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Reagan asks Americans to leave Libya<br />
By GEORGE GEDDA<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
WASHINGTON (AP ) - President Reagan asked<br />
Americans working in Libya to come home<br />
yesterday to keep them from becoming pawns in<br />
any showdown with the radical Arab state. The<br />
government said 1,500 U.S. citizens — many of them<br />
oil technicians — stand in "imminent da'nger."<br />
The <strong>State</strong> Department banned travel to Libya by<br />
U.S. citizens in another move which, according to<br />
congressional leaders briefed by intelligence<br />
officials, is intended to ward off an Iran-like seizure<br />
of Americans as hostages. •<br />
With border guards alerted to be on the lookout<br />
for alleged Libyan assassin squads trying to<br />
infiltrate this country, officials implied that<br />
yesterday's decisions were only first moves in a<br />
cold war with the Libyan strongman Moammar<br />
Khadafy.<br />
The government still is considering an embargo<br />
against oil from Libya, which supplies about 4<br />
percent of U.S. imports, according to officials who<br />
spoke privately. .<br />
"The steps taken early today by President<br />
Reagan are in response to the problem of Libyan<br />
lawlessness," Secretary of <strong>State</strong> Alexander M. Haig<br />
Jr. told reporters in Brussels, where he conferred<br />
with European allies.<br />
"I don't rule out potential further steps, but the<br />
actions taken are justified by the prevailing<br />
circumstances," he said.<br />
Deputy Secretary of <strong>State</strong> William Clark<br />
announced the moves, but refused to link them to<br />
the administration's belief that Khadafy has sent an<br />
assassination squad to this continent to kill Reagan<br />
or other top government officials in retaliation for<br />
the American downing of two Libyan MiGs Aug. 19.<br />
Reagan said Monday he had evidence of the<br />
assassination plot, but none has been made public.<br />
Clark said the steps were taken in view of the<br />
overall pattern of Libyan behavior over the past six<br />
months.<br />
Presidential counselor Edwin Meese III<br />
emphasized in a San Francisco speech that<br />
"steadily increasing" terrorism backed by Libya,<br />
not reports of actual "hit teams," ought to get U.S.<br />
officials, prompted the president's action.<br />
"We reached the conclusion we cannot ignore Col.<br />
Khadafy," Meese said. Khadafy heads the Libyan<br />
government.<br />
Meese said U.S. allies had been consulted about<br />
the need to act against Libya and had given a<br />
"favorable" informal response. He did not say who<br />
was consulted.<br />
U.S. House approves 4% domestic budget cuts<br />
By JOHN SCHLANDER<br />
Daily Collegian Staff Writer<br />
The U.S. House of Representatives yesterday passed a 4<br />
percent across-the-board cut in domestic programs —<br />
including student aid — representing a $4 billion dollar cut<br />
in the federal budget. The vote was 218-197.<br />
The Republican-backed ' 'Conte Amendment'' was passed<br />
shortly after the House rejected 222-194 a Democratic<br />
proposal effecting $3 billion in cuts.<br />
Mark Heuer, news secretary for Rep. William F. Clinger,<br />
R-central Pa., said the Senate has not passed the bill yet, but<br />
inside<br />
• If a student is charged on<br />
campus with a violation, of . both<br />
<strong>Penn</strong>sylvania law and the Universi-<br />
ty's Code of Conduct he can be<br />
tried twice<br />
Page 8<br />
• President Reagan's budget<br />
planners hope to whittle the federa j<br />
deficit down to under $70 billion in<br />
1983 and $40 billion or less in 1984,<br />
and are considering tax increases to<br />
get there?...<br />
Page 9<br />
• The men's basketball team<br />
travels to the Indiana Classic this<br />
weekend in Bloomington, Ind.<br />
Page 17<br />
weather<br />
Variable cloudiness and windy<br />
today with snow showers. High<br />
temperatures near 28 degrees. Partial<br />
clearing and very cold tonight.<br />
Low temperatures near 14 degrees.<br />
Partly cloudy and breezy tomorrow.<br />
High temperatures around 32 degrees.<br />
Increasing cloudiness tomorrow<br />
night with low temperatures<br />
near 24 degrees. A period of light<br />
snow is possible on Sunday with<br />
high, temperatures in the low 30s.<br />
by Mark Stunder<br />
the<br />
daily<br />
it hopes to begin consideration tonight or tomorrow.<br />
Passage is expected in the Republican-dominated Senate,<br />
he said.<br />
Clinger voted in favor of the 4 percent "cut, Heuer said.<br />
"It was the only feasible plan," Heuer said. "This was<br />
generally accepted as being the bill that was going to get<br />
through."<br />
House Republicans earlier warned that President Reagan<br />
possibly might use his second veto if the $4 billion cut was<br />
not made.<br />
"This was worked out in advance, and this is what the<br />
iimiiiHiiii'MHiiiiiiiiBi "imuu I'ni'iti *g«aw ^t<br />
AP Las ' erphoto<br />
U.S. Secretary of <strong>State</strong> Alexander M. Haig Jr., right, and Greek Prime Minister<br />
Andreas Papandreou descend a staircase at the Greek embassy in Brussels<br />
after NATO talks. NATO allies responded coolly to U.S. actions against Libya<br />
yesterday.<br />
¦<br />
president said he would take," Heuer said.<br />
Before the vote, The Associated Press quoted U.S. Rep.<br />
Silvio Conte, R-Mass., the top-ranking Republican on the<br />
House Appropriations Committee, as saying "The president<br />
means what he says."<br />
If the House did not pass his amendment, he said, "We<br />
will be here on .Christmas Eve, angry and frustrated."<br />
In contrast, U.S. Rep. William Natcher, D-Ky., said to<br />
U.S. Rep. Robert Walker, R-Pa., who supported the heavier<br />
cut: "I want you to go back to the state of <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania and<br />
tell them you're against the children of this country . ..<br />
20'<br />
*#*»«&<br />
Friday Dec. 11, 1981<br />
Vol. 82, No. 88 32 pages <strong>University</strong> Park, Pa. 16802<br />
Published by students of The <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania <strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />
You're voting against the handicapped, you re voting<br />
against aid to education ..."<br />
If the Senate passes the bill, the federal government will<br />
finally have its official budget for this fiscal year, now more<br />
than two months old, Heuer said. The government is now<br />
operating with a stop-gap budget bill that runs out Dec. 15.<br />
If Senate passage occurs 1 , domestic programs could still<br />
be subject to recisions, or further cuts, during this fiscal<br />
year, which ends Sept. 30, Heuer said.<br />
It is too early to predict what recisions might be made, he<br />
said.<br />
NATO cool to U.S. acts<br />
Haig: Libyan-European relations to stay normal<br />
By R. GREGORY NOKES<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -<br />
Secretary of <strong>State</strong> Alexander M. Haig<br />
Jr. said yesterday that new U.S.<br />
actions against Libya were in<br />
response to "Libyan terrorist<br />
activity" but that most of America's<br />
European allies probably will<br />
maintain normal relations with the<br />
government of Libyan leader <<br />
Moammar Khadafy.<br />
I Haig apparently encountered a cool<br />
response from America's NATO allies<br />
here to the possibility of U.S.<br />
sanctions against Libya. In recent<br />
weeks, U.S. officials speaking<br />
privately, had spoken in terms of<br />
punitive actions against Libya, such<br />
as banning imports of Libyan oil to the<br />
United <strong>State</strong>s. The Reagan<br />
administration alleges Khadafy is<br />
plotting to kill the president or other<br />
high U.S. officials.<br />
French Foreign Minister Claude<br />
Cheysson told reporters before the<br />
American announcement that France<br />
opposes such sanctions.<br />
Government stops<br />
draft prosecution<br />
Indictments on hold temporarily<br />
By MIKE FEINSILBER<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
WASHINGTON (AP) - The<br />
government put a hold yesterday on<br />
plans to seek indictments against<br />
some of the more than 800,000 young<br />
men who are violating that nation's<br />
laws by failing to register for the<br />
draft.<br />
The Justice Department decision<br />
to temporarily suspend prosecutions<br />
came just a day before U.S.<br />
attorneys in one or two cities were<br />
preparing to go before grand juries<br />
and seek indictments in some of 161<br />
cases being prepared for<br />
prosecution.<br />
Young men are required to<br />
register within 30 days of their 18th<br />
birthday. Failure to comply could<br />
carry a $10,000 fine and five years'<br />
imprisonment.<br />
Leaders of the National Inter-<br />
Religious Service Board for<br />
Conscientious Objectors said Justice<br />
Department officials told them<br />
Wednesday that Scott Aaseng, a<br />
student at St. Olaf College in<br />
Northfield , Minn., would be indicted<br />
Friday. Aaseng, son of a Lutheran<br />
minister, is a conscientious objector.<br />
"With all the attention that's been<br />
focused on Scott's case, they might<br />
have feared not winning their first<br />
case; maybe that's why they pulled<br />
back," said Warren Hoover, the<br />
organization's executive director .<br />
"We urge President Reagan to<br />
take this burden totally from the<br />
shoulders of young Americans,"<br />
Hoover said.<br />
Cheysson also warned that it might<br />
be a.mistake to try to isolate Libya in<br />
the world community, a strategy the<br />
Reagan administration has pursued<br />
for the past several months.<br />
But Haig told reporters at a brief<br />
news conference, "We neither sought<br />
nor anticipated support. We merely<br />
informed our NATO partners today<br />
that such a statement would be<br />
forthcoming," referring to the<br />
announcement of the U.S. actions<br />
yesterday.<br />
"I think it is clear that some of our<br />
European partners will pursue, as<br />
they have in the past, their own<br />
independent policies with respect to<br />
Libya. That means that basically<br />
some, probably most, will make no<br />
change whatsoever."<br />
Asked if the administration took<br />
into account the possibility it might<br />
enhance Khadafy's popularity in<br />
some countries by acting against him,<br />
Haig said, "For every step of this<br />
significance, there is a very careful,<br />
judgment made with respect to not<br />
only the impact on our allies, but on<br />
President Reagan<br />
AP Laastpholo<br />
Aaseng said of the government s<br />
action: "It's just a temporary delay.<br />
It takes off the extreme pressure<br />
and takes us back to the normal,<br />
everyday, too much pressure."<br />
Lawyer David Landau of the<br />
American Civil Liberties Union said<br />
the Justice Department decision<br />
removes "an external factor"<br />
pressing President Reagan to<br />
continue registration.<br />
"We interpret this to mean there's<br />
a chance he's going to end<br />
registration," Landau said.<br />
Selective Service headquarters<br />
said 6.5 million young men from age<br />
18 from 21 have registered and<br />
800,000 have not registered since<br />
registration resumed in July 1980<br />
after a five-year hiatus.<br />
Draft inductions ended in<br />
December 1972, but registration was<br />
resumed by former President<br />
Carter in July 1980 to provide a list of<br />
eligible men in the event a national<br />
emergency required reinstatement<br />
of the draft.<br />
Justice Department spokesman<br />
John Russell said U.S. attorneys<br />
were told not to seek any<br />
indictments while Reagan considers<br />
whether to end registration , a step<br />
he advocated during the presidential<br />
election campaign.<br />
Reagan is to receive by the end of<br />
this month a recommendation from<br />
the Defense Military Manpower<br />
Task Force, chaired by Defense<br />
Secretary Caspar .W. Weinberger.<br />
the moderate and less than moderate<br />
Arab world."<br />
He also said, "It is a responsible act<br />
in light of the current situation and<br />
continued support by the Libyan<br />
government of terrorist activity and a<br />
level of anti-American polemics by<br />
that government."<br />
In answer to a question, he said the<br />
request for Americans to leave Libya<br />
was not the result of concern they<br />
could be taken hostage by the<br />
Khadafy government.<br />
Earlier in the day, the chief U.S.<br />
arms negotiator told the NATO allies<br />
that although progress in U.S.-Soviet<br />
arms talks is being made, it was too<br />
early to predict there will be an<br />
agreement in time to head off planned<br />
deployment of American missiles in<br />
Europe.<br />
Paul H. Nitze told foreign ministers<br />
from 15 NATO countries that "both<br />
sides were getting down to real issues<br />
in the negotiations" that opened Nov.<br />
30 in Geneva, a senior U.S. official<br />
said.
editorial opinion<br />
Democracy in action<br />
¦ ¦<br />
Topics<br />
Say what you will about<br />
the Undergraduate Student<br />
Government, but it really is<br />
making an effort to become<br />
closer to <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> students.<br />
Its Winter Term<br />
newsletter proves USG's devotion<br />
to providing useful<br />
services.<br />
In addition to health insurance,<br />
<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> calendar<br />
and weekend movies, the<br />
newsletter lists one of USG's<br />
dandier ideas: term break<br />
and holiday busses. Apparently<br />
USG's tradition of running<br />
term break and holiday<br />
buses has proven unprofitable<br />
and the executives decided<br />
to, for a price, provide<br />
students with a buss — "a<br />
smacking kiss," as defined<br />
by the American Heritage<br />
Dictionary.<br />
Students shouldn't get too<br />
excited; a buss doesn't carry<br />
the emotion, the caring of<br />
a kiss. It's a cheap thrill,<br />
titilation that fades quickly.<br />
As Herrick said, "We buss<br />
our wantons, but our .wives<br />
we kiss."<br />
However, USG is to be<br />
commended for blazing new<br />
paths in student government.<br />
We can hardly wait<br />
for this program to develop<br />
Being No. 1<br />
The Associated Press reports<br />
that a student from<br />
Lycoming College in Williamsport<br />
has taken it upon<br />
himself to develop a model<br />
hydrogen bomb. Albert<br />
Stoner, a 21-year-old astronomy<br />
major from Altoona,<br />
used declassified government<br />
documents to design a<br />
20-inch polystyrene model,<br />
which he demonstrated for<br />
his class on Monday. (The<br />
bomb, of course, doesn't<br />
work.)<br />
Not content to stick with<br />
mere hydrogen bombs,<br />
Stoner said he has developed<br />
plans for a one-half<br />
megawatt bomb, which<br />
would be nearly 50 times as<br />
powerful as the gizmo<br />
dropped on Hiroshima.<br />
Precocious college kids<br />
seem to be developing these<br />
bombs all the time. Why<br />
can't <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>, with its<br />
strength in technology, produce<br />
a student who will produce<br />
a bomb? Hey<br />
administrators, think of the<br />
publicity. Think of the alumni<br />
money that would come<br />
pouring in. Think of the power<br />
<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> could hold<br />
over the state Legislature,<br />
Teamster unions and AP<br />
sportswriters.<br />
Furthermore, Happy Valley<br />
is practically a world<br />
unto itself and sorely needs<br />
the protection afforded by<br />
nuclear weapons. Call that<br />
Stoner guy; offer him full<br />
tuition, a plush townhouse,<br />
and parking privileges on<br />
campus. Throw in a Corvette<br />
if he holds out. Better<br />
dead than red.<br />
The Daily Collegian 's editorial<br />
opinion is determined by its Board<br />
of Opinion, with the editor-in-chief<br />
holding final responsibility.<br />
Mreader opinion-<br />
In the name of aggressive agriculture and<br />
as agricultural producers, we feel it is essential<br />
to voice our opinions concerning recent<br />
propaganda by various animal rights activists.<br />
We want to grasp the animal rights issue<br />
from the emotional realm and pull it into<br />
reality.<br />
We will be the first to admit that there are<br />
isolated abuses in our industry, as there are in<br />
any other industry. But, it is time that myths<br />
of "farm factories" and "cruel sadistic farmers"<br />
are dispelled, and that the facts of<br />
technical agriculture and the American farmer<br />
be known.<br />
First of all, most farms exist as family<br />
units. In addition, farm practices are scientifically<br />
based, but are not without human<br />
care and concern. Specifically, a practice<br />
that has come under recent attack is the<br />
farrowing crate, a pen that confines a sow<br />
shortly before, during and after parturition. A<br />
farrowing crate makes the sow easily accessible<br />
for observations, medical attention, and<br />
assistance during delivery. Furthermore,<br />
these crates keep the sow from harming her<br />
piglets either by lying on them or consuming<br />
them. The crates are very sanitary and are<br />
Animal lovers ' rebuttal<br />
often kept in farrowing houses that are envi- accomplishment: an accomplishment only<br />
ronmentally controlled. achieved through a high level of productivity.<br />
Since the use of farrowing crates, the death Not only does one farmer now feed 60 people,<br />
rates of both sows and piglets have dropped but has shown a 7 percent increase in producdramatically.<br />
This is but one of the modern tivity over the last five years — which means<br />
practices that has benefitted both the live- one farmer feeds almost two dormitory floors<br />
stock and producer. three meals a day, 365 days a year.<br />
The American farmer does not mistreat his In the days of double digit inflation and<br />
or her animals in the hopes of making a quick declining industrial efficiency, we are proud<br />
buck; rather, he or she is a compassionate to be associated with an industry that has<br />
individual who cares deeply for animals. refused to buckle in times of economic strife,<br />
Moreoever, any individual knows that ani- but has tightened its belt to better serve the<br />
mals placed under undue strength do not American consumer. It is shocking to us that<br />
produce. Therefore, the farmer strives to anyone would choose to condemn rather than<br />
provide a comfortable and sanitary environ- applaud this performance,<br />
ment for his or her stock in order to maximize Finally, we are left wondering what path<br />
profits. the criticism will follow. Will plant pairi be the<br />
We do not starve our animals to produce a next issue? Only the naive would now considproduct<br />
— we produce a product to feed the er this possibility an absurdity,<br />
starving peoples; thus, making the American As agriculturists, we are appalled' at the<br />
farmer the envy/of the world. To this point, we emotional discoloration of our industry. As<br />
have only examined principles. Now, let's educators we are concerned with the Ameritalk<br />
ECONOMICS. can public's ignorance of agricultural prac-<br />
The people in the United <strong>State</strong>s eat more tices.<br />
nutritiously and less expensively than any MeeCee Baker, I2th-agricultural education<br />
other society in the world!! We, as producers Tom Mincemoyer, graduate-agricultural eduof<br />
food, believe that this is an outstanding cation Dec. 10<br />
A divisive language<br />
The Daily Collegian<br />
Friday, Dec. 11<br />
French Quebec fights to separate from its English surroundings<br />
Editor 's note :' This is the first of two columns concerning<br />
the political turmoil in Quebec, Canada. The author,<br />
who recently visited the province/discusses the historical<br />
and socal perspective of the separtist movement.<br />
Next week he will discuss the possible implicatons an<br />
independent Quebec would have on Canada and the<br />
United <strong>State</strong>s.<br />
The snow, which started to fall the day before, had<br />
blanketed the ground on either side of the road and piled<br />
slightly on top of the rows of tombstones. Looking from<br />
side to side, I scanned the names. In the cemetery to my<br />
right, I saw names like Martin, Johnson and Kelly. On<br />
the left, however, the names I saw were considerably<br />
harder to pronounce: Boileau, Soudeyns and Gauthier.<br />
It was that observation that poignantly illustrated the<br />
division of a people within a province and a province<br />
within a country.<br />
Drawing the battle lines very basically, my friend<br />
explained, "English speaking people are buried over<br />
there on the left. French-speaking people on the right."<br />
"You mean if you're French, you can't be buried over<br />
there?" I asked pointing to the Martin's and Kelly's.<br />
"Yes, but if you're French, you don't want to be," she<br />
replied with a smile:<br />
I spent five days in Quebec over term break with a<br />
French-Canadian family. They live in a small, rural<br />
town called Magog, situated at the point of the 30-mile<br />
long Memphemagog Lake and nestled in the shadow<br />
Mount Orford , just above the Vermont border.<br />
During my stay, the only English I heard — be it at the<br />
dinner table, on Main Street or at the bars — was that<br />
which was directed at me. Sure, there was English on<br />
television and radio, but having no knowledge of<br />
French, I was a helpless bystander to the conversations<br />
around me. •<br />
As I gradually ^came<br />
to understand, that was as it<br />
should be.<br />
French Canadians are very proud of their language.<br />
And those who belong to the Parti Quebecois, the ruling<br />
party of Quebec's provincial government, are fiercely<br />
proud of their province. It's the French language that is<br />
the source of this pride and also what sets Quebec apart<br />
from the rest of Canada.<br />
In 1976, Quebeckers took a big step toward setting<br />
themselves apart politically by voting the separtist<br />
Parti Quebecois into power. The party was formed by<br />
Rene Levesque in 1968 in response to Quebec's desire to<br />
protect its special ethnic character arid economic interests<br />
in a country where English Canadians are an<br />
overwhelming majority.<br />
(Of the 6.2 million people that live in Quebec, one of<br />
the country's 10 provinces, 80 percent are French<br />
speaking [francophones, as they are referred to in the<br />
Canadian press]; the other 20 percent are English<br />
speaking [anglophones]. The nine other provinces are<br />
90 percent English.) -<br />
Upon election, the Parti Quebecois, led by Premier<br />
Levesque, promoted its ideal: to remove Quebec from<br />
the Canadian federation . Levesque, a fiery and popular<br />
statesman among francophones, wanted to form a new<br />
nation with political sovereignty able to make its own<br />
laws, conduct foreign affairs and pay taxes only to<br />
Quebec City, its capital.<br />
Still, it was a drastic proposition — with unpredictable<br />
future — that promised to send shock waves from New<br />
Foundland to British Columbia if it succeeded. To fully<br />
understand the emotion behind the separtist movement,<br />
one would most assuredly have to be a Quebecker. But<br />
the move did have a historical, religious and social<br />
foundation.<br />
The separation, however, wasn't to be absolute.<br />
Levesque proposed to maintain a monetary union,<br />
common currency and a common market with the<br />
Canadian federation.<br />
i A- *<br />
mpw *<br />
Jff iW&Ti<br />
It seems that in the past francophones, who are<br />
primarily Roman Catholic, were content.to keep their<br />
distinct cultural identity quietly confined to the rural<br />
towns and villages throughout the province. Meanwhile,<br />
the Protestant anglophones controlled commerce and<br />
industry in the cities. Also, French Canadians could<br />
only rise to a certain level in the business world before<br />
they needed the English language to advance further.<br />
Naturally, francophones, in a province they dominated<br />
in population, could only exist in this subservient<br />
role for so long.<br />
Indeed, in the last 20 years, there has been a surge of<br />
French-Canadian pride, provincialism if you will, that<br />
has moved the francophones to urbanize their culture<br />
and has caused them to instill this pride in their<br />
politically-oriented youth. Gradually, the anglophone's<br />
economic control was challenged as the province's<br />
majority sought greater political authority.<br />
My friend is an energetic example of this change. She<br />
is a supportive member of the Parti Quebecois, and<br />
doesn't hesitate to show her blue membership card. Her<br />
knowledge of national politics is both vast and intense,<br />
and the Maple Leaf of Canada means virtually nothing<br />
next to the Fleur-de-Lys of Quebec.<br />
Even in her friends' apartment, a poster of Rene<br />
Levesque is hanging in the stairwell — and it's not even<br />
Pattin' it in<br />
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page &, typed amtdouble-$paccd> t#i26Carne*<br />
j'tf ei iPa)r^JOne;m^Wd^lpra$t f #$ubmitoedpy.<br />
$p,m, on Sunday, Dec. ik Pan, Tiro material<br />
mniibeMbtnHtMby s pan, Saturday, 'bee.<br />
Thanks, John<br />
I'd like to thank John Allison for his "The<br />
Obligatory John Lennon Column." I'm glad to<br />
see that someone wasn't going to let this "anni-<br />
an election year. The politics of Quebec seemingly touch<br />
these people personally and they don't shy away from<br />
involvement.<br />
In May 1980, when the vote for separation was put to<br />
Quebeckers, it was those youthful provincialists that<br />
backed Levesque's plan in the greatest numbers. With<br />
an astounding 85 percent voter turnout, three-quarters<br />
of voters under 40 years old responded "oui" for<br />
separation.<br />
Yet that support was offset by older, more traditional<br />
and less daring Quebeckers. More than half of all<br />
francophones voted against separtion and the<br />
movement was turned back 59 percent to 41 percent.<br />
Canada breathed a sigh of relief , at the results,<br />
especially Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau who campaigned<br />
fervently against separation. But' if the split<br />
between province and nation did not materialize politically,<br />
it remained intact emotionally.<br />
The fact that a vote occurred at all was testimony to<br />
the bitterness and animosity felt by French Canadians<br />
in Quebec toward English Canadians everywhere else.<br />
The long, heated campaign ruined friendships , divided<br />
families (Levesque's brother was a staunch federalist)<br />
and even spurred pockets of violence when a group of<br />
young francophones rioted in an English section of<br />
Montreal after the vote.<br />
The scars haven't healed; Levesque doesn't want<br />
them to. i<br />
Canada is now just a few legislative steps away from<br />
its first constitution, thus officially ending its colonial<br />
status under Great Britain. Yet the document which<br />
was warmly embraced by all nine anglo provincial<br />
governments, was rejected by Quebec. The consitiution<br />
would weaken Quebec's power to limit English speaking<br />
schools, thus opening up the possibility of diluting the<br />
French province. '<br />
Last week, while the supportive premiers of the<br />
constitution joined with Trudeau in a chorus of "O<br />
Canada," Levesque ordered the flags in Quebec flown at<br />
half mast.<br />
When I read about Levesque s order, I couldn t help<br />
but think of that cemetery in Magog, the neat division of<br />
francophones and anglophones even in death. The issue<br />
is largely a matter of pride and for French Canadians,<br />
an isolated minority in an expansive country, it always<br />
has been.<br />
Again, the talk of separation is in the air. Another vote<br />
is expected. This time, the combination of more young<br />
members of the Parti Quebecois and the growing<br />
impatience of older voters with federal government<br />
could put a new nation above America's Northeast<br />
sector. '<br />
Justin Catanoso is an llth-term journalis m major. His<br />
column appears on Friday.<br />
versary," for want of a better phrase, pass by<br />
unnoticed.<br />
I know the feelings that Mr. Allison had when<br />
he learned about Lennon's death a year ago. I<br />
had the same feelings myself. On every Dec. 8<br />
from now on, I know I'm going to feel the sorrow<br />
that I had in my heart that day.<br />
Some people may think that it's silly to mourn<br />
Lennon's death a year after he's gone. I disagree.<br />
John Lennon was a musical genius who<br />
will long be missed. His music was a major part<br />
of my life and it always will be.<br />
Thank you Mr. Lennon.<br />
Paul Sobotor, llth-art<br />
Dec. 9<br />
Collegian<br />
Friday Dec. 11, 1981—Page 2 ©1981 Collegian Inc.<br />
Paula Froke Debby Vinokur<br />
Editor Business Manager<br />
BOARD OF MANAGERS: Sales Manager, Paul Rudoy;<br />
Assistant Sales Manager, Monique Rura ; Office Manager,<br />
Michelle, Forner; Assistant Office Manager, Michael<br />
Conklin; Marketing Managers, Sue Largman,<br />
Mark Pulos; National Ad Manager, Owen Landon; Co-op<br />
Managers, Donna Dauterich, Jodi Shubin; Creative<br />
Director, Tracy Meyer; Layout Coordinators, Susan<br />
Largman, Barry Reichenbaugh, Jodi Shubin..
