next party, phone Entertainment<br />
Unlimited at 237-0708<br />
SURPRISE! HAPPY BIRTHDAY<br />
Dave. What are you doing at 7pm<br />
Friday? Love Ya Michael<br />
4&Aftr^<br />
£\ \V.V!to<br />
mi!«i.<br />
The Daily Collegian Tuesday, March 30, 1982—13<br />
~ ~<br />
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** "***? * M *V**'«r^** Fi J ' \_T<br />
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AP Laserphoto<br />
Workmen struggle to roll heavy artificial turf onto glue-covered playing surface<br />
yesterday in Veteran's Stadium. Depending on the weather, the surface should be<br />
ready for the Phils' season opener April 6 against the New York Mets.<br />
New York (AL) vs. Los Angeles at Vero Beach, Fla.<br />
Montreal (SS) vs. Toronto at Ounedln, Fla.<br />
Montreal (SS) vs. <strong>University</strong> of Miami at Coral Gables<br />
Fla.<br />
New York (NL) vs. Detroit at Lakeland, Fla.<br />
Cincinnati vs. Kansas City at Fort Myers, Fla.<br />
Seattle vs. San Francisco at Scottsdale, Ariz.<br />
California vs. Chicago (N) at Mesa, Ariz.<br />
Boston vs. Chicago (AL) at Sarasota, Fla. San Diego vs. Oakland at Phoenix<br />
Minnesota vs. Texas at Pomoano Beach, Fla. Milwaukee vs. Cleveland al Tucson, Ariz.<br />
Wake up with<br />
JS Collegian<br />
danyisouegian thefnllt-ftian<br />
Man.ln Form<br />
Classified Information<br />
Policy<br />
Ads must be prepaid<br />
Changes cannot be made after the first insertion<br />
Cash refunds will only be given for ads cancelled by 1 p.m. the day before the firsl insertion. Only credit<br />
vouchers will be given after this time.<br />
The Daily Collegian will only be responsible for one day's incorrect insertion. Please come lo room 126<br />
Carnegie Building immediately if there is an error In your ad.<br />
The Dally Collegian will not knowingly cause to be printed or published any notice or advertisement<br />
relating to employment or membership indicating any preference, limitation, specification or<br />
descrimination based upon race, color, sexual orientation,' religious creed, ancestry, age, sex, national<br />
orgin or non-job related handicap or disability.<br />
• prepaid order form ads<br />
Just MAIL in the classified order form with (he correct payment and your ad will appear when requested<br />
We must receive the ad the morning before publication.<br />
No PERSONAL ads accepted by mail.<br />
• deadlines<br />
classified — 1 p.m. one business day before publication<br />
cancellation — 1 p.m. one business day before publication<br />
renewal — no later than 1 p.m. the last day the ad is to appear in the paper.<br />
Classified Mail Order Form<br />
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(phone number published only if included below)<br />
Please print your ad one word per box<br />
ALL ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW COLLEGIAN POLICY<br />
Date ad begins Make checks payable to:<br />
Total days in paper Collegian Inc.<br />
Amount paid 126 Carnegie Building<br />
Classification <strong>University</strong> Park, PA 16802<br />
NUMBER OF DAYS<br />
KOFWORDS DAY 1 DAY 2 DAY 3 DAY 4 nAV 5 EACH ADDITIONAL<br />
UAT 3 CONSECUTIVE DAY<br />
1-15 1.83 2.71 3.59 4.47 5.35 -88<br />
16-20 2.30 3.42 4.54 5.66 6.78 1.12<br />
21-25 2.76 4.11 5.46 6.81 8.16 1.35<br />
26-30 3.23 4.81 6.39 7.97 9.55 1.58<br />
31-35 « 3.65 5.42 7.19 8.96 10.73 1.77<br />
apartments<br />
Classifications<br />
attention<br />
audio<br />
automotive<br />
tor rent<br />
for sale<br />
help wanted<br />
houses<br />
lost<br />
parties<br />
rides/riders<br />
roommates<br />
student service directory<br />
sublet<br />
typing<br />
wanted<br />
found (free) rooms wanted to rent
14—The Daily Collegian Tuesday, March 30, 1982<br />
Lectures,<br />
Talks<br />
and Seminars<br />
Tuesday<br />
The Christian Science<br />
Organization sponsors Robert W.<br />
Jeffery in a lecture titled, "Christ:<br />
The Light Shining in the<br />
Darkness," 7:30 p.m., HUB<br />
Reading Room.<br />
The Career Development and<br />
Placement Center and Women's<br />
Studies Option present "Job<br />
Search and the Dual Career<br />
Couple." The program includes<br />
three panel discussions: The<br />
Professional's Perspective, 1 p.m.;<br />
The Employer's Perspective, 2:30<br />
p.m. and The Personal<br />
Perspective, 4 p.m.; HUB Art<br />
Gallery Lounge.<br />
Panhel and the Alumni<br />
Association present Alumni<br />
Fellow Elizabeth Kelly with "Tips<br />
on Getting Ahead," 8:30 p.m., HUB<br />
Gallery Lounge. Also in the HUB<br />
Gallery lounge is a seminar on<br />
"Opportunities in Graduate<br />
Studies" at 7 p.m.<br />
Tau Phi Delta fraternity<br />
presents another in its series of<br />
outdoor seminars. Featured are<br />
Wildlife Service biologist Dave<br />
Futnam, area turkey calling expert<br />
Jody Hugil and regional turkey<br />
hunting authority Earl Hower<br />
discussing turkey hunting •<br />
techniques, 7:30 p.m., 427 E.<br />
Fairmount Ave.<br />
The Department of Comparative<br />
Literature features Emily<br />
Grosholtz in a luncheon/lecture<br />
titled, "Angels' Language and the<br />
Imagination: Reike and<br />
Baudelaire," 12:15 p.m., 204 HUB.<br />
Three Cultures will feature Paul<br />
O. Wooley, Jr. of Health Planning<br />
and Administration in a talk on<br />
"Utilitarian Vs. Social Equalitarian<br />
Health Care Policies," 12:20 p.m.,<br />
101 Kern.<br />
The Career Development and<br />
Placement Center features<br />
afternoon seminars on Resume<br />
Preparation, 12:45 p.m.; Job<br />
Search for the Non-Technical<br />
Major, 2:20 p.m. and Interview<br />
Skills, 3:55 p.m., 109 Boucke.<br />
Gerard Damaison of Chevron<br />
Overseas Petroleum will discuss<br />
"Petroleum Source Beds:<br />
Environments of Deposition and<br />
Stratigraphy," 3:45 p.m., 22 Deike<br />
Aiagacone Sriskantha gives a<br />
talk titled, "Tozzett, Classic #9,"<br />
19* J<br />
Szs<br />
Oil qjjWY<br />
CPIZZA CPUB<br />
340 «E. COLLEGE M)E<br />
237-5718<br />
New! !<br />
Delicious<br />
Dinner Specials<br />
every night!<br />
(made uuith homemade ,<br />
handspun white or<br />
whole wheat-dough &<br />
no preservatives!)<br />
Sunday: A Well Balanced Pizzal<br />
buy a meat topping and get<br />
a vegetable topping for 5*.<br />
Monday: 25' off 10", .50' off 12" or 14"<br />
.75< off 16" pizza.<br />
Tuesday: 10" pizza with a salad<br />
for only 2.95<br />
Wednesday; $1.00 off Red Stuffed<br />
Pizza<br />
Pitcher of beer: 2.00 & 2.25<br />
Thursday: 50' off Stromboli fit Calzone.<br />
Pitcher of beer: 2.00 & 2.25.<br />
carving pspsl-colo<br />
3:45 p.m., 213 Buckout.<br />
The Alumni Association<br />
features Alumni Fellow Elizabeth<br />
Kelly, senior consultant, planning<br />
and allocations for United Way of<br />
America, speaking on managing<br />
community service programs,<br />
10:15 a.m., E. 317 Human<br />
Development. Also scheduled is a<br />
seminar on Women's Education<br />
and Professional Development,<br />
3:30 p.m., 224 Rackley.<br />
Wednesday<br />
The Accounting Club and Beta<br />
Alpha Psi present Douglas<br />
MdCormick, treasurer for the<br />
Pittsburgh Pirates, lecturing on<br />
"Accounting for a Sports Entity,"<br />
7:30 p.m., 121 Sparks.<br />
Colloquy sponsors a slide<br />
presentation and speech titled "A<br />
Woman's Journey," detailing the<br />
adventures of Cindy Ross on the<br />
Appalachian Trail, 7:30 p.m., HUB<br />
Assembly Room.<br />
The Environmental Engineering<br />
Department sponsors Dr. Charles<br />
O'Melio of Johns Hopkins<br />
<strong>University</strong> in a discussion on<br />
"Aquasals: The Physical Aspect<br />
of the Behavior in Aquatic<br />
Systems," 7:30 p.m., 305 HUB.<br />
The Insurance and Real Estate<br />
Club features Mark Bigatel,<br />
president of the Centre County<br />
Board of Realtors, in a talk titled,<br />
"Real Estate in the Near Future,"<br />
7:30 p.m., 151 Willard.<br />
<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> Flying Lions, a new<br />
organization on campus, presents<br />
Dan Reese of Piper Aircraft<br />
Corporation speaking on aviation<br />
education and safety, 7:30 p.m.,<br />
232 Hammond.<br />
¦ The Alumni Association<br />
features Elizabeth Kelly, senior<br />
consultant, planning and<br />
allocations for United Way of<br />
America, speaking on Community<br />
Services, 9:35 a.m., 115 Electrical<br />
Engineering West. Also featured<br />
is a talk on Field Experience, 8<br />
p.m., 108 Human Development.<br />
Thursday<br />
The Career Development and<br />
Planning Center features<br />
afternoon seminars on Job Search<br />
for the Non-Technical Major, 12:45<br />
p.m.; Interview Skills, 2:20 p.m.<br />
and Resume Preparation, 3:55<br />
p.m., 109 Boucke.<br />
Physics Colloquium presents<br />
M. Dresden in a talk titled, "H. A.<br />
Kramers and the Quantum<br />
Theory," 3:50 p.m., 117 Osmond.<br />
Department of Anthropology '<br />
Michele Hayward, Ph.D. candidate<br />
* •*•••••* + *••*••*•••<br />
* ARENA FRt-SAT-SUN *<br />
* 2-4-6-8-10 *<br />
* HARRISON _nA/0F/tf OF THE *<br />
* FORD firLosi>ARKm i<br />
* MMB 1-IHUMJLJBI-ilLJ 1-I.MIM *<br />
* _________{____j_y___Ujy_____| *<br />
* 1600 N. Atherton St. 237-2444 *<br />
* —Free Parking— *<br />
i ARENA II MIDNIGHT ONLY „<br />
* f/MwW *<br />
£ IP ' «*¦ Interlude of __ *<br />
* W^fM X *<br />
i HA taP "LUST" ***¦ *<br />
* *••• + **• + + ¦* ¦*¦ + **••<br />
HEAD<br />
•<br />
in anthropology, speaks on<br />
"Linkage of Colonial Mexican<br />
Parish Records," 3:30 p.m., 107<br />
Carpenter.<br />
Department of German<br />
presents Heinz Osterle, Northern<br />
Illinois <strong>University</strong>, and "Auf den<br />
Spuren der Antigone," 8 p.m., 124<br />
Sparks.<br />
Panhel as part of Women's<br />
Awareness Week presents a<br />
seminar on "Women's Health<br />
Issues," 8:30 p.m., 220 HUB.<br />
"Women's Health Issues with<br />
Dr. Wickersham" The <strong>University</strong>'s<br />
noted Professor of Zoology and<br />
human sexuality speaks, 8:30<br />
p.m., 320 HUB.<br />
Films<br />
Tuesday<br />
"Football Fever" Film in which<br />
professional football players<br />
discuss the correlation between<br />
