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U.S./ Libyan forces exchange missile fire<br />

Ia<br />

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By The Associated Press<br />

LONDON — Libyan radio threatened<br />

yesterday to turn "the Mediterranean<br />

into a sea of fire," and urged<br />

attacks on U.S. oil facilities and<br />

American workers throughout the<br />

Arab world in retaliation for U.S.<br />

firing on a Libyan boat and the Libyan<br />

shoreline.<br />

"The oil which America exploits<br />

and usurps should now be de-<br />

stroyed," said the Libyan radio<br />

broadcast, monitored in London by<br />

the BBC. "The American bases in the<br />

Arab homeland should now be<br />

stormed. The American spies who<br />

were pushed forward as experts and<br />

consultants should now be executed,<br />

wherever they might be in the Arab<br />

homeland."<br />

Libyan television, and the official<br />

news agency, JANA, had reported<br />

earlier Monday that three U.S. jets<br />

AP laserphoto<br />

This Is a file photo of the harpoon missile, the same type which U.S. aircraft shot at a Libyan patrol boat yesterday after<br />

Libya fired six ground missiles at three American planes conducting naval exercises in the Mediterranean.<br />

Faculty and staff<br />

fast for divestment<br />

By NANCY FUNK<br />

Collegian Staff Writer<br />

University faculty and staff members began<br />

a week-long, liquid diet fast yesterday,<br />

taking shifts between teaching their classes to<br />

stand in front of Old Main in support of prodivestment<br />

student demonstrators and in protest<br />

of the University's business holdings in<br />

South African-related companies.<br />

About 50 faculty members from colleges<br />

ranging from liberal arts to engineering went<br />

from classes and office hours to stand in shifts<br />

from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.<br />

And staff members spent lunch hours in<br />

front of Old Main to make a symbolic<br />

statement about apartheid in a non-violent,<br />

non-confrontational way, said Robert Corrington,<br />

assistant professor of philosophy and<br />

co-organizer of the fast.<br />

When asked if organizing the fast was<br />

difficult in light of his .teaching responsibilities,<br />

Corrington said, "It would hurt my soul if<br />

I didn't do this."<br />

The faculty members stood around a table<br />

spread with anti-apartheid literature and a<br />

large bottle of apple juice, while students<br />

walking by looked on with curiousity.<br />

"The reaction to the fast has ranged from<br />

curious to indifferent to enthusiastic," Corrington<br />

said. "There has been no anger shown<br />

today."<br />

The University administration has yet to<br />

respond to the fast, Corrington said, but he<br />

said he believes the fast will be tolerated by<br />

University officials.<br />

University President Bryce Jordan said in a<br />

recent statement that the University community<br />

should be "understanding and tolerant as<br />

i<br />

we all seek constructive alternatives for expressing<br />

together our strong repugnance to<br />

apartheid and racial discrimination."<br />

Faculty members say they will fast<br />

throughout the week, and will refrain from<br />

eating for one to three days beginning today,<br />

and will spend a portion of their time in front<br />

of Old Main.<br />

"I am fasting because I am against apartheid<br />

and I believe fasting is to act against it,<br />

whereas not to divest is to support it," said<br />

Richard Devon, assistant professor of engineering.<br />

Don Smith, a graduate assistant in the<br />

department of speech communications, said<br />

he is participating in the fast because he<br />

supports divestment and the efforts of the<br />

Black Student Coalition Against Racism and<br />

the Committee for Justice in South Africa.<br />

Smith said he will fast "for as long as I<br />

can."<br />

A closer black community at the University<br />

is one of the positive changes resulting from<br />

these groups' protests, Smith said.<br />

"The best universities in the country are<br />

characterized by their commitment to publicly<br />

debating critical human issues," Devon<br />

said. "Participating . in the debate about<br />

apartheid means contributing to the intellectual<br />

and ethical vitality of the University<br />

community."<br />

He added that the University divesting its<br />

$6.1 million in South Africa would have a<br />

positive effect because it would be heard by<br />

the South African government and recognized<br />

as a sign of disapproval.<br />

"Economic pressure works," he said! "It<br />

always works."<br />

were shot down over the Gulf of<br />

Sidra, but the White House said no<br />

American planes were damaged in<br />

the military confrontations.<br />

White House spokesman Larry<br />

Speakes said in Washington that<br />

American aircraft fired on a Libyan<br />

patrol boat, setting it afire, after<br />

Libyans launched six missiles at the<br />

U.S. planes. He said, "We have no<br />

reports of any U.S. casualties."<br />

Speakes said of the Libyan patrol<br />

HK'u * I \ L i A &' -tm<br />

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boat: "The ship is dead in the water,<br />