¦ ¦<br />
opinions<br />
f.<br />
Question: Do you think cheating occurs on campus? If so, why<br />
away with it?<br />
wi mkk<br />
#4<br />
Kim Short, 12th-food service and<br />
housing administration: "Cheating<br />
occurs because the classes are too<br />
large and because all of my tests are<br />
objective ; there should be more<br />
essay tests. Also, there's too much<br />
competition within the classes."<br />
Tom Nevling, 6th-industrial<br />
engineering: "The<br />
college cheats too. Why<br />
should I care, if they<br />
don't?"<br />
Barb Colombo, llth-parks and recreation:<br />
"I wouldn't expect it, but I<br />
know cheating happens. I don't think<br />
anyone really thinks that collegelevel<br />
students need to cheat. Hopefully<br />
by this time they're studying<br />
something they're interested in."<br />
uotographs<br />
fl weekly look at <strong>University</strong> liPe<br />
7W<br />
Lori Moglia, graduate-special education:'<br />
"I've only been here for a<br />
term, but I suspect the reason most<br />
students cheat is because of the<br />
pressure applied in their competitive<br />
fields. The pressure required to<br />
do well, whether for GPA or their<br />
own satisfaction, sometimes overrides<br />
their moral sense."<br />
iS i £d*LJt y<br />
^T"?<br />
i:Wr ) i<br />
1<br />
\ .hsswsL ML<br />
Dennis Roberts, professor of educational<br />
psychology: "Certainly I<br />
think cheating goes on a lot. The<br />
large claasses are difficult to monitor,<br />
and there are so many different<br />
ways to cheat. I think a lot of faculty<br />
members don't really care. They<br />
feel that they (the students) will get<br />
caught sooner or later anyhow."<br />
career opp ortunities at<br />
do you think students get<br />
WmnnFmk<br />
Zylphia Ford, 5th-psychology: "The<br />
professors don't care, and they don't<br />
try to stop cheating (from occurring).<br />
If there's too many seats in a<br />
class, there is nothing they can do<br />
about it."<br />
Tom Fair, llth-agricultural<br />
mechanization:<br />
"A lot of cheating occurs,<br />
especially with<br />
fraternities and students<br />
that have a little<br />
bit of background and<br />
references."<br />
mmmamm<br />
m<br />
Edwina Howard, 5th-accounting:<br />
"Students get away with cheating<br />
because they pick the best seats in<br />
the middle of the class where teachers<br />
can't really see people."<br />
AMERICAN MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS, INC<br />
a leading nationwide comp uter<br />
service and consulting f irm<br />
DATE: Sunday, December 13, 1981<br />
PLACE: Room 333 Whitmore Lab<br />
TIME: 7:00p .m. . -<br />
SPEAKER: Skip Korkuch (1978 PSU graduate)<br />
sp onsored by COMPUTER SCIENCE CL UB<br />
Refreshments will be served!!<br />
• ••<br />
ci super?antostic<br />
at barefoot.<br />
fryebpots- bass • capezio • zodiac<br />
nickels • 9west • bandolino • etc-<br />
barelf©@t<br />
325 E CALDER WAY • 234 8080 • WEEKN1GHTS TIL 8:30<br />
VISA<br />
master card<br />
blue key card<br />
Animal liberation is human liberation<br />
By GEORGE P. CAVE<br />
President, Trans-Species Unlimited<br />
"But with so much human suffering in the world, why worry<br />
about animals?" This is the objection perhaps most often<br />
raised to the work of the animal rights activist. It is an<br />
important, if misguided criticism, for it is usually sincere, and<br />
to those unaware of the links between human and animal<br />
exploitation, and ignorant of the moral foundations of the<br />
animal rights movement, it may appear to be a telling objection<br />
to participation in that movement.<br />
Pushed to its logical conclusion, this line of thought leads to a<br />
charge of moral hypocrisy or even immorality, as evidenced by<br />
the recent article "Saving Monkeys, Ignoring People" by<br />
William Raspberry in the Washington Post (Oct. 14, 1981).<br />
Speaking of the recent rescue operation of 17 abused laboratory<br />
monkeys by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals<br />
(PETA) Raspberry states: "... all this heroism on behalf of 17<br />
monkeys, when the situation for millions of human beings is<br />
desperate and growing worse strikes me as, well, inhuman."<br />
forum<br />
Unfortunately, what usually underlies this sort of criticism is<br />
nothing more nor less than blatant homocentric prejudice, the<br />
morally repugnant assumption that human beings should<br />
always come first, not because their suffering is greater but<br />
simply because they are human beings. In order to see that this<br />
way of thinking is morally objectionable, we have merely to<br />
cast our initial question into its parallel racist form: "With so<br />
much suffering of white people in the world, why worry about<br />
blacks?" Most people today recognize that race, sex, age, etc.<br />
are not morally valid grounds for preferential treatment. Few<br />
recognize this principle with regards to species. Yet there is no<br />
more justification for unnecessarily inflicting pain on a monkey<br />
because he is not a human being than for inflicting pain on a<br />
black man because he is not white.<br />
Treating an animal differently simply becase it belongs to a<br />
different species is morally unjustifiable. As Jeremy Bentham<br />
said one hundered years ago, "pain is pain no matter who<br />
suffers it," Our decision as to whose sufferings we should<br />
attempt to relieve should, therefore be determined by who<br />
suffers most, not by what species the creature in question<br />
happens to belong to.<br />
The objection raised above against animal rights activists is<br />
not, however, always motivated solely by homocentric prejudice<br />
and speciesism. It may reflect a genuine concern for moral<br />
priorities, a suspicion that greater suffering is being ignored<br />
for the sake of relieveing lesser suffering. This concern is what<br />
lies beneath the stock charge that animal rights advocates are<br />
misanthropic animal lovers who care more for animals than for<br />
people. It should be noted that mere emotional preference for<br />
non-human animals over human beings is not, in itself, ad-<br />
, equate grounds for moral condemnation unless this results in<br />
preferential treatment of non-human animals.<br />
The history " of the humane movement, however, clearly<br />
belies the claim that animal rights advocates are typically<br />
misanthropes who are unconcerned with human woes. Today,<br />
the vanguard of the animal rights movement today is composed<br />
of activists who in the past participated in the civil rights<br />
movement, the anti-war protest, and the feminist movement.<br />
But the question is, assuming the correctness of the moral<br />
principle, that one should attempt to relieve the greater<br />
z£*<br />
rfc*<br />
Departures<br />
Philly<br />
Dec. 18<br />
12:30 p.m<br />
5:30 p.m.<br />
*.<br />
».<br />
Monday December. 14th<br />
7:00 201 BAB<br />
R.048 ft. All Business Students Welcome ft<br />
1.-+S "»-r Si-»* ~r~t. i. »i~»« T'*<br />
suffering, irrespective of species, how can the animal rights<br />
activist defend himself against the charge that he ignores<br />
greater human suffering for the sake of relieving lesser animal<br />
suffering?<br />
In his criticism of PETA, Raspberry unfairly contrasts the<br />
suffering of 17 monkeys with the travail of millions of human<br />
beings, thus suggesting that the suffering of human beings far<br />
•outwieghs the suffering of non-human animals. Nothing could<br />
be further from the truth. The answer to the question raised<br />
above is, quite simply, that the pain and torment inflicted on<br />
non-human animals far exceeds, both in quantity and intensity,<br />
the suffering endured by human beings. Instances of huma[n<br />
beings undergoing tortures comparable to those inflicted on<br />
laboratory animals are rare, isolated atrocities; for laboratory<br />
animals they are daily occurrences. The same holds true in<br />
every other area of non-human animal abuse. '<br />
There is another reason for devoting one's energies to<br />
animals rather than humans: unlike humans, they cannot<br />
defend themselves. Non-human animals are, in the fullest<br />
sense of the work, victims. ;<br />
In, a deeper sense, however, the supposed conflict between<br />
concern for humans and concern for animals is spurious. Th|e<br />
relief of animal suffering directly contributes to the relief of the<br />
most fundamental forms of human suffering: animal liberation<br />
is human liberation. In virtually every case animal abuse<br />
perpetuates and supports a system which exploits human<br />
beings. Perhaps the most conspicuous example of this is<br />
factory farming. The factory farming industry is a mora l<br />
outrage from the standpoint of human welfare. Due largely to<br />
the methods employed in factory farms, meat presents a<br />
serious hazard to human health. When we eat meat we eat<br />
antibiotics, pesticides, and a host of toxic and carcinogenic<br />
chemicals. In spite of this the USDA, acting as the lackey of the<br />
multi-national corporations which own the factory farms,<br />
continues to disseminate lies about the nutritional necessity of<br />
meat in the diet. • ',<br />
Factory farming is also a major contributor to the destruction<br />
of the environment. It is, in truth, nothing less than an<br />
ecological disaster. Energy and resource consumption is staggering.<br />
One average chicken slaughter house, for example,<br />
uses 100 million gallons of water in a single day. Factory<br />
farming generates massive amounts of animal wastes which<br />
cannot be properly disposed of and air polluting our atmosphere<br />
and water supplies. Production of beef cattle results in<br />
overgrazing of land, cuttng back of timber land, and accompanying<br />
erosion. Wildlife also suffers in this process from the<br />
destruction, of habitation and from the "predator control"<br />
program of ranchers. All of these things contribute to the<br />
deterioration of the quality of human life. !<br />
Factory farming, as controlled by giant corporations, is also<br />
responsible for driving the small farmer out of business, or<br />
forcing him into a mode of production which is exploitative of<br />
both animals and human beings and runs against the tradition<br />
of humane and sound husbandry.<br />
Finally, and most importantly, factory farming contributes<br />
directly to world hunger and starvation through the misuse of<br />
land for raising animals, much of which could be used instead<br />
to grow grains and soybeans. It is thus directly linked ip<br />
exploitation of poorer nations: when we eat meat we starve<br />
someone in the Third World.<br />
What is true for factory farming is equally true for laboratory<br />
experimentation, "sport" hunting arid trapping, irresponsible<br />
breeding of domestic animals and all other forms of animal<br />
abuse. When will we learn that we live in one world in which<br />
exploitation of any living being is a form of self-destruction? To<br />
liberate man we must first liberate the animals. '.<br />
GO HOM€ ON fl US© BUS!<br />
Dec. 19<br />
12:30 p.m<br />
Pitts.<br />
Dec. 18<br />
1:00 p.m<br />
6:00 p.m<br />
' NYC<br />
Dec. 19 Dec. 18<br />
1:00 p.m. 5:00 p.m<br />
All buses will return January 3,1982 at 7:00 p.m.<br />
S3*<br />
Dec. 19<br />
12:00 p.m<br />
Buses will begin loading in front of the HUB approx. 15 min.<br />
before departure time and will stop at parking lot 80 approx. 5<br />
after scheduled departure time<br />
Stops<br />
Philly<br />
King of Prussia Mall<br />
(Wanamakers)<br />
Reading Terminal<br />
Prices<br />
Philly<br />
One Way<br />
$14.75 .<br />
Roundtrip<br />
$28.50<br />
Pittsburgh NYC<br />
David Weis Rockaway Mall<br />
— Miracle Mile Entrance<br />
Heinz Hall NYC Port Authority<br />
Pittsburgh<br />
One Way<br />
$12.25<br />
NYC<br />
Roundtrip One Way<br />
$23.75 $29.00<br />
Tickets will go on sale at the HUB Desk<br />
9am - 3pm, December 11th<br />
and the14th-18th<br />
1)268 08L<br />
The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. 11, 1981— 3<br />
Attention Business Students!<br />
Come join Administrators, Faculty Members and<br />
Fellow Students in the College of Business Student<br />
Council's Christmas Party<br />
Roundtrip<br />
$56.50<br />
tf a
4—The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. 11, 1981<br />
Initiative is important<br />
for Liberal Arts majors<br />
<strong>University</strong> grad says<br />
By REBECCA CLARK<br />
Daily Collegian Staff Writer<br />
'Liberal Arts graduates must have<br />
more personal initiative and must look<br />
at; all the job opportunities that open up<br />
—not just opportunities in their majors,<br />
Kenneth Buntrock, a 1973 <strong>University</strong><br />
graduate said yesterday.<br />
"Liberal arts graduates have to<br />
push themselves on people and have to<br />
get job contacts; graduates' personal<br />
contacts are their best method," he<br />
sa;id. "Keep pushing, keep looking in<br />
all different directions, be flexible, be<br />
diversified."<br />
Buntrock, a foreign exchange officer<br />
with Mellon Bank in Pittsburgh, spoke<br />
ta a group of students as part of the<br />
Liberal Arts Alumni Career Series<br />
"Career Options for Liberal Arts Students."<br />
A graduate in speech/broadcasting<br />
and sociology, Buntrock spoke to students<br />
about job search methods, interview<br />
technics, and what general<br />
proceedures liberal arts should use<br />
when looking for employment.<br />
In his speech, which was sponsored<br />
by the <strong>University</strong>'s Career Development<br />
and Placement Center, Buntrock<br />
said grades are not really<br />
important when employers consider<br />
hiring liberal arts graduates.<br />
He said the most important thing<br />
liberal arts students should do is to<br />
develop good interviewing skills and to<br />
learn how to sell themselves.<br />
"Interviewing is really difficult; you<br />
have to always show the best side of<br />
yourself, but don't say anything<br />
wrong," Buntrock said. "Try to present<br />
yourself in your best fashion."<br />
Buntrock stressed that all students<br />
I<br />
should try to go through mock interviews<br />
in order to get an idea of what<br />
interviews are like.<br />
"If students could go through interviewing<br />
just to get an idea about them,<br />
it would be good for them; you do get<br />
better at (interviewing) after a few,"<br />
he said.<br />
Students should spend a lot of time<br />
preparing their resumes because resumes<br />
are important in letting employers<br />
know what skills and<br />
attributes a graduate students should<br />
put a lot time in writing their resumes,<br />
Buntrock said.<br />
''You really have put you soul on<br />
your resume," he said. "Put your<br />
strengths on your resume, what you do<br />
best. Students should get help in resume<br />
writing."<br />
Attitude is also an important aspect<br />
to consider when searching for employment,<br />
Buntrock said. Students<br />
should go into job interviews with a<br />
good attitude because showing an employer<br />
that you can do and want to do a<br />
job will help an employer evaluate a<br />
student's ability to do a job, he said.<br />
"You have to have a good attitude in<br />
searching for a job and when you get a<br />
job. Employers want people who will<br />
be hard workers, people who will find<br />
something do when they are on the<br />
job," Buntrock said.<br />
Because many employers do not<br />
actively recruit liberal arts students, it<br />
is especially important that liberal<br />
arts students should not put off looking<br />
for a job or writing a resume and<br />
should not ignore the services offered<br />
by the Career Development and Placement<br />
Center.<br />
Warttes J.'iattoUa...<br />
f eatuung<br />
EFliday: Wavid SFox<br />
•&.<br />
Satuiaay:
\><br />
A potential customer looks at shoes and hiking boots at The Pathfinder<br />
doors as soon as its remaining merchandise is sold.<br />
'<br />
Photo by Karen Sola!<br />
The store will be closing its<br />
Pathfinder to close after final sale<br />
By SUZANNE M. CASSIDY<br />
Dally Collegian Staff Writer<br />
Trapped in a plight in which many small<br />
specialty shops find themselves today, The<br />
Pathfinder, 137 E. Beaver Ave., will close its<br />
doors as soon as all the remaining merchandise<br />
is sold, the store owner said.<br />
David Nevins, owner of The Pathfinder,<br />
said the store is closing because, as a small<br />
specialty store, it cannot compete with mass<br />
merchandisers.<br />
"Part of the original concept when we<br />
opened in the early '70s was that we were<br />
going to provide a unique kind of item and<br />
service that wasn't available at any other<br />
store," Nevins said.<br />
Since its opening in 1971, The Pathfinder has<br />
specialized in outdoor apparel and equipment,<br />
Nevins said: By hiring employees that had<br />
some expertise and knowledge in the area of<br />
backpacking, his store became a center for<br />
many people who wanted to prepare themselves<br />
for their treks into the wilderness.<br />
However, things have changed considerably<br />
since the early days, Nevins said.<br />
"No. 1, backpacking of itself is not the fad it<br />
used to be," he said. "No. 2, the amount of<br />
competition both in <strong>State</strong> College and around<br />
the state is much higher than it used to be."<br />
Add those factors to the effects of inflation<br />
and customers having less money to spend<br />
because of the recession , and it means trouble<br />
for the small business owner, Nevins said.<br />
In order to pay The Pathfinder's debts<br />
before it closes, Nevin said the store is holding<br />
a "going-out-of-business" sale, which will<br />
probably last some time into January. Because<br />
so many students are shopping for the<br />
holidays, this was a good time to have the<br />
sale, he said.<br />
"I saw (the sale) as an opportunity to get<br />
out before things really got bad," Nevins said.<br />
The store has been deluged all week with<br />
customers in search of bargains and Nevin<br />
said some people are finding it hard to understand<br />
why he decided to close The Pathfinder.<br />
"I'm very flattered by a lot of things people<br />
are saying — they're saying they love the shop<br />
and that they'll really miss it, but these same<br />
people admit to me that they haven't bought<br />
anything in the store for a while," Nevins<br />
said.<br />
Higher overhead costs just do not allow him<br />
to consistently offer, quality merchandise and<br />
the sale prices he is offering now and yet<br />
remain in business, he said.<br />
For example, Nevins said that in 1972, he<br />
could sell a pair of hiking boots for $39.95.<br />
Today, because of rising supplier costs, he<br />
must sell that same pair of boots for $110.<br />
"Should I carry a $40 pair of boots today<br />
that's a piece of junk and that are going to fall<br />
apart*?" Nevins asked. "Is that going to compromise<br />
The Pathfinder's reputation of offering<br />
quality and service?"<br />
In addition to the problems The Pathfinder<br />
has experienced, Nevins said his other businesses<br />
played an important role in his decision<br />
to close The Pathfinder.<br />
Nevins, who also owns Cheap Thrills, 118 W.<br />
College Ave., and Leather-To-Boot , 114 W.<br />
College Ave., said he thinks that in order for a<br />
specialty shop like The Pathfinder to succeed<br />
despite today's economic conditions, it needs<br />
an owner who is willing to devote all of his<br />
time and energy to the operation of that store.<br />
<strong>University</strong> scholarships provide students funds<br />
By PHIL EVANS<br />
Daily Collegian Staff Writer<br />
With the price of a college education increasing each year<br />
and the availability of loans becoming more scarce, tomorrow's<br />
students will have to utilize all possible sources of money<br />
in order to finance their education.<br />
One assured source of funds for students are the many<br />
scholarships that have been established at the <strong>University</strong>,<br />
providing partial or complete funding for four years of college.<br />
Several new scholarships recently have been established to<br />
benefit students in a wide area of interests.<br />
Eight new scholarships have been created from the Shibley<br />
Memorial Endowment, which was established by Raymond N.<br />
Shibley of Washington, D.C. in memory of his father, mother,<br />
wife and sister.<br />
Shibley, a 1947 graduate in commercial chemistry, distributed<br />
the funding equally among the eight scholarships which<br />
recognize outstanding students in mathematics, ministry preparation,<br />
speech communication, library science, health education<br />
and psychology. ~ '<br />
The endowment also creates a scholarship for outstanding<br />
members of the Blue Band and for students who plan careers as<br />
choral singers or directors. The Shibley awards are given for<br />
one' academic year, but may be renewed if funds are available.<br />
The Mary Ann Montecalvo Memorial Scholarship will be<br />
awarded yearly to an entering freshmen at any <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong><br />
©©©©©©©©©©©©©<br />
€ e<br />
€<br />
€><br />
©<br />
€><br />
©<br />
©<br />
©<br />
On Drugs, Inc.<br />
needs<br />
Volunteers<br />
On Drugs, Inc. is seeking volunteers to<br />
staff agency hotline counselor positions.<br />
Must give one year commitment after<br />
successfully completing 8 week training<br />
program. Potential for paid employment.<br />
Counseling background helpful but not<br />
required. Applications available: 236 A<br />
South Allen St., <strong>State</strong> College. Application<br />
deadline: Dec. 14, 1981. No phone<br />
calls. An EOE.<br />
9<br />
9<br />
9<br />
9<br />
9<br />
9<br />
9<br />
9<br />
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30000 (90000000<br />
%ock n'Ro//<br />
Qt<br />
The Scorpion<br />
232 W. Colder Way<br />
with<br />
"FOXIE"<br />
Every Friday<br />
campus — it is based on academic achievement. First consideration<br />
for the scholarships will be given to graduates of the<br />
Bradford Area High School or the Bradford Christian High<br />
School. '<br />
Montecalvo, a 1978 <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> graduate, was killed by a<br />
sniper last spring when she was driving to her Arlington, Va.<br />
apartment. The scholarship was established by Montecalvo's<br />
family.<br />
Alumni and friends of the <strong>University</strong>'s College of Earth and<br />
Mineral Sciences have set up the Edward Steidle Fund in<br />
memory of Steidle, who was dean of the college from 1928 to<br />
1953.<br />
The fund will be used to assist in faculty projects and provide<br />
special educational offerings for 1 students in the college.<br />
Milk Marketing, Inc. of Strongville, Ohio, has set up a<br />
scholarship to recognize students preparing for careers in<br />
dairy production, milk marketing and handling of foods and<br />
nutrition. '<br />
Freshmen.and juniors in these fields are eligible for the<br />
scholarships if they live in an area served by Milk Marketing,<br />
Inc., a dairy farmer's cooperative.<br />
The Curtis A. Miller Memorial Scholarship has been established<br />
by the Golden Key National Honor Society for students in<br />
the College of Business Administration.<br />
Miller, a business administration student, was killed in an<br />
auto accident in 1979. He was posthumously recognized for<br />
us* Zhm Location^<br />
•Junction op OoWeae- L<br />
<<br />
G-arner 0<br />
hte<br />
W&terlv Parkmih<br />
Shopp ing Center<br />
mmm<br />
serving f bt»i Cote<br />
Applications now available<br />
for the positions of<br />
EDITOR and MANAGING EDITOR<br />
for LaVie '83, the <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong><br />
Yearbook<br />
Pick up in 209 HUB<br />
Deadline: December 16<br />
U-219<br />
academic excellence by the society.<br />
Undergraduate students enrolled or planning to enroll in the<br />
College of Business Administration are eligible for the one-year<br />
scholarship if they have shown outstanding academic success.<br />
Members of the <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> Chapter of the National.Association<br />
of Homebuilders may be eligible for a Residential Building<br />
Construction Scholarship if they are seniors enrolled in architectural<br />
or civil engineering and are planning a career in<br />
residential construction.<br />
Funds to continue this scholarship will be contributed annually<br />
by the National Association of Homebuilders in Washington,<br />
D.C. and the <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania Builders Association of Harrisburg.<br />
Students in the Cpllege of Agriculture who have demonstrated<br />
academic excellence may be eligible for a <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania<br />
Farmer's Association Memorial Scholarship.<br />
This scholarship will be funded by the <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania Farmer's<br />
Association of Camp Hill and is intended for members or<br />
children of members of the association.<br />
The Ketchum MacLeod arid Grove Pittsburgh Media Intern<br />
Scholarship' has been established to recognize outstanding<br />
students in the field of advertising.<br />
The scholarship will consist of a one-term internship in media<br />
planning and research with the Ketchum MacLeod and Grove<br />
agency, which is the largest advertising agency in the state.<br />
Scholarship funds will be awarded upon successful completion<br />
of the internship. .<br />
ss ^x^<br />
& wn<br />
^F & • ORDER<br />
Graduating<br />
standing academic achievement may be eligible for the Dr. *<br />
Irwin L. Baird Memorial Award. Gifts given to the <strong>University</strong>'s<br />
Hershey Medical Center funded the award given in memory of<br />
the late Dr. Baird, a professor of anatomy at Hershey from 1967<br />
to 1981.<br />
The Edward and Lauretta Fay Scholarship has been established<br />
for students from Blair, Bedford and Cambria counties<br />
who are enrolled at the <strong>University</strong>'s Altoona Campus. Full-time<br />
undergraduate students who graduated in the upper-fifth of<br />
their high school class are eligible for the award.<br />
The Eastman Kodak Co. presented a $12,000 grant to support<br />
scholarships for undergraduate students enrolled in the departments<br />
of chemical engineering, electrical engineering, mechanical<br />
engineering, computer science and quantitative<br />
business analysis.<br />
The grant is one of some 150 made to colleges and universities"<br />
nationwide by Eastman Kodak. '•<br />
These recent additions to the scholarships available, to *<br />
medical students who have demonstrated out-<br />
students at the <strong>University</strong> further illustrate the fact that their<br />
are many options open to students to fund their education<br />
besides pleading for a loan from the local bank.<br />
Students interested in applying for scholarships should contact<br />
their specific college office because most scholarship<br />
recipients will be chosen by their individual college scholarship<br />
committee.<br />
St. Paul's United Methodist Church<br />
250 E. College Ave., <strong>State</strong> College, PA 16801<br />
Sunday Worship — 9:15 & 10:45 a.m.<br />
Students/Young Adults Class — 10:30 a.m<br />
The Rev. Donald Nolder, Associate Miinister<br />
preaching on<br />
"One Who Missed Christmas: Herod"<br />
r THE<br />
OFFICIAL<br />
PENN STATE<br />
CLASS RING<br />
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Get the facts from the Class Ring Experts, you'll like what you see<br />
ONE HUNDRED<br />
mover jewelers EAST COLLEGE AVENUE<br />
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6—The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. 11, 1981<br />
Boyle still interested<br />
in local government<br />
By MARGARET ANN WALSH<br />
Daily Collegian Staff Writer .<br />
Ray Boyle has not lost interest in local<br />
government even though he was not<br />
elected to the <strong>State</strong> College Municipal<br />
Council.<br />
Boyle and several others have formulated<br />
a proposal suggesting uses for the<br />
federal Community Development Block<br />
Grants. <strong>State</strong> College is receiving the<br />
funds as a result of being designated a<br />
Standard Metropolita n Statistical Area<br />
in the 1980 census.<br />
<strong>State</strong> College can expect between $730,-<br />
000 and $780,000 annually for the next<br />
three years, Municipal Manager Carl B.<br />
Fairbanks said.<br />
Boyle objects to Fairbanks' proposal<br />
that the funds be used for street lights<br />
and road reconstruction.<br />
"That's forgetting the purpose of the<br />
money," he said. "Offering people more<br />
street lighting is not offering services.<br />
It's more of a service to the <strong>State</strong> College<br />
budget than to the people."<br />
"The (council block grant) committee<br />
members should ask themselves 'are we<br />
really helping people?' " Boyle said.<br />
Fairbanks said the funds are allowed<br />
to be used in three general areas? to help<br />
low- to moderate-income citizens, to improve<br />
housing stock and to encourage<br />
economic development.<br />
By constructing street lights in a section<br />
of town that is utilized by all types of<br />
people, the project is of benefit to lowincome<br />
residents, he said.<br />
Fairbanks said he also supports the<br />
construction projects because they can<br />
be implemented without a great deal of<br />
paperwork. However, deciding which<br />
agencies deserve the funds and then<br />
distributing the money would be an in-<br />
COLL6GIAN CLASSIFICD ADS<br />
Smart people read Collegia n ads. Right?<br />
volved process that might jeopardize the<br />
funds for 1982, he said.<br />
Boyle disagreed with Fairbanks' assessment:<br />
"Social service applications<br />
wouldn't take much time. Just a meeting<br />
to review them."<br />
Another problem with Fairbanks' proposals,<br />
Boyle said, is that they really<br />
only include <strong>State</strong> College. The entire<br />
county was designated the metropolitan<br />
area — with <strong>State</strong> College being the<br />
center of the metropolitan area, he said.<br />
"There are a hell of a lot of needy<br />
people in this county," Boyle said. "I'd<br />
like to see the money spread around a<br />
bit."<br />
Boyle said he would like to see the<br />
money invested in social programs, such<br />
as a community action weatherization, a<br />
community action center or park, or a<br />
community garden project.<br />
He has also suggested that some of the<br />
funds be given as "out-and-out grants to<br />
programs that are going to be hardest hit<br />
by Presidnt Reagan's budget cuts.<br />
"It's been done in other areas with<br />
block grant money and been very successful."<br />
Boyle said the most important factor in<br />
deciding the use of the funds will be large<br />
citizen input.<br />
However, Boyle said he is "hopeful<br />
(council and committee member) Felicia<br />
Lewis will push for needed services."<br />
Lewis has said she is in favor of using<br />
the money to expand Schlow Memorial<br />
Library, 100 E. Beaver Ave., to make it<br />
more accessible to the handicapped and<br />
elderly, and create a community center<br />
that could be used by a number of service<br />
agencies. She also suggested using the<br />
funds to rehabilitate housing in the region.<br />
234-2606 (215)265-1880<br />
CM«I4 MAAM'IA rnorf r^nllsni an aWe BinhiO<br />
DBKALB PIKE AND BORO LINE ROAD<br />
'" • r<br />
" • » * I KING OF PRUSSIA, PA 19406<br />
Women's studies ignores blacks, speakers say<br />
By RON CROW<br />
Daily Collegian Staff Writer<br />
"All the women are white, all the blacks are men,"<br />
the sub-title to a new book about black women's<br />
studies still applies to Women's studies, writer Barbara<br />
Smith said during the keynote address on "The<br />
Intersection of Black studies and Women's studies"<br />
last night in the HUB.<br />
"Black Studies programs exclude black women<br />
from teaching," said Sharon Harley, Assistant Professor<br />
of Afro-American Studies at the <strong>University</strong> of<br />
Maryland. Smith said .Women's studies programs<br />
have been predominantly white and were not addressing<br />
their own racism.<br />
"It's bankrupt to say you are teaching Women's<br />
studies when all your teachers are white women,"<br />
Smith said.<br />
Last night's keynote address dealt with problems in<br />
Black studies and Women's studies in the form of a<br />
Black and Women's studies share future, panel says<br />
By PHIL EVANS<br />
Daily Collegian Staff Writer<br />
Black studies and women's studies share a common<br />
background of being repressed, and their future<br />
lies in a strong coalition to combat discrimination,<br />
panel representatives told students yesterday at the<br />
Paul Robeson Cultural Center.<br />
!<br />
The panel, moderated by Emily Toth, assistant<br />
professor of English and American studies, directed<br />
its comments to the topic of the intersection of black<br />
and women's studies.<br />
Audrey Rogers, the coordinator of the <strong>University</strong>'s<br />
Women's studies program, said the Women's studies<br />
program suffers from being established in a time of<br />
monetary retrenchment.<br />
"The majority feels we've gone far enough," Rogers<br />
said. "In the real world, women are not making<br />
the strides they think they are."<br />
For example, Rogers said only one woman was<br />
promoted to full professorship at the <strong>University</strong> in<br />
1981.<br />
''Women are like blacks — first hired, first fired,"<br />
Rogers said.<br />
Women's studies faces the problems of an apathet-<br />
20 minutes from Philadelphia<br />
dialogue between Smith and Harley.<br />
"We need to show colleges how they can integrate<br />
the black women's history into other courses in Black<br />
studies," Harley said. For the most part, colleges and<br />
universities have improved in their Black Studies<br />
programs, she said.<br />
"Black women's studies have unleashed a black<br />
woman that black men aren't used to," Jim Stewart<br />
(12th-journalism) said. He said black women now are<br />
very aggressive and suggested that some' kind of<br />
program needs to be formed to prepare black men to<br />
handle this.<br />
In response to Stewart's question Smith said Black<br />
studies courses should deal with this. She said it helps<br />
a lot when black men can realize this and know their<br />
own limits.<br />
Asked if it would be detrimental to the Black<br />
studies and Women's studies programs to combinethem,<br />
Harley said they weren't ready to intersect the<br />
ic student body and a lack of money for the program,<br />
she said. The program suffers because students who<br />
major in other programs may not have time to take<br />
women's study courses as electives, Rogers added.<br />
Pointing to this reality and acknowledging a moral<br />
committment made by the administration, Rogers<br />
said, "The faculty is not behind Women's studies in<br />
any tangible way."<br />
Rogers said the program would offer a 21-credit<br />
minor in the field of Women's studies starting Fall<br />
Term 1983.<br />
Sharon Harley, representing the Afro-American<br />