spiritual aspects of their lives and<br />
athletic success. Lions Todd<br />
Blackledge and Curt Warner are<br />
scheduled to appear at the<br />
showing. Sponsored by the<br />
Campus Crusade for Christ. 8<br />
p.m., 102 Forum.<br />
"How to Say No to a Rapist and<br />
Survive" Instructional film on rape<br />
and assault. Sponsored by the<br />
<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> Students for Life in<br />
observation of Women's<br />
Awareness Week. 9:35 and 11:10<br />
a.m. today, 12:45 and 2:20 p.m.<br />
tomorrow and Thursday, HUB<br />
Main Lounge.<br />
Thursday<br />
"Fallacies of Hope" Another in<br />
the series of selections from<br />
"Civilization," Sir Kenneth Clark's<br />
BBC-produced film series on art.<br />
Co-Sporisored by the Museum of<br />
Art and the Art Students' League.<br />
7 p.m., First Floor Gallery,<br />
Museum of Art.<br />
"The Hot Rock" Generally<br />
pleasing comedy in which a<br />
makeshift group of so-called<br />
thieves, led by slick fellows<br />
Robert Redford and George Segal,<br />
have the darndest time trying to<br />
lift a priceless diamond from awell-guarded<br />
museum. Directed<br />
by Peter Yates ("Breaking Away"),<br />
this 1972 film won plaudits for its<br />
innovative editing. 7 and 9 p.m.,<br />
112 Kern.<br />
"Knife in the Head" Bruno Ganz<br />
plays Hoffman, a biogeneticist<br />
who searches for his estranged<br />
wife in a radical hanqout when he<br />
is shot in the head during a police<br />
raid. The film deals primarily with<br />
his attempt, despite irreversible'<br />
brain damage, to piece together<br />
his consciousness and<br />
reconstruct the series of events<br />
that led to his tragedy. The film<br />
also makes deeper statements<br />
about political and social .<br />
manipulation. Directed by<br />
Germany's Reinhard Hauff. 7 and<br />
9 p.m., 112 Chambers.<br />
Sounds<br />
The Bars<br />
Arthur's (formerly Le Bistro)<br />
Red Dog Records' recording<br />
artists Archie Blue will appear<br />
tonight.<br />
Allen Room Bill Filer plays<br />
tonight, tomorrow and Thursday.<br />
Autoport Tonight, enjoy the<br />
sounds of Larry Marynek,<br />
tomorrow Jim Langton entertains<br />
on the grand piano, and Thursday<br />
listen to Skip Werham.<br />
Brewery Spend your evening<br />
with Second Wind tomorrow,<br />
Thursday party with Red Rose<br />
Cotillion.<br />
Brickhouse Tavern Tomorrow<br />
and Thursday rock with music's<br />
Force-of-One J.B.<br />
Coffee Grinder Isabel Fine<br />
performs tonight and tomorrow;<br />
Thursday enjoy the music of Tom<br />
Huckabee.<br />
Gatsby's Bittersweet performs<br />
on Wednesday.<br />
La Bella Vita Relax on Thursday<br />
with Andy Mozenter.<br />
Le Papillon Enjoy the mellow<br />
sounds of Sherry McCamley<br />
tonight, tomorrow, and Thursday.<br />
The Pub (Holiday Inn) Thursday<br />
David Fox, formerly of Backseat<br />
Van Gogh, plays for your<br />
enjoyment.<br />
Phyrst Red Rose rocks tonight,<br />
Thursday Second Wind takes the<br />
stage.<br />
Rathskellar Tom Casey appears<br />
tomorrow, Kenny Matthieu sets<br />
the mood on Thursday.<br />
Rego's John Cunningham plays<br />
tonight, tomorrow and Thursday.<br />
Scorpion Kikkin' Inn rocks with<br />
a country style tonight and<br />
tomorrow. Thursday take the<br />
Tahoka Freeway exit to the Scorp'.<br />
Sly Fox (Sheraton) Way Out<br />
features all types of music<br />
tonight, tomorrow, and Thursday.<br />
Saloon W.C. Billhick appears<br />
tonight, while tomorrow Larry<br />
Moore plays the oldies. Thursday<br />
Chi Omega mould like to extend its walmest<br />
congratulations to OWL nexaest sister<br />
ANN SHAFFER<br />
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LUCY, WE'VE SOT TO 6ET<br />
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If you want to work for a computer company that expects more of you<br />
than more of the same, talk to CSC. Our recruiter will be on campus<br />
to answer your questions April 12th.<br />
The only limitations are the ones you bring with you.<br />
CSC<br />
COMPUTER SCIENCES CORPORATION<br />
Corporate Offices: 650 N. Sepulveda Blvd., El Segundo, CA 90245<br />
An Equal Opportunity Employer<br />
Svndl<br />
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IN.<br />
THIS 15 THE FIRST TIME<br />
I'VE EVER LOOKEP PIRECTLY<br />
INTO THE EYES OF<br />
SOMEONE WHO IS TOTALLY<br />
OUT OF HIS MINP!<br />
t n •i<br />
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Ad-Keep. \i<br />
r\Ov\i G-ivf<br />
Matches<br />
don't start<br />
forest fires<br />
People do.<br />
Across<br />
1 Food for Mr. Ed<br />
4 What "prler" means (2 wds.)<br />
9 Lucille Ball role<br />
13 Blrthstone<br />
15 In for — awakening<br />
16 "-— the Mood for Love"<br />
17 Hair color (2 wds.)<br />
20 Capital of Chile<br />
21 Walk In water<br />
22 Commit a faux pas<br />
23 Judge<br />
25 Drew close<br />
28 Thoses who shun<br />
32 Other Sp.<br />
33 River to the Rhone<br />
34 "Vive le —!"<br />
35 Words on a memo pad<br />
39 Lenhon's mate<br />
Down<br />
1 Adam's brother<br />
2 First unit in a residential building<br />
(2 wds.)<br />
3 "TV Guide" word for tale<br />
4 Knight's cloak<br />
5 Mt. Hood's state (abbr.)<br />
6 Sky phenomenon (2 wds.)<br />
7 Emitter (abbr.)<br />
8 Word for <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania or second<br />
base<br />
9 Way to address an English<br />
nobleman<br />
10 Half of radio pair<br />
11 Ho Chi —<br />
12 Football position<br />
14 Football play<br />
18 Finish line<br />
19 Rocky of the Steelers<br />
24 <strong>State</strong>'s wih conviction<br />
25 From — (hereafter)<br />
U-225<br />
WHAT'S<br />
¦ ¦ • »•<br />
40 German ruling house of the<br />
Middle Ages<br />
41 Speck of dust<br />
42 Last but —<br />
44 Ran out<br />
46 Doubleday or Yokum<br />
47 Boxing great<br />
48 Serum-holding vial<br />
50 Bruce Wayne, to Batman (2<br />
wds.)<br />
55 What Cronkite does (5 wds.)<br />
57 Star's demise<br />
58 Racket<br />
59 Opposite of put, In finance<br />
60 Scissor<br />
61 Oohs and ahs<br />
62 "The Seven Faces of Dr. —"<br />
THEME<br />
HOUSE ft'<br />
wont to know ?<br />
Come to the Open House<br />
Where? FUB Lounge<br />
When: March 31st<br />
From: 7-9PM<br />
CONSERVE<br />
Tuesday €vening<br />
26 Prefix: people<br />
27 Without control or restrain!<br />
29 Suffixes used by Cosell<br />
30 Road map word<br />
31 Selected a location<br />
33 Drunkard<br />
36 Region en route to Hades<br />
37 Newborn goat<br />
38 Based on experience<br />
43 South Pacific loincloth •<br />
44 Potato pancakes<br />
45 Toward shelter<br />
48 Long, long time<br />
49 XXXTI times XXXIII<br />
51 Speech flaw<br />
52 And others: Lat.<br />
53 — monster<br />
54 Christianla, today<br />
55 Large weights (abbr.)<br />
56 "Ode — Nightingale 1 '<br />
35<br />
39<br />
42<br />
55<br />
57<br />
><br />
^<br />
15<br />
The Daily Collegian<br />
Tuesday, March 30<br />
NEV ,<br />
ADRfA V<br />
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WATER<br />
EVENING<br />
CD MOVIE-(WESTERN) **tt "Bravados"<br />
6:00 L3J WEATHER-WORLD<br />
1958 Gregory Peck , Joan Collins. Man<br />
0 CHARLIE'S ANGELS<br />
searching forgunmenwhorapedandmurdered<br />
CD CD (12)® NEWS<br />
his wife, finally realizeshisthlrstforvengeance<br />
0 HAWAII FIVE-0<br />
hasgivenhimnotimeforeitherloveormercy.(2<br />
CD LA VERNE AND SHIRLEY AND COMPANY hrs.)<br />
S3) NEWS (CONTINUES FROM DAYTIME) 8:300<br />
CAROL BURNETT AND FRIENDS<br />
6:30 (D HABLAMOS ESPANOL<br />
CD JOANIE LOVESCHACHI<br />
CD NBC NEWS<br />
9:00 CI) AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE'NorthernLights-<br />
GD ABC NEWS<br />
This film, shot entirely in the farm country of<br />
Cl® S3) §2 CBS NEWS<br />
North Dakota by filmmakers John Hanson and<br />
(D BARNEY MILLER<br />
RobNilsson. isastoryoffarminginthewinterof<br />
6:59 S3 DAILY NUMBER<br />
1915, by the first Scandinavian immigrants, the<br />
7:00 CD MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT<br />
Sorenson family.<br />
© M.A.S.H<br />
0 MERV GRIFFIN<br />
CD M.A.S.H.<br />
CD FLAMINGO ROAD Sam and Field<br />
CD DAILY LOTTERY NUMBER<br />
jeopardize their lives when they undertake an<br />
O YOU ASKED FOR IT<br />
investigation into Michael Tyrone's past; and<br />
35) MUPPETSHOW<br />
Lane loarna she is pregnant, but may soon be a<br />
(D JEFFERSONS (CLOSED CAPTIONED)<br />
widow. (60 mine.)<br />
60) TIC TAC DOUGH<br />
GDTHREE'SCOMPANYJackattendsaheated<br />
© FAMILY FEUD<br />
session of Janet's jazz dance class and learns<br />
7:01 CD PM MAGAZINE<br />
IhatJanet' steacherwantBhertoquitherioband<br />
7:30 S> DICK CAVETT SHOW<br />
turn professional. ' (Repest) (Closed-<br />
Q ALL IN THE FAMILY<br />
Csptioned; U.S.A.)<br />
SD YOU ASKED FOR IT<br />
Q0) S3)(22> CBSTUESDAY NIGHTMOVIE<br />
(SO ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT<br />
'Gideon'sTrumpet' 1981 Stars: Henry Fonda,<br />
OS) LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY<br />
Jose Ferrer, John Houseman, Drama based on<br />
01 NEWS<br />
Anthony Lewis' 1964non-fictionaccountofhow<br />
© FAMILY FEUD<br />
anobscureFloridaconvictdrastlcallychanged<br />
@ JOKER'S WILD<br />
the course of American legal history. (Repest;<br />
8:00 OLIFEONEARTH'LilointheTreos'Thestory 2 hrs.)<br />
of primates andhowthey solvedthedifficulties 9:30 IA1 CD TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT<br />
of living high up In the forests unfolds In this 10:00 0 NEWS<br />
episode , which travels to Madagascar , CD BARBARA MANDRELL AND THE<br />
Malaysia,South Amoricaand Africa,andehows MANDRELL SISTERS Guest: Debbie<br />
some of the monkeys and apes in the group of Reynolds. (60 mins.)<br />
200 species of which man is a part. CD HARTTO HART What begins as a romantic<br />
(Closed-Captloned; U.S.A.)<br />
weekend at the Hart' s mountain retreat<br />
Q PM MAGAZINE<br />
becomes one of danger and suspense as<br />
CD BRET MAVERICK Maverick gets It from all Jonathan and Jennifer try to clear thler cabin<br />
sides whenhewlnsafeistyChlnesegirlinacard caretaker of a murder rap. (Repeat; 60 mins.)<br />
game. (Repeat; 60 mins.)<br />
(Closed-Captloned; U.S.A.)<br />