studies program at the <strong>University</strong> of Maryland,<br />
addressed the causes that women and blacks had<br />
supported together in the United <strong>State</strong>s' history.<br />
Women and blacks shared the title of a "lower<br />
being" because neither could buy or sell propertyor<br />
independently establish themselves, Harley said.<br />
The abolition movement during the Civil War is<br />
evidence of a successful coalition between the two<br />
groups, Harley said.<br />
To successfully integrate women and blacks, Harley<br />
said more blacks must become involved in women's<br />
studies, more women administrators in black<br />
two programs yet. It can be good however to combine<br />
the two programs to attract more people, like last<br />
night's program, she said. . ><br />
"The two programs can be unified and still be<br />
different," Smith said."Black Women's studies<br />
should deal with women and blacks."<br />
James Stewart, director of the Black studies program<br />
at the <strong>University</strong>, asked if the initial dynamism<br />
and creativity of the Black studies movement has<br />
expended itself. Harley.said it is a shame the program<br />
is losing dynamism and pointed out that Black<br />
studies don't have a movement to rely on. ' , ¦<br />
Smith said the activist movement of the sixties and<br />
seventies provided a place for Black studies. Now the<br />
feminist black movement is paving the way for Black<br />
Women's studies.<br />
Harley and Smith were guests at "The Intersection<br />
of Black studies and Women's studies," sponsored by<br />
the <strong>University</strong> Black studies program.<br />
studies and a greater self-awareness of the goals of<br />
each group.<br />
Black feminist Barbara Smith said that the <strong>University</strong><br />
is basically a "white male institution" because it<br />
sends its graduates into the white business world.<br />
People are afraid of the coalition between women<br />
and blacks due to the enormity of sexism and racism<br />
in the world, Smith said.<br />
She pointed to the rise of third world feminism as<br />
proof of the unescapable fact of the struggle for<br />
equality.<br />
James Stewart, director of the <strong>University</strong>'s black<br />
studies program, said the program had also been<br />
created out of the activism of the '60s when "it was<br />
initially a matter of survival."<br />
At the peak of program, black studies was featured<br />
at 600 campuses across the United <strong>State</strong>s. Only about<br />
200 campuses offer such a program now, Stewart<br />
said.<br />
He acknowledged the lack of women in the black<br />
studies program and the possibility of bias in the<br />
present teaching where the role of the black woman is<br />
concerned. ><br />
ACOUSTIC GUITAR, ARIA Pro I, all<br />
blonde wood with sturdy case-call<br />
238-4147<br />
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN color concert<br />
photos. Top quality. Reasonably<br />
priced. 238-1476<br />
CHRISTMAS .TREES FOR sale,<br />
Spruce and Scotch Pine, Centre<br />
Hall 364-1715<br />
DACHSTEIN SKI BOOTSsize 9 (1<br />
think) Good intermediate boot. $50<br />
b/o. John 234-8852 865-1828<br />
DOWN JACKET, LIKE new, men's<br />
medium, $60. 237-3318 after 5:30pm<br />
FIREPLACE TUBE - GRATE with<br />
blower. $60. 237-0096<br />
FOR SALE: male dorm contract<br />
Winter—Spring. Discount offered.<br />
Call Tim 234-8026 or George 238-<br />
0911<br />
FOR SALE: NORDICA ladies ski<br />
boots; size 5 1/2 M. Only worn 6-8<br />
times. Price negotiable. 234-5296<br />
FOR SALE: TWO Winter ski jackets<br />
1965 CHEVELLE VERY good condi-<br />
and matching bib ski pants; will sell<br />
tion 56,000 ml. Fenton wheels, new<br />
as a set or separately. Good condi-<br />
paint, auto. Must sell immediately.<br />
tlon. Price negotiable, 234-5296<br />
BpnHBHBHflnnn Four extra spares, spares, restorable clas-<br />
GARMONT LASERLITE SKI boots MB El 1 C4 kit HH L*J ^<br />
size 9. Used one season, like new.<br />
$75. Phone 237-5477<br />
^_<br />
HELEN FRITZ HAS beautiful bargains!<br />
'Presents From The Past',<br />
221 East Beaver, opposite Triangle,<br />
234-6894<br />
ICE HOCKEY EQUIPMENT. Excellent<br />
condition, reasonable prices.<br />
Call Allen at 234-2432, must sell!<br />
MOTOBECANE NOMAD 10-SPEED,<br />
brand new-$150. Marantz 3-way stereo<br />
speakers, new $250. Call Amy at<br />
234-1459, evenings<br />
MOTORCYCLE 1974 TRIUMPH Trldent<br />
750 for sale as is and very<br />
negotiable. Greg. 237-2315<br />
OLIN MARK IV 160cm skis, excellent<br />
freestyle skis; Marker M-412<br />
bindings w/skibreaks. Package<br />
$200 includes FREE poles. Also will<br />
sell separately. Call 466-6201 before<br />
11:00pm<br />
OVATION CLASSICAL HARD shell<br />
case excellent condition must sell<br />
$400 or b;o call Kevin 865-2626<br />
OVATION MATRIX GUITAR, like<br />
new, $195. Hardshell case $75. Both<br />
$250 (offers accepted). Mario 234-<br />
2796. Keep trying, 863-0241 leave<br />
message<br />
SHI- ON PITT buttons and shirts.<br />
Great gifts for favorite Pitt fans.<br />
237-3085 before 9pm<br />
SINGLE BED, BOOKSHELF, chest<br />
of drawers for sale. Call 238-3607<br />
SKI BOOTS, POLES, & bindings.<br />
Great shape. Cheap. I need money,<br />
Richard 234-2606<br />
sic - 234-0164<br />
A CHRISTMAS SEMI-FORMAL! The<br />
* M IIM IIII MIMI >> ,<br />
first annual Starlight Holiday Ball, * 0^. *_—, - nuaM# ^k<br />
December 13, 8pm, in the HUB if UTTLc PlfiC fif \|<br />
Ballroom, featuring Mainstream,<br />
m^wv^mm<br />
The Trend, the <strong>University</strong> Singers, Qp EffRTH<br />
and the Nlttany Lion. Ticket sales _ ___ _<br />
begin Friday, December 4 In the . FQR MILC ***<br />
HUB $4 slngte/$7 couple ¦<br />
A PERFECT GIFT. Some lessons ..- JS^iSfiSfc<br />
from The Music Workshop. For *? «BBrWf\<br />
more information, please call: 238- t_ Sk V ***<br />
2660 V f W *'<br />
DESIGN AND MANUFACTURE of - "*-"¦"¦<br />
fine jewelry. Prices below whole-<br />
Diamonds<br />
sale. Low cost Christmas gifts. Call ,<br />
238-5906 Rubies—Sapphires<br />
LIKE SQUAREDANCING? Join the Emeralds<br />
rustical quality string band: Friday, .<br />
Dacember 11th at 8:00pm. All pro- Set In CO X rings<br />
ceeds will benefit <strong>State</strong> College<br />
of Gold and Silver<br />
Friends' School! C'mon<br />
OT V ,a ana ,,ver<br />
out and *° *<br />
dance!<br />
PORTRAITS, SKETCHED IN char- THE SILVER CELLAR<br />
coal by local artist. Unique gift. Still IV'M S- Aiim «. vn.\ut> I.<br />
time for Xmas. Jeff 466-7510 T<br />
^ -.^r<br />
SPRING BREAK PACKAGE - Baha- ^* " ""<br />
i" ¦ "¦P"^^<br />
mas - for more information call<br />
Debra at Centre for Travel 238-4987 nBnpOTQUH09Vpnn<br />
TUTOR AVAILABLE IN Physics 201, flB lToTC WCl J |?li JHI<br />
202, also cmpsc ioi, 201, 203. IH nHaU wBBa nBI<br />
Reasonable rates (neg.). Call Clay FOR RENT APT. at 539 E. Beaver. 9<br />
237-3268 after 6pm months, 140/month. Interested call<br />
UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST Jonathan 215-723-4446<br />
FELLOWSHIP is a liberal faith, a IMMEDIATELY-CHARMING 1 bedcaring<br />
community of free and disci- room apartment. Close to campus,<br />
plined women and men who are $270/month. Heating and cable InseeKing<br />
to unify all people In a large eluded. Grads and professionals<br />
spiritual fellowship through a phi- preferred. Call 237-8909 after 5pm<br />
^°^^nLniL 9 J 0 rnH tl a l?i reS .o1n ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT In<br />
reason goodness and service Join scen|0 Toftrees Ava|,ab|e January<br />
E^ Un SKIS ROSSIGNOL CM'S 190cm<br />
brand new, never mounted call Tom<br />
m 8<br />
«-Mf?° 2 1st - 5315/month. Utilities included<br />
237-9526 after 6pm<br />
Road, <strong>State</strong> College<br />
Wu, A.C.) 237-6590<br />
SNOW TENT, MEN'S fur jacket, WATERCOLOR PORTRAITS OF<br />
Latour III bike men's, all excell, «i Jr i T,<br />
rv",,"","a "' PRESTIGIOUS APARTMENT,3<br />
friends, family or your home from<br />
bed-<br />
2 f „ ba(h LR.DR k<br />
cond. negotiable am/pm 234-5274<br />
' |tohen<br />
fn ° fo r r»H n 4ufi& '<br />
9 " ,S- *""<br />
Info, "eat ""d "** • furnished. Good<br />
STUDYING ABROAD? TAKE my<br />
call Sue 237-4049<br />
maintenance. Excellent location,<br />
Pentax 35MM SLR camera. $90. Call<br />
Kemmerer Drive. Professional or<br />
238-3542, Carolyn ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^<br />
HHBHPWI 'VMHB IHI Grad students only. $425/mo. Call<br />
TECHNICS SL-B3 turntable • belt<br />
driven, fully automatic, plckering VBBtum Ami&d B^R ROOM IN PRIVATE home. Female<br />
cartridge - XV-15/625E, excellent AAAAH! YAMAHA CR-620, Sony grad. Rent includes meals, utilities,<br />
,'condltion - $110 - 234-0457<br />
STR-V35 Receivers, Sony PS-T22 phone, laundry. 234-5661 after 4:00<br />
Turntable! ¦,„, 865-4813 -,w.^<br />
- r~<br />
.TWO RABBIT FUR jackets. Size<br />
TW0 BEDR00M TRAILER on bus<br />
small and medium. Color: dark GENESIS. 2+ SPEAKERS good line. Three miles from campus,<br />
brown and beige. Call 865-2625 con. great bass response $250. 200/mo. plus utilities. 238-5973<br />
Price firm. 234-3884 M-F<br />
TWO SNOW TIRES, size SR165/14,<br />
9-2pm<br />
weekends anytime<br />
used one season. Call Tim,<br />
238-7339<br />
STEREO COMPONENTS at dls- ^"~<br />
count prices. All the name brands _ fg<br />
WOMEN'S HART MUNARI ski<br />
boots, size 8Vi, never worn. $80 or ga^ar best offer. 234-3044 evenings<br />
76 CHEVY MALIBOU classic,<br />
AC/PS/PB, new radials. Best offer.<br />
238-6193<br />
spec,a,s! can<br />
woniGn s<br />
^ J^mrexotCM.: ' 1 ONE BEDROOM APT.. '< available FEMALE - OWN ROOM in 2-bed-<br />
(ionprtil Phtltn'Q spring summer. Rent $280. % block room apartment, $170/month. Walk<br />
uc eK rllVW O " " from campus. Call Lisa 238-5705 to campus; laundry; parking; yard.<br />
ALL WEATHER TIRES- Michelan<br />
radials, FR78-14, almost new. Be- Ninth AnniVPrQatV 0NE BEDROOM, available now. Eileen 237-9685,865-7972<br />
nil HI I i-U II11 velocity Bus pass included. Nice apartment, GRAD STUDENT NEEDED to share<br />
fore 5 863-1746. After 5 237-9818<br />
f\ 11R P f\ rVA I PI rent low a utllitles<br />
FOR SALE 67 M.G. Midget Classic<br />
' "<br />
included. Call V2 of two-bedroom, furnished apart-<br />
Mike, or Gus 238-2365 Anytime ment. $160/month plus electric. Call<br />
style, spoke wheels, hood pins,<br />
miUF R \Al PI<br />
Austin Healy dual carburators. For VVl Lil Unfabl SPRING SUBLET one of three bed- Jos. 237-6314<br />
room apartment, two blocks from MALE WANTED 1/3 2 bedroom newinformation<br />
call Joe 234-3397<br />
Hundreds Of downtown, very comfortable. % 238- |y remodeled College Ave. condo<br />
YAMAHA 360 TWIN, 1977, good '<br />
I<br />
2143<br />
¦<br />
. ¦<br />
Wint/Spring. Call 238-8356,<br />
condition, $500. Lisa: 865-4174 PnOtOgraphlC ValUeS . SUBLET: 123 NORTH BARNARD. $165/month ,<br />
78 DATSUN B-210GX. Excellent rinn't mk
*¦<br />
*<br />
Board of Health approves motionn<br />
to write new smoking ordinance|><br />
By MARGARET ANN WALSH<br />
Daily Collegian Staff Writer<br />
The <strong>State</strong> College Board of Health has<br />
not given up its crusade to get a stricter<br />
smoking ordinance on the books in <strong>State</strong><br />
College.<br />
The board approved a motion Tuesday<br />
to draw up an ordinance that "would<br />
prohibit smoking in public places of a<br />
non-commercial nature, excluding restaurants<br />
at this time," said Board Chairman<br />
Manfred Kroger.<br />
<strong>State</strong> College's existing smoking ordinance<br />
gives businessmen the option to<br />
declare a non-smoking section in their<br />
establishment, he said.<br />
"It's rather toothless," Kroger said.<br />
Although the board has not yet defined<br />
non-commercial public places, Kroger<br />
said it will include churches, libraries,<br />
and hospitals.<br />
"If it is accepted by council you can ho<br />
Group protests animal trappings<br />
By DENNIS SNYDER<br />
Daily Collegian Staff Writer<br />
Proponents and opponents of animal<br />
trapping are basically split on three<br />
main issues, the vice president of the<br />
<strong>Penn</strong>sylvania Trapping Association said<br />
last night.<br />
Sally Lipp, vice president of the <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania<br />
Trapping Association, speaking<br />
on "Controversies in Trapping," said the<br />
issues were the use of teeth on the jaws of<br />
the traps, the trapping of unwanted animals<br />
and the time difference between the<br />
setting of the traps and when the traps<br />
are checked.<br />
Lipp said teeth have been outlawed in<br />
<strong>Penn</strong>sylvania, resulting in more humane<br />
trapping. , •<br />
"The anti-trappers would have you<br />
The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. 11, 1981—7<br />
chasing criminals, not smokers."<br />
Kenneth Kulp, owner of Mr. Donut, 352<br />
E. College Ave., and Baskin-Robbins, 358<br />
E. College Ave., said he does not object to<br />
^ the board's proposal.<br />
"It's enforceable, and it makes sense,"<br />
longer light up a cigarette or hold I a he said.<br />
cigarette in Schlow Library, (100 E. E- Kulp had been opposed to the earlier<br />
Beaver Ave.)" he said.<br />
proposal that required all restaurant<br />
The proposal should be ready to be owners to set aside a non-smoking sec-,<br />
presented to the council by March, Krog- og- tion. Because of the design and size of his<br />
er said. The council should react more )re establishments, it would be impossible<br />
favorably to this proposal than it did to for him, he said.<br />
the board's last proposal because it is s a Kroger said <strong>State</strong> College will rieveri<br />
"smaller option ," he said.<br />
pass a total ban on smoking in public!<br />
The board had supported a ban on places.<br />
smoking in all public places, but the "it would infringe on constitutional<br />
council did not pass it after questioning ing rights," he said.<br />
the meaning of "public places" and how ow The board's proposal will be based on<br />
the ordinance would be enforced. existing laws in Utah, Minnesota and San,<br />
Kroger said the board would have to Diego, Kroger said.<br />
"wait and see how (the enforcement) at) "(Dra fting the ordinance) will be<br />
would be handled." Signs would be post- st- easy," he said. "Other people have done<br />
ed and peer pressure would be used to the homework for us.<br />
quell smoking in these places, he said. "It's a domino effect — one community<br />
"The police obviously do not want to be after another are adopting these ordi-!<br />
involved and I don't want them to be," j," nances, which are sometimes known as<br />
Kroger said. "I'd rather have them out jut Clean Indoor Air Acts," Kroger said.<br />
believe that traps still have teeth on the<br />
jaws," she said.<br />
Lipp said the traps now in use either<br />
break the necks of the animals, killing<br />
them instantly, or, in the case of traps<br />
used in water, hold them underwater for<br />
quick drowning.<br />
Some traps will hold an animal by the<br />
leg, but will not break the animal's skin<br />
because of rounded jaws.<br />
"They're designed to hold an animal<br />
until the trapper arrives," Lipp said. "A<br />
trapper traps to get fur, not feet."<br />
However, George P. Cave, president of<br />
the animal rights group Trans-Species<br />
Unlimited, a subcommittee of Eco-Action,<br />
said the leg-hold trap is still inhumane<br />
and that alternative traps could be<br />
used, such as a constant tension trap in<br />
which pressure is exerted to hold the ,<br />
animal but stops at a certain point. He<br />
said this would eliminate suffocation of<br />
the animal.<br />
Lipp said another topic of argument is<br />
the trapping of unwanted animals. She'<br />
said 'it was only an occasional event'<br />
because experienced trappers have the -<br />
knowledge to catch the right animal.<br />
Many cases involve cats and dogs, she<br />
said, though the law says that dogs are ,<br />
not allowed to run free. Still , trappers are<br />
blamed "99 percent of the time," she.<br />
said.<br />
Dana Stuchell, another member of .<br />
Trans-Species Unlimited , said this im-'<br />
plies that each animal has an owner,<br />
which is not true.<br />
COLl€GinN CLASSIFICD I1DS<br />
EARN WHILE YOU learn. Sell Avon.<br />
Fit hours around classes. Call 238-<br />
7070<br />
EXOTIC RESORTS, SAILING expeditions!<br />
Needed: sports Instructors,<br />
fr office personnel, counselors. Europe,<br />
Carribean, Worldwide! Summer.<br />
Career. Send, $6.95 + $1<br />
handling for application, openings,<br />
guide to Cruiseworld, 93, Box<br />
60129, Sacramento, Ca. 95860<br />
GSA DESPERATELY NEEDS help.<br />
Graduate representatives needed<br />
for the follwing committees: <strong>University</strong><br />
Discipline Policy Committee,<br />
<strong>University</strong> Appeals Board, <strong>University</strong><br />
Hearing Board, GSA Social Committee,<br />
GSA Coffeehouse.. If<br />
interested, please call 865-4211 Immediately<br />
NEED MONEY? WORK for yourself!<br />
32 ways, guaranteed to make money<br />
In <strong>State</strong> College. Send $1.00,<br />
* SASE, to Sweetwater Publishing,<br />
Box 518, Boalsburg, PA 16827<br />
OERSEAS JOBS - SUMMER/year<br />
roundJ Europe, S. America, Australia,'<br />
Asia. All fields. $500-$1200<br />
monthly. Sightseeing. Free info.<br />
Write IJC Box 52-PA7 Corona Del<br />
Mar, CA 92625<br />
fc SALES PEOPLE - SIX ambitious<br />
men or women (couples). Car & paid<br />
vacation trips after you qualify. Up<br />
to $5000 per month at management<br />
level. Many retire after 5 years with<br />
$1000 - $2000 per month. Call Rick<br />
for appt. 238-9027<br />
SUMMER JOBS. NATIONAL Park<br />
Co.'s 21 Parks, 5000 openings.<br />
Complete information $5.00 Park<br />
*• Report. Mission Mtn. Co., 621 2nd<br />
Ave. W.N., Kallspell, Mt 59901<br />
SUMMER JOBS. U.S. Forest Service.<br />
How, where, when to apply.<br />
Complete information $5.00 Forest<br />
Report. Mission Mt. 59901. Application<br />
Deadline Jan.15<br />
FmdAy<br />
"HAPPY W IEEI<br />
HOURS"<br />
"Tiftc best WAY Tit<br />
START yovn weekesdl"<br />
SATURCIAY<br />
"PARTY<br />
AT the DEN."<br />
118 S. GARNER<br />
"TAltEOUTS TOO!"<br />
AN EXCELLENT TYPIST and close<br />
to campus. IBM Selectrlc, 12 years<br />
experience. Call Ton) 237-9468<br />
UNIVERSITY SECRETARY QUIT to<br />
type from home- theses, resumes,<br />
.term papers, etc. Call anytime 238-<br />
# 2388<br />
COMMUTING FROM WILLIAMS-<br />
PORT Monday, Wednesday, Friday?<br />
Riders wanted. Call Bob 717-326-<br />
9822<br />
* FLORIDA (PENSICOLA) RIDERS<br />
NEEDED: RIDE TO Chicago or-Mllwaukee<br />
for Xmas holidays. Call Bob<br />
865-1678 .<br />
NEEDED. RIDE TO Vermont. (Burlington<br />
area.) Friday 18th after 5th<br />
period. Call Mark 234-2659<br />
NEED RIDE TO Norfolk VA 12/17-18.<br />
Call 238-9849 after 7pm. Leave message<br />
lor Mike O.<br />
RIDERS WANTED TO Atlanta, Gainesville<br />
and Melbourne or Sarasota.<br />
Dec. 19 to Jan. 3 234-1948<br />
RIDER WANTED TO St. Louis, Mo.<br />
over X-mas break. Call 237-7244<br />
RIDE WANTED TO Dallas, Texas or<br />
vicinity over X-mas break. Call<br />
Grant at 234-2013<br />
THANKS ALOT St. Jude for helping<br />
me through my finals, Ken<br />
TWO RIDERS NEEDED for<br />
Christmas break trip to Florida call<br />
Emily 234-4663 or llene 238-1275<br />
TYPING - RESUMES, THESES, reports,<br />
etc. One block from campus.<br />
Tues.- Sat. 10-4:30 Beth or Dianne<br />
238-7833<br />
•*•••••••*•••••<br />
t GENERAL I<br />
I PHOTOGRAPHIC j<br />
i<br />
neededll Leaving Dec. 19th and Will<br />
return Jan 3rd. For more information<br />
call 234-0927<br />
NINTH ANNIVERSARY J<br />
t SUPERSALE!<br />
* 1*<br />
* -— Hundreds of J<br />
* Photographic<br />
*<br />
* Values *<br />
£ ... Don't miss it! FOUND WOMEN'S WATCH (gold<br />
and black) 12/9, outside Lyons Hall.<br />
Contact Nancy 865-9300<br />
HEAVY CHAIN AND lock for motorcycle/bicycle.<br />
Owner with key to<br />
lock can claim 237-2938<br />
I FOUND A calculator. Wanf it<br />
back? Call 237-0635<br />
ONE BLUE AND white <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong><br />
hat; pair red/white mittens. Claim in<br />
140 Chambers<br />
SET OF TOYOTA and Ford keys in<br />
the vicinity of Beaver Hall. Call 865<br />
0095<br />
SUE PI PHI found your pledge book<br />
Beaver Hills parking lot call 238-<br />
2673<br />
AAAAA - FEMALE ENGINEERS -<br />
please meet us inside main entrance<br />
of Willard Bldg. (facing<br />
Thompson) at 7pm Friday or 2pm<br />
Sunday - Hopeful Grads<br />
AAAALRIGHT!. DANCING AND partying<br />
with Delta Sigma Phi— the<br />
Pink Elephant— tonight from 9:30<br />
until ? 508 Locust Lane<br />
AHOY DELTA CHI! Let's do It again<br />
- + 1 in Anchor.Splash '81. Get psyched!<br />
Love Ruth and Nadine<br />
ALL STUDENTS WHO attend St.<br />
Paul's. Tonight's, the night to<br />
dance!! 3rd floor Education Building,<br />
9-12pm. All welcome! Questlons?<br />
Call Ellen 865-7203<br />
ALPHA SIGS: GOOD luck with<br />
Anchor Splash. Love, ¦<br />
Rosie and<br />
Sharon<br />
J ANN KLEIN JEANS - Notre Dame<br />
-K 325 E. Beaver Ave. game. Pope jokes! Had to leave<br />
¥¥¦¥•¥<br />
* early. How about a second half?<br />
**¥¥•¥¦*•¥¦***¦*• Reply personals<br />
*?$-!- ! A Post-Pearl Harbor Day-Pre<br />
New Year's Eve Blowout? Yupl Nlttany<br />
40, Friday 9 pm. Bombs away!!<br />
BRIGHT ORANGE WALLET. Brown AROUND THE WORLD In 80 beerstrim,<br />
Velcro close. Lost in town ...only at Zeno's. 80 different im-<br />
Friday. If found, please contact ported beers for your enjoyment<br />
Tammy,238-3446 or leave at HUB ATTENTION PENN STATE!!! Bob,<br />
desk. Contents-great sentimental Jack, Rick, Scooter, and Scott<br />
value!<br />
(Studs of Cedarbrook) Wish all of<br />
GOLD CHAIN BRACELET In ground their friends a Merry Christmas and<br />
floor Wlllard 12/7 after 9th. Senti- a Happy New Yearll!<br />
mental, please call 865-9860. Re- BASS PLAYER left mainstream<br />
ward ..<br />
long Island recording band to<br />
GOLD INITIAL RING. Initials S.C. come to PSU. Serious bands or<br />
Sentimental value. Please call Cln- musicians interested In conquering<br />
dy 237-0267. Reward I .<br />
<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> call Bill 237-4937 .<br />
LOST A LEATHER Wilson NBA bas- BUTCH, DENNIS, FUZZY, Jack,<br />
ketball on Sunday, December 6th In Mike, Paul, Terry • Congratulations<br />
the IM building. Roommate's ball. on your initiation! We're anxious to<br />
Need desperately. Call Dave 234- become your sisters and are<br />
5096<br />
looking forward to wild times to-<br />
LOST: FRIDAY, 12/4-Skull, Ladles gether. Love, DTD little sister pledg-<br />
gold Advance digital watch; Satures .<br />
day, 12/4-Rec, gray scarf 237-1894<br />
LOST In Atherton Hall: Blue Gore-<br />
Tex down jacket from Recreational<br />
Equipment Incorporated with<br />
matching hood. Medium sized with |<br />
pair of wool-lined men's leather<br />
gloves In right pocket. Contact<br />
Steve at 5-4927 or 5-1667.<br />
LOST ON THIRD floor Stone Hall<br />
friday Doc. 4 brown leather bomber<br />
jacket size 42. If found contact<br />
Andy at 865-4892<br />
LOST ORANGE WHITE male cat<br />
longhaired Doc. 3 McCormlck Universlty<br />
238-6643<br />
LOST: SHORT-HAIRED black male<br />
cat. If seen of found call 234-0958 or<br />
238-3375. 25$ reward ,<br />
LOST: WOMAN'S SLATE grey fulllength<br />
raincoat on Thurs. Oct.29 In<br />
BAB. Reward. Call 364-9911<br />
NAVY SUEDE GUCCI purse with red<br />
stripe at FIJI Saturday, 12/5. Any<br />
Info. Reward 865-2253<br />
"FOUND" NOTICES .<br />
ARE PUBLISHED<br />
FOR THREE DAYS AT NO CHARGE<br />
FOUND: GRAY WOOL gloves in 309<br />
Sparks, 12/6. Call 234-4009 evenings<br />
FOUND: WHITE GLOVE behind Hartranft<br />
during finals week. Joe 865-<br />
5183<br />
ATTENTION ?<br />
? Sugorbush Skiers!<br />
$ Payment #2—$50<br />
*<br />
?<br />
§ due today 12/1 1 §<br />
§ HUD Ground Floor §<br />
& 1st-6th periods. &<br />
|<br />
Those on waiting list £<br />
? — additional spots. ?<br />
y Stop down! /<br />
L i<br />
ERIC-THOUGH rNTquTckiy ^ GET IN THE holiday spirit with A<br />
Christmas Festival. Free concerts<br />
are the best kind<br />
GET SEASONED WITH Cedar, Sequla,<br />
and I Tapa Keg House at a<br />
Christmas bash Friday, Dec. 11,<br />
9:30-ish. Where? Zeta Psi 225 Foster<br />
^<br />
HAVING TROUBLE FILLING your<br />
Christmas gift list? For friends and<br />
relatives who are single, a unique<br />
and very special gift is a membership<br />
to Innovative Dating. $18<br />
for six months (at least ten<br />
matches.) Call 238-4200 for free<br />
information package. And.... how<br />
about a gift membership for yourself!<br />
Merry Christmas.<br />
HIGHER BUYER-TOP prices paid<br />
for gold and silver In any form, one<br />
day only, Dec. 5, 11am to 5pm,<br />
Sheraton Inn downtown, <strong>State</strong> College<br />
a&eeoeee<br />
% $<br />
A "What a GVistmos R-««nt<br />
A<br />
S JPMi<br />
• ^ify •<br />
m M *\<br />
llfe S.P(IGHA Z M 2M-272G X<br />
9 SUfcrL ««* to 9<br />
$<br />
becoming<br />
a Nemir Nadhir fan, I'm still<br />
crazy about you! Hope you're<br />
cheering up! You know Ivan and I<br />
are glad you're back! Love ya- Mar<br />
EXPERIENCED ACOUSTIC GUITAR<br />
instructor now scheduling students<br />
for winter term. Reasonable rates.<br />
Glenn Kricher 238-3664<br />
E.A.B., I'M SORRY for all I put you<br />
through. I'l always love you, but<br />
I've come to realize that some<br />
things just weren't meant to be. I<br />
miss you. Let's be friends. George<br />
FOR SALE: PANASONIC portable<br />
am/fm stereo cassette, two years<br />
old. $150. Price negotiable 2344942<br />
FRED - HAPPY BIRTHDAY. Thanks<br />
for being there when I need you. All<br />
my love, Sue<br />
¦ft*"*' "- RAhskelkr-<br />
STACY, LYNN AND Carla, last term LYON'S KENNELS 328 W. College<br />
was great. Let's make this one even Avenue 234-2370 'Where every dog<br />
more exciting. Your personal Is styled to look his best.' Profesanchorman<br />
'Dr. Gyno'<br />
sional grooming and grooming aids<br />
STORE YOUR MOTORCYCLE in our THE SILVER CELLAR 153 S. Allen<br />
garage. Close to campus. $10 per St. 237-1566. Custom design work<br />
month. 234-8462 . by local goldsmiths. Repairs and<br />
SUPER STUD AND Rol: You both remounting, gemstone restringing,<br />
mean the World to me!! I love you,<br />
yours or ours<br />
LA THE DECORATOR'S WORKSHOP<br />
SUPER STUD OR better know as<br />
0<br />
KAPPAS: MISSING SOMETHING?<br />
KIMBERLY; HAVE A great 21st!!<br />
Remember, don't be too w-l-l-d!<br />
Love, Jackie. P.S. Halfway to 42 and<br />
gray hairs 1<br />
KIM (SOUTH HALLS ; Sue's friend;<br />
short blonde hair) - want your picture<br />
taken by a curly-haired photographer?<br />
Gimme a call (234-4257) or<br />
stop me next time you see me<br />
LOST PORT-FOLIO (Art 222) in<br />
V.A.B. over break. Please, please<br />
return! Very important to Art major!<br />
No Questions. Amy 5-6955<br />
LOUNGE PIANIST WANTED for<br />
cocktail hours. Repetolre should<br />
Include smooth standards, easy<br />
contemporary pieces and familiar<br />
sing-alongs. Call Tom or Kerry at<br />
247-5873<br />
MARIE, SMILE! YOU'RE the most<br />
beautiful woman in creation when<br />
you flash that sexy grin. I love you,<br />
girl-forever, pssst, pssst, pssstl 007<br />
MAURY - I'LL BE at Plka this Saturday<br />
night. Linda<br />
MCDONALD'S EATERS: WILL pay<br />
cash for passport ticket numbers<br />
667 and 682. Mary Beth 234-0693<br />
MIKE, HAD A good time at your<br />
party. Hope to see you again. Liz's<br />
Friend<br />
MR. BILL OH nooool Santa likes<br />
chocolate tool From your S.S<br />
MUSICIANS: OPPORTUNITY<br />
KNOCKS! Last Spring's hottest<br />
new band is reforming. Guitarists,<br />
keyboardists call now 234-0754<br />
PARTY AT SIGMA Phi Epsilon on<br />
Friday night. Be There!!!<br />
P, I'M SO happy that you wanted to<br />
come up and even happier that you<br />
are up here. It will surely be a time<br />
to remember. Love, B<br />
RUSTICAL QUALITY STRING Band<br />
Square Dance, 8-11pm, HUB Ballroom,<br />
adults $2.00, students $1.50<br />
tickets at door.<br />
SEMESTER CHANGE? WHAT'S a<br />
semester? Bring your questions<br />
and concerns about the semester<br />
system to the lunchtlme discussion<br />
led by Chris Hopwood, Head of the<br />
Academic Assembly,; and Dr. Dugan,<br />
Secretary to Calendar Conversion<br />
Council, in HUB Lounge on<br />
Monday, Dec. 14 at noon. Sponsored<br />
by Alpha Lambda Delta<br />
Freshman Honor Society<br />
SHY BLUE-EYED BRUNETTE,<br />
here's loolng at you, .kid. 5-4894,<br />
maroon Izod.<br />
SO MEB IS legal now — Look outl<br />
Love Poots RT Bl<br />
sm West Colle9e Ave- 237-8900.<br />
Santa Clause, the pleasure was all °P en Monday through Saturday<br />
ours!! Love, your S-hearts; Rol and 7:30 t0 5:3 ° . Tuesday and Thursday<br />
LA)<br />
til 9. Offering everyday discounts<br />
T,.- ¦-— ,, .-„„ „„ —¦ — on paint, carpeting, draperies and<br />
TERRI - HAPPY 21st. You're the wallpaper<br />
one... The only one... No matter —rrr^ :<br />
what. Love, Nat T. V. or Stereo broken down? Our<br />
THE MAIN EVENT: Gunerman the servlce ls exceptionally competent,<br />
Great vs. Gavin the Geek. The prize: ,ast - and economical. All brands<br />
Thunder Thighs, the best with no | erv , l "A d I1 T THE STATE COLLEGE Family SERVICE FOR ALL small appll<br />
Chiropractic Center 905 West Bea- ances, hairdryers, curling irons<br />
ver Avenue. Open weekdays 9-9 heaters, shavers, irons, etc<br />
Phone 238-O250 Klaban's. 206 S. Allen<br />
LIVING<br />
GIFTS<br />
Buy it early —we'll<br />
pamper it until<br />
Christmas Eve and BONSAI<br />
* " E'f£ironics 225<br />
chest<br />
South Allen St. 238-3800 we'll bundle your plant huge ferns,<br />
THE XI BUNNIES wish the DK Phi<br />
for winter travel.<br />
terrariums,<br />
Demons a Happy Holiday. You are GOLD & SILVER<br />
flowering plants<br />
the greatest house anyone could<br />
and indoor trees<br />
want. Love y'all HIGHEST CASH NOW!<br />
Open till 9<br />
TO THE ONE and only Jonnie Jo.<br />
beginning Dec. 1 7<br />
Thanks for one great year. Love Class rings $50 and up. Wedding<br />
Dave<br />
rings, watches, denial gold.<br />
WAZ, PETER PAN returns this fri- Anything made of gold and silver.<br />
day. Clap your hands ten o'clock at<br />
Now buying at 2 locations<br />
the obelisk. Be therelWHO WOULD<br />
PASS up a free concert? A<br />
Christmas Festival helps you cele- EDS DISCOUNT<br />
SjKssanfle<br />
brate the season<br />
12-5 p.m. Ph. 237-5112<br />
ZEBRA WOMAN - Is it love with one ARENA THEATERS<br />
named Goddess? Look for me in 7-10 p.m. Ph. 237-2303grape<br />
tonite. ^£? 105 E. Beaver Avenue<br />
Our lips are sealed.. Will pick up also by appointment<br />
Jet Boy.<br />
HO HO HO Holly. Look, you finally<br />
got a personal. Happy 18th, now<br />
you're finally a mature adult like us.<br />
Classified Information<br />
Mat's mid-munch kink wall and the<br />
cave. Love Mad and Bee AColiegian Mail-In Form<br />
I'M OFFERING A reward for the<br />
• Policy<br />
return of a blue backpack which<br />
was taken from the Student Book Ads must be prepaid<br />
Changes cannot be made after the first insertion<br />
Store on campus on Tuesday. Cash refunds will only be given for ads cancelled by 1 p.m. the day before the first insertion. Only credit<br />
Please return it to the bookstore; I vouchers will be given after this time.<br />
need my notebooks and I.D.<br />
The Daily Collegian will only be responsible for one day's incorrect insertion. Please come to room 126<br />
INTERESTED IN MAKING $200-500<br />
Carnegie Building immediately if there is an error in your ad.<br />
The Daily Collegian will not knowingly cause to be printed or published any notice or advertisement<br />
per week this summer? If so, meet- relating to employment or membership indicating any preference, limitation, specification or<br />
ing at 117 Boucke Sunday Dec.13 at descrimlnation based upon race, color, sexual orientation, religious creed, ancestry, age, sex, national<br />
7:30pm<br />
orgin or non-job related handicap or disability.<br />
JIM-THANKS FOR the wonderful • prepaid order form ads<br />
year. Looking forward to many more<br />
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested<br />
of the same. Janet _ We must receive the ad the morning before publication.<br />
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE 17 No PERSONAL ads accepted by mail.<br />
newest brothers at Acacia. Ken,<br />
• deadlines<br />
Craig, Jim, John, Mark, Chris, Andy,<br />
Bob, Paul, Lance, Gary, Todd, Jon,<br />
classified — 1 p.m. one business day before publication<br />
Glenn, Dave, Joe, and Dan. You<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 />
guys are great! Love 1095.5<br />
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favorite <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>rl $3.50<br />
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8—The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. II , 1981<br />
Violations can carry double jeopardy<br />
By HENAE HAKDORY<br />
Daily Collegian Staff Writer<br />
If a student is charged on campus<br />
with a violation of both <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania<br />
law and the <strong>University</strong>'s Code of Conduct<br />
he can be tried twice for the<br />
same offense.<br />
"Students have an obligation to the<br />
laws of the Commomwcallh and the<br />
laws, or policy, of the <strong>University</strong>,"<br />
Tom Harmon , manager of <strong>University</strong><br />
Police Services, said. "In all cases<br />
where a student is involved in misconduct<br />
or a violation , they are reported<br />
to the Office of Conduct Standards,<br />
and are therefore subject to disciplinary<br />
action ," Harmon said.<br />
However, if the violation is one of<br />
<strong>Penn</strong>sylvania law as well, campus<br />
police will refer it to the <strong>State</strong> College<br />
District Magistrate, Clifford II.<br />
Yorks, where the student will be subjected<br />
to action as would any state<br />
resident, Harmon said.<br />
For example, a student caught for<br />
underage drinking on campus by <strong>University</strong><br />
police will automatically be<br />
reported to the Office of Conduct<br />
Standards and to (he district magistrate,<br />
Harmon said.<br />
The student will have to be tried in<br />
the Office of Conduct Standards, and<br />
also has to appear before Yorks in a<br />
hearing downtown to determine his<br />
guilt or innocence.<br />
Therefore, students can be tried<br />
twice for the same offense or crime, if<br />
they are caught dnd charged on campus.<br />
Although students have the most<br />
problems with underage drinking,<br />
they can be cited twice for a variety of<br />
offenses, Harmon said. The most<br />
common are criminal mischief , property<br />
damage and theft, he said.<br />
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But if a student is caught committing<br />
a crime off campus and is<br />
charged with a violation of <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania<br />
law and <strong>University</strong> rules, he is<br />
not directly referred to the Office of<br />
Conduct Standards by <strong>State</strong> College<br />
police.<br />
"We do not furnish any information<br />
to anyone else," Lt. Jack Orndorf ,<br />
<strong>State</strong> College police officer, said.<br />
Yet, students may be still cited and<br />
" tried twice with an offense that occurred<br />
off campus if Donald T. Suit,<br />
director of the Office of Conduct Standards,<br />
is made aware of it, Harmon<br />
said.<br />
with the<br />
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... we re bound by <strong>University</strong> polic y to take<br />
action if we have knowledge of a student's<br />
offense of that policy, even if the offense<br />
occurred off the campus.'<br />
analysis<br />
Police logs, newspapers and students<br />
reporting other students for<br />
violations are sources of information<br />
for his citing of students for off campus<br />
violations of <strong>University</strong> policy,<br />
Suit said.<br />
Anything that is an immediate or<br />
possible threat to the <strong>University</strong>, and<br />
that comes to the attention of Suit, will<br />
be dealt with according to the <strong>University</strong>'s<br />
Code of Conduct — even if such<br />
an offense occurs off campus, he said.<br />
More serious offenses — such as rape,<br />
sale of a substantial quantity of drugs,<br />
theft from another student and assault<br />
— fall into the category of<br />
threats, Suit said.<br />
Even less serious violations occurring<br />
off campus — such as a criminal<br />
mischief charge for intentionally<br />
walking through wet cement — that<br />
— Donald T. Suit, director,<br />
Office of Conduct Standards<br />
Suit learns of are subject to disciplinary<br />
sanction.<br />
"The only inequitable thing is that<br />
we're bound by <strong>University</strong> policy to<br />
take action if we have knowledge of a<br />
student's offense of that policy, even if<br />
the offense occurred off the campus,"<br />
Suit said.<br />
Suit also said while he may review<br />
transcripts of a student's hearing in<br />
the magistrate's court , he is not permitted<br />
to consider that court's decision<br />
when determining a student's<br />
sanction.<br />
"A student may be found guilty<br />
downtown and innocent on campus,<br />
and vice versa ," Suit said. "And , he<br />
can be found guilty twice, he said."<br />
However, students aren 't the only<br />
people at the <strong>University</strong> who must<br />
comply with both state laws and <strong>University</strong><br />
rules.<br />
Faculty and other <strong>University</strong> personnel<br />
are also obligated to adhere to<br />
both sets of rules, Suit said.<br />
Since students can be tried and<br />
charged twice, they would have records<br />
of their violations in the magistrate's<br />
office and the Office of<br />
Conduct Standards. These records are<br />
kept for a certain period of time in<br />
both offices.<br />
"In our office, we keep all records,<br />
regardless of type of offense, for three<br />
years," a spokesman for the <strong>State</strong><br />
College magistrate's office said.<br />
In the Office of Conduct Standards,<br />
records are kept until the student<br />
graduates. However, certain sanctions,<br />
or penalties, for offenses will<br />
appear on the student's transcript.<br />
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Solidarity stands strong against government pressure<br />
By THOMAS. W. NETTER crs, including a strike ban.<br />
Associated Press Writer Solidarity officials in Szczecin , the Baltic port on the East<br />
WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Solidarity leader. Lech Walesa German border, said five policemen began a hunger strike in<br />
declared yesterday his independent union "cannot retreat any the Adolf Warski.shipyard to demand a trade union for police.<br />
more" in the face of unrelenting assaults by Poland's Commu- The authorities<br />
ve<br />
^<br />
fought sucn an idea for montns since it<br />
regime.<br />
. .„¦/ " .' . „, " , was raised by former policemen in Warsaw. Shipyard sources<br />
As he entered a meeting of the union presidiUm-in Gdansk on<br />
said other {ice ome£s would join the test la\er by giving<br />
the eve of a session of Solidarity's national leadership commis- mnral qunnnrt<br />
sion,<br />
moraI SUppor bat not fastine g<br />
Walesa told reporters outside a Baltic port shipyard.<br />
'<br />
"We do not want confrontation but we cannot retreat any- Poland's army, newspaper, Zolnierz Wolnosci , quoted an<br />
more. We cannot be passive any longer as this would be unnamed colonel as saying it was time to hall Solidarity 's<br />
detrimenta l for the union." He said that strikes, not violence, "march to a national catastrophe, the suicidal march to the<br />
were the union's only weapons. gallows."<br />
Solidarity's national leadership commission, which meets The paper called Unionists who paint anti-media graffitti and<br />
today in Gdansk, is expected to approve launching a general paste up posters around Poland "snots run berserk."<br />
strike if the government gets and uses "extraordinary" pow- "Solidarity leaders demonstrate constant concern over their<br />
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10—The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. 11, 1981<br />
College graduates in record demand<br />
EVANSTON, 111. (AP ) - Major corporations will hire<br />
more new college graduates next year than ever before,<br />
and will pay them record starting salaries, a Northwestern<br />
<strong>University</strong> report said yesterday.<br />
I The 36th annual Endicott Report said more than half<br />
the 242 companies responding to a November survey<br />
indicated their needs for 1982 graduates are up despite<br />
the sluggish economy. In addition, starting salaries will<br />
be 9.2 percent higher than last year, the report said.<br />
¦ "We didn't expect such a positive outlook,", said<br />
Victor R. Lindquist, director of the Placement Center at<br />
Northwestern.<br />
Frank S. Endicott, director emeritus of placement,<br />
said the survey shows job opportunities will increase 11<br />
percent next year for graduates with bachelor of arts<br />
degrees and 12 percent for those with master of arts<br />
degres.<br />
Lindquist and Endicott are co-authors of, the survey,<br />
which is conducted as a university service to business,<br />
ihdustry and graduates entering the job market.<br />
"A strong demand will continue in the fields of<br />
accounting, engineering, business administration,<br />
sales, marketing and computer science," said Endicott.<br />
"But the greatest changes are in chemistry baccalaureates,<br />
which are up more than 30 percent, and engineers,<br />
which are up by 21 percent."<br />
Starting yearly salaries next year will increase by an<br />
average of 9.2 percent over 1981, the report said.<br />
Bachelor's degree engineers will average $25,428, an<br />
11.4 percent jump.<br />
Master's degree graduates in engineering will start at<br />
$28,188, up 10 percent, while non-technical MBA's will<br />
average $25,788, up 13.4 percent.<br />
The report estimated that salaries for science and<br />
engineering Ph.Ds will increase about 13 percent.<br />
Of the participating companies, 38 percent said that<br />
the general corporate business outlook for 1982 is better<br />
than 1981, 44 percent answered "about the same as<br />
1981" and 18 percent checked "riot as good as 1981."<br />
Defense and energy were quite positive about the<br />
coming year, the report said. Companies in construction-related<br />
fields and the auto industry reported .uncertainty<br />
about the first part of the year but were<br />
optimistic about later months.<br />
The report indicates 94 percent of the 242 employers<br />
surveyed are satisfied with the performance of their<br />
class of 1981 employees.<br />
In answer to the question, "If the graduate has a<br />
major shortcoming, what is it? " many of the companies<br />
responding cited "unrealistic expectations."<br />
"(The grabs) just expect too much too soonj " said<br />
Lindquist. "They do not want to take time to learn the<br />
job assigned. Grads are setting naive goals on job<br />
content, promotion, responsibility and salary that cannot<br />
be realized.";^ ;. , : ' .<br />
Another most often mentioned shortcoming was poor<br />
communication skills.<br />
"Employers say that many college graduates display<br />
an inability to write or speak clearly,.concisely and<br />
correctly," said Lindquist.<br />
Aid students often earn lower grades<br />
By MARGARET SCHERF<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
;! WASHINGTON (AP) - Many college<br />
students who receive federal financial<br />
aid are not making satisfactory academic<br />
progress, according to the General<br />
Accounting Office.<br />
,: "Mainly this resulted from school standards<br />
that allowed students to remain<br />
eligible for aid without proving tfiat they<br />
were moving toward a definite goal with<br />
adequate grades and at a reasonable<br />
rate," the GAO said in a report released<br />
this week. "Some of the institutions were<br />
not even enforcing their own standards."<br />
. The GAO, Congress' auditing agency,<br />
said its conclusions came after visits to<br />
20 campuses and a review of more than<br />
5;800 randomly selected student transcripts.<br />
¦ It said many of the schools visited did<br />
n(jt?have reasonable requirements concerning<br />
such factors as minimum grade<br />
point averages and the rate of movement<br />
toward completion of a program of study.<br />
; "While the schools visited uniformly<br />
rjequired a 2.0 grade point average (on a<br />
-to scale) for graduation, they normally<br />
siet their standards for determining academic<br />
progress at considerably lower<br />
levels," the report said. "This resulted in<br />
large numbers of students on financial<br />
aid with low grades."<br />
J, In many cases, it said, the averages<br />
were below 1.5, or the equivalent of a Dplus.<br />
!' Only 10 of the 20 schools visited had<br />
r. i<br />
•<br />
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i<br />
specific requirements concerning the<br />
rate of a student's academic progress,<br />
the report said, and these requirements<br />
were often ineffective.<br />
"This led to instances where students<br />
stayed in school and on financial aid for<br />
inordinate lengths of time," the report<br />
said.<br />
It noted that federal assistance programs<br />
administered by the Department<br />
of Education, the Veterans Administra-<br />
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tion and the Social Security Administration<br />
provided about $7.8 billion in student<br />
aid during fiscal 1980.<br />
"In general, fewer instances of poor<br />
progress were noted among VA aid recipients<br />
than either Education Department<br />
or Social Security Administration aid<br />
recipients," the report said.<br />
The GAO recommended tighter academic<br />
progress standards and said the<br />
Department of Health and Human Serv-<br />
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ices and the Office of Management and<br />
Budget generally agreed.<br />
It said VA "did not concur with our<br />
recommendation that institutions be re?<br />
quired to establish standards on the rate<br />
at which a student should progress."<br />
The VA contended it previously had<br />
been required to set such a specific<br />
standard "and this had ^proved to be<br />
unworkable and an administrative burden,"<br />
the report said. -;;'<br />
College enrollment at all-time high<br />
By CHRISTOPHER CONNELL<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
WASHINGTON (AP ) — Enrollment in the nation's colleges<br />
and universities hit an all-time high of 12.3 million this fall, the<br />
government reported yesterday.<br />
The figures, based on preliminary estimates from the National<br />
Center for Education Statistics, indicate that educators'<br />
fears about enrollments dropping due to cuts in federal aid and<br />
the passage of the baby boom generation into adulthood have<br />
not yet come true.<br />
But the center, part of the Department of Education, found<br />
that 42 percent of the 943 institutions it surveyed had experienced<br />
enrollment drops of 15 percent or more since 1980.<br />
Several of these institutions blamed cuts in state aid that<br />
"translated into higher tuition rates, especially for part-time<br />
students, and the elimination of selected programs," the center 4<br />
reported.<br />
Its overall enrollment estimate of 12,322,469 was UD 126.000. or<br />
almost 2 percent, from the fall 1980 level of 12,096,895.<br />
The center said that for the sixth straight year, more women<br />
than men are attending college. Women accounted for nearly 52<br />
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percent of all students, up from 45 percent in 1975 and only 42<br />
percent a decade ago.<br />
The center said the women are helping to keep enrollments<br />
on the rise. Other factors are a peak in 1981 in the number of 18to-24-year-olds,<br />
"the last group to come out of the great birth<br />
boom of the 1950s and 1960s," and "the growing popularity of<br />
two-year institutions."<br />
• Candy • Nutcrackers '• Plush Animals<br />
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It said the two-year community and junior colleges were "the<br />
only institutions that showed a large enrollment gain, up 5<br />
percent over 1980" to 4.7 million students.<br />
Some 2.9 million students were attending universities and the<br />
other 4.7 million were attending four-year colleges.<br />
The center said enrollment in public colleges was up 2.1<br />
percent to 9.6 million, while private college enrollment rose: 1<br />
percent to 2.7 million.<br />
But within the public and private ranks, the center found that<br />
private universities fell slightly to 734,000, a loss of 1,500<br />
students, and four-year public colleges enrolled just under 3<br />
million students, a loss of 16,000.<br />
The.943 institutions were surveyed at random from among<br />
the nation's 3,231 colleges and universities.<br />
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briefs —-<br />
Christmas tree<br />
HARRISBURG (AP) - The word<br />
from Christmas tree growers this<br />
year is that there will be plenty of<br />
yuletide evergreens in every size,<br />
shape and price during this holiday<br />
season. ,<br />
Growers estimate that nationally<br />
about 32 million trees will be<br />
trimmed and lit in sizes ranging<br />
from knee-high pines sitting on tabletops<br />
to giant Douglas firs.<br />
"The -quality and quantity are<br />
better this year and there'll be a tree<br />
for everyone's budget," said Donald<br />
McNeil, executiive director of the<br />
National Christmas Tree Association<br />
in Milwaukee.<br />
Twelve Beatles songs hidden<br />
LOS ANGELES (AP ) - As many<br />
as 12 unreleased Beatles songs are<br />
tucked away in vaults in England,<br />
the Los Angeles Herald Examiner<br />
reported yesterday.<br />
Ken Townsend, a spokesman; for<br />
Abbey Road Studios in London, said<br />
there are "about 10" such songsi at<br />
the studio where the Beatles worked<br />
from 1962 until John Lennon, Paul<br />
McCartney, George Harrison and<br />
Ringo Starr dissolved the group in<br />
the early 1970s. - '<br />
In addition, Brian Southall,<br />
spokesman for EMI Records in London,<br />
said two unreleased tracks<br />
were in EMI vaults, and one, "Leave<br />
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Monday, December 14 to Friday December 18<br />
All merchandise will be 20% OFF (excluding textbooks<br />
calculators and other limited items), and all Christmas<br />
items reduced 30%. There will be additional reductions on<br />
selected items. The sale will be held at all campus locations.<br />
Buy a Christmas present at the <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>r's<br />
Bookstore!<br />
•<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong><br />
store<br />
on campus<br />
Owned and operated by the <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania <strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />
McAllister Building and Hetzel Union Building<br />
My Kitten Alone" with the late John<br />
Lennon on lead vocal, will be released<br />
by EMI either in 1982 or 1983.<br />
"Kitten," described by Townsend<br />
as "probably the best" of the unreleased<br />
material, was first brought to<br />
public attention by a British disc<br />
jockey in 1980 and was being considered<br />
for release by EMI as a single<br />
last Christmas.<br />
Those plans were scrapped when<br />
Lennon was killed in New York City<br />
in December 1980, because, as an<br />
EMI spokesman said, "It would<br />
appear that we would be cashing in<br />
on a tragedy."<br />
Koch appeals for homeless<br />
NEW YORK (AP) - Unable to<br />
find shelter for the estimated 36,000<br />
homeless men and women roaming<br />
the city's streets, the mayor is<br />
asking each church and synagogue<br />
to take in 10 vagrants every night.<br />
"It's their Judeo-Christian duty,"<br />
Mayor Edward I. Koch said in an<br />
interview.<br />
The city, sued earlier this year on<br />
behalf of its homeless population,<br />
signed a consent decree in August in<br />
which it agreed to provide overnight<br />
shelter for anyone requesting it.<br />
But it had not proved easy. On a<br />
typical night this week only 3,178<br />
people sought shelter in facilities<br />
provided by the city.<br />
One reason, according to those<br />
who work with the homeless, is that<br />
city accommodations are crowded,<br />
dirty, noisy and unsafe. Another is<br />
that many who live on the street are<br />
too poor, too weak or too confused to<br />
reach the central city facility on the<br />
Lower East Side.<br />
But earlier this year, when city<br />
officials approached every community<br />
board in New York, they could<br />
not find one neighborhood in any<br />
borough willing to accept a new 200<br />
to 300-bed facility for men.<br />
So this week Koch turned to the<br />
estimated 2,450 churches and synagogues.<br />
f: ?. s<br />
The Hetzel Union Board St Th© Ballroom Dance Cub<br />
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TH
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Animal life abounds<br />
on this year's editions<br />
of Christmas cards<br />
WASHINGTON (AP) - America's fascination<br />
with animals, from house pets to<br />
endangered species, is reflected in this<br />
year's Christmas greeting cards, of<br />
which well over 3 billion are expected to<br />
be exchanged, according to the National<br />
Association of Greeting Card Publishers.<br />
Pandas and polar bears are among the<br />
subjects of seasonal cheer. They are<br />
joined by turtles and whales proclaiming<br />
Christmas as a time of love for "all<br />
things bright and beautiful, all 1 things<br />
great and small."<br />
Animals as a dominant theme in this<br />
year's Christmas cards are among the<br />
findings of the greeting card publishers,<br />
with headquarters in Washington, D.C,<br />
in an informal survey of its members.<br />
Each year, the association reviews the<br />
work of artists and writers who create<br />
Christmas greetings, and a pattern of<br />
themes emerges from this review. The<br />
themes reflect the interests and lifestyles<br />
of. most Americans, according to the<br />
artists who produce the cards.<br />
"Historically, religious themes outnumber<br />
other subjects about 3-to-l," said<br />
Norman S. Halliday, executive vice president<br />
of the publishers' association. "Secular<br />
greetings generally reflect the<br />
fads, foibles and concerns of our society."<br />
One of this year's cards, a stylized<br />
panda, painted in blue, holds aloft a sprig<br />
of greenery with a red berry. The greeting<br />
is timely, since the panda has become<br />
the symbol of the World Wildlife Fund,<br />
Halliday points out. The non-profit organization<br />
is now allocating monies for the<br />
protection of pandas and other endangered<br />
species.<br />
In a light-hearted vein, another card<br />
portrays an ark whose passengers include<br />
turtles, elephants, egrets, snail<br />
darters, koala bears and a host of other<br />
animals. The card proclaims "peace on<br />
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earth" to the fin-and-furry boatload and<br />
"to all other endangered species such as<br />
you and me and us."<br />
Dogs and cats abound on cards. One<br />
reads: "From our dog to yours," with<br />
space provided for a canine signature.<br />
Another shows a kitten swaying from the<br />
branch of,a Christmas tree to which it<br />
has been lured by an ornament in the<br />
form of a bluejay. A portion of the card's<br />
purchase price is earmarked for the<br />
Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to<br />
Animals.<br />
Many religious cards continue a trend<br />
started last year, the embossed reproduction<br />
of stained-glass windows from<br />
cathedrals. The Madonna and Child and<br />
scenes from the manger are reproduced<br />
in acrylics, oils and watercolors.<br />
Steepled churches throughout rural<br />
America seem as popular as palmfringed<br />
vistas of Bethlehem.<br />
Two cards from UNICEF, the United<br />
Nations Children's Fund, reproduce 12thcentury<br />
stained-glass panels of the "Adoration"<br />
and "Three Kings" from Canterbury<br />
Cathedral, England.<br />
Personalized greeting cards, on which<br />
the name of the sender is imprinted,<br />
range from cartoons to fine-art reproductions.<br />
Many publishers in this category<br />
anticipate orders from lawyers, physicians<br />
and like professionals. The cards<br />
are increasingly popular as a form of<br />
business communication, Halliday says.<br />
The exchange of Christmas greeting<br />
cards will not be hindered by inflation,<br />
Halliday adds. In times of economic<br />
stress, he says, the buyer of a greeting<br />
card often perceives the card as a gift in<br />
lieu of a more expensive offering.<br />
"It s a lasting gift," he says. "A greeting<br />
card comes without batteries, there's<br />
nothing to assemble and no parts to<br />
lose."<br />
our<br />
The Brothers of ZN Congratulate their newest Initiates<br />
Richard Frances Talamo James Edward Eiseman<br />
and Welcome their Winter '82 Pledge Classes<br />
Joel Robert Burns<br />
Jeffrey Ronald Bogus<br />
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The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. 11, 1981—11<br />
O.vj.<br />
&<br />
* m M<br />
in Danks Merchandise Certificates<br />
3 DAYS ONLY ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦<br />
(Certificates are good at Danks as Money anytime i )<br />
FRIDAY—SATURDAY—SUNDAY<br />
STATE COLLEGE : 10- 9 9- 9 12-5<br />
NITTANY MALL 10-10 10-10 12-5<br />
BELLEFONTE 10- 9 9:30-9 12-5<br />
Just take your Sales Slips — cash or charge — to our Credit Office. When your<br />
combined purchases from Friday, Saturday or Sunday total $50 or more, you will<br />
receive $10 in Danks Merchandise Certificates. If you have a Danks Charge, you<br />
may prefer a Charge Credit.<br />
If your purchases total $100 you will receive $20 in Danks Merchandise Cer<br />
tificates . . . and $10 more for every $50 you spend<br />
Purchases must be made on the same day Friday, Saturday or Sunday<br />
Sales Slips must be redeemed by 5:00 p.m. Sunday, December 13th 1981<br />
The Merchandise Certificates are as good as money at Danks. They can be used<br />
anytime, in any Danks Department Store — Lewistown, <strong>State</strong> College, Nittany<br />
Mall, and Bellefonte.<br />
Beauty Shop is not included.<br />
•<br />
¦<br />
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We Welcome Your Danks Charge, Master Card or Visa<br />
As Always, We Wrap Your Danks Purchases Free!<br />
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DEPARTMENT STORES
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12—The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. 11, 1981<br />
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$3.oo-value<br />
SAVE 15%<br />
The Candy Cane<br />
Next to Ye Olde College Diner<br />
Coupon expires 12/19/81 '<br />
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Neiman-Marcus: The home of Texas chic<br />
By KATHY BAKER<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
DALLAS (AP) — In a state not noted for<br />
demure reticence, it is perhaps not surprising<br />
that Stanley Marcus — the 76-year-old head of the<br />
family that founded the ritzy -Neiman-Marcus<br />
chain with the famous Christmas catalog —should<br />
take sole credit for the rise of "Texas chic."<br />
Marcus has turned over the management of the<br />
change — founded by his father — to a corporation,<br />
but he still retains his role as keeper of the<br />
Neiman-Marcus "mystique."<br />
Marcus says he got the idea for promoting the<br />
bravado of Texas while going to college.<br />
"I think maybe I was responsible in a way," he<br />
says. "Having gone to school in the East and<br />
having had a great deal of difficulty explaining to<br />
people what Dallas was, where Dallas was and<br />
where Texas was, I realized this was an opportunity<br />
to capture the interest of the rest of the<br />
country in the Southwest and the western tradition."<br />
,<br />
Marcus says he started it all in 1936 when he<br />
persuaded his father, Herbert, to give a fashion<br />
show in Dallas and invite the New York fashion<br />
press. The show featured a fur collection based on<br />
the "colors of the Southwest."<br />
"They saw Dallas and the store and they fell in<br />
love with it," Marcus says. "And this interest in<br />
the West, I don't think it's temporary. I think it's<br />
¦<br />
B¦<br />
¦<br />
...but Stanley Marcus says he was just lucky<br />
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going to continue. It's one of the few real traditions<br />
that's based on fact. The tradition of New<br />
England — the Pilgrim fathers — is not as gutsy,<br />
not as interesting."<br />
In 1907, Herbert Marcus, his sister Carrie and<br />
her husband, Al Neiman, returned to Dallas from<br />
Atlanta where they had developed a successful<br />
public relations business. They passed up a<br />
chance to trade the business for the Missouri and<br />
Kansas franchises for a new soft drink '— Coca-<br />
Cola — and instead sold it for $25,000 cash.<br />
With that stake and borrowed funds, the young<br />
entrepreneurs came home to found a retail store<br />
£o cater to the Wealthy with gracious service in<br />
elegant surroundings.<br />
Marcus says Dallas did not spawn .Neiman-<br />
Marcus, but rather Neiman-Marcus pushed Dallas<br />
into a society that might not have welcomed it<br />
without the hype and calculated "mystique" of<br />
the exclusive and unabashedly Texas-oriented<br />
enterprise.<br />
"I think we were lucky," Marcus says: "Cer-j<br />
tainly there was not much indication that Dallas<br />
was going to be what it is today. It was a growing<br />
city. The oil was there, but it wasn't very important.<br />
After all, what did you do with oil? You had<br />
horse-drawn streetcars. You used oil for kerosene<br />
and axle grease.<br />
"The fact that Dallas has grown into the type of<br />
city it is — very cosmopolitan — was helped in<br />
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Friday, Dec. ll lOAMto 5 PM<br />
STEA PUJS!<br />
w^* STEAK PLUS<br />
STEAK PLUS<br />
CHICKEN<br />
Dinners<br />
SHRIMP<br />
14—The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. 11, 1981<br />
I<br />
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iK offer expires Dec. 31, 1981<br />
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Coupon good thru Dec. 16, 1981<br />
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HOLIDAY SPECIALS<br />
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1&—The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. 11, 1981<br />
Week-long sex discussions continue<br />
By JOYCE WASHNIK<br />
Daily Collegian Staff Writer<br />
Understanding sexuality may be the touchstone<br />
for understanding what is best for the human<br />
condition, said an assistant professor of health<br />
education yesterday during a presentation about<br />
"Sexual Values and Guilt."<br />
"One of our concerns is the anxiety that comes<br />
along with even being comfortable examining<br />
issues," said Robert A. Walker at the Straight<br />
Talk About Sex program, sponsored by the United<br />
Ministry at the <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Annette W. Ranck, clinical psychologist at<br />
Ritenour Counseling Center, joined Walker to<br />
present the last talk in the week-long series of<br />
presentations. She instructed the audience to try<br />
to "get in touch with feelings and values about<br />
sexual expression."<br />
"From all experiences consider what you believe<br />
about sex," she said. "Consider your sexual<br />
values now, and what you want them to be.<br />
Ranck asked the audience to relax and look into<br />
their past. The audience was then given a sheet of<br />
paper and each person was asked to write down<br />
"Five Commandments About Sex."<br />
Several responses were then shared with the<br />
audience, including such ideas as "Intercourse is<br />
only for procreation," "Always use protection<br />
when having intercourse," "Having sex with a<br />
person of the same sex is a no-no" and "No<br />
kissing or touching in front of others."<br />
"Listing messages you don't actually live by<br />
can be useful," said Walker.<br />
Ranck then spoke about guilt as a punishment<br />
people inflict upon themselves for some wrongdoing.<br />
"Guilt is often a word we use for our experiences<br />
when we have made a gap between what we<br />
do and what we believe we should do," she said.<br />
"Behind every instance of guilt is an ideal into<br />
which we are failing to fit."<br />
The discussion continued at a seminar last night<br />
with students offering their feelings about guilt<br />
and asking questions.<br />
"I was looking for understanding and a solution<br />
to the personal relationship that I have now so I<br />
could feel better," said Don Lehr (graduate-counselor<br />
education). "This did help me."<br />
Suzanne Marsten (9th-business logistics)<br />
thought the program was "presented in a very<br />
professional and unbiased way."<br />
Another student said she came to the program<br />
to "see if people shared similar problems or guilt<br />
feelings and to see how they dealt with them."<br />
The program continues this morning at 11:30 in<br />
the HUB main lounge when all speakers who have<br />
participated in the series of presentations will<br />
conduct a panel discussion.<br />
Group to protest Burger King veal ads<br />
A local animal rights group will picket Burger<br />
King restaurant, 521 <strong>University</strong> Drive, tomorrow<br />
to protest that chain's recent national advertising<br />
campaign promoting veal sandwiches. &<br />
Trans-Species Unlimited, a subcommittee of<br />
Eco-Action, has had flyers printed explaining why<br />
the group believes veal calf production is the<br />
cruelest of factory farm practices and urging<br />
others to join the demonstration . The group<br />
argues that Burger King's national promotion is<br />
an attempt to radically expand what has been a<br />
This Weekend<br />
at the Brewery<br />
Tahoka<br />
Freeway<br />
Graduate Student Association<br />
presents<br />
relatively small industry.<br />
Representatives from the local Burger King<br />
and the regional headquarters were unavailable<br />
for comment.<br />
At the <strong>State</strong> College Municipal Council meeting<br />
Monday, Tim Auvil, a regional supervisor for<br />
Burger King, questioned the safety of protesters<br />
walking the sidewalk in front of the restaurant.<br />
He said Burger King had no problem with the<br />
protesters presenting their point of view but<br />
questioned why they singled out Burger King.<br />
m EUGENE HIM ES<br />
CAPITAL BLUE CROSS<br />
FRI DEC. n ®<br />
I I :00- I :00 Questions/Answers<br />
Kern Lobby<br />
2: I 5-3:00 Lecture/Slide Presentation<br />
I I 2. Kern fci?i u , e Cross/Blue Shield<br />
JRRUN<br />
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*<br />
Lion cagers aim for Classic berth against Indiana<br />
By STEVE GRAHAM<br />
Daily Collegian Sports Writer<br />
The place is Bloomington, Ind. Its history<br />
includes six Big Ten championships and two<br />
NCAA crowns in the last 11 years. The coach is the<br />
controversial Bobby Knight. And the atmosphere<br />
is Hoosier Hysteria.<br />
That's what the men's basketball team will be<br />
up against when it makes its first appearance<br />
ever at the Indiana Classic today and tomorrow.<br />
Tonight, <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> (4-1) will face Southern<br />
Methodist at 10 (EST) and Colorado <strong>State</strong> will<br />
take on the defending national champion Hoosiers<br />
at 8 in first-round games.<br />
One might expect the Lions to be awestruck this<br />
weekend. Indiana has a rich basketball tradition,<br />
and a capacity crowd of 17,357 fans could fill<br />
Assembly Hall. But that doesn't seem to make<br />
much difference to <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> guard-forward<br />
Wally Choice.<br />
"You can't be in awe of anybody," Choice said,<br />
"because everybody puts their underwear on just<br />
like we do. You can't really put yourself in a<br />
different class. You have to go out and be ready to<br />
play every day, no matter if you're playing<br />
Indiana or you're playing Lafayette."<br />
To be sure, this year's edition of Knight's<br />
Hoosiers is no Lafayette. Although they have lost<br />
forward Ray Tolbert (New Jersey Nets), guard<br />
Isiah Thomas (Detroit Pistons) and forward<br />
Landon Turner (paralyzed after a auto accident),<br />
the Hoosiers are 2-1, including a convincing 69-55<br />
victory over Notre Dame.<br />
But the Lions may not even get the chance to<br />
play Indiana. They must still get past a muchimproved<br />
SMU sqiiad and assume that the Hoosiers<br />
will handle Colorado <strong>State</strong> with relative<br />
ease. Then, and only then, will <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> meel its<br />
toughest opponent of the season.<br />
"It should be pretty exciting," said Choice, who<br />
himself has been excited about^his increased<br />
amount of playing time. "Bloomington is a basketball<br />
town. But they're still another'team. So,<br />
once you get down on the court, it shouldn't be<br />
much different."<br />
Getting down on the court has not been a<br />
Farrell falls short<br />
in bid for Lombardi<br />
HOUSTON (AP) - Kenneth Sims,<br />
the injured two-time All-America<br />
defensive tackle from Texas, received<br />
the Lombardi Award last<br />
night as the nation's best college<br />
football lineman for 1981.<br />
The 6-6, 270-pound Sims finished<br />
ahead of Billy Ray Smith of Arkansas,<br />
Sean Farrell of <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> and<br />
Bob Crable of Notre Dame.<br />
The award, a 40-pound block of<br />
granite, js given in honor of Vince<br />
Lombardi, the former Green Bay<br />
and Washington coach who died of<br />
cancer in 1970.<br />
The.point total from balloting by a<br />
committee of 95 college football<br />
coaches, sportswriters and sportscasters<br />
was not disclosed.<br />
Sims went to the award banquet as<br />
the most decorated of the finalists,<br />
having finished as runnerup to Ner<br />