CD HAPPY DAYS Lori decides to have natural 0 NINE ON NEW JERSEY<br />
childbirth and enlists a surprisingly ID INDEPENDENT NETWORK NEWS<br />
faint-hearted Fonzie as her delivery room 10:30 S) LAND OF COOL SUN<br />
coach. (Repeat) (Closed-Captloned; U.S.A.) 0 NEWARK AND REALITY<br />
O MOVIE -(MYSTERY) •• "They Call It CD NEWS<br />
Murder" 1971 JimHutton, Jessica Walter. A 11:OQ CD NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT<br />
D.A. is hard pressed to link a swimming pool 0 M.A.S.H.<br />
murder, a car crash fatality to a large Insurance CD CD® S3) ® NEWS<br />
claim. (2hra.)<br />
O BENNY HILL SHOW<br />
3® S3) (3) Q.E.D. Deverlll joins an automobile CD HONEYMOONERS<br />
designer-racer to create a sleek , rocket 11:30 (1) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS<br />
powered car and enter it in a Grand Prix auto 0 STARSKY AND HUTCH<br />
race through 1912 England. (60 mins.)<br />
OS THE TONIGHT SHOW<br />
Crossword<br />
14<br />
22<br />
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46<br />
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15<br />
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(answers In tomorrow's Classifieds)<br />
© Edward Julius Collegiate CW79-25<br />
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CD ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE Anchored by Tec<br />
Koppel.<br />
0 MAUDE<br />
QD© CBS LATE MOVIE Alice: 'That Old Back<br />
Magic'MelwrencheshisbackatAlice' sbrunch<br />
and claims immobility and refuses to leave the<br />
premises. (Repeat) McCloud: 'Return to the<br />
Alamo' Afemale sergeant is leftin charged the<br />
precinct when Sgt. Broadhurst is kidnapped.<br />
(Repeat)<br />
CD SATURDAY NIGHT<br />
23) w%y4??%y«HH?wcBS CBS LATE<br />
MOVIE<br />
12:00 CD FANTASY ISLAND Two men, one whose<br />
future in business is at stake and the other<br />
whose dream is to become irresistable to<br />
women , are the guests on Fantasy Island.<br />
(Repeat; 70 mins.)<br />
0 RACING FROM YONKERS RACEWAY<br />
12:30 0 GET SMART<br />
CD LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN<br />
Guests: Tony Award-winning actress Swoosie<br />
Kurtz, cartoonist Gahan Wilson. (60 mins.)<br />
0 MOVIE-(WESTERN-DRAM A) * Mi "Rose of<br />
Cimarron" 1952 Mala Powers, Jack Buetel.<br />
White woman, raised by Cherokee Indians who<br />
are killed by outlaws, takes the law Into her own<br />
hands to deal out justice. (90 mins.)<br />
CD STAR TREK<br />
1:00 0 RAT PATROL<br />
1:30 0 LOVE AMERICAN STYLE<br />
CD® NEWS<br />
0 INDEPENDENT NETWORK NEWS<br />
1:50
16—The Paily Collegian Tuesday, March .30, 1982<br />
Loop to try 2 weeks<br />
of extended hours<br />
By MARCY MERMEL<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
Campus Loop hours will be extended<br />
on weekends if a two-week trial is<br />
successful, an Undergraduate Student<br />
Government senator said last night.<br />
At a USG Senate meeting, East<br />
Halls Senator Darryl Daisey said that<br />
on Friday and Saturday nights students<br />
will be able to ride the loop free<br />
from 11 p.m. until 2:30 a.m. and pay<br />
the 25 cent fare until 11 p.m. The loop<br />
now runs free from 9 p.m. until midnight<br />
on those nights, but no service is<br />
provided after midnight.<br />
Daisey, chairman of the senate<br />
transportation advisory committee,<br />
said under the present system the loop<br />
takes students to parties and bars, but<br />
leaves them there after midnight.<br />
Therefore, students who must walk<br />
home could be in danger because they<br />
often return from parties drunk or<br />
alone, he said.<br />
<strong>University</strong> administrators have<br />
agreed to try the extention for two<br />
weeks if USG guarantees the loop will<br />
not lose money during that period,<br />
Daisey said. Last night the, senate<br />
passed a bill promising to cover the<br />
loop's operating expenses for the altered<br />
hours if the experiment fails.<br />
The bill also includes money for advertisements<br />
to inform students of the<br />
change. No dates have been set for the<br />
trial weekends.<br />
The loop could make more money<br />
with the extended hours and should at<br />
least break even, Daisey said. .<br />
However, USG Centre Halls Senator,<br />
Dennis Zak said students who don't<br />
ride the loop to parties would be<br />
forced to pay for those who do.<br />
USG Town Senator Chris Yanckello '<br />
said although many students don't<br />
take the loop to parties, many do.'<br />
Also, some of the people who will be<br />
riding the loop at 2 a.m. will ride it<br />
from 9 to 11 p.m. and will, therefore,<br />
be paying their quarters, he said.<br />
"Something like this should be<br />
tried," Yanckello said.<br />
Also, USG Town Senator Joe Clouse<br />
said vandalism may be reduced if<br />
students do not have to walk home.<br />
USG is responsible for only the two<br />
week experiment, Daisey added.<br />
''I do not want the USG senate to<br />
continually subsidize the campus<br />
loop," he said. The administration<br />
will decide whether to continue with<br />
the extention after the trial.<br />
The senate also passed an order to<br />
conduct a survey of student opinions<br />
and concerns about the <strong>University</strong>'s<br />
conversion to a semester calendar.<br />
The order has already been passed by<br />
USG's Academic Assembly.<br />
In other business, Town Senator<br />
Jim McJunkin said the senate police<br />
services committee will sponsor tables<br />
next Monday, Wednesday and<br />
Friday in the HUB. <strong>State</strong>, local and<br />
<strong>University</strong> police officers will answer<br />
students' questions and show displays,<br />
he said.<br />
The Career Development and Placement Center and the Women's Studies Option presents<br />
"Job Search and the Dual Career Couple"<br />
1 00 - The Professional Perspective—how a career counselor views<br />
the dual career j ob search—strategies and steps.<br />
2:3C The Employer s Perspective on dual career couples—moving<br />
in and moving up.<br />
4:00 The Personal Perspective—how some couples have managed<br />
job search.<br />
Four participants will be selected from the audience to accompany the panelists to<br />
dinner at the Nittany Lion Inn following the program.<br />
U-011<br />
#Tuesday, March 30, 1982, Art Gallery Lounge 'HUB.<br />
ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA FRESHMAN HONOR<br />
SOCIETY cordially invites all members of the <strong>Penn</strong><br />
<strong>State</strong> Honor Societies to an APRIL FOOL'S DANCE<br />
on Friday, April 2nd f rom 8:30 to 11:30 at the Walnut<br />
Building. Refr eshmen ts will be served and guestsare<br />
welcome. Tickets are two dollars and will be available<br />
at the door only look f orward to seeing y ou there t<br />
We<br />
FREE STUDENT INFORMATION!<br />
If you have a question pertaining to academic, campus, health, or<br />
personal information, pick up the phone and take advantage of the<br />
Telephone Information for <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> (TIPS) Service<br />
¦ I _f*\0 answers a * y<<br />
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Pattee bomb threat a hoax<br />
By MARTIN COREN<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
Pattee was not evacuated despite a<br />
bomb threat late yesterday afternoon,<br />
said the acting supervisor of <strong>University</strong><br />
Police Services.<br />
Officer Mark Kinley said a man<br />
called police at 5:42 p.m. and said a<br />
bomb was planted in Pattee.<br />
After checking with his supervisors<br />
and library adminstrators, Kinley<br />
said, "no one advised (me) that the<br />
library should be closed. They all said<br />
it should be kept open."<br />
Stuart Forth, dean of <strong>University</strong><br />
libraries, said <strong>University</strong> procedure<br />
for this type of threat does not include<br />
evacuation.<br />
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A FULL YEAR AGAINST LOSS — THEFT - DAMAGE — FREE!<br />
"I suppose there's always the possibility<br />
(of danger)," he said, "but (an<br />
explosion has) never happened."<br />
Police responded to the threat less<br />
than 10 minutes after the man called,<br />
Kinley said. Officers searched Pattee<br />
and an announcement was made over<br />
the loudspeakers announcing the<br />
threat. Also, warning posters were<br />
posted at all entrances to the library<br />
and at all major inside doorways.<br />
Forth said he did not know if the<br />
threat was made by a student. But, he<br />
said, "this is the kind of thing that<br />
destroys the students' credibility in<br />
wanting to participate in the affairs of<br />
the <strong>University</strong>, if it was a student."<br />
• ^<br />
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2 Collegian Magazine Tuesday, March 30, 1982<br />
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It's greek to me — for an entire week Page 4<br />
Parks: A great place to spend the spring..........Page 4<br />
Don't pick the flowers — you may be sorry Page 6<br />
Climbing Mount Nittany... Page 7<br />
Horizons faces its second year<br />
..Page 8<br />
Calendar of events<br />
Page 10<br />
Gentle Thursday.......... , . .Pagel: 12<br />
To heat or not to heat — that is the questionPage 13 1;<br />
Running from bar to bar? It's got to be the Phi Psi<br />
, ... Page 14<br />
Elsewhere: How other universities celebrate spring<br />
.J . .Page 16<br />
The regatta: A spring splash at Stone Valley.Page 17<br />
Spring in the residence halls: dorm weeks..:.Page 18<br />
Temperatures go up, loop ridership goes down<br />
.: . ; .Page 18<br />
Tuesday, March 30, 1982<br />
Collegian Magazine 1 a n i i<br />
Phil Gutis<br />
Editor<br />
Cover Photo<br />
Board of<br />
Magazine Coordinators<br />
Managing Editor<br />
Editorial Editor<br />
Associate Editorial Editor<br />
Assistant Editorial Editor<br />
Assistant Managing Editor/Town<br />
Assistant Managing Editor/Features<br />
Campus Editor<br />
Town Editor<br />
News Editors<br />
Sports Editor<br />
Assistant Sports Editors<br />
¦ Arts<br />
Assistant Arts<br />