braska junior center David Remington<br />
in balloting for the Outland<br />
Trophy given to the nation's outstanding<br />
interior lineman.<br />
Before his season ended with a<br />
broken ankle, Sims was credited<br />
with 110 tackles — including 81 unassisted<br />
— and had 10 quarterbacks<br />
sacks to help the Longhorns, whose<br />
defense ranked second in the nation,<br />
win a. Cotton Bowl berth against<br />
Alabama.<br />
Crable, a 6-3, 265-pound middle<br />
linebacker, was the first finalist in<br />
the -12-year history of the award not<br />
to attend the banquet. He stayed<br />
away because it conflicted with his<br />
own team's annual banquet.<br />
All four finalists were first-team<br />
members , of the 1981 Associated<br />
Press All-America team.<br />
Farrell, a second team choice in<br />
the AP's All-America selections last<br />
year, was the only offensive lineman<br />
in the quartet. The 6-3, 265-pound<br />
offensive guard is the first player in<br />
20 years to start three seasons for<br />
the Nittany Lions.<br />
He scored his first career touchdown,<br />
recovering a fumble in the<br />
end zone, during <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>'s upset<br />
victory over then top-ranked Pitt<br />
Lady Lions top Cowgirls<br />
in first round of classic<br />
In the opening round of the Lady<br />
Techsters Dial Classic-last night in Huston<br />
* La., the women's basketball team<br />
handed McNeese <strong>State</strong> a 90-73 defeat.<br />
But, the score doesn't reflect the true<br />
tone of the contest.<br />
The Lady Lions led by 19 points in the<br />
first half until junior guard Annie Troyan<br />
left the game with 7:10 remaining.<br />
Troya n, who is nursing a hamstring<br />
injury, once again has knee problems. A<br />
trainer reported a hyper-extension of the<br />
same knee that was operated on at the<br />
beginning of last season.<br />
' "We missed Annie more than we<br />
should have," coach Rene Portland said.<br />
"It's just a mental problem.<br />
When Troyan sat, the Cowgirls took<br />
over the corral. They put on a zone press<br />
which - destroyed <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>. McNeese<br />
pulled within five as it capitalized on<br />
numerous Lady Lion turnovers. Then for<br />
some unknown reason, which even<br />
mystified Portland , the Cowgirls<br />
changed to a man-to-man defense and<br />
the Lady Lions once again took control.<br />
Portland said the key to <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>'s<br />
second-half resurge was rebounding. •<br />
Freshmani Kahadeejah Herbert, who<br />
only saw action for 15 minutes, controlled<br />
the boards for the Lady Lions. With four<br />
minutes remaining Herbert was fouled<br />
on an offensive rebound. She hit the first<br />
free throw and nabbed the rebound which<br />
led to a Carol Fultz bucket. Herbert sunk<br />
the final shot to seal the win for <strong>Penn</strong><br />
<strong>State</strong> and end up with 11 points for the<br />
night.<br />
Three other Lady Lions registered in<br />
double figures. Cheryl Ellison led <strong>Penn</strong><br />
<strong>State</strong>, pumping in 21 points and pulling<br />
down 21 rebounds. Carol Walderman<br />
sunk 20 points as Louise Leimkuhler<br />
chipped in 18.<br />
<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> will battle Illinois <strong>State</strong><br />
tonight in the semi-finals. Illinois <strong>State</strong>,<br />
which beat Jackson <strong>State</strong> 82-56 last night ,<br />
boasts two impressive junior forwards:<br />
Cathy Boswell (6-2) and Debbie Benak<br />
(6-0).'<br />
problem for the Lions, but getting up on the court<br />
has — especially in the first half. <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> has<br />
lacked the inspiration and motivation to take<br />
command in the early going, as witnessed by its<br />
lethargic performance in the win Tuesday night<br />
over Lafayette.<br />
Hardly anyone, including Choice and <strong>Penn</strong><br />
<strong>State</strong> volunteer assistant coach Fletcher Gregory,<br />
has an explanation for it.<br />
"I don't know what the problem is," Gregory<br />
said. "If you ask each individual, I think he would<br />
probably tell you that he thought he was ready to<br />
play when he stepped onto the floor.<br />
"We just have to develop a 40-minute attitude,<br />
particularly in that first five, six minutes. In<br />
general, I think the guys are ready to play, but<br />
they're going to have to dig a little deeper."<br />
Depth is something that has helped the Lions to<br />
four wins (albeit unimpressive ones) in their first<br />
five games. For example, Lion forward Brian<br />
Dean came off the bench to score 16 points in the<br />
victory over Lafayette.<br />
Choice has also seen more playing time than<br />
Photo by Jams Burger<br />
After closing the regular season with a stunning 48-13 win over archrival Pittsburgh , moments such as <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> fullback Mike<br />
Meade's (38) failure to score on this play against Alabama seem to be fade from memory. The Lions, after working on<br />
conditioning this week, begin full-fledged preparation next week for their Fiesta Bowl encounter with Southern Cal on New<br />
Year's Day.<br />
he s normally accustomed to. He said he'll be<br />
ready to step in against Indiana , but SMU is a<br />
more immediate, and possibly, more pressing<br />
problem.<br />
"I think motivation won't be a problem for<br />
SMU," Choice said. "We're kind of getting keyed<br />
up for that game right now. We're looking forward<br />
to playing SMU, and SMU might even be a<br />
tougher team than Indiana."<br />
Led by transfer guard John Addison (18.4 points<br />
a game) , the Mustangs (3-2) have kicked up their<br />
heels to wins over Wisconsin-Oshkosh, Southwestern<br />
and Texas-Arlington. However, they played<br />
possibly their best ball in a 69-62 loss to Top 20ranked<br />
Alabama earlier this week.<br />
"The (<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>) coaches have scouted them<br />
and say they're a tougher team," said Choice,<br />
comparing this year's SMU team to last year's.<br />
"They're better all-around — intensity, quickness,<br />
everything."<br />
They may be better, but they're not any younger.<br />
According to Mustang assistant coach Vern<br />
Cohrn, SMU will start two freshmen and a sopho-<br />
more tonight.<br />
"We've got a lot of players who haven 't played<br />
that much basketball," Cohrn said. "<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> is<br />
always known for its pressure defense. We're<br />
going to have to play very well to be in the<br />
ballgame with them."<br />
Colorado <strong>State</strong> (2-2) also has shown marked<br />
improvement over last year's 3-24 season. The<br />
Rams sport a balanced attack, with guard Eddie<br />
Hughes (16.8 points per game) , center-forward<br />
Mark Steele (15 points, 7.5 rebounds) and forward<br />
Tim Murphy (14.8 points) leading the way.<br />
And then, there's Indiana, the sole possessor of<br />
all those championship banners and all that<br />
basketball fever. All of that rich tradition could be<br />
thrown in the Lions' faces Saturday night.<br />
There's at least one <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> player who<br />
thinks he can handle it.<br />
"Craig Buffie (a native of Bloomington) has<br />
been talking about it for quite a while," Gregory<br />
said. "I'm sure he's going to be ready. Hopefully!<br />
it's going to rub off and everybody will be in the<br />
right frame of mind."<br />
Lady Lions vault into season<br />
By KEITH GROLLER<br />
Daily Collegian Sports Writer<br />
Judi Avener scanned the spacious gymnastics room in<br />
the White Building yesterday afternoon, checking out<br />
each' of the eight girls on her women's squad.<br />
There was Marcy Levine, flopping to the mat after<br />
her uneven bars routine with a pleasant smile on her<br />
face.<br />
There was Heidi Anderson, meticulously working on<br />
the beam and concentrating as though it were a final<br />
exam and she needed an "A" to pass the course.<br />
•And there was Avener, shouting encouragement and<br />
instructions to her girls with enthusiasm and concern in<br />
her voice at the same time,<br />
„ Avener's Lady Lions open their season at 1 p.m.<br />
tomorrow at Clarion <strong>State</strong>, and the outlook, like the<br />
coach's voice, is filled with enthusiasm and concern.<br />
The enthusiasm stems from the team's talent. Any<br />
team with performers like Anderson and Levine has to<br />
be enthusiastic. But the concern comes from the fact<br />
that there are only eight girls on the squad.<br />
Eight on a basketball team is fine. Eight on a<br />
gymnastics squad means trouble.<br />
. "I feel like a football coach with just eleven players,"<br />
Avener said, during her team's workout yesterday. "I<br />
don't think we're going to be as strong a team this year<br />
as we have been in the past, simply because we don't<br />
have the depth."<br />
The team must avoid injuries. But that's about as<br />
easy as entering a <strong>State</strong> College night spot without an<br />
ID. It's an awfully tough task because injuries occur in<br />
gymnastics about as often as the Yankees change<br />
managers. Just about everyday.<br />
<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> has all ready suffered two crippling<br />
injuries. Both Margie Foster (torn ligament in her<br />
knee) and Patti Rice (dislocated elbow ) are lost for the<br />
season. So, it's understandable that Avener is very<br />
cautious about her team's chances this year.<br />
"We're not shooting for a national championship at<br />
this point," Avener said with a smile. "Right now our<br />
major goal is to be healthy. Secondly, we want consistency.<br />
And third, we'd like individual improvement."<br />
Avener has five gymnasts back from last year's team,<br />
which finished a disappointing fourth in' the AIAW<br />
national championships. Disappointing only because<br />
the Lady Lions won the title two of the previous three<br />
years and had beated eventual champion, Utah, in the<br />
dual meet season.<br />
Heading the list of returnees are Anderson and<br />
Levine.<br />
Anderson, a sophomore, won the AIAW floor exercise<br />
title last year as a freshman and according to Avener, is<br />
a much improved gymnast this year.<br />
"Heidi is a very gifted athlete, perhaps one of the best<br />
gymnasts in the country," Avener said. "It's too early<br />
to tell, but I think she's improved a great deal over last<br />
year. She looks good.<br />
"Her strong events have been the floor and the beam,<br />
but her bars and vault routines are much better.<br />
Improving in these events, particularly the vault, will<br />
make her a much stronger all-around gymnast."<br />
Levine, whose "happy-go-lucky" personality offsets<br />
the stern, serious atmosphere of the gym, is a veteran<br />
performer coming off a season which was dimmed<br />
somewhat by a cracked rib right before the nationals.<br />
But the senior is back at it for another season more<br />
talented and funnier than ever.<br />
"Marcy's great strength is her consistency," Avener<br />
said. "She's an aggressive, good competitor and on a<br />
team as small as ours, she comes in very handy. She<br />
also has quite a sense of humor, which helps the team,<br />
too."<br />
Other returners, Joanne Beltz, Linda Tardiff and<br />
Karen Polak will all be counted on as will newcomers,<br />
Joanna Sime, Cissy Chung and Debbie Williams.<br />
Sime participated in a meet against <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> last<br />
year as a member of the national Great Britain team.<br />
Sime was so impressed with the place that she decided<br />
to come to Happy Valley and is now a member of the<br />
Lady Lions.<br />
"She's a classy gymnast with a lot of international<br />
experience," Avener said. "She's consistent on all<br />
events, but we'll need her most in the floor exercise."<br />
Chung will be counted on in the vault, but because she<br />
doesn't have the private club expereince that most<br />
gymnasts have, she'll have to work hard to catch up<br />
with most of the girls.<br />
So will Williams, who was called out of retirement<br />
after the injuries to Foster and Rice. She was going to be<br />
the team's manager, but was asked to join the squad.<br />
She's been working hard to get back in shape, according<br />
to Avener, after three years away from competition.<br />
The team, as a whole, will be rounding into shape<br />
against Clarion , a meet which Avener looks forward to.<br />
Lions eye clash with USC<br />
By MIKE POORMAN<br />
Daily Collegian Sports Writer<br />
,<br />
If there was ever a time to overthrow <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>'s football<br />
program, it was the past week.<br />
The full-time assistant coaches'were on the road recruiting.<br />
Head coach Joe Paterno, after a bout with the bug last<br />
weekend, was in New York. Sean Farrell, everybody's AU-<br />
American guard, was in California , had come back, and then<br />
left for Houston. Only the part-time assistants and the players<br />
themselves remained.<br />
But there was no mutiny. Instead, the Nittany Lions went<br />
through two quiet days of light practice at the Indoor Sports<br />
Complex, concentrating mainly on conditioning!<br />
They did get to see a bit of the offensive and defensive<br />
formations Southern Cal is expected to use against them on<br />
Jan. 1 at the Fiesta Bowl in Tempe, Ariz.<br />
Still, Nittany Lion linebackers Matt Bradley and Ed Pryts<br />
couldn't wait to see how USC runs its Student Body Left and<br />
Student Body Right, so they made a special trip to the Nittany<br />
Lions' film room.<br />
"I don't think they've shown the films officially yet, but Ed<br />
and I went down to look at some," Bradley said. "They're<br />
definitely impressive.<br />
"And Marcus Allen is a great tailback. What more can be<br />
said about him? He won the Heisman Trophy, you can't say<br />
much more about the guy."<br />
That's if you can even find him. Allen hasn't been on the<br />
Southern Cal campus for almost a week.<br />
He was in New York last Saturday night for the syndicated<br />
Heisman Trophy show and earlier in the week he appeared on a<br />
network morning television show. And last night, Allen was<br />
officially awarded the Heisman by the Downtown Athletic Club<br />
at a black-tie affair at the New York Hilton.<br />
Until yesterday afternoon, when his plane flew into <strong>State</strong><br />
College from New York, Paterno had been on the go, too.<br />
He spent the latter part of last week at the National Collegiate<br />
Athletic Association convention in St. Louis. There, he helped<br />
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Joanne Beltz<br />
Chandler KOs Murata to retain WBA title<br />
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) - Jeff Chandler stopped<br />
challenger Eijiro Murata in the 13th round with two<br />
swift uppercuts last night to retain his World Boxing<br />
Association bantamweight title.<br />
Chandler knocked Murata to the canvas early in the<br />
13th round and later caught him off balance with a left<br />
hook before delivering the final blows.<br />
Referee Vincent Rainone stopped the fight at 1:52 into<br />
the round.<br />
Murata, 19-1T3, of Tokyo, relied heavily throughout the<br />
fight on body punches and a counterattacks against<br />
Chandler's st nging blows to the head.<br />
Chandler, 27-0-2, of Philadelphia, established himself<br />
in the third round but threw few combinations until the<br />
fifth , when he stung Murata with a right uppercut<br />
followed by a left hook. Murata responded each time<br />
with a flurry to the ribs.<br />
In the ninth round of the scheduled 15-rounder, Chandler,<br />
117'/4, threw himself off the ropes with a right to<br />
Murata's chin, then put a bruise under the Japanese<br />
fighter's left eye with a hook.<br />
A powerful right to the jaw sent Murata , 117%, reeling<br />
17<br />
The Daily Collegian<br />
Friday, Dec. 11<br />
forward.<br />
By the 11th, Murata appeared sluggish and started<br />
clutching.<br />
Chandler's victory came in his fourth defense of the<br />
title he took from Julian Solis a year ago in Miami.<br />
Before the fight, Chandler said his earlier fight with<br />
Murata left him embarrassed.<br />
Murata had fought Chandler to a dra w April 5 in<br />
Tokyo.<br />
lead the fight to cut the number of Division I-A footbail schools.<br />
Among those eventually dropped from the big-time football<br />
world were the Ivy League colleges, which award financial aid<br />
based on need rather than athletic ability.<br />
"The Ivy League is in another world, all by their own; I'm in<br />
the real world," Paterno, a graduate of Ivy member Brown<br />
<strong>University</strong>, had said.<br />
An illness sidelined Paterno for the next few days, but after<br />
recuperating he headed to New York, where he attended the<br />
induction ceremonies at the National Football Foundation and<br />
Hall of Fame dinner. Wednesday at another dinner, he received<br />
the Lambert Trophy, awarded to <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> as Eastern<br />
football's top team.<br />
Farrell came back from filming a Bob Hope television<br />
special in California in time to make practice Tuesday, but was<br />
in Houston last night for the Lombardi Award presentation.<br />
The Lions will settle down to their normal practice routine<br />
next week, practicing nearly every day until Dec. 22.<br />
"Next week, we'll get more in-depth, more into it," Bradley<br />
said. "It'll be all USC and nothing else. It'll be more of our old<br />
practice; an hour and a half, two-hour practice."<br />
After a four-day break for Christmas, the <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> players<br />
will regroup Dec. 26 and fly to Phoenix. They'll stay in<br />
Scottsdale and practice up until the day before the game.<br />
Southern Cal had the entire last week off and will workout<br />
next week for three days, beginning Wednesday. The Trojans<br />
will then take off a week for final exams and Christmas, before<br />
arriving in suburban Tempe Dec. 26.<br />
NOTES: Offensive guard Dave Laube will not play in the<br />
Fiesta Bowl. He is ineligible...Also missing from the Nittany<br />
Lion roster will be defensive back Guiseppe Harris, who has<br />
left the team for personal reasons:..A limited number of copies<br />
of <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>'s Fiesta Bowl Media Guide are available for $4<br />
(which includes first-class postage), from the <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong><br />
Athletic Department, 234 Rec Hall, <strong>University</strong> Park, Pa. Make<br />
checks payable to "The <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania <strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong>." The<br />
guide will be mailed via first class on Dec. 18.
18—The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. 11. 1981<br />
Women spikers look to be spoilers<br />
But enter NCAA match against Pacific 'realistically 7<br />
By PETE WALDRON<br />
Daily Collegian Sports Writer<br />
Last year at the NCAA men's basketball<br />
championships, St. Joseph's upset<br />
No. 1 ranked DePaul and nixed the Blue<br />
Demons chances of winning the 1981<br />
national championship.<br />
;Women's volleyball coach Russ Rose is<br />
hoping the Lady Lions will be the spoiler<br />
for the rest of this year's NCAA women's<br />
volleyball championships. Especially at<br />
7 (EST) tomorrow night when the Lady<br />
Lions tackle fourth-seeded <strong>University</strong> of<br />
Pacific at Northwestern.<br />
•"Tournament time is upset time,"<br />
Rose said. "Last year St. Joes defeated<br />
DfePaul in the NCAA basketball<br />
championships. Hopefully, we are going<br />
to be the St. Joes of women's volleyball.<br />
;"We have to stay together and serve<br />
tough — and.we're capable of doing that.<br />
If, we serve easy, they are going to beat<br />
us because their offense is great. We<br />
have to hope we can control their performance.<br />
A lot will come down to serving<br />
and passing.<br />
"We have to hope we can control their<br />
performance,". Rose said. "If we play<br />
well we are going to make Pacific work."<br />
:But Pacific is no pansy team — and<br />
Rose knows that. They play the game<br />
yearround in California and Rose said<br />
this keeps the Lady Tigers' competitive<br />
edge up.<br />
The Lady Tigers, three time NorCal<br />
Conference champions and 24-11 this<br />
season, were runner-ups in the national<br />
tournament last year to Southern California.<br />
Last week they upset third-ranked<br />
UCLA, 15-13, 15-7, 15-4, in the first three<br />
games. Rose was not surprised they<br />
demolished UCLA. He knows they have<br />
talent — lots of it.<br />
With a list headed by 6-2 All-America<br />
middle-blocker Jayne Gibson and top<br />
freshman recruits Jan Saunders (5-9<br />
setter ) and Linda Vaughn (5-10 setter) ,<br />
no wonder Rose believes Pacific should<br />
be the No. 2 or 3 team in the nation.<br />
glMany<br />
T» fld,< '<br />
Lady Lion Lori Barberich (left ) and the women's volleyball team hope to spoil the <strong>University</strong> of Pacific's quest for the NCAA<br />
women's volleyball championship. <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> takes on Pacific at 7. (EST) tomorrow night at Northwestern. •<br />
"We cannot key in on any one player,"<br />
Rose said. "Pacific's got balance, depth<br />
— he's (Pacific coach, Dr. Terry Liskevych)<br />
got everything. I know we are the<br />
underdogs. We are up against a pretty<br />
formidable foe and it is going to take the<br />
best game of the year to beat them.<br />
"They are capable of winning the national<br />
championship — we are not. We<br />
may be the top team in the East, but they<br />
are one of the top teams in the nation."<br />
Could this be true? Russell D. Rose,<br />
proud of his winning traditions in Eastern<br />
women's volleyball, going into a<br />
match pessimistically?<br />
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Battered icers to face De aware<br />
By PAUL ALEXANDER<br />
Daily Collegian Sports Writer<br />
A battered and bruised men's ice hockey<br />
team will travel to the <strong>University</strong> of<br />
Delaware tomorrow to meet a team<br />
that's been playing excellent hockey.<br />
The Lions will be without the services<br />
of their second leading goal scorer, Brad<br />
Rush. He suffered a fractured right hand<br />
against Cortland <strong>State</strong> last weekend.<br />
They'll also be playing without defenseman<br />
Dave Hornack and left wing<br />
Wayne Powers. Hornack has been hampered<br />
by a pinched nerve in his neck and<br />
Powers has strained ligaments in his<br />
knee. Both players have been large contributers<br />
to the Lions' impressive 8-2<br />
record.<br />
Aside from coming off a very demanding<br />
weekend with Cortland <strong>State</strong> —where<br />
dental work and stitches were common,<br />
along with one fractured bone — the<br />
Lions will be facing a team that soundly<br />
beat <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> rival Villanova and lost<br />
by one goal in overtime to'Navy.<br />
"Delaware is traditionally tough at<br />
home," Lion tri-captain Joe Battista<br />
said. "We haven't played them for two<br />
years and they were tough then. Howev-<br />
er, this year's team is supposed to be<br />
their toughest in a while."<br />
A bright spot for the Lions is the fact<br />
that their most productive line of Toby<br />
Ritner, Joe Grainda and Matt Glass is<br />
healthy and, according to Glass, the line<br />
has worked well together this week in<br />
practice.<br />
Grainda leads the team in goals with 11<br />
and also leads the team in total points<br />
with 23. Ritner and Rush are the second<br />
leading goal-getters with nine apiece.<br />
The Lions as a team have outscored<br />
their opponents 67-43, an average of 6.7<br />
goals for per game and 4.3 goals against.<br />
Despite their average margin of victory,<br />
the 4.3 goals against average does indicate<br />
that the Lions have been rather<br />
suspect on defense.<br />
"In order to beat Delaware we're going<br />
to have to play a better overall game<br />
defensively," Glass said. "That doesn't<br />
just mean the defensemen. The offense<br />
has to get back more effectively and we<br />
have to have a man in the outer slot.<br />
"We've also been working on stopping<br />
the opposing team from executing its<br />
breakout play so easily. It seems we're<br />
not getting enough pressure out of our<br />
forechecking. We have to bottle up Delaware<br />
in its own end."<br />
Lion head coach Jon Shellington has<br />
been forced to fill some vacancies created<br />
by the injuries. Roger Furce will<br />
occupy Rush's left wing spot alongside<br />
Clark Dexter and Norm Jacobs, and<br />
freshman Bill Mayer will play a regular<br />
shift on defense.<br />
"I've been stressing technique in practice<br />
and Larry (Rocha, Lion assistant<br />
coach) has been drilling them physically,"<br />
Shellington said. "We're still not in<br />
shape after that two week lay-off over<br />
Thanksgiving.<br />
"I also implemented two new options<br />
to our power play. I'm hoping that they<br />
will pay off against Delaware."<br />
"Our pride was a little hurt last weekend<br />
in that second game with Cortland<br />
<strong>State</strong> (a 9-4 loss)," Shellington added,<br />
"but we worked on those mistakes and<br />
have more or less got the fine tuning<br />
readjusted."<br />
The Lions won't return to the Indoor<br />
Sports Complex until after Christmas<br />
break, but they'll be home to stay at that<br />
point. <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> will play 10 consecutive<br />
home games starting Jan. 8.<br />
Lady swimmers on the road for<br />
By CHRIS WIGHTMAN<br />
Daily Collegian Sports Writer<br />
Senior Sandy Bizal, who has been hampered recently by<br />
arthritis in .her elbow, will not be in the pool tonight at<br />
Princeton when the women's swim team goes against last<br />
year's Eastern champion, Princeton <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Tri-captain Bizal, an Ail-American for the Lady Lions, was<br />
kept out of last week's PSU Relays because of the injury, which<br />
her doctor diagnosed as either arthritis or a broken piece of<br />
cartilage.<br />
"The doctor told me to stay out of the water until it gets<br />
better," Bizal said. "I've had this problem ever since childhood<br />
and it usually comes and goes. Right now it's hanging on longer<br />
than usual. I thought it would never be like this."<br />
Bizal, who is on a therapy program for her elbow, said the<br />
swelling is going down and that she is getting a better range of<br />
movement in her elbow.<br />
"I'm starting to feel better already," she said optimistically.<br />
Joining Bizal on the doubtful list is freshman Sue Beauchamp,<br />
who swims the breaststroke and is in the individual<br />
medley for the Lady Lions. She is currently having knee<br />
problems.<br />
However, sophomore Cindy Post, who was also sidelined for<br />
the relays, will be back in the lineup for Princeton and the Lady<br />
2<br />
Lions' meet at Villanova tomorrow afternoon.<br />
"Cindy Post will definitely swim this weekend," said <strong>Penn</strong><br />
<strong>State</strong> coach Bob Krimmel. "She's looked good in practice all<br />
week."<br />
Krimmel, who said the team had to work on several things<br />
this week if it is going to beat Princeton, was generally pleased<br />
with the way practices went the past week.<br />
"Practice went very well this week," Krimmel said. "We've<br />
had good workouts every day."<br />
Krimmel also said the Lady Lions are very excited about<br />
traveling to a meet for a change.<br />
"We've been swimming in this same pool since December 3,<br />
and the girls are very eager to travel," he said. "Plus a lot of<br />
the girls' parents will be making either the Princeton meet or<br />
the Villanova meet. So we'll have a big following."<br />
However, the'Lady Lions will need more than a big following<br />
to beat Princeton, a team Krimmel said is difficult to accurately<br />
assess.<br />
"They had a meet last Saturday," Krimmel said, "but their<br />
swimmers only swam twice, so it's difficult to understand their<br />
times. (Princeton coach) Jane Tyler is an excellent coach and<br />
always comes up with surprises."<br />
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U-219<br />
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UIIHIR
20—The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. 11 1981<br />
U.S. set to open quest<br />
for 2 7th Davis Cup win<br />
By BOB GREENE<br />
AP Sports Writer<br />
CINCINNATI (AP) - John McEnroe<br />
meets Guillermo Vilas in the opening<br />
match 6f the Davis Cup finals at Riverfront<br />
Coliseum today, and U.S. Captain<br />
Arthur Ashe couldn't be more pleased.<br />
Roscoe Tanner takes on Argentina's<br />
Jose Luis Clerc in the second singles<br />
match Friday. Tomorrow, McEnroe and<br />
Peter Fleming will team up in doubles<br />
against Vilas and Clerc, with Sunday's<br />
final two singles matches pitting McEnroe<br />
against Clerc and Tanner against<br />
Vilas.<br />
.."It makes it easier for Roscoe," Ashe<br />
said of the first-match pairing of McEnroe,<br />
the world's top-ranked player, and<br />
sixth-ranked Vilas.<br />
If McEnroe wins as expected, Tanner<br />
would not be faced with having to win his<br />
match against Clerc to even the series.<br />
And, even if McEnroe should lose, Tanner,<br />
ranked 11th in the world, doesn't<br />
have the added pressure of starting the<br />
three-day series.<br />
Vilas holds a career winning edge over<br />
McEnroe, 6-5. But McEnroe holds a 2-1<br />
edge over the sixth-ranked Argentine on<br />
the semi-fast indoor carpet, the surface<br />
that will be used here.<br />
And Vilas also has been bothered with<br />
a' sore throat and cold because of the<br />
near-freezing temperatures and snowy<br />
weather in this Ohio River city.<br />
• "It's better for him than for me," Vilas<br />
said of the carpet surface. "I will have to<br />
serve and volley more, attack more."<br />
Vilas has said that he gives Argentina<br />
a 30 percent chance of winning the coveted<br />
Davis Cup for the first time. The<br />
United <strong>State</strong>s, playing in the finals for<br />
the 52nd time, is going after its 27th,,title.<br />
' L"We lost almost all of our matches<br />
(against McEnroe and Tanner ) on faster<br />
surfaces," Vilas said, explaining his reasoning<br />
for making the U.S. such a heavy<br />
favorite. "That's what the history says,<br />
but we are here to change it."<br />
ilf the finals were being played on clay,<br />
chilled y?<br />
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the slow surface preferred by the Argentinians,<br />
then he would give the Americans<br />
only a 30 percent chance of winning.<br />
In their last Davis Cup meeting, Argentina<br />
defeated the United <strong>State</strong>s 4-1 last<br />
year in Buenos Aires on clay. Argentina<br />
also won at home in 1977, while the<br />
United <strong>State</strong>s has captured all four meets<br />
played between the two countries in the<br />
United <strong>State</strong>s.<br />
"The crowd in Argentina (last year)<br />
just felt like anything they did was okay<br />
because it helped their team to win,"<br />
McEnroe remembered. "You just<br />
couldn't believe how it was. The crowds<br />
in the United <strong>State</strong>s aren't at all like that.'<br />
McEnroe, the 22-year-old left-hander<br />
who captured both Wimbledon and the<br />
U.S. Open this year, has a 16-3 record in<br />
Davis Cup play. Tanner is 9-3.<br />
Behind the New Yorker, the United<br />
<strong>State</strong>s has advanced to the finals by<br />
beating Mexico 3-2, defending champion<br />
Czechoslovakia 4-1 and Australia 5-0.<br />
Argentina has eliminated West Germany<br />
3-2, Romania 3-2 and Great Britain<br />
4-1.<br />
P3 CjVUrvSs wear<br />
w<br />
Vilas has won 36 of his 43 Davis Cup<br />
matches, while Clerc has a record of 13-7<br />
in this team competition.<br />
Ashe named Tanner to the U.S. squad<br />
when his first choice, Jimmy Connors,<br />
turned down a spot on the team. Connors<br />
broke his self-imposed Davis Cup exile to<br />
help the Americans stop Czechoslovakia<br />
last July in New York.<br />
Asked why Connors had decided not to<br />
play in the finals, Ashe said the world's<br />
third-ranked player said "he was getting<br />
ready for the (Volvo Grand Prix) Masters"<br />
which will be held in New'York in<br />
January.<br />
"Fair enough,' I said. 'Good luck in<br />
the Masters,'" Ashe said he told Connors.<br />
"We would be marginally strong with<br />
Connors," the American captain admitted.<br />
"We wanted Jimmy to play.<br />
"Now we're a great team. With McEnroe<br />
and Connors, we would have been<br />
awesome."<br />
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Wrestlers' loss a bitter pill<br />
LEE DeORIO<br />
Daily Collegian Sports Writer<br />
<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>'s 19-17 setback at-Michigan<br />
on Wednesday was very difficult<br />
for the Nittany Lions to swallow. It was<br />
a heartbreaking and controversial loss<br />
— one that will not be easily forgotten.<br />
They led 17-13 going into the final<br />
match, but heavyweight Jim Sleeper<br />
was disqualified for stalling.<br />
The Nittany Lions have no time to<br />
mourn over their defeat, however.<br />
This weekend they travel to Lock Haven<br />
to wrestle in the rugged Mat Town<br />
U.S.A. Tournament, which will feature<br />
top teams such as Tennessee, Bloomsburg<br />
and Michigan <strong>State</strong>. ¦<br />
The Spartan wrestlers, in particular,<br />
better be aware of <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> because<br />
the Lions are very apt to mangle any<br />
opponent even vastly related to Michigan.<br />
The controversy swirling around the<br />
meet with the Wolverines stems from<br />
the results of the last two matches,<br />
between <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>'s Joel Johnson and<br />
Michigan's Pat McKay at 190 and<br />
Sleeper and the Wolverine's Eric Klasson,<br />
and both involved stalling.<br />
At 190 pounds, McKay took a 2-0 lead<br />
and was riding Johnson effectively —<br />
perhaps too effectively.<br />
"All of a sudden, McKay is trying to<br />
hold on instead of working for the fall,"<br />
<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> head coach Rich Lorenzo<br />
said. "Joel stops for lO.seconds 1 and<br />
gets warned for stalling. The ref didn't<br />
call it like this for the first eight<br />
matches.<br />
"He called the match for the first<br />
eight weight classes one way and then,<br />
for the last two, he calls them completely<br />
opposite. I don't like to complain<br />
about referees because I believe<br />
you control your own destiny, but this<br />
guy was totally inconsistent."<br />
The inconsistency became evident<br />
when Johnson took McKay down in the<br />
third period, and the Wolverine decided<br />
to take a breather.<br />
"McKay didn't even try to get out,"<br />
Lorenzo said. "The ref let him go a<br />
minute and 20 seconds without warning<br />
him. It was his (McKay) first<br />
match back after an injury and he was<br />
really tired."<br />
McKay hung on to defeat Johnson, 3-<br />
2 and cut <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>'s lead to four<br />
points heading into the heavyweight<br />
division.<br />
In the meet's final match, Sleeper<br />
was warned four times, which cost him<br />
four valuable points, until with only 17<br />
seconds left in the match, he was<br />
warned a fifth time and disqualified. It<br />
was then that Lorenzo went into his<br />
Billy Martin imitation.<br />
"I blew my stack because I don't like<br />
being robbed." Lorenzo said. "I wasn't<br />
angry so much for the referee disqualifying<br />
Sleeper, but for not penalizing<br />
McKay. He was doing the same thing<br />
Sleeper was."<br />
However, Lorenzo said the Nittany<br />
Lions did' not lose because of the officiating.<br />
"The referee doesn't win or lose<br />
matches," Lorenzo said. "It shouldn't<br />
have come down to a point where the<br />
ref had an opportunity to control the<br />
match."<br />
The turning point in the match may<br />
have come at 167 pounds when John<br />
Hanrahan struggled to a 4-1 decision<br />
over Michigan's Scott Rechsteiner.<br />
"John lost his concentration and we<br />
needed a superior decision from him,"<br />
Lorenzo said. " I think maybe him and<br />
Jim (Sleeper) were a little tight. Being<br />
seniors, they felt like they had to carry<br />
the team on their shoulders."<br />
The Nittany Lions now must put the<br />
Michigan meet in the past, or better<br />
yet, use it in a positive manner.<br />
"The team was upset but there's<br />
nothing you can do about it," Lorenzo<br />
said. "We have to learn from this and<br />
make sure the refs don't have an<br />
opportunity to control a match."<br />
For the Lock Haven tournament, the<br />
Nittany Lions will field a lineup of Carl<br />
DeStefanis (118), Scott Lynch (126),<br />
Bill Marino (134), Gary Kaschak<br />
(142),Eric Childs (150) , Eric Brugel<br />
(158), Hanrahan (167) , Bob Harr (177),<br />
Johnson (190) and Sleeper (heavyweight).<br />
"It's a very difficult tournament,"<br />
Lorenzo said. "It will be a battleground<br />
with a lot of great competition."<br />
The tournament begins with quarterfinal<br />
action at 11 tomorrow morning<br />
and semi-finals at 7:30 tomorrow<br />
night. The finals will start at 7 Sunday<br />
night.<br />
Eagles, Steelers to come up short<br />
By BRUCE LOWITT<br />
AP Sports Writer<br />
Dallas, Cincinnati and Tampa Bay each need only one<br />
more victory to clinch a division title in the 15th<br />
weekend of the National Football League season. The<br />
Cowboys and Bengals will get theirs, the Buccaneers<br />
won't.<br />
Philadelphia still has the best defense in the league,<br />
but it's going up against one of the best offenses. And it's<br />
doing it in Texas, where the Cowboys rarely lose. And<br />
the Eagles have lost three in a row, while Dallas has<br />
won three straight. Stick with the streaks.<br />
Cincinnati and Pittsburgh will have their starting<br />
quarterbacks riding the bench, but that won't be the<br />
difference. The Bengals' defense has been far superior<br />
to Pittsburgh's.<br />
,<br />
Its a<br />
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San Diego has. the best offense in the league. Dan<br />
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bombs to keep the Chargers' slim title hopes alive.<br />
Last week's record against the point spread: a disastrous<br />
2-11. For the season: 97-96. This week's picks<br />
(home teams capitalized) :<br />
- DALLAS minus 3'/2 over Philadelphia: The Eagles<br />
will slow down Tony Dorsett, but they won't stop him.<br />
And he'll catch a couple from well-rested Danny White.<br />
Philadelphia, particularly Ron Jaworski, seems unable<br />
to shake out of the doldrums.<br />
Cincinnati even over PITTSBURGH: The key to this<br />
one could be Pete Johnson. If the Bengals can spring<br />
him loose up the middle a couple of times, the Pittsburgh<br />
defense will have serious problems dealing with<br />
him as well as Cincinnati's receivers.<br />
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-<br />
San Diego minus 3 over TAMPA BAY: The Chargers<br />
have not only the best passing game around but the<br />
worst pass defense. The guess is that the former,<br />
bolstered by a couple of Chuck Muncie bursts, will<br />
overcome the latter.<br />
CLEVELAND plus 2% over New York Jets: The Jets<br />
never have beaten the Browns. Let's make believe<br />
they're playing Seattle again. UPSET SPECIAL.<br />
Denver minus 9% over Seattle: The Broncos, unbeaten,<br />
at home this year, are already a mile high. They'll<br />
bring Dave Krieg down to earth.<br />
Buffalo minus 3% over NEW ENGLAND: The Patriots<br />
are making a run for the Nd.l draft choice. They<br />
won't catch Baltimore this week. BEST BET.<br />
SOTTOTOTOCTWTOW «WTOSTOS «TOTO«STO;reS«OTWW OTWfeTO^SM<br />
The <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong> Choir<br />
and the<br />
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present:<br />
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Sunday<br />
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STOWWWWW TOWTOWTOTOWW WMCTMWTOTOWTOSOTMWSWWS'
National League approves Phils sale<br />
G//e«?' first goal to negotiate deals with Schmidt, Rose<br />
HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (AP ) - The National League<br />
has bestowed its official blessing on the $30,175<br />
million sale of the Philadelphia Phillies to a group<br />
headed by Bill Giles. '<br />
' -<br />
The quick, 11-0 vote came yesterday at the request<br />
of former owner Ruly Carpenter during baseball's<br />
annual winter meetings here. The deal is to be closed<br />
officially Monday when the check is turned over in<br />
Philadelphia.<br />
"I hope we can carry on the tradition of the<br />
Carpenter family, and my father," said Giles, a 47year-old<br />
Rochester, N.Y., native whose late father,<br />
Warren, was president of the National League.<br />
"It's a great honor to run a ball club and we will run<br />
the best we can afford, and let me emphasize 'we can<br />
afford,' " added Giles.<br />
Executive vice president of the Phillies since 1972,<br />
Giles heads the limited partnership that bought the<br />
team in October. /<br />
After the approval, Carpenter said he felt the same<br />
way he did when he offered the club for sale last year<br />
during spring training — tired of the bickering with<br />
the players, fed up with the escalating salary struc-<br />
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"It's hard to be part of something for 38 years and stocl<br />
all of a sudden say you're getting out," Carpenter shar<br />
said. "But if the club had to be sold, my family is —<br />
pleased that Bill Giles was able to form a group to Dre\<br />
buy it. Hedl<br />
Giles said his first priority was signing third priir<br />
baseman Mike Schmidt, the league's Most Valuable relal<br />
Player for the second straight year who has one year su]u<br />
left on a six-year pact. _<br />
The team will also have to negotiate to'keep Pete<br />
^rot Rose in a Phillies' uniform in 1984.<br />
Jr ,<br />
The Cincinnati-based Taft owns the largest block of<br />
stock, but none of the partners owns 50 percent of the<br />
shares.<br />
— J.D.B. Associates, a partnership of which John<br />
Drew Betz is the limited partner and Robert D.<br />
Hedberg the general partner. Betz heads a company<br />
primarily engaged in industrial water treatment and<br />
related chemical areas. Hedberg is a financial consultant.<br />
— Tri-Play Associates, a partnership of three<br />
brothers, Alexander K. Buck, James Mahlon Buck<br />
Jr. and Williams Clifton Buck, principal executive<br />
"(Rose) definitely does want to play. He wants to Qofficers break Ty Cobb's record (for the most hits ever by a ^<br />
of private venture capital investment compa-<br />
major leaguer), and I'd just as soon it happen in a ^^<br />
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— A subsidiary of the Taft Broadcasting Co., a sity and Widener College, former owner of pro<br />
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22—The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. 11, 1981<br />
Ebert s talent hidden<br />
behind top Lion divers<br />
By GREG LODER<br />
Daily Collegian Sports Writer<br />
When the men's diving team is<br />
mentioned, the names Dale Dmitrzak<br />
and Mike Cecatiello are sure to<br />
be the topic of conversation.<br />
And why not, the duo defeated<br />
some of the most prestigous divers<br />
in the East to win the diving competition<br />
at the <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> Relay Carnival<br />
last weekend.<br />
But many do not realize the men's<br />
diving team has a third member —<br />
freshman Jim Ebert. Diving coach<br />
Bob Goldberg believes that Ebert<br />
soon may have just as much potential<br />
as Dmitrzak and Cecatiello.<br />
"He has come a long way this<br />
fall," Goldberg said. "He has quite a<br />
bit of potential and his dives show<br />
constant improvement.<br />
"In the beginmg he had to spend<br />
some time learning the dives. He<br />
will just have to gain some experience."<br />
Ebert said that sometimes he does<br />
feel overshadowed by the talented<br />
Cecatiello and Dmitrzak, but that<br />
the two have been a big help.<br />
"Sometimes it bothers me,',' Ebert<br />
said about being overshadowed.<br />
"They are super divers and I look up<br />
to them. They often tell me that they<br />
were in the same position as I am<br />
last year."<br />
Goldberg said that the situation is<br />
understandable for the freshmen.<br />
"It's a normal feeling, but it<br />
should work its way out," the coach<br />
said. "Jim doesn't have the experience<br />
of Mike and Dale. They felt the<br />
same way at one time."<br />
Ebert has adjusted well to the new<br />
competition. He finished third in the<br />
one-meter dive against Villanova on<br />
Wednesday and was even in first<br />
place after the required dives were<br />
completed.<br />
Ebert and "the other two divers"<br />
will be home this weekend as <strong>Penn</strong><br />
<strong>State</strong> faces St. Bonaventure at 2<br />
tommorrow afternoon.<br />
Although the Lions are coming off<br />
a defeat suffered Wednesday night<br />
at Villanova (71-42) , men's swimming<br />
coach Lou MacNeill insists<br />
that the meet was one of the best he<br />
has seen all year.<br />
"I am very happy about the<br />
meet," MacNeill said. "Right down<br />
the line we had good swims. We<br />
don't care about the points."<br />
MacNeill in his seventeen yearsat<br />
<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> has always kept this<br />
philosophy that winning dual meets<br />
are not important.<br />
What is important in MacNeill's<br />
mind is that his swimmers record<br />
the best times that they can, every<br />
time they go out.<br />
"What we are looking for is the<br />
best times in Easterns," he said.<br />
"We pay no attention to the other<br />
team in the dual meets. Winning or<br />
losing has nothing to do with our<br />
program."<br />
As for tommorrow's meet, MacNeill<br />
does not see <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> as having<br />
much of a chance to win.<br />
"St. Bonaventure will do everything<br />
they can to beat us. They are<br />
trying to become a force in Eastern<br />
swimming. Their program has higher<br />
priorities than ours does."<br />
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B<br />
Young Lion gymmen on road again<br />
By MARIA MARTINO<br />
Daily Collegian Sports Writer<br />
With a troop of new recruits, transfers,<br />
and returnees, the men's gymnastics<br />
team will enter its second invitational of<br />
the season this weekend.<br />
Though it's only a preseason meet and<br />
will not count in the final standings', the<br />
Farmingdale Invitational (today and tomorrow<br />
in Long Island, N.Y.) will give<br />
the Lions another chance to prove themselves.<br />
Last week, the Lions finished sixth at<br />
the Windy City Invitational in Chicago<br />
against just about the best dozen teams<br />
in the country. It was <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>'s first<br />
tournament, unlike the other teams<br />
which already had three meets under<br />
their belts. But things should be different<br />
this weekend.<br />
"It's no where near the level (of competition)<br />
of last weeekend," <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong><br />
coach Karl Schwenzfeier said. "But last<br />
week was really wild. Every top team in<br />
the country except UCLA and Arizona<br />
<strong>State</strong> were there.<br />
"We've gone to Farmingdale every<br />
year since I've been here. It's never been<br />
a roll-over-and-die situation, but we hope<br />
to win. We always want to win."<br />
The competition this weekend will give<br />
the Lions a breather — but not a big one.<br />
Although it is not defending NCAA champion<br />
Nebraska, Southern Connecticut has<br />
been ranked as high as third and Temple<br />
has acquired many recruits that make it<br />
a much improved team/ And Farmingdale<br />
has consistently been ranked first or<br />
second among the junior colleges.<br />
Schwenzfeier said it will be "a little<br />
easier for the individuals, too. That<br />
seems like quite an understatement<br />
when you consider that Lion captain<br />
Randy Jepson beat two-time NCAA<br />
champion Jim Hartung, from Nebraska ,<br />
on still rings last week.<br />
"Hopefully, we'll be able, to see that<br />
occur again," Schwenzfeier said. "Bill<br />
Stanley should do well on the pommel<br />
horse, too."<br />
Junior Kenn Viscardi will not be com:<br />
peting due to knee injury suffered during<br />
a dismount in his floor exercise at last<br />
week's finals.<br />
"We expected that," Schwenzfeier<br />
said. "It's coming along fine but we want<br />
to give it plenty of time to heal.<br />
"Gregg Simon's going to have to stay<br />
away from the leg events, like the vault<br />
and the floor exercise, because he<br />
sprained his knee, too. We want to be<br />
very, very careful about it."<br />
Simon was vaulting before the Thanksgiving<br />
break and jammed his knee a"nd<br />
couldn't compete last weekend.<br />
Farmingdale was the Lions' first outing<br />
last year and they scored.254 points —<br />
10 points less than they did this year<br />
without the services of Simon.<br />
But sometimes it's best to work your<br />
way up and use meets like Farmingdale<br />
to get your feet wet. At least, that's what<br />
the Lion coach wants his freshmen to do.<br />
"Steve Friedman was the New Jersey<br />
state champ last year and this will be the<br />
first time he's competing with us,"<br />
Schwenzfeier said."Steve was 30th in the<br />
Junior Olympics and in the upper 10 to 15<br />
of all seniors. Terry Bartlett, of course,<br />
was first."<br />
Bartlett, the top freshman recruit in<br />
the country, has won both the British and<br />
the American Junior National titles in<br />
the past two years. Since he strained his<br />
back in the preliminaries last week and<br />
has been restricted in practice this week,<br />
Farmingdale will be his first real test.<br />
Junior transfer, Tom Ladman, fell off<br />
the horse in Chicago and still received a<br />
9.0. Schwenzfeier said he is looking forward<br />
to seeing his entire, routine in competition.<br />
• /- . . '<br />
Likewise, he said that when Tini Darling,<br />
a transfer from the <strong>University</strong> of<br />
Oregon, hits his routine, he'll be excellent.<br />
, . '<br />
Even with all this fresh talent,<br />
Schwenzfeier doesn't expect to unseat<br />
Nebraska as NCAA champs just yet.<br />
"I think we'll make a jump to third this<br />
year and make a run for the top in '83,"<br />
he said. "Of course, we like to win all the<br />
time, but in gymnastics, yoii have to<br />
work your way up."<br />
Garret looks for Wharton to lead at invite<br />
By MICHAEL FELICI<br />
Daily Collegian Sports Writer<br />
Nittany Lion fencing coach Mac Garret has a pool<br />
cleaner, an older sister and last year's team captain,<br />
Don Lear, to thank for one of his top sabre fencers, Paul<br />
Wharton. •<br />
Wharton and his teamates travel this 'Weekend to<br />
Lafayette for a four-way meet against the Leopards,<br />
Rutgers and Pace.<br />
But back to the pool cleaner. "Our high school fencing<br />
coach worked on our pool the' summer before I entered<br />
high school and since I was looking for a winter sport he<br />
suggested fencing," Wharton said.<br />
"Since I couldn't hit the outside shot in basketball and<br />
didn't want to wrestle, I gave fencing a try."<br />
Wharton played soccer in the fall and was a sprint<br />
runner for the track team in the spring.<br />
UNIVERSITY CALENDAR<br />
SPECIAL EVENTS<br />
Friday-Sunday, December 11 13<br />
i<br />
Friday, December 11<br />
Sports: P.S. Squash Club Insilco Tournament, Rec Hall. Registration: 865-5481<br />
or 865-7491. Through Dec. 13.<br />
Un-Common Holiday Buffet, 6:30 p.m., 102 Kern.<br />
Cinematheque, "Eraserhead," 7 and 9 p.m., 121 Sparks Also Dec. 12<br />
Interlandia folk dancing, 7:30 p.m., HUB Ballroom.<br />
Astronomy Open House, 8 p.m., 6th floor , Davey Lab. If overcast-Dec. 12<br />
Saturday, December 12<br />
Christmas Party for Children, noon to 3 p.m., Assembly Km., Walnut BIdg<br />
Chinese Student Assoc., Film Series, 1:30 p.m., 112 Kern.<br />
Sports: Swimming (men) vs. St. Bonaventure, 2 p.m.<br />
Korean Students meeting, 2-5 p.m., 320-21 HUB.<br />
Francd-Cinema, Truffaut, Jules and Jim, 7 arid 9 p.m., 112 Kern. Also Dec. 14<br />
International Coffee House, 8 p.m., Kern.<br />
Christmas Music Festival, 8:30 p.m., Eisenhower Aud. Free.<br />
Sunday, December 13<br />
Contemporary Dance Compa ny 1 30 and 4 p.m., White Bldg Dance Theatre<br />
Holiday Festival VIII, Christmas Caroling Around Campus, 8 p.m., Eisenhower<br />
Auditorium. •<br />
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My older sister and her boyfriend were both fencers<br />
and Don was the captain of my high school team ," said<br />
the sophomore from Wyckoff , N.J. "So I had a lot of<br />
contacts." ¦ <<br />
Wharton was ready to give up on fencing that freshman<br />
year to perform in the school's musical, but<br />
encouragement from his coach and Lear in addition to a<br />
first-place finish in a New Jersey fencing competition<br />
for freshmen kept him on the team. .<br />
"That victory was a real ego booster," Wharton said.<br />
"I couldn't believe I could be that good."<br />
•Garret said that Wharton has been coming along<br />
exceptionally well this year. His 12-6 record, which<br />
includes the <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> and Temple Opens, places him<br />
third in victory percentage behind Joe Hayes and Bruce<br />
Capin. Wharton's career meet record of 27-3 (90 per-<br />
cent) puts him atop the Lion career victory list based on<br />
percentage. , s- ..<br />
"Paul's determination and his unusual long, lunge,<br />
which gives him the ability to reach his opponent at a<br />
great distance, is his greatest asset," Garret said.<br />
"He's also very aggressive. Put all these factors together<br />
and Paul becomes a dangerous competitor,."<br />
Garret doesn't expect any problems from Lafayette<br />
or Pace, but feels Rutgers could give his fencers a hard<br />
time. The Scarlet Knights placed 30th out of 53 schools<br />
at the National Collegiate Athletic Association<br />
championships last year.<br />
"We should be able to take Lafayette and Pace in the<br />
similar fashion we did Duke and George Mason,"<br />
Garret said. "Rutgers is going to be another problem.<br />
They have a great deal of depth, a good coach and a<br />
great deal of experience."<br />
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24—The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. 11, 1981<br />
scoreboard<br />
NHL<br />
Wales Conference<br />
Patrick Division<br />
W L T GF GA PIs<br />
FLYEHS 17 10 1 109 105 35<br />
NY Islanders 15 8 4 113 97 34<br />
PENGUINS<br />
~ ~-- ~ ^ 13 11 4 103 103 30<br />
I.NY Rangers<br />
-Washington<br />
?<br />
• Buffalo<br />
* Boston<br />
.Quebec<br />
- Montreal<br />
r Hartford<br />
¦' .<br />
' .;<br />
.Minnesota<br />
/Chicago<br />
-Winnipeg<br />
VSt. Louis<br />
# flO 15 3 93 115 23<br />
' 8 17 2 101 113 18<br />
Adams Division '<br />
15 6 7 109 84 37<br />
16 7 4 109 85 36<br />
15 12 4 141 134 34<br />
• 12 7 8 129 81 32<br />
7 12 8 ' 92 107 22<br />
Campbell Conference<br />
Norris Division<br />
12 6 9 120 89 33<br />
11 8 8 127 115 30<br />
11 12 5 109 127 27<br />
10 15' . Detroit<br />
Toronto<br />
4 102 124 24<br />
8 15 5 104 126 21<br />
7 13 7 117 122 21<br />
Smythe Division<br />
' Edmonton 18 7 6 175 116 42<br />
' Vancouver 13 11 5 109 98 31<br />
'Calgary 9 14 6 111 144 24<br />
%os Angeles ' 10 16 1 ill 136 21<br />
-Colorado 4 19 5 69 142 13<br />
; .Wednesday's Games<br />
'. ' 'Boston 4, New York Rangers 3 ,<br />
-' " Hartford 5, St.Louis 1<br />
" .<br />
' . -FLYERS 4, PENGUINS !<br />
- ^Winnipeg 3, Toronto 3, tie<br />
. : jBuffalo 7, Colorado 1<br />
¦; -Montreal 6, Minnesota 6, tie<br />
;! Chicago 7, Washington 3<br />
.- .Edmonton 5, Los Angeles 5, tie<br />
'I Vancouver 4, NY Islanders 3 .<br />
-Last night's Games<br />
' St.Louis at Boston<br />
¦ Minnesota at Detroit<br />
' * ^Tonight's Games<br />
- ^Toronto at Washington<br />
'[ Montreal at Winnipeg<br />
NBA<br />
EASTERN CONFERENCE<br />
Atlantic Division<br />
W...L....Pct...G B..<br />
SIXERS 16 3 .842 -<br />
Boston 16 4 ,000 ii<br />
New York 9 9 .500 6'/4<br />
Washington 6 12 .333 9'A<br />
New Jersey 5 14 .263 11<br />
Central Division<br />
Milwaukee 13 6 .684 -<br />
Indiana " 9 -550 2Vi<br />
Atlanta 8 10 .444 m<br />
Detroit 8 11 .421 5<br />
SAVE ON<br />
FILM<br />
PROCESS<br />
out euelyday low ptice<br />
35mm /110/126<br />
Color Print Film<br />
12exp. $2.59<br />
24 exp. $4:49<br />
36 exp. $6.69<br />
kinko's copies<br />
256 E. Beaver<br />
(across from <strong>Penn</strong> Towers)<br />
238 -COPY<br />
l<br />
Chicago 8 12 .400 5'£<br />
Cleveland 5 14 .263 8<br />
WESTERN CONFERENCE<br />
' Midwest Division<br />
San Antonio 14 5 .737 —<br />
Denver 8 11 .421 6<br />
Utah 8 12 .400 6'A<br />
Kansas City 7 12 .368 7<br />
Houston 7 14 .333 8<br />
Dallas 4 16 .200 1014<br />
Pacific Division<br />
Los Angeles 16 6 .727 —<br />
Phoenix 11 6 .647 2'A<br />
Portland 12 7 .632 2%<br />
Seattle ' 11 8 .579 314<br />
Golden <strong>State</strong> It 7 .fill 3<br />
San Diego 6 12 .333 8<br />
Wednesday's Games<br />
Boston 109, New Jersey 100<br />
SIXERS 137, Denver 109<br />
Indiana \13, Utah T7<br />
Cleveland 112, Atlanta 108, OT<br />
Milwaukee 89, Houston 83<br />
San Antonio 110, Seattle 99<br />
Kansas City 113, Dallas 109, OT<br />
Phoenix at Golden <strong>State</strong>, (n)<br />
Last night's Games<br />
New York at Detroit, B:X0 p.m.<br />
Portland at Phoenix, 10:30 p.m.<br />
U) semen<br />
know a good gift<br />
when they see it<br />
Artiste Sei<br />
December 1<br />
Boliday Sa<br />
Tickets on sale...<br />
Best Little Whorehouse in Texas<br />
Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra<br />
Chinese Magic Circus of Taiwan<br />
imw ¦<br />
j}<br />
i<br />
Sunday, January 10<br />
Friday and Saturday, March 19 & 20<br />
Friday, April 16<br />
at Eisenhower Auditorium 9am - 4pm<br />
W« IA<br />
MasterCard/Visa accepted at 863-0255 days of sale<br />
Tonight's Games<br />
Atlanta vs. Boston.at Hartford, 7:30 p.m<br />
Denver at New Jersey, 7:35 p.m.<br />
Cleveland at SIXERS, 7:35 p.m.<br />
Houston at Chicago, 8:35 p.m.<br />
San Antonio at Dallas, 8:35 p.m.<br />
Indiana at ' Milwaukee, 9 p.m.<br />
Kansas City at Utah, 9:30 p.m.<br />
Portland at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.<br />
Washington at San Diego, 10:35 p.m.<br />
NFL<br />
Saturday, Dec.12<br />
New York Jets at Cleveland<br />
Minnesota at Detroit<br />
Sunday, Dec.13<br />
Baltimore at Washington<br />
Buffalo at New England<br />
Cincinnati at STEELERS<br />
Green Bay at New Orleans<br />
New York Giants at St.Louis<br />
San Diego at Tampa Bay<br />
Miami at Kansas City<br />
Chicago at Oakland<br />
Houston at San Francisco<br />
EAGLES at Dallas<br />
Seattle at Denver<br />
Monday, Dec.14<br />
Atlanta at Los Angeles<br />
• •<br />
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I Dec. IT 7:00p.m. 510 <strong>Penn</strong> Towers<br />
v. R-259 Donation accepted at the door<br />
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Is there<br />
By BRUCE LOWITT<br />
AP Sports Writer<br />
It would seem that the National Football League's priorities<br />
— or moralities — are just a little out of whack.<br />
To wit: ><br />
There are laws.on the books in this land of ours which say<br />
gambling is illegal.<br />
So Tommy Kramer, quarterback of the Minnesota Vikings,<br />
stands in a bar and bets a few bucks with his buddy, the<br />
bartender, over the outcome of a pro football game.<br />
And Pete Rozelle, Lord of the League, sort of shrugs, says<br />
"poor judgment," and closes the books on the matter. This is<br />
the same commissioner who 18 years ago pounced upon a<br />
quintet of Detroit Lions for betting on one pro football game,<br />
fining each of them what was then the prinqely sum (NFL<br />
player-salarywise) of $2,000.<br />
There also are laws on the books in this land of ours which say<br />
a man has a right to speak his piece.<br />
So Miami coach Don Shula, enraged over what he believes to<br />
be an egregious error in officiating, has the misfortune to be<br />
trapped by one of ABC's unblinking eyes — one of those<br />
portable, sideline jobs that can get close enough to count your<br />
freckles — when he vents his frustration in referee Red<br />
Cashion's direction.<br />
And John Mecom, owner of the Bum Phillips-coached New<br />
Orleans Saints, surveys the carnage wrought by Bud Adams'<br />
precipitous New Year's Eve firing of Bum as Houston's coach<br />
and observes that something obviously is wrong in Oilerland.<br />
For their crimes, Shula is fined $1,000 and Mecom $5,000.<br />
Where is the justice in all of this?<br />
Where, for that matter, is the logic?<br />
Granted, Kramer wasn't exactly playing with the company<br />
receipts or blowing the rent money when he and "Rafael<br />
Elizondo started wig-wagging their fingers over point spreads.<br />
In fact, a few people around town have been known to toss<br />
down a few bucks on the strength of Kramer's arm. A lot of<br />
Div. TAA playoffs winding down<br />
By the Associated Press<br />
A grudge match and one of those<br />
ground-versus.-air battles will feature<br />
Saturday's semifinal games in the NCAA<br />
Division I-AA football championships.<br />
Aerial-minded Idaho <strong>State</strong>, 10-1 behind<br />
record-setting quarterback Mike Machurek,<br />
will face the grinding ground game<br />
of South Carolina <strong>State</strong>, 10-2, at the ISU<br />
Minidome. And at the same time, the<br />
House 1¦•<br />
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defending national champions, Boise the hands of Boise last year, coach Roy<br />
<strong>State</strong>, 10-2, hosts the team it beat in the Kidd and his Colonels would be aiming<br />
championship game last year, Eastern for a third straight I-AA championship.<br />
Kentucky. EKU has lost only to Navy in EKU also won the crown in 1979.<br />
12 games this year. Boise's players have been fired up<br />
The teams won quarterfinals last since then about remarks attributed to<br />
weekend and the winners on Saturday Kidd and his squad, belittling the Idaho<br />
will meet Dec. 19 in the Pioneer Bowl at team. "Bring on EKU. We want them<br />
Wichita Falls, Texas. bad!" was the first thing said after last<br />
Except for a last-second 31-29 defeat at .week's 19-7 victory over Jackson <strong>State</strong> .<br />
rn«««»M.«_u_..._.H„.H„,M_„,<br />
i ./*" "N.* "j Expires Dec. 25, 1981 I<br />
'FOSTER'S<br />
PIPE SHOP<br />
25% OFF<br />
any pipe with<br />
coup on this<br />
justice in Rozelle s kingdom?<br />
newspapers around the country are running a little line this<br />
week which says something like "Minnesota plus 4 at Detroit."<br />
Now, for those of you who have been living on a mountainside<br />
in Tibet since George Halas was playing right field for the New<br />
York Yankees, that 4 refers to the number of points by which<br />
certain knowledgeable people'believe the Lions will beat the<br />
Vikings.<br />
Those points will be the subject of much consternation this<br />
weekend as people with barely enough money for a quart of<br />
milk for the kiddies — and people with enough money to buy<br />
every cow in Wisconsin — try to figure out whether the final<br />
margin will be 3 points or 5 points or anything else but 4 in the<br />
Lions' favor.<br />
The NFL acknowledges the existence of such illegality by<br />
publishing injury reports each week. No sense in limiting the<br />
"inside" information to the guys who print up those pieces of<br />
paper with the teams and numbers on 'em, eh?<br />
Legalized gambling?; Heaven forfend ! It would doom everything<br />
which is good and pure and wholesome, says the NFL<br />
when the subject arises.<br />
All of this is not to say that Rozelle should have brought to<br />
bear all the wrath and power of his commissionership upon<br />
Two-Minute Tommy. He did the right thing. Basically, he<br />
ignored Kramer's peccadillo.<br />
i Which suggests that perhaps that Joe Schmidt, Wayne<br />
Walker, Gary Lowe, Sam Williams and John Gordy — that<br />
pride of'Lions which wagered once too often (on the 1962<br />
championship game, and with friends.not bookies) — should be<br />
cashing in NFL IOUs.<br />
Let's see, now: That's $2,000 in the bank at a conservative 5<br />
•percent interest, compounded daily. . .Pete, you owe each of<br />
them roughly $2,555 — plus an apology.<br />
And while you're at it, how's about an apology to Shula and<br />
Mecom, too?<br />
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Frontlash presents the Warren Miller ski movie "Ski in the Sun," at 7 and 9:15 p.m<br />
Tuesday in 102 Forum.<br />
L': V*V ' '<br />
Films<br />
On Campus<br />
"Cruising" Al Pacino stars in a controversial<br />
story about a cop who goes undercover in the<br />
gay world in order to find a murderer, and then<br />
has trouble deciding where the undercover<br />
ends and reality begins. Violent and otherwise<br />
unpleasant , it played to wide'protest from the<br />
gay community when it first opened. 7 and 9<br />
tonight and Sunday, 112 Kern.<br />
"American Pop" Overblown animation from<br />
Ralph Bakshi, creator of "Fritz the Cat," to the<br />
tunes of Morrison, Hendrix and Joplin. Shows at<br />
7, 8:45 and 10:30 tonight and tomorrow, 112<br />
Chambers.<br />
"Kentucky Fried Movie" " A funny, if<br />
sometimes gross, look at' American life in the<br />
form of a collection of vignettes, such as one<br />
titled "Catholic High School in Trouble.". 7,8:30<br />
and 10 p.m. tomorrow and Sunday, 101<br />
Chambers.<br />
' ¦<br />
•<br />
"The Last Detail" Jack Nicholson stars in<br />
the story of two sailors assigned to transport a<br />
backward colleague to the brig and the<br />
adventures they create in order to give the kid a<br />
last fling. 7 and 9 tonight, 101 Chambers; 7 and<br />
9 p.m. Sunday, 112 Chambers.<br />
"And Now For Something Completely<br />
Different" Monty Python's'tlrst film, a<br />
collection of bits that appeared in their B.B.C.<br />
series.' 7, 9 and 11 tonight/tomorrow and<br />
Sunday, Pollock Rec Room. *<br />
"Toss" Roman Polanski's beautifully filmed<br />
version of the Thomas Hardy classic, Tess of<br />
the D'Urhervilles. Natasia Kinski is a perfect<br />
match for Hardy's description of the title<br />
character. Polanski manages to catch much of<br />
Hardy's pace and style. Near-classic treatment<br />
of the novel. 7 and 10 tonight, tomorrow and<br />
Sunday. 108 Forum. ' ;<br />
"Lady and the Tramp" Disney for all you<br />
kids at heart. Tramp, a back alley mutt.'falls in<br />
love wilh Lady, a hlgh-society.cocker spaniel,<br />
and their romance becomes another madcap<br />
misadventure. 7, 9 and 11 tonight and -<br />
tomorrow night, 7 and 9 p.m. Sunday. 105<br />
Forum.<br />
"Eraserhead" A cult classic directed by<br />
David Lynch, who garnered an academy award<br />
nomination as best director'for his later work,<br />
¦<br />
"Elephant Man." 7 and 9 tonight and Sunday,<br />
¦¦<br />
121 Sparks.<br />
"'" : • ¦ -. " - '<br />
"Jules and Jim" A little Triilfaut (to balance<br />
out the porn and shlock). 7 and 9 p.m. tomorrow<br />
and Monday, 112 Kern.<br />
:• "The<br />
and<br />
Fan" Slars Lauren Bacall, James<br />
¦^^wamer Maureen Staptafevx 7. 9 and,11<br />
^^P^I<br />
tinSj^rr^, T^fe .m.-SujSoav, 10<br />
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•"" "Urban Cowgirls" This week's porn offer for<br />
those whojust aren't satisfied with television T<br />
and A. 7, 9 and 11 tonight and tomorrow, 7 and<br />
9 p.m. Sunday, 111 Forum. .<br />
"Lord of the Rings" Bilbo Baggins, Gandall<br />
the wizard and the rest of the good elves,<br />
hobblts and men travel through Middle Earth on<br />
a deadly," mysterious mission In this film<br />
adaptation of J.R.R. Tplkien's classic. You've<br />
read the trilogy, now see the movie. 7, 9:15 and<br />
f<br />
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Allen Room Enjoy the refreshing style of<br />
John Cunningham tonight and tomorrow.<br />
Sunday, hear the guitar, cello and then some of<br />
Duet.<br />
Brewery Shrug oft the cold with the warm<br />
sounds of Tahoka Freeway tonight and<br />
tomorrow.<br />
Brickhouse Tavern Country-rock's Force of<br />
One, J.B., plays tonight and tomorrow in the<br />
Intimacy of the Brickhouse.<br />
Coffee Grinder Tonight, Tom Huckabee<br />
provides the entertainment. Tomorrow, hear<br />
Eventide, a guitar and singing group.<br />
Le Bistro Kenney Mathieus appears tonight;<br />
tomorrow hear Bowman and Goldstein.<br />
Phyrst Tonight, rowdy rock 'n' roll with Red<br />
Rose Cotillion. Saturday night, keep up the<br />
Happy Valley tradition with the Phyrst Phamily.<br />
The Pub (Holiday Inn) Rick Jones relaxes<br />
you throughout the weekend.<br />
. Rathskellar Tonight, Casey, Austin and<br />
Fenslermacher bring the good times to the<br />
'Skellar.<br />
Rego's Pasta and Rasta tonight with the<br />
Evan Pugh Revue. Tomorrow, hear that Bach to<br />
Beatles to Bluegrass pair, Duet. Sunday, who<br />
else but mellow Menagerie.<br />
Saloon Bop to the brass of the W.C. Billhick<br />
Band tonight and tomorrow. Sunday, Tahoka<br />
Freeway appears.<br />
. Scorpion Tonight roll to the rock sound of<br />
Foxy. Tomorrow, Jaysonn Grand from '<br />
Harrisburg plays the rock 'n' roll.<br />
Shandygaff Tonight, hear Golden Oldies<br />
with Ray Anthony. Tomorrow, get down Io the<br />
country rock sounds of Kikkin' Inn.<br />
Sly Fox (Sheraton) Crossroads plays a<br />
variety of sounds, including country and rock,<br />
tonight and tomorrow.<br />
Westerly Parkway Hlway Pizza Tuesday<br />
nights hear oldies wilh Warren O. Fitting, and<br />
Wednesday hear the bluegrass sounds of<br />
Whetstone Run.<br />
Concerts and Coffeehouses<br />
Kern Tomorrow night see an International<br />