Photo<br />
Assistant Photo<br />
Contributing<br />
Graphics<br />
Edi tor<br />
Editor<br />
Editor<br />
Editor<br />
Editor<br />
Editor<br />
Wire Edi tor<br />
Copy Editors<br />
Managing Editor/Weekly Collegian<br />
Assistant Managing Editor/Weekly Collegian<br />
Board of Opinion<br />
Assistant Business Manager<br />
Office Manager<br />
Assistant Office Manager<br />
Distric t Sales Managers<br />
National Ad Manage/<br />
Assistant National Ad Manager<br />
Advertising Training Manager<br />
Co-op Managers<br />
Marketing Manager<br />
Creative Director<br />
Layout Coordinator<br />
Paul Rudoy<br />
Business Manager<br />
Chuck Andrasko<br />
Editors<br />
David Medzerian<br />
Iris Naar<br />
Sharon Taylor<br />
John Allison<br />
Board of Managers<br />
Anne Conners<br />
Suzanne Cassidy<br />
Mark Featherstone<br />
Diane Rowell<br />
Jenny Clouse<br />
Lisa Hill<br />
Jackie Martino<br />
Leslie Zuck<br />
Ron Gardner<br />
Keith Groller<br />
Pete Waldron<br />
Elaine Wetmore<br />
Debbie Krivoy<br />
Renee Jacobs<br />
Barb Parkyn<br />
Paula Froke<br />
Vlada Raicevic<br />
Maryann Hakowski<br />
Dina DeFabo<br />
K.E. Fishman<br />
Mary Beth Horwath<br />
Becky Jones<br />
Karen McManiman<br />
Margaret Ann Walsh<br />
Laurie Penco<br />
Ellyn Harley<br />
Tim Beidel<br />
Cindy Cox<br />
Eugene Grygo<br />
Mike Poorman-<br />
John Schlander<br />
Judy Smith<br />
Michael Conklin<br />
Colleen Waters<br />
Susan Ingrahm<br />
Jon Kaplan<br />
Bill Overmyer<br />
Owen Landon<br />
Donna Streletzky<br />
Monique Rura<br />
Chip Schnetler<br />
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Sue Largman<br />
Tracy Meyer<br />
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•> Not all Greek Week activities are just for fun — as the expressions on these runners in last year's Chariot Race show<br />
Collegian photo<br />
Everyone can put a little greek in this week<br />
By PATRICIA HUNGERFORD<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
ven if you don't belong to a sorority of fraternity,<br />
you can still put a little greek in your week from<br />
E April 19 to 24.<br />
Though fraternities and sororities often team up during<br />
Greek Week, many times fraternities will team up with an<br />
independent group of women, such as a residence hall<br />
floor, and independents can become involved in events<br />
such as Assassin, said Greek Week Chairwoman Ellen<br />
Kehlenbeck.<br />
A new event this year is a carnival, which is designed to<br />
improve relations between greeks, independents and the<br />
community, Kehlenbeck said.<br />
The Assassin game and the Trivia Bowl are being<br />
brought back from last year.<br />
"We're trying to get somewhat of a tradition like<br />
Homecoming," Kehlenbeck said.<br />
Assassin will begin April 14. The. game is starting five<br />
days earlier than other events so enough days are available<br />
for people to "kill" each other in time to announce the<br />
winner at the awards ceremony on the last day of Greek<br />
Week, Kehlenbeck said.<br />
Assassin, a campuswide event, may involve 2,000 people<br />
this year, both greeks and independents, as opposed to 500<br />
people last year, almost of all of whom were greeks, she<br />
said.<br />
The object of the game is to "kill" the person described<br />
in a portfolio, given to each participant on April 14. To kill<br />
someone, participants must walk up to their "victims"<br />
and say, "excuse me, you're dead."<br />
Participants must sign up between March 24 and April 2<br />
and must attend a meeting on at 7 p.m. April 7. The place<br />
will be announced.<br />
The Trivia Bowl will also begin early, starting April 16.<br />
Ten trivia questions are given to participants each day<br />
and points will be given out for the most correct answers.<br />
The Greek Week opening ceremony will be held at 6:30<br />
p.m. on April 20 between Garner Street and Locust Lane<br />
on East Fairmount Avenue.<br />
Skits will be held that night from 7:30 to 9:30 and will<br />
also take place April 21 and 22 at the same time and place.<br />
The theme of the skits this year is " 'Twas the Night<br />
Before Finals ..." with the skits lasting 15 minutes and<br />
involving as many people as the team wants, in accordance<br />
to the rules, Kehlenbeck said.<br />
Roads near the fraternities will be closed each night of<br />
the skits from 6 to 11, and from 4 to 8 p.m. for the chariot<br />
race on April 21.<br />
The chariot race will begin at 5:30 p.m. on East<br />
Fairmount Avenue between Hetzel and Garner streets.<br />
The chariots will be paraded past the judges' stand prior<br />
to the race to be judged on appearance, she said, and 10<br />
people will dress according to the theme of the chariot to<br />
show enthusiasm. Also, two people will ride in the chariot<br />
and four runners will pull it.<br />
An organized Bar-a-thon will be held on April 23. Local<br />
bars will offer special prices to greeks who wear their<br />
letters./Kehlenbeck said, but they must have proper<br />
identification.<br />
The last day of Greek Week, April 24, will start with the<br />
Greek Games at 1 p.m. on the Pollock Fields. Last year<br />
teams were picked randomly, but this year the teams will<br />
be the same as those entered in Greek Week, such as a<br />
fraternity and sorority that signed up as a team together.<br />
The carnival will be held on from 1 to 4 p.m. April 24 on<br />
East Fairmount Avenue and Fraternity Row. Each fraternity<br />
and sorority signed up for the event will set up a<br />
booth.<br />
A fraternity/sorority team that wants to be involved in<br />
all the events must pay $100. The team may also sign up<br />
for individual events at varying charges.<br />
Points for this event will be determined by how many<br />
tickets the booth collects from the crowd, Kehlenbeck<br />
said. Tickets will be sold for 10 cents to help pay for the<br />
cost of prizes, she said.<br />
At 7 p.m., the three best skits will be performed again at<br />
the same place they were performed at earlier in the<br />
week.<br />
Awards will be given out at 8 p.m. that night in the same<br />
place as the skits. First, second and third place awards<br />
will be given out in the following categories: skits, chariot<br />
races, carnival and overall participation.<br />
Teams will be judged on a point system with 900 possible<br />
points. The skits, the chariot races and the games are<br />
each worth 300 points. The games category is broken down<br />
into the Trivia Bowl, worth 50 points, the carnival, worth<br />
100 points, and New Greek Games, worth 150 points.<br />
April 2 is the deadline for signing up for the events.<br />
Entry fees must be paid by then at the Panhellenic<br />
Council/Interfraternity Council office, 203B HUB.<br />
Individuals entering events will also be charged varying<br />
prices for each event.<br />
Parks: A great place to spend a spring afternoon<br />
By LARRY BENDESKY Mills, the two areas are open all year but<br />
Collegian Staff Writer offer special services and programs in<br />
; the spring.<br />
pring Term is here, and it's time to At Stone Valley, hiking, fishing, picget<br />
out of your room, shed the nicking and the use of rental cabins are<br />
S extra pounds gained from gallons available to the public, while boating and<br />
of beer and enjoy the pleasures of the sailing will open on April 3.<br />
outdoors. ' Shaver's Creek .has a plefhora of pro-<br />
In addition to laying out in the quad, grams available for all who love the<br />
frisbee playing on the HUB lawn and outdoors. Throughout the spring, it offers<br />
Saturday afternoons downtown, spring the Docent Training Series from 9 a.m. to<br />
offers to all the use of parks arid recre- noon every Monday. The series will covation<br />
facilities in the <strong>State</strong> College area , er a variety of topics to help people learn<br />
Part of the <strong>University</strong> is the Stone about the environment in which they live,<br />
Valley Recreation Area and the Shaver's said Pam Kavanaugh, program director<br />
Creek Environmental Center. Located and naturalist at Shaver's Creek,<br />
off Route 26 south just past Pine Grove Also offered are Wildflower Walks on<br />
April 18, May 9 and May 16. Participants<br />
walk along the parks trails and learn the<br />
legends and lore of the area and its<br />
facilities.<br />
Adding to the center's diversification<br />
are center-sponsored trips to the Baltimore<br />
Aquarium and to Ocean City, Md.,<br />
for a whale-watching adventure. The<br />
aquarium trips will be held on April 2 and<br />
13. Whale-watching will be held on the<br />
weekend of April 30 to May 2. For information<br />
on how to sign up for these and<br />
other programs, call the Shaver's Creek<br />
Environmental Center at 238-5872.<br />
Associated with the vast network of<br />
state parks found throughout <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania<br />
is Whipple's Dam. Also located along<br />
Route 26, about 20 miles south of <strong>State</strong><br />
College, the dam offers swimming, trout<br />
fishing, all-day use of facilities and a<br />
small beach.<br />
Also, anyone willing to travel 40 miles<br />
from <strong>State</strong> College for recreation will be<br />
enlightened by the facilities at Racetown<br />
Lake. Located along Route 26 south near<br />
Huntingdon, Racetown is the largest lake<br />
in <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania, said John York, executive<br />
director of the Huntingdon County<br />
Tourist Promotion Agency. The lake<br />
offers all forms of water-based recreation<br />
in addition to picnicking and camping,<br />
and is the only place in <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania<br />
where landlock striped bass can be<br />
fished for, York said.
California dreamin<br />
s<br />
THE<br />
f3:m*i%?«Jvijo«<br />
If all the events of Spring Term at <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> are tiring you out, there's always the old favorite activity: roasting<br />
female <strong>University</strong> students enjoy the summerlike weather that visits Happy Valley occasionally in the spring,<br />
$<br />
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6 Collegian Magazine Tuesday, March 30, 19B2<br />
Please don t pick the daisies<br />
Or the tulips. Or the roses. Or the daffo dils<br />
By RITA McLAY<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
s spring once again and the grass is green, the sky is blue, all<br />
It' the birds are singing and the flowers are in bloom.<br />
And aren't those flowers beautiful? Wouldn't a vase of them<br />
enhance any apartment or dorm? Or how about a flower for "that<br />
special<br />
¦<br />
someone"?<br />
Well, think again because picking flowers grown on'campus is<br />
considered theft, according .to the 1980 edition of "<strong>Penn</strong>sylvania<br />
Consolidated Statutes, Title 18, Crimes and Offenses."<br />
The flowers are defined as "movable property" by the statute.<br />
Picking flowers is considered a misdemeanor three if the<br />
damage involved .is less than $50. The offense could not be<br />
considered criminal mischief because the criminal mischief<br />
statute does not take dollar value into consideration, said Stewart<br />
Neff, a police supervisor for <strong>University</strong> Police Services.<br />
A misdemeanor three is considered a criminal offense with a<br />
maximum penalty of a jail sentence of one year and/or a fine of<br />
$2,500, said Bob Mix, Centre County district attorney.<br />
The severity of the penalty would be "entirely at the judge's<br />
discretion," Mix said.<br />
A flower-nabber can be caught in the act by a <strong>University</strong> police<br />
officer or be reported by an observer.<br />
Academic and physical plant personnel are required to report<br />
any kind of damage to landscape or buildings as a matter of<br />
standard procedure, said Gerald Garbrick, manager of landscape<br />
operations.<br />
"They (flowers) are there for everyone to enjoy, not for one<br />
person to pick and take to their room," he said.<br />
"We have no authority other than to observe and report,"<br />
Garbrick said, although personnel are sometimes requested to go<br />
to court and testify as to costs involved. Cost is considered to be<br />
the amount of time required to replace or place "whatever has<br />
been removed or broken," Garbrick said.<br />
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Climbing<br />
Mount Nittany:<br />
A PSU tradition<br />
By CAROLINE CHURCHILL<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
<strong>Penn</strong><br />
<strong>State</strong> seems to abound with<br />
student traditions, from being photographed<br />
on the Nittany Lion shrine<br />
to eating sticky buns at the diner after 2<br />
a.m. But perhaps one of the oldest and<br />
most-cherished <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> "musts" is a<br />
hike up Mount Nittany,<br />
It's not the climb that makes this tradition<br />
special, but the mountain itself. Mount<br />
Nittany, an 80-mile ridge stretching from<br />
the Centre Region to the Susquehanna<br />
River near Lewisburg, has become as<br />
much a part of <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> as the alma<br />
mater.<br />
The 2,077-foot mountain, visible from<br />
any part of Happy Valley, has always been<br />
a haven for students interested in hiking,<br />
camping or just plain relaxing.<br />
Greg Zlock (12th-biology), president of<br />
the hiking division of the <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> Outing<br />
Club, said the club usually plans two<br />
trips up Mount Nittany during the year.<br />
The club kicks off Fall Term every year<br />
with a charge up the mountain as its<br />
opening event, Zlock said. The trip is open<br />
to anyone interested in climbing. This year<br />
more than 100 people participated, he said.<br />
After the hike, the club provides hot dogs<br />
and lemonade for everyone at the base of<br />
the mountain.<br />
Zlock said the club also camps at the top<br />
of the mountain every year on Halloween<br />
to wait for the "Great Pumpkin."<br />
"We haven't seen him yet," Zlock said.<br />
The club occasionally has a work trip in<br />
the spring to blaze trails, even though it<br />
only needs to be done once every ten years,<br />
Zlock said<br />
S__ __A<br />
Collegian photo<br />
The hiking division of the <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> Outing Club usually sponsors two trips up Mount Nittany each year. After the hikes, the club provides<br />
hot dogs and lemonade to those who survived<br />
Tom Thwaites, associate professor of because of erosion problems, Thwaites<br />
physics and adviser to the hiking division, said.<br />
said the outing club blazed the main trail Camping is permitted on the part of the<br />
up Mount Nittany and named it the "White mountain owned by the Alumni Associa-<br />
Trail" after the club's founder, Harold tion of the Lion's Paw senior society, he<br />
White. ' . " said.<br />
Association member J. Arthur Stober<br />
The White Trail starts at the end of said Lion's Paw, an honorary society for<br />
Mount Nittany Street in Lemont and is outstanding senior student leaders, owns<br />
much easier to hike than other trails. Most' 535 acres at the top of the mountain and the<br />
other trails, which run straight up and rest is owned by private landholders,<br />
down the mountain, have been closed off Lion's Paw has just finished the forma-<br />
.,.,<br />
Vf^* ^* "'<br />
ow \e<br />
c.<br />
tion of the Mount Nittany Conservancy, a<br />
non-profit organization to maintain and<br />
protect the mountain, said Stober, who is<br />
president of the conservancy.<br />
Last year the association spent $2,000 to<br />
spray the mountain against gyspy moths,<br />
Stober said. This year the conservancy<br />
will take that project over.<br />
Stober said Phi Kappa Psi fraternity will<br />
be donating $1,000 from the proceeds M<br />
this year's Phi Psi 500 to the conservancy.-<br />
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Horizons:<br />
Gentle Th ursda y's replacement prepares for its 2nd showing<br />
By ROB STEUTEVILLE<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
pring Term is a time of fun and<br />
games. But this year, like last year,<br />
S there is something more to look<br />
forward to — a festival that not only offers<br />
a good time, but a chance to learn, to be<br />
exposed to diverse cultural activities, to<br />
become more aware of what the community<br />
has to offer and possibly even to share<br />
talents with the community.<br />
That event is Horizons, scheduled for<br />
May 6 to 8.<br />
Horizons Director John McCauley said-<br />
Horizons is a "smorgasbord of awareness."<br />
About 50 <strong>University</strong> organizations<br />
contributed to the events last year, he said,<br />
and it attracted thousands of participants.<br />
Horizons started out last year as a<br />
replacement for Gentle Thursday, but it<br />
has very little in common its predecessor<br />
on the HUB lawn, said Chris O'Brian,<br />
Horizons co-chairman.<br />
"It is more in line with enlightening<br />
people," he said. "It is educationallybased<br />
— as opposed to strictly entertainment<br />
such as Movin' On and Gentle Thursday.<br />
"Gentle Thursday started out as a great<br />
idea — a day of sharing," he said.<br />
But it developed into a. rock festival with<br />
the inherent problems, such as excessive<br />
litter and cutting classes, he said, and a<br />
group of people realized they didn't want<br />
that so they developed Horizons instead.<br />
McCauley identified a deeper reason for<br />
the development of Horizons, a need that<br />
existed before the festival was created.<br />
Groups such as Free <strong>University</strong>, Eco-Action<br />
and Colloquy needed a forum to make<br />
No matter what they<br />
you will<br />
people aware of what they were doing as<br />
organizations, he said.<br />
"I look upon this as an awareness festival,<br />
to let students gain a better awareness<br />
politically, socially and ecologically," he<br />
said, "and as an opportunity for various<br />
student organizations to increase student<br />
awareness of what they are all about.<br />
"But just because we are trying to make<br />
people more aware doesn't mean it is not<br />
fun," he said. "There will be no, saching<br />
— it will .not be overbearing. The whole<br />
idea of the program is for you to bump into<br />
something new, forcing you to make a<br />
decision about it — yes you like it or no you<br />
don't — this makes you more aware of<br />
yourself."<br />
The programs that people can.expect to<br />
bump into this year, McCauley said, range<br />
from exhibits, lectures, seminars,<br />
workshops and films during the festival's<br />
first two days to entertainment activities<br />
scheduled for the last two nights.<br />
The entertainment activities will probably<br />
include mime and theater and classical,<br />
folk and jazz music, with a deemphasis<br />
on rock music, he said.<br />
"This is getting back to the idea of<br />
alternative programming," he said. "Most<br />
students have a steady diet of rock music.<br />
What these people feel they need is to be<br />
exposed to alternative forms of music."<br />
Also, Eco-Action is planning a health<br />
alternatives day again this year, said<br />
O'Brian, who is a representative from<br />
Eco-Action. The program, which will be<br />
held on May 6 in the HUB fishbowl, will<br />
encompass the health of the mind and body<br />
and will let people see other lifestyles, he<br />
said.<br />
"It's a holistic approach ," he said,"in-<br />
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11:30 a.m. to midnight Sunday<br />
volving health foods, vegetarianism, yoga,<br />
different exercises and possibly natural<br />
childbirth."<br />
Eco-Action is planning an alternative<br />
energy exposition for May 8, O'Brian said,<br />
where there will be various displays on<br />
solar and wind-power —"things people can<br />
go up and touch."<br />
This is getting bock to the idea of alternative<br />
programming. Most students have a steady diet<br />