Coffeehouse co-sponsored by Commonsplace<br />
and the International Students' Organization.<br />
Jawbone Tonight, Doug Anderson plays, and<br />
tomorrow hear Mark Nan and Joe Pillot. Open<br />
mikes between shows as always.<br />
. Shaver's Creek Environmental Center Folk<br />
'singer Priscilla Herdman offers a concert at 8<br />
p.m. tomorrow at the <strong>University</strong> Baptist and<br />
Brethren Church, 411 S. Burrowes St. Tickets<br />
are $4 and are available at the ticket office In<br />
Rec Hall or at the door. '<br />
The Wine Cellar (La Bella Vita) Tonight hear<br />
the sensational sounds of Nile Line. Tomorrow<br />
Andy Mozenter returns to the Cellar.<br />
Music<br />
School of Music A celebration of the<br />
Christmas season will be performed by the<br />
<strong>University</strong> Choir and the Symphony Orchestra<br />
free Io the public. "A Christmas Festival"<br />
beginning with music by Dufay, a 15th-century<br />
composer , Sweelinck, Mendelson and Gabrieli,<br />
Contemporary arrangements of traditional<br />
spirituals', and also fhe festive "Benedictine""<br />
by Ralph Vaughan Williams will be performed.<br />
The Universily Wind and Brass ensembles will<br />
perform traditional carols before the concert,<br />
which will begin at 8:30 p.m. Saturday in<br />
Eisenhower Auditorium.<br />
School of Music A program of chamber<br />
works by Haydn, Kodaly and Mendelson will be<br />
presented by the <strong>University</strong>'s quartet-inresidence,<br />
the Alard String Quarlet. The<br />
performance is open and free to the public and<br />
begins at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Music<br />
Building Recital Hall.<br />
School of Music Georgia Peeples, recently<br />
appointed instructor in bassoon, saxophone<br />
and music history will give her first on-campus<br />
performance at 8:30 p.m. Monday in (he Music<br />
Building Recital Hall. Peeples will be joined by.<br />
graduate student in bassoon, Trina Baker to<br />
play Pressor's Bassoon Duels. Keith Ward,<br />
also a recently appointed instructor will join<br />
Peeples as accompanist.<br />
WDFM The Metropolitan Opera airs<br />
tomorrow at 2 p.m. with Puccini's "II Tritlico."<br />
• In the Mood features a re-release of Chick<br />
Webb and Orchestra with his then-new<br />
discovery Ella Frtzgerald, 7 to 10 Sunday night.<br />
Chicago Symphony features soprano soloist<br />
Lucia Popp and guest conduclor Leonard<br />
Slalkin, 6 p.m. Tuesday.<br />
<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> Glee Club and the <strong>Penn</strong> Slate<br />
Chorus will perform a Christmas concert at 3<br />
p.m. Sunday in Schwab Auditorium. The<br />
concert is dedicated to Dean Walter Walters of<br />
the College of Arts and Architecture.<br />
The <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> Percussion Ensemble and<br />
newly formed Mirimba Band under the direction<br />
of Dr. Micheal Udow will perform in concert al<br />
8:30 p.m. Sunday in the Music Building Recital<br />
Hall.<br />
Galleries<br />
¦ Chambers Various porcelain and stoneware<br />
works are on display in the showcases.<br />
HUB As pari of the annual holiday festival at<br />
the HUB, an International Cultural Artifacts<br />
exhibit is in the Art Alley Showcases. The<br />
Gallery features, a Contemporary American<br />
Indian exhibit.<br />
Kent An exhibit of woodcuts by Gordon<br />
Mortensen is on display until Dec. 18. Also, an,<br />
exhibit of walercolors by Dorothy Crowly is on<br />
display until Dec. 21.<br />
Museum of Art The Danish Ceramic Design<br />
show continues through Jan. 24. Also,<br />
"Architectural Fantasy and Reality: Drawings<br />
from the Accademia Nazionale di San Luca in<br />
Rome," continues through Jan: 31. "American<br />
Paintings Before World War Two from the<br />
Museum's Collection," is showing until Feb. 14.<br />
Pattee In the East Corridor Gallery, recent<br />
works.from Peter Jogo are on display until Jan.<br />
8. In the Lending Services Lobby are<br />
walercolors by Sally Berndt until Jan. 7. In .<br />
Second Floor East Paltee, ceramics by Kathy<br />
Dobash are on display until Jan. 7.<br />
Zotler Showing until Jan. 3 is The<br />
<strong>Penn</strong>sylvania Stale <strong>University</strong> Masters of Fine<br />
Arts Graduate Group Show.<br />
Sports<br />
Home<br />
Men's swimming Coach Lou MacNeill's<br />
squad hosts St. Bonaventure at 2 p.m.<br />
tomorrow at McCoy Natatorium.<br />
Marathon The Nittany Valley Track Club's<br />
10th annual marathon (26.2 miles) begins al 10<br />
a.m. tomorrow in the parking lot near the H.R.B.<br />
Singer Building, behind the golf course on Park<br />
Road. In conjunction with the marathon, a<br />
10,000-meter race will be held al 10:30 a.m.,<br />
beginning at the same place.<br />
Away .<br />
Women's basketball Continuing their road<br />
swing, the Lady Lions play in the Lady<br />
Techslers Dial Classic at Ruston, La., today<br />
and tomorrow. The first round began yesterday<br />
Men's basketball <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> meets<br />
Southern Methodist al 10 tonight in the first<br />
round of the Indiana Classic at Bloomington,<br />
Ind. A victory would pit the Lions against the<br />
winner of tonight's Colorado <strong>State</strong>-Indiana<br />
game.<br />
Men's fencing A victory for the Lions this<br />
weekend at Lafayette will give coach Mac<br />
Garret his 100th win as <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong>'s fencing<br />
coach.<br />
Women's volleyball By virtue of their easy<br />
win over Cincinnati last week, the Lady Lions<br />
face the <strong>University</strong> of the Pacific In the first<br />
game of the NCAA regionals tomorrow al<br />
Northwestern. If <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> wins, on Sunday il<br />
will face the winner ol the Northwestern-Cal<br />
Poly match for the regional title.<br />
Men's gymnastics With one meet tucked<br />
under their belts, the Nittany Lions head to the<br />
Farmingdale Invitational al Long Island, N.Y.,<br />
tonight and tomorrow.<br />
Women's gymnastics In their first<br />
competition of the 1981-82 season, the Lady<br />
Lions visit Clarion at 1 p.m. tomorrow.<br />
Wrestling The Lions are just a short drive<br />
down the road when they compete in the Mat<br />
Town USA Tournament at Lock Haven<br />
tomorrow and Sunday.<br />
Ice hockey <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> is on the road for<br />
three games this weekend. The Lions play<br />
Drexel tonight, Delaware tomorrow and Upsala<br />
on Sunday.<br />
Women's swimming The Lady Lions have a<br />
busy weekend ahead, swimming at Princeton<br />
today and then traveling to Villanova tomorrow<br />
for an afternoon meet. The women divers,<br />
along with the men's diving team, will compete<br />
in the Hershey Diving Meet Sunday.<br />
Etc.<br />
The Contemporary Dance Company The<br />
company will present five works<br />
choreographed by co-directors Patricia Heigel-<br />
Tanner and Paula Donahoe. Heigel Tanner's<br />
pieces include "Free Flow" with music by J.S<br />
Bach, Vivaldi's "Concerto for Violin, Lule and<br />
Figured Bass" and "Dinosaur Dance" with<br />
25<br />
The Daily Collegian<br />
Friday, Dec. 11<br />
M<br />
Monty Python's first film, "And Now For<br />
Something Completely Different" comes<br />
to campus this weekend.<br />
music by Bruce Trinkley. Donahoe's "May I ,<br />
Have This Dance?" is set to music by several<br />
composers, while "Jigsaw" uses Mozart's .i<br />
"Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star."<br />
Eco-actlon is sponsoring a square dance<br />
featuring the Rustical Quality String Band at 8<br />
tonight in the ' HUB Ballroom. All proceeds wilhbenefit<br />
the <strong>State</strong> College Friend's School.<br />
Photo by Nathan Lader<br />
The Evan Pugh Review (above) brings reggae to Rego's tonight. The Contemporary' Dance Company, shown below at the Central<br />
<strong>Penn</strong>sylvania Festival of the Arts,<br />
'<br />
offers a recital at 1:30 and 4 p.m. Sunday in the White Buildin g.<br />
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But Warren may be too much of a good thing<br />
B£ STUART AUSTIN<br />
Daily Collegian Staff Writer<br />
Purpose. Goals. Ambition. Dreams. We students are<br />
bombarded with such cliches daily, these banal justifications<br />
for a life of pressure and anxiety that goes<br />
largely unrewarded. "Reds" is a story of purpose,<br />
goals, ambitions and dreams that are rewards in and of<br />
themselves for that same kind of life.<br />
" "Reds," written, directed, produced and starring<br />
Warren Beatty, is the biography (obligatory historical<br />
a'&uracy notwithstanding) of John Reed, journalist,<br />
'< a<br />
Diane Keaton and Warren Beatty<br />
I<br />
activist, adventurist of the early days of the 20th<br />
century. An era of war, of political and economic unrest<br />
and collapse in Russia. An era of rising blue-collar<br />
consciousness, of .unions, of Socialism, of a global<br />
dogma of dictatorship of the proletariat.<br />
John Reed was there. He did more than just report<br />
history in the making, he was history in the making.<br />
Warren Beatty has successfully brought this character<br />
and his historical-novel lifetime to the screen.<br />
Successfully, did I say? I'd better qualify that. The<br />
film is engaging and very entertaining, lively, action-<br />
Pholos by Oavld Appleby<br />
and romance-packed, star-studded and a real bargain<br />
at $3.75. But how much can one person do?<br />
Beatty's screenplay is excellent, and the cast (including<br />
Diane Keaton as Louise Bryant, Jack Nicholson as<br />
Eugene O'Neill and Maureen Stapelton as Emma Goldman)<br />
captures the tension and emotion of it, bringing it<br />
to a life that's bigger than life. Clearly Beatty's directing<br />
is also top-notch, to put together such a myriad of<br />
emotions and conflicts without becoming confusing, too<br />
shallow, or worse yet, sentimental.<br />
Fine. But, try as I might, I still see Beatty as the<br />
athlete a.k.a. millionaire Leo Farnsworth in "Heaven<br />
Can Wait," bouyantly addressing his board of trustees<br />
with a boyish grin of optimism for a Utopian plan of<br />
goodwill-at-the-expense-of-financial-reality. So Leo<br />
Farnsworth wants to make the world safe for consumers,<br />
John Reed wants to make it safe for workers, and<br />
Warren Beatty wants to make it safe for cute guys with<br />
lots of fun ideas about how to make the world a better<br />
place.<br />
Perhaps this isn't fair to him, after all, he's been so<br />
busy writing "Reds" with Trevor Griffiths; maybe he<br />
hasn't had time to develop a new character. Maybe he<br />
identifies with Reed better than anyone else he knows:<br />
Maybe he's John Reed reincarnated. I'm becoming<br />
absurd, but there is a point. Beatty is just too much of a<br />
nice guy to render what an s.o.b. Reed must have been.<br />
Unlike Nicholson, who shows us just what an s.o.b.<br />
O'Neill could be.<br />
Enough lambasting. Go see the damn movie; it says<br />
more than I can. What I will say is that Diane Keaton is<br />
great. She hit me with all the frustration of Louise<br />
Bryant, the struggling author(esss????) ignored by her<br />
lover's trendy friends, who thought that oP Jack Reed<br />
was the greatest. All the bitterness of living in his<br />
shadow, but not being able to live without him. All the<br />
fiery self-confidence of a woman who would damn the<br />
torpedos and make it on her own. Of a woman in love; a<br />
woman who wanted and needed love, and who wouldn't<br />
wait around for it to happen.<br />
Gripping? Definitely. Almost engrossing. Long? You<br />
betcha, but it's worth it. A classic? Well .. . like the<br />
events that became history which Beatty has brought to<br />
the screen in "Reds," only time will tell. Warren Beatty<br />
U2, Prince, AC/DC: hard rockers who are here to play<br />
Prince<br />
Show a<br />
u<br />
By CHRISTINE CURCIO<br />
Daily Collegian Staff Writer<br />
U2, "OCTOBER ," Island, ILPS- * 9680<br />
This curious release is courtesy of the relatively<br />
new band, Ireland's U2. These lads have created<br />
an Ip that can't rightly be called rock. It doesn't<br />
even fit in to the mold of New Wave.<br />
This music is mysterious and hypnotic, with the<br />
help of The Edge on lead guitar. The mixture of<br />
percussion and unusual guitar patterns lends an<br />
unmistakable tone of originality to U2's strange<br />
style.<br />
Lead singer Bono has a tone of desperation in<br />
his voice which is effective on "1 Threw a Brick<br />
Through a Window" (the -most commercially<br />
accessible cut) , "October," and "Scarlet." But at<br />
times he sounds a bit like Saturday Night Live's<br />
Bill Murray in the routine of his not-too-popular<br />
nightclub entertainer.<br />
"October" entered Rolling Stone's Top 100 at<br />
number 25, which isn't too shabby for a band both<br />
new and unusual. Watch for their North American<br />
tour in the following months.<br />
PRINCE, "CONTROVERSY," Warner Brothers,<br />
BSK 3601<br />
Will this guy ever do anything middle-of-theroad<br />
again? After his latest success with "Dirty<br />
Mind" which dealt with incest, cross-dressing and<br />
fellatio, Prince , was involved in a lot of, you<br />
guessed it, controversy over his music and ideas.<br />
Prince explains himself more or less in "Controversy's"<br />
title track, dealing with his recent<br />
problems with the press and public over 1980's<br />
"Dirty Mind": "I just can't believe all the things<br />
people say/ Am I black or white am I straight or<br />
gay/ l ean understand human curiosity/ Was it<br />
good for you, was I what you wanted me to be?"<br />
"Controversy" has the subjects of sex ("Let's<br />
Work," "Sexuality," and "Jack U Off") , politics<br />
("Ronnie Talk to Russia") and religion ( "Annie<br />
Christian"). Prince lives up to the album's title<br />
when, in the lead track, he recites the Lord's<br />
Prayer. How much of a scandal is this?<br />
To avoid a dull discussion on Prince's political<br />
and social views, the musical merits of the album<br />
should be mentioned. "Controversy" has plenty of<br />
fresh material not expected of Prince. "Jack U<br />
blast from the past but then fades fast<br />
m<br />
9?<br />
By ELAINE WETMORE<br />
Daily Collegian Staff .Writer<br />
The Roaring '20s with its speakeasies,<br />
bootleg whiskey and silk-seamed stockings<br />
swept into Eisenhower Auditorium<br />
Wednesday night in the swinging jazz<br />
musical "One Mo' Time." Unfortunately,<br />
the storm quelled prematurely,<br />
and the initial excitement dwindled to an<br />
occasional stir.<br />
Sponsored by the Artists Series, this<br />
Broadway hit under the direction of Bill<br />
Gile recreated a bawdy, drunken night of<br />
entertainment in the infamous New Orleans'<br />
Lyric Theatre and at times, as the<br />
agitated theatre owner played by Sam<br />
Baker so aptly put it, featured "the best<br />
in colored entertainment."<br />
The show cleverly juxtaposed Big Bertha<br />
Williams and her Touring Company's<br />
stage numbers with the troupe's comedic<br />
confusion between routines in the dressing<br />
rooms. The gaudy purple backdrops<br />
contrasted the shabby interior of the<br />
backstage cubicle, yet the diverse talents<br />
of the company surfaced in both settings.<br />
In the first half , numbers like "C.C.<br />
Rider" with Mama Reed, "He's in the<br />
Jailhouse Now" featuring Papa Du and<br />
Bertha's "Kitchen Man" set a rakish<br />
pace that never diminished. Each song<br />
and ensuing dialogue seemed better and<br />
funnier than the last. However in the<br />
second act, the flow never returned — the<br />
scenes were disjointed and numbers less<br />
vivacious. Even Bertha's attempts at<br />
humorous sexual overtones failed and<br />
Ma Reed's "Exotic Dance: Hindustan"<br />
was particularly dismal. The spark that<br />
ignited the first half fizzled in the second.<br />
Each of the two acts.featured a dozen<br />
songs running the gamut of musical<br />
genres, all accommpanied by well-choreographed<br />
soft shoe and chorus line<br />
dances.<br />
Yvonne Talton Kersey as Big Bertha,<br />
(the adjective attributed to either her<br />
sheer immensity or her ample breasts<br />
forever threatening to spill from her<br />
outrageous get-ups), sashayed about the<br />
stage, belting out the burlesque as well<br />
as the torche. Just like Nell Carter in<br />
"Ain't Misbehavin'. " Bertha was the ba-<br />
ba-ba-boom, boob-jiggling, ass-wiggling<br />
husky tenor who forced a head-shaking<br />
laugh from wonderment or a throat-constricting<br />
gag.<br />
Lyrine Clifton Allen as Ma Reed sparkled<br />
— her voice, her dance, her '20s<br />
costumes of sapphire blue complete with<br />
blue fringe and feather all contributed to<br />
an awe-inspiring whole. When accompanied<br />
by Ronald "Smokey" Stevens as<br />
Papa Du the two in the first half were<br />
unsurpassable.<br />
Stevens boasts of body fluidity that is<br />
not only enviable, but downright amazing.<br />
From the cane and derby routines to<br />
the Charleston, the man ^had the timing<br />
and could make the moves, and all he<br />
says is "Ain't nothin' to it but to do it."<br />
Even his corny, overtold jokes were<br />
crowdpleasers.<br />
artists series<br />
The weak link appeared in the role of<br />
Thelma played by Adjbra Faith McMillan/<br />
Though a talented performer, she<br />
was often overshadowed by the other<br />
members of the cast. But her backroom<br />
antics as the brazen hussy (or brown<br />
Heifer as Bertha put it) seemed characteristic<br />
and were immensely entertaining.<br />
The talented members of the New<br />
Orleans band The Blue Serenaders performed<br />
consistently well throughout. Albert<br />
Bemiss, piano; Manny Boyd,<br />
clarinet; Joseph Lastie, Jr., drums;<br />
John Brunious, trumpet; and especially<br />
Alton Carson, tuba (who had Big Bertha<br />
beat by 75 pounds) provided the core<br />
around which any of the show's Success<br />
evolved. The old sounds of Bourbon and<br />
Burgundy Streets and the Louis Armstrong<br />
magic permeated the auditorium.<br />
Through "One Mo' Time" the tingle of<br />
the '20s did traipse through Eisenhower,<br />
if only for a short time.<br />
Off" oddly enough has a beat reminiscent of 1940s<br />
swing. "Sexuality" has synthesizer work from<br />
Doctor Fink that is weirdly intertwined with<br />
Prince's vocals.<br />
Prince's vocal range has much to do with the<br />
complexity of the album. He is a little boy with his<br />
falsetto on the syrupy "Do Me" and someone<br />
completely different screaming about gun control<br />
on "Annie Christian." This aspect makes the<br />
listener sit up and wait for what will happen next.<br />
Choice cuts are the danceable "Let's Work,"<br />
"Private Joy," and "Controversy." Aside from<br />
the heavy breathing and lyrics that you wouldn't<br />
want Mom to hear, these tunes are Prince's<br />
saving grace. As long as he puts out music that<br />
people will like, let him say what he wants.<br />
AC/DC "FOR THOSE ABOUT TO ROCK," Atlantic,<br />
SD-11111<br />
Australia rocks again. These bad boys have<br />
released a typically brutal collection of tunes that<br />
have given AC/DC fans something to argue'about.<br />
The cover is terrible. The band's logo is above a<br />
dull picture of a cannon (it relates to the title,<br />
"For Those About to Rock We Salute You"). For<br />
art's sake, I prefer the cover of "Back in Black."<br />
The main complaint with this effort is its lack of<br />
originality. With Angus Young on guitar, this<br />
band can do anything. Going by AC/DC's early<br />
days with the late Bon Scott, the group did a lot<br />
with incredibly suggestive lyrics and amazing<br />
guitar work.<br />
After Scott's death in 1979, Brian Johnson took<br />
over as lead singer in his own throaty, vulgar<br />
way. "Back in Black" showed that AC/DC could<br />
go on without Scott, and had possibly their first<br />
biggest commercial success to date.<br />
On this latest release, Angus Young is dazzling<br />
on. "C:O.D ' .;" "For Those About to Rock," and<br />
"Put the Finger on You." He absolutely carries<br />
the band and is the focal point of their live<br />
performances. .<br />
This album will only be accepted by diehard<br />
AC/DC fans, because it takes a few listens to<br />
distinguish songs. Too bad.<br />
Overall, this album, as far as AC/DC is concerned,<br />
could have been called "Back in Black II"<br />
or, more of the same old stuff.<br />
Ex-Door dancing to<br />
different drum beat<br />
By MARY CAMPBELL<br />
AP Newsfeatures Writer<br />
The Doors were together a short<br />
time. Their'first recording came out<br />
in 1967 and lead singer Jim Morrison<br />
died in 1971. The interest in them and<br />
in Morrison may be greater now<br />
than it was when they were performing.<br />
A greatest hits album sold almost<br />
a million copies in 1980. A Morrison<br />
biography, "No One Gets Out Alive,"<br />
sold big. Morrison's book of<br />
poems, "The Lords and the New<br />
Creation," published in 1969, will be<br />
reprinted next year.<br />
Doors organist Ray Manzarek and<br />
guitarist Robbie Krieger are working<br />
with rock groups in the Los<br />
Angeles area. And drummer John<br />
Densmore is dancing.<br />
Interviewed in New York while<br />
Bess Snyder and Company was visiting<br />
to give performances, Densmore<br />
wore a Bob Marley T-shirt.<br />
"Ray and I and Robbie made two<br />
alburns after Jim died," he says.<br />
"We realized we didn't have a focal<br />
point. Then Robbie and I had another<br />
group, the Butts Band, which was<br />
together about a year. We went to<br />
Jamaica to record. I wrote an article<br />
about Marley and my experiences in<br />
Jamaica. I think Wet magazine is<br />
going to put it out.<br />
"When that group fell apart, I<br />
realized what a special group I was<br />
in, in the Doors. I shied away from<br />
being in another band.<br />
"I studied acting for 2% years. I<br />
wanted to break away from my<br />
drums. It is my security and I love<br />
it. I know how to do it; I've done it so<br />
many years. I wanted to get up and<br />
express myself."<br />
Then, a year and a half ago, a<br />
friend took Densmore to a concert<br />
26<br />
The Daily Collegian<br />
Friday, Dec. 11<br />
by Bess Snyder and her small, avant-garde,<br />
modern-dance troupe. He<br />
and Miss Snyder talked after the<br />
concert and came up with the idea<br />
that he could drum while she danced.<br />
"Then she started to make this<br />
drummer a character. I got up from<br />
my drums and spoke to her. Then<br />
she said, 'I've got this one piece I<br />
think you could 'dance in.' That's<br />
when I started taking dance classes.<br />
She has a house in Santa Monica<br />
where there are classes in .different<br />
kinds of dance. It's the focal point of<br />
the Los Angeles Area Dance Alliance."<br />
Densmore is 36, as he quickly<br />
says, "about the time when dancers<br />
give up." But he is studying ballet,<br />
on an elementary level, always has<br />
been thin and wiry, and says he can<br />
stretch his leg farther than he could<br />
a year ago.<br />
The Doors played in Madison<br />
Square Garden and Bess Snyder and<br />
Company's audience is small but,<br />
Densmore says, when he danced<br />
with her in "I Don't Think It's Funny,<br />
Honey," in San Diego, San Francisco<br />
and Santa Monica, he had<br />
butterflies in his stomach.<br />
"I'm still interested in acting,"<br />
Densmore says.. "I'm sidetracked<br />
now, so I think I'll stay in dance for a<br />
few years. My individual growth is<br />
doing good. That's why I'm here. It<br />
is painful sometimes to dance and it<br />
also feel ' s good. My body is the<br />
instrument, not the drums. It's more<br />
vulnerable and frightening -"<br />
Densmore is also able to help the<br />
group financially, which pleases<br />
him. He was impressed with the<br />
very first concert he saw by "this<br />
group of dancers trying to say something<br />
to people, for no profit."
O'Toole finds the studio<br />
a difficult place to work<br />
By BOB THOMAS<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - "Stupid,<br />
ridiculous and ultimately self-defeating.".<br />
That's Peter O'Toble's<br />
analysis of working conditions after<br />
his first real experience in the Hollywood<br />
studios. ¦<br />
The British actor has been performing<br />
in films since "Kidnapped"<br />
in 1959, and mostly for American<br />
producers — "Lawrence of Arabia,"<br />
"Beckett," "Lord Jim," "What's<br />
New, Pussycat?" "The Lion in Winter,"<br />
"Goodbye, Mr. Chips," etc.<br />
Curiously, he has never undergone<br />
the Hollywood studio experience until<br />
now.<br />
"Well, I did make some added<br />
scenes for 'Masada' at Universal,"<br />
he cited, "and although 'Stunt Man'<br />
was shot mostly on location, we did a<br />
few pickup shots here."<br />
O'Toole was spending a few moments<br />
of relaxation in his motor<br />
home-dressing room on his next-tolast<br />
day in "My,Favorite Year" at<br />
MGM. His complaint was directed<br />
not at the movie, which he has<br />
greatly enjoyed, but at studio thinking<br />
that decrees a full workday. He<br />
arrives for work in the early morning<br />
and leaves well after dark.<br />
"It makes no sense," he declared,<br />
pushing a cigarette into his holder.<br />
"Working in films is hard enough for<br />
actors — doing 6ne-or two-minute<br />
scenes every couple of hours. To try<br />
to maintain your energy for a 12-<br />
THE YUCATAN HAMMOCK<br />
ft<br />
hour period is absolutely impossible.<br />
You can't even keep your makeup in<br />
suitable condition 12 hours at a<br />
time."<br />
Aside from the hours, O'Toole is<br />
delighted with "My Favorite Year."<br />
Understandably so, since he has a<br />
bravura role that any actor would<br />
envy. He plays Alan Swann, a larg- .<br />
er-than-life film star who swashes<br />
buckles and swigs bottles with equal<br />
abandon. Sound like Errol Flynn?<br />
The resemblance is more than coincidental.<br />
The year is 1954, and Swann is<br />
booked on television's "Comedy<br />
Cavalcade," starring Stan (King)<br />
Raiser (Joe Bologna). Swann, de- '<br />
spite his on-screen bravery, is terrified<br />
by the prospect of live TV.<br />
UP) wlrophoto<br />
Peter O'Toole<br />
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Humble Fonda subject of new biography<br />
By BOB THOMAS<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Henry Fonda,<br />
struggling' with health problems, has<br />
much to cheer him these days: praise for<br />
his performance in the new film "On<br />
Golden Pond"; his appearance with<br />
Katharine Hepburn on Time's cover;<br />
praise for his autobiography, "Fonda —<br />
My Life."<br />
The book was written by playwrightbiographer<br />
Howard Teichmann, based<br />
on 200 hours of interviews with the star<br />
plus talks with his family and friends.<br />
The result is a bit more adulatory than<br />
the modest Fonda would probably like,<br />
but with characteristic honesty he discusses<br />
the major events of his life.<br />
Well, almost all. He is incurably honest,<br />
but also a gentleman. He chooses to<br />
omit some of the ill treatment from<br />
producers and . directors and false<br />
friends. Unlike some star autobiographies,<br />
"Fonda — My Life" is not an<br />
exercise in retribution.<br />
One'of Fonda's earliest memories was<br />
of a'boy of five when his mother wakened<br />
him to see Halley's Comet flash across<br />
the Nebraska sky. She told him: "Remember<br />
this. . .it comes around only<br />
every 76 years. Seventy-six years is a<br />
long time..."<br />
Fonda discusses with candor his experiences<br />
with women, beginning with a<br />
disastrous initiation in Minneapolis during<br />
his brief college career. Despite his<br />
lifetime shyness, he has loved many<br />
women, sometimes disastrously. He<br />
speaks frankly of his four failed marriages<br />
and blames himself for the divorces.<br />
The actor recalled a 1927 date on the<br />
Princeton campus with a blond New<br />
England girl from whom he exacted a<br />
1<br />
single chaste kiss in the back seat of a<br />
car. A few days later, he received a<br />
letter: "I've told Mother about our lovely<br />
experience together in the moonlight.<br />
She will announce the engagement when<br />
we get home." Fonda adds that he believed<br />
he was engaged — "That's how<br />
naive I was, and that's what a devil Bette<br />
Davis could be at 17."<br />
During their early Hollywood days,<br />
Fonda and James Stewart shared a<br />
house and partook of nightlife with movie<br />
beauties. One night Stewart dated Ginger<br />
Rogers and Fonda escorted Lucille Ball<br />
to dancing at the Cocoanut Grove and<br />
ended at dawn in Barney's Beanery.<br />
When Stewart commented that the women's<br />
inakeup looked heavy in the morning<br />
light, Fonda agreed and Miss Ball's<br />
ardor cooled. Fonda comments: "If I'd<br />
behaved myself, they might have named<br />
that studio Henrylu, not Desilu."<br />
Fonda is less than expansive about the<br />
rifts between himself and his famous<br />
children, commenting: "Peter and Jane<br />
were successful very young. Their rebellion<br />
against me as a parent didn't last too<br />
long. They willingly admitted, 'I'm sorry,<br />
Dad, for the hurtful things that were<br />
said.' Jane said plenty of hurtful things to<br />
the press: She told one reporter she grew<br />
up in a completely phony atmosphere."<br />
Fonda's restless spirit finally turned<br />
tranquil after his marriage, to airline<br />
stewardess and model Shirlee Adams.<br />
He comments: "Shirlee turned me<br />
around. I'm easier with her than I've<br />
ever been with anyone before. Maybe<br />
I'm mellowing with age. Maybe with<br />
Shirlee I'm more willing to compromise."<br />
His friend Nedda Logan observes:<br />
"His whole life opened like a rose coming<br />
out from a tiny, tight bud."<br />
Hey, Mom! Hey, Dad!<br />
I'm coming home<br />
for Summer Term.<br />
i: .<br />
t i<br />
>'«<br />
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it<br />
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The <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> Press: Little khovvn, but very useful<br />
By LINDSAY NAYTHONS<br />
Daily Collegian Staff Writer<br />
One of the <strong>University</strong>'s lesser-known departments<br />
is also one that has access to many of the<br />
world's greatest minds — including <strong>University</strong><br />
faculty members.<br />
Readers in university libraries throughout the<br />
world have access to books published by the<br />
<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> Press. The Press also publishes<br />
educational magazines and regional publications.<br />
Located in 215 Wagner, the Press reviews<br />
manuscripts for potential books, copy edits the<br />
finished ones and sends them to be printed.<br />
Book 7 orders are taken at the office, including<br />
those from branch offices of the <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong><br />
Press located in London and Tokyo.<br />
Office manager Robert Paradine said before<br />
a book is sent to the printers, it must meet<br />
certain standards, including clarity of organization<br />
and expression, comprehensiveness and<br />
originality of the book's subjects.<br />
"Two faculty members review the manuscript.<br />
If they both give positive reviews', then<br />
the book-to-be is on its way to the presses."<br />
The printing is done by many different companies<br />
— "wherever we can get the best price,"<br />
Paradine said.<br />
Another important decision in determining<br />
where to send the books to be printed is quantity<br />
of books to print.<br />
Most of the subject matter contained in the<br />
books published by the Press deals with math<br />
and science, including topics from the social<br />
sciences and humanities.<br />
However, the Press also publishes books<br />
outside the academic spectrum.<br />
From the Creator of "Lord of the Rings"<br />
"Mzt<br />
SPECTACULAR ^f '}<br />
"Heavy Traffic "<br />
ANIMA TION by RALPH BAKSHI<br />
pHMHK<br />
4.S*- ><br />
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y<br />
The "Gymnastics Safety Manual" was written<br />
for the United <strong>State</strong>s Gymnastics Safety<br />
Association by former men's gymnastics coach<br />
Gene Wettstone.<br />
And Eugene E. White, a professor in the<br />
Speech Communication Department, examined<br />
the ways of conceptualizing and exploring rhetorical<br />
experience and the nature and uses of<br />
rhetorical communication in "Rhetoric in Transition."<br />
At a university operation, they are more likely to get<br />
books published that commercial houses would consider<br />
r<br />
marginal or uneconomic<br />
Matthew Guntharp, a member of one of the<br />
local bands, the Buffalo Chipkickers, penned<br />
"Learning the Fiddler's Ways." The annual<br />
fiddlers' competition at the Central <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania<br />
Festival of the Arts is a development from<br />
the fieldwork involved in Guntharp's book.<br />
<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> Press Editorial Director John<br />
Pickering said the notion of a university press<br />
goes back over 500 years to the first university<br />
press at Oxford <strong>University</strong>.<br />
Pickering said there are two main reasons<br />
college professors go to a university press to get<br />
their work published rather than a commercial<br />
publishing house.<br />
"At a university operation, they are more<br />
likely to get books published that commercial<br />
»¦'*»'<br />
mto*. 'WfcWrTrv<br />
!§<br />
Student<br />
"Ralph Bakshi may well music by<br />
be a genius. He JJM MORRISON<br />
continues to push JIMI HENDRIX<br />
animation techniques to JANIS JOPLIN<br />
the outer limits." and other great artists ,<br />
— Vincent Canby,<br />
N.Y. TIMES<br />
Friday & Sat. in 112 Chambers 7, 8:45, 10:30 p.m. $1.50<br />
niK<br />
LAST DETAIL<br />
J A CK NICHOLSON<br />
BEST ACTOR<br />
Cannes Film Festival .<br />
^ .<br />
I oumr. in. |<br />
Fri and Sunday 7 and 9 p.m. 101 Chambers $1.50<br />
houses would consider marginal or uneconomic,"<br />
he said. "Also, university presses will keep<br />
a book in print longer than commercial houses.<br />
"And many faculty members feel they get<br />
more attention from a university press."<br />
The <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> Press does not give options on<br />
its specific writing contracts.<br />
"We hope that the authors will come back to<br />
us if they feel we have done a good job,"<br />
Pickering said.<br />
John Pickering, editorial director<br />
The National Endowment for the Humanities,<br />
the National Science Foundation and the <strong>University</strong><br />
contribute money to the Press. However,<br />
the <strong>University</strong> gives very little help,<br />
Pickering said.<br />
"Mainly (the <strong>University</strong>) provides us with pur<br />
office facilities," he said. "We are largely selfsupporting<br />
although some of our books are<br />
partially subsidized if they entail high costs and<br />
have a slim market."<br />
White said his book on rhetoric was the first<br />
he published with the Press. However, he has<br />