of rock music. 'What these people fee! they need<br />
is to be exposed to alternative forms of music'<br />
The Undergraduate Student Government<br />
is planning a wide-ranging awareness<br />
exposition of a different sort, said<br />
Steve Ripp, USG North Halls senator.<br />
"On Friday (May 7) in the HUB fishbowl<br />
USG will be sponsoring a Political Awareness<br />
Day," he said.<br />
"It will be the political side of USG, as<br />
well as local, state and national government.<br />
What we mostly want is to educate<br />
people on how everything functions (politically),<br />
so they can make an impact in<br />
decisionmaking and learn how things<br />
affect them."<br />
Most of the proposals, however, for this<br />
year's Horizons are still being received<br />
and processed, so information about them<br />
cannot be released yet, said Diana Shenk,<br />
Horizons co-chairman.<br />
Last year, films on health and energy<br />
problems, race relations and general classics<br />
such as "Casablanca" were shown,<br />
she said. Also, exhibits on dance, karate,<br />
yoga, fencing and juggling and demonstrations<br />
in pottery, weaving, silkscreening<br />
and other crafts took place last year, she<br />
said.<br />
Recreational activities included bike<br />
—John McCauley, Horizons director<br />
__(
' Last year we had so many movies that<br />
at times it was one person, one movie,"<br />
she said.<br />
McCauley said the festival was reduced<br />
to three days so a rain date could be<br />
provided, which would make it easy to<br />
move, events up one day.<br />
"We needed to do this because it was so<br />
late in the term. If we had events on both Because of the size, Horizons needs<br />
Saturday and Sunday, and one of them volunteers, Shenk said,<br />
rained out, there would be no back-up."<br />
- Shenk, McCauley and O'Brian agreed<br />
that one of the best things about Horizons<br />
is the way it involves many student organizations<br />
and presents many aspects of<br />
student life.<br />
"We provide the structure and take care<br />
of the financial end of it," O'Brian said,<br />
"and all they have to do is get an idea<br />
together and give it to us."<br />
The deadline for proposals is today, but<br />
McCauley said proposals that don't require<br />
finances will be accepted until April<br />
15.<br />
Anybody can submit a proposal, he said,<br />
but it must be co-sponsored by a <strong>University</strong><br />
organization and then accepted by the<br />
Horizons Steering Committee.<br />
The steering committee is made up of<br />
representatives from Horizon's sponsors<br />
— Eco-Action, Free <strong>University</strong>, Colloquy,<br />
USG and Yachad.<br />
McCauley said Horizons is the only event<br />
he knows of where so many "diversified<br />
student groups do happen to come together<br />
and agree on programs" for such a large<br />
festival.<br />
"There are so many aspects to Horizons<br />
— we need a lot of student help," she said.<br />
"We can always use people on our committees<br />
— promotions, art and entertainment,<br />
education and audio-visual scheduling.<br />
People who volunteer will only be working<br />
on what they volunteer for. They won't<br />
have to go to other meetings that don't<br />
involve their specialty. It will be good<br />
experience."<br />
McCauley summed up the experience of<br />
Horizons, whether one is working as a<br />
volunteer or just participating in the<br />
events, by saying, "it can mean a different<br />
thing to every person who takes part in the<br />
festival."<br />
"No person can take the whole festival<br />
in," he said. "We provide the opportunity<br />
for each person to increase their awareness,<br />
but it is up to the individual what they<br />
want to increase their awareness of."<br />
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Last spring's revival of Gentle Thursday — '"Gentle<br />
Thursday Lives" consisted of a<br />
disappointing collection of one dog, six frisbees:<br />
and about 40 mellow Gentle Thursday die-<br />
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hards — and occassional light rain, which dampened the group's spirits more than the<br />
turnout.<br />
Gentle Thursday: A discontinued tradition<br />
By JOYCE A. VENEZIA<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
magine a day when everyone would<br />
push aside thoughts of the crisis in the<br />
I Middle East, forget about the recession,<br />
dismiss opinions about the pros and<br />
cons of nuclear energy and toss away<br />
notions of impending gloom.<br />
Imagine a day when everyone would<br />
share " goodwill, spread friendship, give<br />
kindness freely and express love.<br />
In 1971, a group of'students thought the<br />
<strong>University</strong> community needed such a<br />
change of atmosphere and proposed a day<br />
when people could "forget political ideologies,<br />
fields of interest, ages, colors of skin,<br />
religious beliefs, length of hair and all<br />
other differences which tend to leave us,"<br />
The Daily Collegian reported.<br />
Gentle Thursday, as it was called, was a<br />
day to "give things to people, whether it be<br />
a smile, a kiss or a piece of bubble gum."<br />
And it was "a day of sharing" until last<br />
year, when organizers decided the day had<br />
turned into nothing more than "a day of<br />
partying and blowing off classes" — and so<br />
ended the tradition.<br />
The idea for the first Gentle Thursday<br />
was conceived in the fall of 1970 during a<br />
speech communication 200 class taught by<br />
Peter Glazer, a graduate student in speech<br />
communication. The following May, three<br />
students from the class — Jon Lange, Tom<br />
Sapper and Susan Snyder —decided to<br />
coordinate the event with assistance from<br />
class members and other interested peo- <<br />
pie.<br />
Merchants were eager to participate and<br />
donated kites, daisies and balloons. Four<br />
stations were scattered on the Old Main<br />
lawn to distribute gifts during the day,<br />
including smile buttons, kazoos, bubble<br />
gum and enameled pins in different designs<br />
such as ladybugs, birds and alliga-<br />
* X WW-ff iff if l K4<br />
Gentle Thursday, as it was called, was a day to<br />
"give things to people, whether it be a smile, a kiss<br />
or a piece of bubble gum." And it was "a day of<br />
sharing" until last year, when organizers decided<br />
the day had turned into nothing more than "a day<br />
of partying and blowing off classes" — and so<br />
ended the tradition.<br />
tors (a prelude to today's "preppy" look,<br />
perhaps?).<br />
In turn, participants shared their own<br />
gifts of oranges, peanuts, candy and even<br />
hugs and kisses. People walked all over<br />
campus urging others to come to the Old<br />
Main lawn to share in the experience.<br />
Of course, music highlighted the day,<br />
and bands with names such as City Chicken,<br />
Windsong, Hero, Rhythm Kings and<br />
Springwater appeared with local folk guitarists.<br />
Large sheets of paper were stretched on<br />
the steps of Old Main so people could<br />
"express themselves creatively."<br />
" When a rain shower appeared later that<br />
afternoon, students were invited inside Old<br />
Main until the showers passed. The day<br />
continued with no complications, and<br />
plans were made to keep it an annual<br />
event.<br />
As Snyder said, "It was like Woodstock<br />
revisited."<br />
Not surprisingly, more than just students<br />
appeared. The entire <strong>University</strong><br />
community, including townspeople, came<br />
to share — high school students, secretaries,<br />
professors, disabled veterans and<br />
small children.<br />
Several years later, the event grew so<br />
Pi<br />
large that it was moved to the HUB lawn.<br />
But the truancy of hundreds of local high<br />
school students during Gentle Thursday<br />
caused local school boards to question the<br />
validity of the day and forced police and<br />
coordinators of the event to check students'<br />
identification. Gentle Thursday was<br />
turning into "a day of delinquency."<br />
During the years, Eco-Action had set up<br />
recycling stations on the lawn to discourage<br />
the large volumes of trash that accumulated<br />
during the day, but became<br />
frustrated by uncooperative students as<br />
years went by. Gentle Thursday was turning<br />
into "a day of litter."<br />
And Free <strong>University</strong>, another organizer<br />
of the event, was becoming frustrated by<br />
the lack of sharing and the increased<br />
partying atmosphere. Students would cut<br />
classes and spend the day on the HUB lawn<br />
drinking, smoking and "mellowing out" to<br />
the music, not "spreading kindness and<br />
goodwill." Gentle Thursday was turning<br />
into "a day of partying." *<br />
"We would be out there on our beach<br />
towels with our screwdrivers; meanwhile,<br />
everyone around us was getting high,"<br />
says Mary Ann Murphy (12th-finance).<br />
"But if they had it again, I'd vote for it."<br />
Some students miss the - day of free<br />
music: "I had a good time listening to the<br />
bands," says David Kohl (9th-forestry<br />
science) . "I'd like to see it come back."<br />
And Jill Massena (8th-health planning<br />
and administration) reminisces: "Gentle<br />
Thursday was a great blow-off day —it<br />
was a good day to get together and sit<br />
there, not worry about anything — just sit<br />
and watch the crowd. It doesn't need to be<br />
educational — we're not in the '60s anymore."<br />
Even so, in January 1981, the various<br />
coordinators of the event decided to<br />
change the concept of Gentle Thursday<br />
into a festival titled Horizons. Horizons<br />
would span an entire week and would<br />
consist of a cultural smorgasbord of<br />
events. The first festival was held last<br />
Spring Term and met mixed approval<br />
from students.<br />
"Last year's Horizons was too cultural;<br />
it needs to be less educational," says Anne<br />
Batko (12th-marketing). "It was kind of<br />
weird; there were a wide variety of groups<br />
there, and it was very unstructured. But it<br />
was a nice place to go and sit outside."<br />
Meanwhile, a group of students decided<br />
to rebel and hold their own informal Gentle<br />
Thursday last spring. Their event — "Gentle<br />
Thursday Lives" — consisted of a<br />
disappointing collection of "one dog, one<br />
balloon, two clowns, six frisbees and about<br />
40 mellow Gentle Thursday die-hards"<br />
valiantly trying to restore the "gentle"<br />
atmosphere — in the rain, the Collegian<br />
reported.<br />
Several weeks ago, the Undergraduate<br />
Student Government decided that Gentle<br />
Thursday would become a permanent fixture<br />
of the past. USG Town Senator Joan<br />
Hanley said the <strong>University</strong> administration<br />
said that even if the name and day were<br />
changed and made a part of the Horizons<br />
festival, it would still carry the "partying"<br />
connotation.<br />
**
To heat or not to heat<br />
That is the question<br />
By MARY HUNDLEY<br />
Collegian Staff Writer ¦ -'<br />
he control of heat and air conditioning<br />
in buildings across campus involves<br />
more than just a flick of the<br />
switch — a lot more.<br />
In fact, any decision to turn on or off heat<br />
or air conditioning in residence halls or<br />
classrooms is based on data from 30 years<br />
of recorded temperatures for Happy Valley.<br />
"It used to be a strictly by guess, by gosh<br />
decision," said J.C. Bean, manager of the<br />
Energy Conservation Program.<br />
But now the comfort of thousands of<br />
dorm residents, classroom students and<br />
furry laboratory animals demands more<br />
than mere guesses based on a Farmer's<br />
Almanac.<br />
The 30-year history of temperatures is<br />
curve-fitted, diagrammed, disected and<br />
analyzed — all in the name of human<br />
comfort and energy conservation.<br />
It all began five years ago, when the<br />
data was compiled by a graduate student<br />
in meteorology, Bean said. Then, certain<br />
conditions — dealing with predicted temperatures,<br />
the number of hours a predicted<br />
temperature is reached and the number of<br />
days a certain temperature is reached —<br />
were established. Those conditions have to<br />
be met before heat or air conditioning goes<br />
on or off.<br />
For example, if the temperature outside<br />
is more than 55 degrees for at least four<br />
consecutive hours for two days, than the<br />
heat is turned off.<br />
According to the 30-year history, the<br />
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predicted day that occurs is June 13. And<br />
that's the day the heat is turned off.<br />
Officials start the boilers rolling again in<br />
the residence halls on Sept. 15. The conditions<br />
then must be less than 55 degrees<br />
during four consecutive hours of four days.<br />
Using various conditions like the ones<br />
above, the dates are established for heat<br />
and air conditioning control in all buildings<br />
across campus. Unless an unexpected cold<br />
front or heat wave moves in, then, according<br />
to <strong>University</strong> information:<br />
• Oct. 9 — heat is turned on in academic<br />
buildings.<br />
• May 15 — heat is turned off in academic<br />
buildings.<br />
• June 8 — air conditioning is turned on<br />
in academic buildings.<br />
• Sept. 10 — air conditioning is turned<br />
off in academic buildings.<br />
Instead of physical regulation of thermostats,<br />
what is actually done on those<br />
dates is a "de-activation." The amount of<br />
heat in campus buildings is self-regulated<br />
by a control system, with outside temperatures,<br />
determining the amount of heat<br />
being emitted.<br />
On the designated date, that control<br />
system is de-activated to prevent unnecessary<br />
energy loss, Bean said.<br />
The system is at times bound to overheat,<br />
which explains some students' complaints<br />
about oven-like temperatures in<br />
their dorm rooms, he said.<br />
Too often, however, those complaints<br />
are misdirected and nothing is done about<br />
them. Students should contact their resident<br />
assistant or housing supervisor in<br />
such cases; Bean said.<br />
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You normally wouldn't expect to see a painted Juggler or living dominos on the streets of<br />
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The annual Phi Psi 500<br />
By PATRICIA HUNGERFORD<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
hat began with 24 runners in 196S<br />
has become the 1,800-runner Phi<br />
W Psi 500 that many students and<br />
area residents look forward to watching<br />
and participating in each year.<br />
The April 17 race, sponsored by Phi<br />
Kappa Psi fraternity in cooperation with<br />
Schlitz Brewing Co., starts in front of the<br />
fraternity and includes five stops at different<br />
bars. The race is 1.1 miles long, and<br />
race participants must drink a 10-ounce<br />
glass of beer or soda at each of the five<br />
bars.<br />
The five bars include: the Phyrst, 111%<br />
E. Beaver Ave., Rego's, 128 E. College<br />
Ave., the Ail-American Rathskeller, 108 S.<br />
Pugh St., the Shandygaff Saloon, 212 E.<br />
College Ave., and the Brewery,' 233 E.<br />
Beaver Ave.<br />
A popular event in the race is the Anything<br />
Goes competition. About half the<br />
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Running, drinking for charity<br />
to 125 people are really serious about<br />
running for time, Martin said.<br />
The masters category is for participants<br />
more than 35 years old.<br />
- Checkers will be in each bar making<br />
sure the runners drink all their beer or<br />
soda, Martin said. IWhe runner spills too<br />
much beer or soda , the checker will tell<br />
him to drink another. If the second drink is<br />
spilled also the runner will be disqualified.<br />
The race starts at noon and will end at<br />
4:30. Registration, held in the HUB basement,<br />
begins April 5 and ends April 15. The<br />
registration fee for individuals is $12.<br />
Fees for the group events are as follows:<br />
team, $55; community relay, $55; sorority<br />
relay, $35; and anything goes, $12 for the<br />
first runner and $11 for each additional<br />
runner, with a limit of 20 runners. Each<br />
participant in the Phi Psi 500 will receive a<br />
T-shirt.<br />
Participants must carry five quarters to<br />
pay for their beer at each bar along the<br />
race route. Participants must be at least 21<br />
jm\ .<br />
years old, and proof of age is required.<br />
One-hundred student marshals will be<br />
placed along the route. The Mure of the<br />
Phi Psi depends on the crowd's behavior,<br />
said Doug Laderer, co-chairman of the<br />
race.<br />
The event has run smoothly for the past<br />
two years and organizers would like to see<br />
it continue to do so, Laderer said.<br />
From the race's proceeds, $1,000 will be<br />
donated to the Mount Nittany Conservancy,<br />
a group that owns the deed to the top<br />
third of Mount Nittany, Martin said.<br />
The money will be used to spray the land<br />
against gypsy moths, he said.<br />
The rest of the money will be donated to<br />
the Easter Seals Society of Centre County<br />
for therapy equipment used in direct patient<br />
care, he said.<br />
"We always donate to a local charity so<br />
the people of the community can see the<br />
money working," Martin said.<br />
Last- year $20,000 was donated to the<br />
Second Mile, he said.<br />
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500, song test,<br />
Easters: What<br />
other schools do<br />
in the spring<br />
By JACKIE MARTINO<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
unning from bar to bar dressed as<br />
pregnant nuns in the Psi Psi 500 may<br />
R be <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>'s notion of fun, but<br />
other colleges have very different ideas on<br />
how to have a good time in the spring.<br />
One idea is a 50-mile bike race modeled<br />
after the Indianapolis 500... except Indiana<br />
<strong>University</strong> students, not Mario Andretti,<br />
will be vying for the No. 1 slot. The race,<br />
"The Little 500," is "a real student tradition"<br />
at Indiana, said Rita Anderson,<br />
assistant director of the Student Foundation<br />
at Indiana.<br />
"It's a great community event, as well<br />
as a competitive event," she said.<br />
On a spring day, Indiana students can be<br />
seen riding through the streets of Bloomington,<br />
practicing for the event.<br />
"The whole idea is that? it's a college<br />
event," Anderson said. "It's good, clean<br />
competition."<br />
Only 33 of the 60 teams of four who enter<br />
will qualify for the race, she said. The<br />
teams, composed of students living on<br />
campus in residence halls or fraternity<br />
houses, each have three chances to qualify.<br />
After the trial runs are completed, the<br />
teams with the 33 fastest times may enter,<br />
Anderson said.<br />
On Friday night, the day before the main<br />
race, a "Mini 500" is held on Indiana's<br />
basketball court. Traditionally, Anderson<br />
said, men participate in the main race on<br />
Saturday, with women entering the Friday<br />
night event. But the women don't race on<br />
an outdoor track on ten-speed bicycles —<br />
they pedal around an indoor basketball<br />
court on tricycles, made especially by<br />
AMF for the event.<br />
The idea for the race evolved in 1951<br />
when then-director of the Student Foundation<br />
saw women looking out their dorm<br />
window cheering on a race between two<br />
bikers, Anderson said.<br />
<strong>University</strong> students and Bloomington<br />
residents are not the only people interested<br />
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While students at Indiana are busy<br />
thinking about bicycles and qualifying<br />
times, students from the <strong>University</strong> of<br />
Southern California are planning a musical<br />
extravaganza — the "USC Song Fest."<br />
The song fest, the largest college-run<br />