had other books published with commercial<br />
houses such as MacMillan and Allyn & Bachyn,<br />
he said.<br />
"I first went to the Press with my manuscript<br />
THE solo ARTISTRY °><br />
KENNY MATMEU<br />
ToNiqHT ONly<br />
/^^<br />
io-i<br />
^QS^<br />
AT l^ifiTiQ<br />
21C WKT COI ECE<br />
WDFM wonts to know what you think of us!<br />
This week's live Two-Woy Radio<br />
lets you air your comments/ questions<br />
or suggestions so that we can<br />
serve you better.<br />
Mark Giesen, Station Manager and Michell Rossi, Program, Director<br />
. will be featured on<br />
Sunday December 13th, 1981<br />
from 6:30-7 p.m.<br />
WDFM FM 91<br />
Become a child<br />
again for the<br />
HOUDflVS<br />
A SP€CIAl SHOWING<br />
OF<br />
UJAIT DISNCV'S<br />
FANTASY<br />
A.R.H.S. MOVIES<br />
3 ACADEMY<br />
AWARDS<br />
Best<br />
Cinematography<br />
Best<br />
Art Direction<br />
Best<br />
Costume Design<br />
"The year's<br />
best film."<br />
Charlu Champlin, O ^<br />
LOS ANGELES TIMES , A53E •'t«e<br />
&PPR . t -4 ' mi<br />
A JEM Production for Alpha Phi Omega<br />
U012 Alpha Beta Chapter<br />
7/9:15/11:30 p.m.<br />
7/9:15 p.m.<br />
$1.25<br />
Fri, Sat 7,9, 11 Sun 7, 9<br />
105 Forum $1.50<br />
SSSSUiB*<br />
Fri, Sat 7, 9, 11<br />
Pollock Rec Room<br />
U-226<br />
Sorority to make<br />
waves at annual<br />
Anchor Splash<br />
Delta Gamma sorority will be making<br />
waves this Sunday afternoon when the 13th<br />
annual Delta Gamma Anchor Splash takes<br />
place in the McCoy Natatorium.<br />
The sorority has set its goal for this year<br />
at $5,000, said Joy Manzinger; chairwoman<br />
of the Anchor Splash.<br />
Swimmers from 43 fraternities and sororities<br />
will compete in both serious and fun<br />
swimming races to raise money for the<br />
Delta Gamma national philanthropy, Sight<br />
Conservation arid Aid to the Blind, she said.<br />
The teams will be judged in three categories:<br />
bathing beauties, spirit and swim-<br />
ming.<br />
'• ' •<br />
For the bathing beauties category, each<br />
team submitted a picture of one contestant,<br />
dressed up in a crazy outfit, Manzinger said.<br />
The pictures of all contestants were on<br />
display in the HUB basement this past week<br />
and were voted upon by the public.<br />
The spirit category will be voted upon<br />
according to the number of supporters for<br />
each team. ¦ ¦ ' .; /. '<br />
Teams will receive points based on how<br />
they place in the races, which are separated<br />
info men's and women's divisions, Manzinger<br />
said.<br />
The Witch ' Doctor from WQWK radio<br />
station, who is a Delta Gamma Anchorman,<br />
will , broadcast live from the event, which<br />
begins at 1 p.m., Manzinger said.<br />
Admission is 75 cents.<br />
; . • — by Jenny Clouse<br />
Sun 7, 9<br />
$1.50
FILM DEPARTMENT<br />
CINEMATHEQUE<br />
ERASERHEAD<br />
DIRECTED BY DAVID LYNCH<br />
flH ^H|^^^^ HH<br />
^^ ¦^^ ¦^n<br />
imyumm<br />
FROM TIIH DIRECTOR WHO BROUGHT US "TOE<br />
ELEPHANT MAN," HERE IS HIS FIRST FEATURE<br />
FILM. "F.RASERIIEAD" HAS PROVEN TO HE THE<br />
CULT FILM OF THE LATE 70'S , ESTAI1L1SHINC<br />
LYNCH AS AN AMERICAN SURREALIST AND A<br />
UNIQUE TALENT IN FILM TODAY. .<br />
A FIUl OF EXTRAORDINARY POWER , "KRASER-<br />
IIEAD" IS PRESENTED MUCH LIKE A NICHTMAItE<br />
WHERE LAYERS OF'REALITY brilliantly MESH, DISSOLVE<br />
AND ARE RECONSTRUCTED INTO A TERRIFYING<br />
VI.'IKIN OF AN KMIvridflAI.I.V AND IMIYSICAI.I.Y<br />
MAI.FlMMEU SOCI ETY .<br />
"A<br />
horror film. "<br />
"An extraordinary lilm which resembles no other . . in a class by itsetl. II intimately blends<br />
horror and terror , atrocity and tho absurd ... a masterpiece olphantas tmaj tic cinema!"<br />
" ' ' —Joan Claude Romar. Franeh Film i '<br />
FRI. & SAT. DECEMBER 11, 12<br />
u-0193 121 SPARKS S1.50 7&9PM<br />
| _ |S l T |U| P l_g_ Mj T l_ lF|i i L M III<br />
B Q a e» a a 5 o - ""3 a a a a a o a a<br />
MOTEL HELL<br />
Thurs. & Fri. Dec. 10, 11 HUB Assembly Room<br />
7& 9 PM $ 1.50 U4193<br />
he<br />
a<br />
ar<br />
in<br />
nt<br />
Fri-Sat 7, 9, 11 MAA 10 Sparks<br />
Sun 7, 9 UOU $1.50<br />
CAMPUS PREMIERE<br />
eP *<br />
\ mMTHEY'RE<br />
WAITING FOR<br />
GEOnGlNA SPELVIH<br />
*<br />
YOUR LOVE<br />
HILLARY .i. I0HN VERONICA ERIC LEE<br />
^ * *<br />
SUMMERS * LESLIE* HART * EDWARDS * CARROU,<br />
Fri-Sat 7, 9, 11 ii£/* 111 Forum<br />
Sun 7, 9 Ubla $1.50<br />
U268-03P<br />
ragmMeiomo<br />
Friday<br />
¦:¦ ¦<br />
6:00 CD WEATHER-WORLD<br />
¦: ¦ ¦¦¦<br />
¦<br />
. "¦'© CHARLIE'S ANGELS : .V' .'l'i •<br />
. QDQDOIDNEWS • , ,. .<br />
O TIC TAG DOUGH<br />
ID HAPPY DAYS AGAIN<br />
S3) © NEWS (CONTINUES . FROM<br />
DAYTIME) ¦ ¦• -<br />
6:30 CD SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY<br />
• QD NBCNEWS<br />
QD ABCNEWS ' •<br />
O BULLSEYE .<br />
aa>(a)© cBS NEws ov.c-<br />
. (D LA VERNE AND SHIRLEY AND COMPANY<br />
6:69 0D DAILY NUMBER<br />
7:09 ® MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT<br />
• 0QD M.A.S.H.<br />
CD DAILY LOTTERY NUMBER ' ¦<br />
i ;•-<br />
O YOU ASKED FOR IT Host: Rich Little.<br />
Scheduled segments are on Spain's youngest<br />
bullfighter; Doctor Jim, Africa's bush M.D.; the<br />
beauty with 1000 bodies.<br />
CIS MUPPETSHOW<br />
CD JEFFERSONS<br />
S3) TIC TAC DOUGH<br />
© FAMILYFEUD . -<br />
7:01 QD PM MAGAZINE<br />
7:30 SD DICK CAVETT SHOW '<br />
0 ALL IN THE FAMILY<br />
''<br />
QD YOU ASKED FOR IT ...i<br />
00 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT<br />
© ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT Hosts': Tom<br />
Halllck, Dixie Whatley, Ron Hendren. In New<br />
York , Susan Saint James says the movie<br />
business is tough, but admits that it isn't bad<br />
enough to prevent her from falling in love with<br />
most of her leading men.<br />
S3) LA VERNE AND SHIRLEY AND COMPANY<br />
CD NEWS<br />
SS® JOKER' S WILD<br />
8:00 (3D WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW<br />
0 PM MAGAZINE<br />
QD BILLY GRAHAM CRUSADE<br />
QDBENSONBensonoffershlsreslgnationafter<br />
being accused of favoritism because his<br />
girlfriend turns out to be a lobbyist for a real<br />
estate project being considered by the state<br />
legislature. (Closed-Captioned; U.S.A.)<br />
- 0 MISL SOCCER Jacksonville Tea Men vs<br />
New York Cosmos<br />
(EDO© THE DUKES OF HAZZARD.CIetus<br />
falls In love with Daisy and gets fired by Hoss<br />
Hogg tor letting his hoped-for, future In-laws<br />
escape from jail after Luke and Bo are accused<br />
of bad check writing. (60 mlns.)<br />
CD YOGI'S FIRST CHRISTMAS An animated<br />
special featuring the legendary Yogi Bear and<br />
his friends Boo Boo, Huckleberry Hound, Augle<br />
Doggie, Snagglepuss, Cindy Bear, Ranger<br />
Smith, and Santa Claus.<br />
8:30 (3D . WALL STREET WEEK WITH LOUIS<br />
RUKEYSER<br />
0 CAROL BURNETT AND FRIENDS<br />
QD BOSOM BUDDIES ,/:<br />
9:00 QD PEOPLES'S BUSINESS<br />
0 MERV GRIFFIN<br />
QD MCCLAIN'S LAW McClain is enraged but<br />
powerless when two robbers, whom he<br />
, arrested, are given immunity from prosecution<br />
in exchange for their cooperation In another<br />
case and return to terrorize their victims who<br />
were to testify against them. (60 mlns.)<br />
(ID DARKROOM A Vietnam veteran happily<br />
. . giveshis'sonatoyarmy.onlytobecometerrlfied ' by the boy's sudden knowledge of secret<br />
wa'rtimehorrors;andacity-slickhustlertang!es with the voodoo of an old Cajun woman. (60<br />
miris.)<br />
A® S3) S3) DALLAS A desperate J.R. Is forced<br />
to submit to Cliff's demands (or Ewlng property<br />
after Cliff buys the bank notes and threatens to<br />
foreclose; and Bobby's investigation of J.R.,'s<br />
connection to Kristin's trust fund reveals<br />
startling information which prompts Bobby to<br />
makeacrucialdeclsionconcernlngthefutureof<br />
Kristin's child. (60 mins.)<br />
CD BILLY GRAHAM CRUSADE<br />
9:30 QD INSIDE BASKETBALL<br />
10:00 QD MILLER'S COURT<br />
0 NEWS<br />
CD ATR1BUTETO 'MR.TELEVISION! MILTON<br />
BERLE Star-studded special honoring Milton<br />
Berle'stelevisloncareer.fromhisdebut in 19.48<br />
to today. Among those appearing are Johnny<br />
Carson, Lucille Ball, Bob Hope, Carol Burnett,<br />
Angle Dickinson, Gregory Peck, Gene Kelly,<br />
Frank Sinatra, Don Rickles, Carl Reiner, Joey<br />
Bishop and Kermit The Frog. (Repeat; 60<br />
mins.)<br />
QD STRIKE FORCE Frank Murphy andhisteam<br />
go after an amusement park clown who makes<br />
extramoneybysellinganewhightoyoungsters,<br />
stampsthatbearcolorfulcartooncharacterson<br />
one side and a dose of LSD on the other: (60<br />
mins.)<br />
0 NINE ON NEW JERSEY<br />
(H)(i3)(3>FALCONCRESTA(terPaulSalinger,<br />
a fast living pilot fails to persuade Chase to<br />
become his business partner In an Investment,<br />
Salinger convinces Angle Channlng to back his<br />
• scheme designed to run Chase out of the wine<br />
country. (60 mlns.)<br />
CD INDEPENDENT NETWORK NEWS<br />
10:30 (3D LAWMAKERS<br />
0 GREATEST SPORTS LEGENDS Host:<br />
GeorgePllmptontalkswithbasketballstarRick<br />
Barry.<br />
CD NEWS<br />
11:00 QD NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT<br />
, 0 M.A.S.H. ,<br />
(3D CD 95) S3) © NEWS<br />
SflKSttV^fi<br />
• ''¦'¦ •<br />
0 BENNY HILL SHOW<br />
CD JEFFERSONS<br />
11:30 QD ABC CAPTIONED NEWS<br />
0 KOJAK '<br />
QD THE TONIGHT SHOW Guests: Bob Hope.<br />
Mac Davis. (60 mins.)<br />
QD ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE Anchored by Ted<br />
Koppel.<br />
0 MAUDE<br />
09) S3) © BEHIND THE SCREEN After Joyce<br />
catches Janie-Claire secretly entertaining<br />
Brian, the actress frantically schemes to stop<br />
Joyce from telling Evan Hammer. (35 mins.)<br />
CD SATURDAY NIGHT Host: Hugh Hefner.<br />
12:00 QD FRIDAYS<br />
©MOVIE-(SUSPENSE)****"Psycho"1960<br />
Anthony Perkins, Janet Leigh. A woman steals<br />
a fortune and encounters a young man too long<br />
under the domination of his mother. (2 hrs.)<br />
12:05 33)S3) CBS LATE MOVIE 'The Uncanny' 1977<br />
/ Stars: Peter Gushing, Ray Milland. Three<br />
horrifying vignettes , linking an eccentric<br />
writer's manuscript, recount fiendish killings of<br />
humans by malevolent felines. (Repeat; 2<br />
hrs.)<br />
62 MOVIE -(COMEDY-WESTERN) *• V,<br />
"Rancho Deluxe" 1975 Jeff Bridges.<br />
Elizabeth Ashley. Two sidekicks are<br />
modern-day cattle rustlers who steal beef , .one<br />
head at a time, from a neighboring rancher.<br />
Finally, they conspire with the ranch hands to<br />
steal the whole herd. (R) (95 mins.)<br />
12:30 0 AMERICA'S TOP 10<br />
SD SCTV COMEDY NETWORK<br />
CD STAR TREK'Plato's Stepchildren'<br />
1:00 0 SHANANA<br />
1:30 0 LOVE AMERICAN STYLE<br />
QD MOVIE -(SUSPENSE) *• "Journey Into<br />
Midnight" 1968 Chad Everett, Julie Harris. A<br />
two part suspense thriller. 1) A commercial<br />
artist , while at a costume party is taken Into a<br />
tragic past. 2) An unscrupulous opportunist<br />
tries to set himself up wilh a wealthy widow, but<br />
fails to reckon with the spirit world. (115<br />
mins.)<br />
, CD INDEPENDENT NETWORK NEWS-i*?. '• '•.¦<br />
1:40 (SI NEWS<br />
"<br />
2:00 0 MOVIE-(COMEDY) **V4 "Blonde,<br />
Bombshell" 1933 Jean Harlow.Tranchot<br />
. Tone.Hecticlifeofastarwholoves.Hghts. loses<br />
and wins her man, despite all odds. (2 hrs., 20<br />
mins.)<br />
0 JOE FRANKLIN SHOW<br />
09) NEWS<br />
CD MOVIE -(COMEDY) ••• V, "Kind Hearts<br />
And Coronets" 1950 Alec Guinness, Valerie<br />
Hobson. An enterprising 'black sheep' in a<br />
family decides to dispose of eight relatives. (2<br />
Saturday<br />
8:30 0 SUPERHEROES<br />
SD SMURFS<br />
0 NEWARK AND REALITY<br />
S2)S3)"/<br />
0 DR. WHO 'The Robots', 'Ark In Space'<br />
CD OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR \ . ". .<br />
10:26 QD ASK NBCNEWS<br />
10:30 CD INTRODUCTION.TO PHILOSOPHY<br />
© LAUREL AND HARDY -<br />
'¦' QD SPIDER-MAN AND HIS AMAZING<br />
FRIENDS.<br />
3® S3) S2 THE POPEYE AND OLIVE SHOW<br />
10:55 QD SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK<br />
10:56 Q3)S3)©I.IN THE NEWS<br />
11:00 CD AMERICAN GOVERNMENT<br />
0 SOUL TRAIN<br />
SD SPACE STARS<br />
, ¦. (3D NEP FAMILY SPECIAL 'Bridge of Adam<br />
' Rush' '<br />
, ''<br />
. .<br />
¦<br />
" ©MOVIE-(SCIENCE FICTION) **V4 "This<br />
: 'o Island Earth" 1955 Jeff Morrow, Rex Reason.<br />
. .. Scientists are shanghaied by aliens, to help<br />
' ¦ 'theirwar-tbrnplanet! (2h'rs.) '<br />
, ;a®S3)©>-BLACKSTAR;<br />
CD HEEHAWGuestsiDavidFrizzellandShelly<br />
"- West, Oscar/The Grouch. (60 mlns.)<br />
11:26 QD ASK NBC NEWS<br />
3® S3) ©IN THE NEWS<br />
11:30 QD AMERICAN GOVERNMENT<br />
3® S3)© TARZAN-LONE RANGER-ZORRO<br />
ADVENTURE HOUR ¦<br />
11:56 OS © IN THE NEWS<br />
: . , AFTERNOON . .<br />
12:00 (3D CONTEMPORARY HEALTH ISSUES<br />
© AMERICA'S TOP 10<br />
GD NFLV HrHost: Bryant Gumbel: -<br />
CD ABC WEEKEND SPECIAL<br />
CD. WORLD. OF SURVIVAL Never Built To<br />
12:263® S3)© INTHENEWS<br />
12:30 QD CONTEMPORARY HEALTH ISSUES<br />
0 PORTRAITOFALEGEND<br />
CD NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE GAME<br />
, New York Jets at Cleveland Browns.<br />
CD AMERICANBANDSTANDHost:DlckClark.<br />
(60 mlns.)<br />
3® ACTION NEWS FOR KIDS<br />
CD MOVIE>(CLASSt.CJ,V , *.'!'Adventures Ot<br />
'<br />
, Tom Sawyer'' 1938 Tommy Kelly, Walter<br />
.'. ,'Brennan. Mark Twain's famous yarn about a<br />
, mischievous boy In a small Missouri town. (90<br />
' . •' • ¦ min'sj '.<br />
¦ ¦<br />
' -. S3) © TOM AND JERRY COMEDY SHOW<br />
12:56 S3) ©IN THE NEWS ,<br />
1:00 QD NEXT HUNDRED YEARS<br />
•'•0SHANANA<br />
^<br />
0 GREATEST SPORTS LEGENDS Host:<br />
Reggie Jackson talks with boxing great Joe<br />
Frazler.<br />
3® © THE NEW FAT ALBERT SHOW<br />
S3) HEALTHBEAT<br />
1:26 3® S3)© INTHENEWS .<br />
1:30 0 BRADY BUNCH -V •.<br />
" : QD NCAA FOOTBALL • •<br />
0 NHLHOCKEYNew YorkRangersvs<br />
Philadelphia Flyers<br />
3® © NCAA BASKETBALL Wake Forest at<br />
Marquette.<br />
- •<br />
. - S3) ;NCAA BASKETB'ALLvWake Forest at<br />
' Marquette, or USC at Long Beach <strong>State</strong>.<br />
2:00 QDONCEUPONACLASSIC'TaleofTwoCities'<br />
When Darnayreceivesnews of Gabelle's being<br />
seized, he leaves immediately lor France.<br />
(Closed-Captioned; U.S.A.)<br />
0 LITTLE RASCALS<br />
CD MOVIE -(COMEDY) ?• "Blondle For<br />
' '.." Victory" 1942 StuaryErwin, <strong>Penn</strong>y Singleton.<br />
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2:30 tD'WHAT'S IN THE NEWS<br />
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7:45,QD F.OCUS'ON WOMEN;<br />
8:0d
; • An International Craft Sale will be<br />
held from 6 to 8 tonight at the Wesley<br />
Foundation, 256 E. College Ave. The sale,<br />
sponsored by the World Agricultural<br />
Service Society, will also be held from<br />
9:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. tomorrow, and<br />
from 1 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.<br />
. « The Society of Mineral Economists<br />
will sponsor a faculty-student mixer at 7<br />
tonight at 510 <strong>Penn</strong> Towers, 340 E. Beaver<br />
Ave.<br />
1<br />
'* The Executive Energy Conservation<br />
Committee is interested in conducting<br />
a survey on student attitudes and<br />
knowledge on energy issues. For further<br />
information, contact M. Rashid Khan at<br />
865-2291.<br />
" • Late applications for a position with<br />
thb Student Counselor Program will accepted<br />
until 5 today only in 135 Boucke.<br />
• A representative of Capital Blue<br />
Cross and Blue Shield will answer questions<br />
on Blue Cross-Blue Shield Insurance<br />
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. today in Kern<br />
lobby and from 2:15 to 3 this afternoon in<br />
112 Kern.<br />
• The Krishna Yoga Society will spon- • The <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> Glee Club and <strong>Penn</strong><br />
sor a free vegetarian feast at 7 tonight <strong>State</strong> Chorus will present a Christmas<br />
and 5 Sunday afternoon at 103 E. Hamil- concert at 3 Sunday afternoon in Schwab<br />
ton Ave. Auditorium.<br />
• The Astronomy Club and the astronomy<br />
department will sponsor an astronomy<br />
open house at 8 tonight on the sixth<br />
floor of Davey Laboratory. If overcast,<br />
the open house will be held at the same<br />
time and place tomorrow.<br />
o The Ballroom Dance Club will meet<br />
at 7 tonight in 133 White Building.<br />
o The American Institute of Industrial<br />
Engineers will sponsor a coffeehouse<br />
¦**** ••••••••••••••• •<br />
* Arena I Starts Friday 1<br />
* ^ k |<br />
MERYL STREEP *<br />
i gM^^Mni<br />
'M WHMMbJWE UNITED ARTISTsLSl<br />
J<br />
:£ Last Time - Gigolo - 7:45-5:45 J<br />
*<br />
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r4c nTffiHlffl ^iir "*<br />
1^^*«»T-i»iiit «<br />
^.<br />
*<br />
1600 N. Atherton St. 237-2444 •<br />
*<br />
•*<br />
FREE PARKING<br />
*<br />
£ Arena II Starts Friday *<br />
£ WOMAN IN LOVE I<br />
£ Last Time — Nibbler - 7:00-8:30-10:00 X *<br />
.*•.•••••• *•••••• *••••<br />
! Student Nurses<br />
Association<br />
•" < will hold the first meeting<br />
':; oP winter term Sunday,<br />
;: Dec. 13 at 6:30 p.m. in H.<br />
I '. Dev. Living Center. ,<br />
;; Speaker-. P. Stockhouse,<br />
I ¦ . a pediatric Nurse<br />
': ' Practitioner.<br />
;; Christmas refreshments<br />
'• : will be served! u-256<br />
- /gprr I "3 I'rjp'KPV<br />
i^BnI,] if.'ii• ] x^-fi ^BP(BP<br />
116 H»liHi 237-7657<br />
REDS R<br />
i MON-THURS 8:00, FRI 8:30<br />
SAT 1:00,4:45,8:30<br />
; SUN 2:00 & 8:00<br />
TIME BANDITS PG<br />
¦ THURS 7:45 & 9:45 FRI 7:30 & 9:30<br />
SAT & SUN 1:30,3:30,5:30,7:30,9:30<br />
129 5. Athflon 237-3112<br />
. STEWARDESSES X<br />
NIGHTLY 7:00,8:30, 10:00<br />
SAT & SUN 2:30,4:00,5:30,7:00,8:30,<br />
10:00 STARTS FRIDAY<br />
, ¦¦.... 114 S. AlUn 237«OQ13<br />
ARTHUR PG<br />
! NIGHTLY 7:30 &9:30<br />
'SAT & SUN 2:00,3:45,5:30,7:30,9:30<br />
128 W. Coll«n» 237-7666<br />
SNEAK PREVIEW<br />
ABSENCE OF MALICE R<br />
FRIDAY ONLY 9:15<br />
127 S. Frof r 238-6QQ5<br />
ROLLOVER R<br />
NIGHTLY 7:30 & 9:45<br />
SAT & SUN 1:00,3:00,5:15, 7:30, 9:45<br />
STARTS FRIDAY<br />
128 W. CoU*g« 237-7866<br />
RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK PG<br />
NIGHTLY 7:00 & 9:15<br />
SAT & SUN 2:00,4:15,7:00,9:15<br />
BUDDY BUDDY PG<br />
NIGHTLY 7:30, 9:30 '<br />
SAT & SUN 1:30,3:30,5:30,7:30,9:30<br />
STARTS FRIDAY<br />
from 9 to 11 this morning in 213 Ham<br />
mond.<br />
sion is free<br />
• The European Student Association<br />
will sponsor a party at 8 tonight in the<br />
Atherton Hall basement.<br />
• The <strong>State</strong> College Area Music Guild<br />
will present a concert at 2:30 Sunday<br />
night at the Unitarian Fellowship, 758<br />
Glenn Rd.<br />
• Black Caucus will hold a Kwanzaa<br />
Candelight Ceremony at 6 tomorrow<br />
night and Sunday night in the Conference<br />
Room of the Walnut Building.<br />
• The United Ministry will sponsor a<br />
free film, "Nothing But A Man," at 8<br />
tomorrow night at the Wesley Foundation,<br />
256 E. College Ave.<br />
• The Kuiig Fu Club will hold an open<br />
workout at 6:30 tomorrow night in 106<br />
White Building.<br />
• The Arts and Architecture Interest<br />
House will sponsor and open house at 7<br />
tomorrow night in the design studio on<br />
the first floor of Beam Hall.<br />
• The Model Railroad Club will hold a<br />
open house from 7 to 9 tomorrow night<br />
and at 1 Sunday afternoon in their clubroom<br />
in the basement of the HUB.<br />
• The Newman Student Association of<br />
the <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> Catholic Center will sponsor<br />
a Christmas caroling program and<br />
party at 8 Sunday night. Anyone interested<br />
is asked to meet in the main lounge<br />
of Eishenhower Chapel at 8 p.m.<br />
• The <strong>University</strong> Choir and <strong>University</strong><br />
Symphony Orchestra, will present "A<br />
Christmas Festival" at 8:30 Sunday<br />
night in Eisenhower Auditorium. Admis-<br />
a<br />
i<br />
• The Badminton Club will meet from<br />
noon to 2 p.m. Sunday afternoon in the<br />
north gym of the White Building.<br />
• The Annual Children's Christmas<br />
Party, , sponsored by the Paul .Robeson<br />
Cultural Center, will be held from 12:30<br />
p.m. to 3:30 p.m. Sunday afternoon in the<br />
Assembly Room of the Walnut Building.<br />
The event is part of the International<br />
Holiday Festival.<br />
© <strong>State</strong> Rep. Gregg L. Cunningham,<br />
R-Centre County, will hold his weekly<br />
town meeting at 7 Sunday night in the<br />
Harris Township Municipal Building.<br />
police log<br />
• William R. Scheffley, 516 W. Whitehall<br />
Rd., told the <strong>State</strong> College Police<br />
Department on Wednesday that a car<br />
struck a mailbox and split a rail fence in<br />
front of his home between 2 and 2:30<br />
Wednesday morning.<br />
Damage to the mailbox and fence was<br />
about $400, police said.<br />
• A female student told <strong>University</strong><br />
Police Services on Wednesday that an<br />
unidentified male exposed himself to her<br />
in Thompson Hall.<br />
• Carol McClure, 331 E. Hamilton<br />
Ave., told <strong>State</strong> College police on<br />
Wednesday that seven or eight silver<br />
spoons were missing from her home<br />
since sometime between October 12 and<br />
Try Scarlet's 3%<br />
Egg-Plantation<br />
Frankly, my dear,<br />
the most tempting<br />
eggplant parmesan<br />
you've ever tasted.<br />
Served with beverage,<br />
crusty roll and<br />
butter , $3.35.<br />
Or sample an eggcellent<br />
omelet...<br />
fl u ffy eggs filled<br />
with <strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong><br />
cheddar or tender<br />
ham , $3.90.<br />
Great food, great surroundings,<br />
and great<br />
prices make the Nittany<br />
Lion the Inn place to be.<br />
II<br />
• Stewart W. Either, John Russell Ezzell<br />
and Ronald J. Teichman, members<br />
of the <strong>University</strong>'s College of Business<br />
Administration faculty, are winners in<br />
the Masters of Business Administration<br />
Association's annual Excellence in Teaching<br />
Awards.<br />
Bither,. professor of marketing, has<br />
won the award four times. Ezzell, associate<br />
professor and head of the department<br />
of finance, and Teichman, assistant<br />
professor of accounting, have both received<br />
the award twice.<br />
To determine the winners, course evaluations<br />
written by MBA students were<br />
studied by officers of the MBA Association,<br />
Michael P. Hottenstein, faculty director,<br />
of the MBA program, and Charles<br />
F. Maguire, assistant director.<br />
• Joseph L. French has been elected<br />
to the Committee on Accreditation of the<br />
American Psychological Association for<br />
a three-year term.<br />
December 1.<br />
The value of the missing items is about<br />
$280, police said.<br />
• Edgar Palpant, forestry research<br />
assistant, told <strong>University</strong> police on<br />
Wednesday that three pine trees were cut<br />
down and removed from the north side of<br />
the Forestry Research Laboratory.<br />
The trees are valued at $396, police<br />
said.<br />
* Guy Mussey, landscape foreman,<br />
told <strong>University</strong> police on Wednesday that<br />
three pine trees were missing from Parking<br />
Lot 80.<br />
The ;trees are valued at $360, police<br />
said.<br />
—by Michael Rossi<br />
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¦m<br />
we<br />
. French, professor in charge of educational<br />
psychology and school psychology<br />
in the <strong>University</strong>'s division of counseling<br />
and educational psychology, is one of ten<br />
members on the committee, which evaluates<br />
applications of U.S. psychology<br />
programs seeking approval. ...<br />
• Stanley F. Paulson, dean of the<br />
College of The Liberal Arts, has been<br />
elected chairman of the Commission on<br />
Arts and Sciences of the National Association<br />
of Land Grant Universities and<br />
Colleges for 1982-83.<br />
Paulson will also attend the 68th annual<br />
meeting of the Association of American<br />
Colleges in January in Boston.<br />
Paulson is a member of the asociation's<br />
board of directors and a program chairman.<br />
\<br />
• John J. Cahir, professor of meteorology<br />
and associate dean for resident<br />
instruction in the College of Earth and<br />
Mineral Sciences, is the new president of<br />
the National Weather Association.<br />
The association publishes The National<br />
Weather Digest, as well as sponsoring<br />
regional and national meetings,<br />
• Robert L. Webb, professor of electrical<br />
engineering, has been elected a<br />
Fellow of the American Society of Mechanical<br />
Engineers.<br />
The society honored Webb for his<br />
achievements in heat transfer research<br />
and enhanced heat transfer technology.<br />
He has several patents, and has been<br />
technical editor of the society's Journal<br />
of Heat Transfer and chairperson of the<br />
its Heat Transfer Division.<br />
• Craig F. Bohr en, associate professor<br />
of meteorology, has been appointed a<br />
consulting editor of Weatherwise, a bimonthly<br />
magazine on weather published<br />
by Heldref Publications, Washington.<br />
Bohren was also visiting scholar at the<br />
Institute of Atmospheric Physics at the<br />
<strong>University</strong> of Arizona last summer.<br />
• Z. T. Bieniawski,, professor of mineral<br />
engineering at the <strong>University</strong>, has<br />
been appointed to two National Research<br />
Council committees. ¦<br />
The National Research Council is the<br />
chief operating agency of the National<br />
Academies of Sciences and Engineering.<br />
Bieniawski is director of the <strong>Penn</strong>sylvania<br />
Mining and , Mineral Resources<br />
Research Institute headquartered at the<br />
<strong>University</strong>. •<br />
• Nancy Lowmaster of <strong>State</strong> College<br />
and Philip Kaspryszy of Yorkville, N.Y.,<br />
graduate students at the <strong>University</strong>,<br />
have have won the 1981 Dan H. Waugh<br />
Memorial Teaching Awards.<br />
The awards honor outstanding teaching<br />
by graduate assistants in the department<br />
of chemistry at the <strong>University</strong> and<br />
consist of $150 prizes and certificates.<br />
Lowmaster, who is working for her<br />
master's degree, taught recitation sections<br />
of Chemistry 12. Kasprzyk, a doctoral<br />
candidate, taught the laboratory<br />
section of Chemistry 15, 35 and 36.<br />
• John L. George, professor emeritus<br />
of wildlife managment, has retired after<br />
18 years.<br />
At the <strong>University</strong>, George has studied<br />
white-tailed deer, wild turkeys, elk, otters<br />
and eastern coyotes, as well as<br />
animal damage control and DDT's effect<br />
on animals. He also helped develop the<br />
"<strong>Penn</strong> <strong>State</strong> 5-Wire Electrical Deer<br />
Fence."<br />
• The Golden Key National Honor<br />
Society has awarded scholarships to David<br />
A. Kenny and Roberta L. Millard.<br />
The $750 awards were made for outstanding<br />
scholastic achievement, leadership<br />
and service to the community.<br />
bawdy good humor, ©<br />
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Judith Crist >^0fiiKfeb. ^
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11th. line possible this spring<br />
Calkins: Alternate to overnight<br />
By MARCY MERMEL<br />
Daily Collegian Staff Writer<br />
<strong>University</strong> President John W. Oswald<br />
may have already decided to use<br />
the 11th line method of distributing<br />
dormitory contracts for Fall Term<br />
1982 despite that fact that he requested<br />
a student survey on the situation,<br />
Chris Calkins, president of the Association<br />
of Residence Hall Students,<br />
said last night.<br />
The 11th line plan consists of the<br />
present 10-line first come, first serve<br />
system and a optional , theoretical<br />
11th line for students who prefer their<br />
contracts determined by lottery.<br />
Calkins and Black Caucus President<br />
Avery Rose spoke in programs<br />
that concluded Student Organization<br />
Week sponsored by Centre Halls Resident<br />
Assistants and Centre Halls Residence<br />
Association.<br />
In the last survey two years ago,<br />
Calkins said a majority of the students<br />
preferred the first come, first<br />
serve plan over a mandatory lottery<br />
plan. However, the administration<br />
preferred the lottery system because<br />
it would be the easier method to<br />
distribute. He said ARHS has been<br />
given until Thursday to compile and<br />
write a report on this year's survey.<br />
Calkins advised students to complete<br />
the questionnaires because if<br />
what the students want is on paper,<br />
"(Oswald) has got to make a public<br />
reaction to a public document."<br />
Concerning the introduction of interest<br />
houses into Beaver Hall, Calkin<br />
said independent students feel that<br />
reserved space groups such as the<br />
interest houses are pushing them out<br />
of dorm areas.<br />
South Halls Residence Association<br />
may have problems because South<br />
Halls has over 50 percent reserved<br />
space and the sororities with those<br />
spaces do not actively participate in<br />
the council. '<br />
Calkins added that ARHS has been<br />
accused of consistently defending independent<br />
students, but that these<br />
students have no one else to defend<br />
them.<br />
Rose discussed his idea that individual<br />
groups of the Black Caucus should<br />
work harder to present a more positive<br />
image of the organization and<br />
wait may have been approved<br />
black students.<br />
The groups that comprise Black<br />
Caucus, including fraternities, sororities,<br />
and the East Halls Black Student<br />
Union, can depend on the caucus'<br />
support , but should provide manpower<br />
and ideas for cultural and informative<br />
programming at the <strong>University</strong>,<br />
he said.<br />
Finances are a problem, Rose said.<br />
He said he would like the administration<br />
and faculty to assist the Black<br />
Caucus financially and with their expertise.<br />
Jim McCall, president of the East<br />
Halls Black Student Union said Rose<br />
"hit ( the problem) right on the nose."<br />
He said the founding of the union was<br />
an opportunity to obtain more funds,<br />
as well as give black students ui East<br />
Halls their own organization.<br />
But Black Caucus is "the umbrella<br />
organization. (Rose) represents the<br />
whole black community," McCall<br />
said.<br />
Rose said he was frustrated that 10<br />
years after the chartering of Black<br />
Caucus the black population at the<br />
<strong>University</strong> remains at 2.4 percent.<br />
Black Caucus President Avery Rose and Chris Calkins, president of the Association of Re<br />
night as part of Student Organization Week. Calkins said <strong>University</strong> President John W. Os<br />
on a theoretical 11th line for residence hall contracts, despite his request for a student oi<br />
No consultation on interest house, members say<br />
By STELLA TSAI<br />
Daily Collegian Staff Writer<br />
Some members of the Engineering and Applied Sciences<br />
interest house said that they were not consulted about the<br />
relocation of their interest house next Fall Term in a meeting<br />
last night at Beaver Hall.<br />
"It's just not fair. We weren't approached with 'Do you want<br />
to move?' " Kim Hamme (5th-chemical engineering) said.<br />
"We were told that we were moving."<br />
Hamme proposed placing two floors of interest housing in an<br />
otherwise all-female dormitory, reasoning it would be better<br />
than the system in Porter Hall where the interest house is now<br />
located. "It would be safer," she said.<br />
Andy Mozenter, assistant director of residence hall programs<br />
in South Halls, said Hamme's proposal is a good idea. "I don't<br />
know why it wasn't brought up before,-"he said.<br />
Also, at the meeting, residents of Beaver Hall gave reasons<br />
why they want to remain on their respective floors when<br />
interest housing will be introduced during Fall Term 1982. The<br />
students met with Mozenter and Pat Peterson, associate<br />
director of the Office of Residential Life Programs.<br />
The floors to be displaced for the interest housing will be<br />
chosen tomorrow afternoon, provided the data is sufficient,<br />
Peterson said. The residents who will be affected will be<br />
informed next Friday, she said.<br />
Each floor was given the opportunity to give justification for<br />
not being considered as candidates for displacement.<br />
Joe Scheck, floor president of third floor Beaver, said their<br />
floor has had a chartered residence hall organization since<br />
1976. He also told Peterson and Mozenter of their participation<br />
in intramurals and other social activities.<br />
Other floors in Beaver Hall produced evidence of floor unity<br />
which included hall painting projects and decreases in dam- ' Mozenter said he was "guestimating" three factors in the<br />
ages. selection of Beaver as the location of the Human Development<br />
"You cannot insure security for females on the fifth floor and Engineering and Applied Sciences interest houses :<br />
(Beaver Hall) when there are floors above and below it," Dave . Beaver has been identified as an area for new inlerest<br />
Labuskes South Halls representative, said in consideration of houses in the f t if the program is expanded,<br />
the security reauirements.<br />
r .<br />
Jay Verno (5th-liberal arts) , representing the eighth floor • The physical layout of Beaver is ideal for separate wings<br />
said their low return rate makes their floor a "prime candi- for males and females, he said.<br />
^<br />
date for interest housing.<br />
• It would be easier to monitor the interest houses in the new<br />
"We would like a preference, in where we could go other than location, Mozenter said,<br />
South Halls/' Verno said. "We would like to be a major factor<br />
in the decision in where we would go.<br />
Displaces students could be placed in residence halls other<br />
. "If you can't find 10-13 rooms together, there is something '<br />
nan South Halls, if that's what the students want, Mozenter<br />
wrong,"he said.<br />
said. A "re-looking" at the interest, housing location is also<br />
In response to Verno's request, Mozenter said,"I "T feel com- rnm- aesireaoie, desireable, ne he said, said.<br />
mitted to fight for you all." "We will take care of people who are going to move, "he said<br />
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The Brothers of Delta Sigma Pi Professional Business<br />
Fraternity would like to thank the following people and<br />
student organizations for helping to make<br />
Business Week a success:<br />
Dean Eugene J. Kelly<br />
Dean John J. Coyle<br />
Professor Milton Bergstein<br />
Mr. Tom Broitman<br />
Mrs. Shirley Stanton<br />
Dr. Robert Koehler<br />
Dr. David Butt<br />
Members, of the<br />
Business Roundtable<br />
Alpha Kappa Psi<br />
Business Interest House<br />
Delta Nu Alpha<br />
Insurance Club<br />
Finance Club<br />
Accounting Club<br />
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Management Club<br />
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Mech. Eng. Co-op Society<br />
Amer. Institute of Chem. E.<br />
Amer. Society of Civil Eng.<br />
Nittany Chem. Society<br />
Sigma Iota Epsilon<br />
Alpha Pi Mu<br />
Chi Epsilon<br />
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