production in the nation, is held each<br />
spring with 500 to 600 students participating,<br />
said Chris Benauibes, a <strong>University</strong><br />
employee and a member of the Song Fest<br />
Committee.<br />
"The whole <strong>University</strong> community<br />
goes," she said. "Not only that — the Los<br />
Angeles community as well."<br />
Costumes for the event, which raises<br />
money to send underprivileged children to<br />
summer camp, are donated by alumni and<br />
various companies in the area, Benauibes<br />
said.<br />
"A lot of these businesses have donated<br />
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year after year, - she said. "It's like a<br />
tradition."<br />
Students at the <strong>University</strong> of Virginia<br />
get a little more rowdy in the spring with a<br />
week-long outdoor party.<br />
Easters Week, held the week after the<br />
Easter holiday, culminates with Easters<br />
Saturday, a party with a guest list of 7,000<br />
students, said Michael Dwyer, tri-chairman<br />
of the <strong>University</strong> Union.<br />
However, a T-shirt purchase, not a ticket,<br />
guarantees admission to the event,<br />
which includes 300 kegs of beer and two<br />
live bands, he said.<br />
"That night is probably the biggest<br />
party night of the year," Dwyer said, with<br />
fraternity streets being closed off for the<br />
weekend's events. The main event, however,<br />
is held in an amphitheater.<br />
"It's almost like a week off from<br />
school," he said.<br />
All washed up<br />
*<br />
Pity poor Ellen Crandall (now 10thgeneral<br />
agriculture). She probably still<br />
hasn't recovered from a bath of water,<br />
shaving cream, baby powder and peanut<br />
butter in West Halls quad last spring.<br />
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Collegian photo
The regatta: Paddle your blues away<br />
By PATRICIA HUNGERFORD<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
____fe~TL wwnm . -i.u a. ,. «_»«a_KL__i^, w 5K ~r**m "" .,, "/* ,- . v *?*"3»2S~, «*-_ »;__*¦«.« _ __ * •» .ST""<br />
the academics of Spring Term are<br />
If getting to you already, take heart. The<br />
eighth annual Sy Barash Regatta is<br />
coming to help you paddle and tug your<br />
blues away.<br />
The regatta will be held at the Stone<br />
Valley Recreational Area on April 25. The<br />
rain date is May 2.<br />
A $1 admission fee will be charged the<br />
day of the regatta, but a raffle ticket<br />
bought prior to then will serve as an<br />
admission ticket and entitles the holder to<br />
a chance in a drawing to be held at the<br />
regatta, said Mike Satzberg, a regatta *SS^ «J f ¦' ~<br />
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chairman. '' - '' "¦> > --^g^^gg^Aj^gg^^^^^J^iBBBfe^ -_^_JBiM--lB->lf^:-5 - • '- , ' ,-\; ' , ... \ "<br />
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Because the roads were crowded with .<br />
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traffic during last year's regatta, the Uni- -~~ ~~TZ -- ^ J^--4- -— '<br />
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Dorm areas schedule outdoor activities<br />
By JOYCE WASHNIK<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
Roller skating parties, ice cream socials, arm wrestling<br />
and a casino night are just some of the events<br />
planned for students in the residence halls this<br />
spring.<br />
Every year each dorm area plans a week of special<br />
activities toward the end of April and the beginning of<br />
May, with the majority of the events outdoors.<br />
North Week is from April 24 to 30. In North Halls, events<br />
are planned so each residence hall- receives points for<br />
doing certain activities. There is also an individual<br />
contest to select "Emperor (or Empress) of the North."<br />
Activities during North Week include arm wrestling, a<br />
talent show, a bike .rally, a frisbee throw, a basketball<br />
contest and a scavenger hunt. .<br />
The scavenger hunt will run from April 25 to 29. In past<br />
years, students have had to find pink slips with English 20<br />
on them, menus from three years ago, red shoelaces and<br />
pictures of <strong>University</strong> President John W. Oswald.<br />
In addition, students get points for doing certain stunts,<br />
such as eating worms or shooting baskets w^iile wearing<br />
nothing but shaving cream.<br />
"It should be a lot of fun," said Paula Berardinelli, cochairwoman<br />
of North Week. "We just hope the weather<br />
holds for us."<br />
Pollock-Nittany is also planning a Spring Week, with<br />
activities such as free ice skating, all-night movies,'an ice<br />
cream social, a dance in the quad with a disc jockey, a<br />
casino night and a picnic at Stone Valley. ' ,<br />
Kicking off the week, scheduled for May i to 8, will be a<br />
semi-formal at the Sheraton <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> Inn, 240 S. Pugh<br />
St.<br />
-"We always have good turnouts for Spring Week," said<br />
Patty Kartes, president of the Pollock-Nittany Residence<br />
Hall Association. "It's nice to see everybody out and<br />
everybody having a good time."<br />
West Halls week, to be held from April 19 to 24, will<br />
include outdoor movies, a picnic dinner, an ice cream<br />
social and a casino night. In addition, a week-long tourna-<br />
ment of athletic events is scheduled, including volleyball,<br />
frisbee, golf, a bicycle race and a baseball catch.<br />
Two bands are tentatively scheduled to play sometime<br />
during the week, said Mark Mangficio, president of the<br />
West Halls Residence Association.<br />
"I hope it goes over really well," he said.<br />
South Week runs from May 3 to 9 and includes an<br />
outdoor picnic dinner and coffeehouse, all-night movies, a<br />
hayride, a co-ed volleyball tournament, a roller skating<br />
party and a Mount Nittany hike.<br />
On May 6 there will be a gong show with prize money<br />
totaling $200.<br />
Centre Halls week; scheduled for May 3 to 8, will begin<br />
with a two-day outdoor carvnival, with each residence<br />
hall house setting up a booth.<br />
East Week, running from May 3 to 9, will include a<br />
talent show, an East Halls version of "Name That Tune,"<br />
a ping-pong tournament, a scavenger hunt, a tug-of war, a<br />
frisbee toss, a pie eating contest and a "steeple chase"<br />
race through East Halls.<br />
Campus Loop gets spring fever, too — and loses riders<br />
By CHERYL SACRA<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
like students with spring fever, the<br />
Just<br />
Campus Loop suffers from the nice<br />
weather. Loop ridership' drops off in<br />
the spring,, but unlike some students, the<br />
loop must keep .working.<br />
"The Campus Loop is' very smuch controlled<br />
by the weather," said Bruce Younkin,<br />
foreman of bus operations. "We do<br />
well in the winter, and don't do well in the<br />
spring."<br />
Ruth Carpenter,, a full-time Campus<br />
Loop driver, said, "I think the students get<br />
spring fever. They want to get out and<br />
walk.'<br />
In 1981, ridership dropped from 161,947<br />
riders in the winter to 114,118 riders in the<br />
spring, Younkin said.<br />
"This year the drop-off should probably<br />
be more drastic because we had such a<br />
severe winter," he said.<br />
Most of the people who ride the loop do so<br />
because of convenience or bad weather,<br />
Younkin said. It is not a service they need<br />
to get between two points, he said.<br />
But regardless of ridership, rates remain<br />
the same throughout the year, Younkin<br />
said.<br />
"We cannot vary the rates because<br />
they're regulated by the PUC (Public<br />
Utilities Commission) and because students<br />
complain," he said.<br />
About twice as many passes are sold for<br />
the loop in the winter compared to spring,<br />
Younkin said.<br />
Passes, which sell for $15 apiece, last for<br />
Try McDonald s new<br />
Salad Bar<br />
and get /<br />
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Now through April 30th, you can get a great salad<br />
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College Avenue.<br />
You'll love McDonald's all-you-can-eat Salad Bar<br />
fresh , crisp iceberg lettuce uce, red ripe tomatoes, car<br />
rots, sweet red onions, red cabbage, croutons and<br />
six kinds of dressing.<br />
^^t^TuTTfRlNrisiSj<br />
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Offer good only at McDonald s. 442 East College<br />
Avenue, now through April 30th, 1982<br />
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McDonald's<br />
a term and allow students to ride as often<br />
as they want, Younkin said. A lot of passes<br />
are. sold to students living in East Halls<br />
and Graduate Circle because they are so<br />
isolated, Younkin said.<br />
Carpenter said she notices a change, but<br />
not a drastic change, in the ridership from<br />
winter to spring. And she said she doesn't<br />
find driving in the spring boring.<br />
"Spring is a nice time to drive. You see<br />
the kids out doing things, and you can see<br />
the trees bud and the flowers come up,"<br />
she said.<br />
The people are friendlier when the<br />
weather is nice, Carpenter said.<br />
"They seem to want to talk more. When<br />
we have a nice day, everybody is just so<br />
happy. Usually someone will strike up a<br />
conversation," Carpenter said.<br />
Greg Thompson (9th-administration of<br />
justice) , who lives in East Halls, said he<br />
definitely rides the loop more in the winter<br />
than he does in the spring.<br />
"(Parking Lot 80) is bad to walk across<br />
in the winter," Thompson said.<br />
Another East Halls resident, Lynn Mullaly<br />
(loth-finance) , said people tend to<br />
want to be outside more in the spring. She<br />
rides the loop mostly at night or if the<br />
weather is cold, she said.<br />
Carpenter said the days seem to go<br />
faster in the spring when it's nice, but<br />
there is one thing she misses when she is<br />
driving.<br />
"I do envy that I can't get out and lounge<br />
in the sun," Carpenter said.<br />
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