burning and appears to be sinking.<br />

There are no apparent survivors."<br />

Later in Washington, Defense Secretary<br />

Caspar W. Weinberger said<br />

American warplanes had disabled a<br />

second guided-missile patrol boat<br />

headed toward U.S. 6th Fleet ships<br />

stationed off Libya in the gulf where<br />

Libya claims a 40-mile territorial<br />

zone. The U.S. recognizes a 12-mile<br />

zone.<br />

In an earlier broadcast monitored<br />

by the British Broadcasting Co.; Libyan<br />

radio said the U.S. fleet in the<br />

Mediterranean "is now within the<br />

range of our weapons, and the American<br />

aircraft are now food for our<br />

weapons.<br />

"We will fulfill our promise, which<br />

we promised ourselves, to make the<br />

Mediterranean into a sea of fire, and<br />

to strike mercilessly," the broadcast<br />

said.<br />

The state-run radio said America's<br />

arrogance and the madness of its<br />

president made them think that the<br />

aggression against the Libyan Arab<br />

people would be something like a<br />

picnic and would be an easy operation."<br />

Prior to the U.S. announcements,<br />

the editor in Rome for the Libyan<br />

news agency, JANA, telephoned The<br />

Associated Press in the Italian capital<br />

and read the following brief dispatch<br />

in Italian:<br />

"American aircraft today attacked<br />

with missiles the region of Sidra, and<br />

at the same time, Libyan air defense<br />

has struck back, shooting down three<br />

American fighter planes."<br />

There were no subsequent reports<br />

from the agency.<br />

The Soviet news agency Tass<br />

quoted JANA as saying in the Libyan<br />

capital that Navy planes made a<br />

bombing raid on a civilian Libyan<br />

vessel, but the bombs missed the<br />

target.<br />

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The Daily Collegian<br />

Tuesday, March 25, 1986<br />

Medical ethics:<br />

Probing whether to 'pull the plug or sustain life with technological advances<br />

By CHRISTINE KILGORE<br />

Collegian Science Writer<br />

"Ten years ago, my brother was hit by a<br />

car and went into a coma for about a month.<br />

Then he recovered (but that was) after the<br />

doctors said he had no brain waves. At that<br />

time, there was never any question (about<br />

removing him from the respirator). But, £/<br />

there had been, my parents never would have<br />

given up."<br />

his life-and-death situation, faced by a<br />

University student and her family,<br />

T exemplifies one of the most debatable<br />

bioethical issues in today's society: who<br />

should be maintained by medical technology?<br />

In an age of rapidly-growing medical technology,<br />

bioethical questions concerning pulling<br />

the plug on comatose patients like the<br />

young man described above, and an array of<br />

other dilemmas face doctors and society.<br />

The sky-rocketing costs of medical care,<br />

the allocation of resources, the role of state<br />

and federal governments, and the question of<br />

who should make life and death decisions, are<br />

some of the issues that have quickly come to<br />

the forefront.<br />

Sheldon R. Gelman, professor of social<br />

work and director of the Social Work Program<br />

at the University, said many students<br />

will confront bioethical issues sometimes in<br />

their lives.<br />

"Young people — and college students —<br />

tend to think they're immortal and invincible,"<br />

said Gelman. "But what happens if<br />

they're involved in an accident? Do they want<br />

to be hooked to machines? Do they want to be<br />

subject to new technology? Those kinds of<br />

things have to be thought about beforehand."<br />

Gelman pointed to the landmark case of<br />

Karen Ann Quinlan, who in 1975 lasped into a<br />

coma at the age of 21 after taking a combination<br />

of tranquilizers and alcohol. After laying<br />

comatose in a New Jersey hospital for ten<br />

years, she died last year, ending the case that<br />

sparked interest in bioethical decision-making.<br />

"That's probably the first case that got as<br />

widespread publicity, because it involved an<br />

attempt by her parents to make a decision to<br />

forego the use of the respirator to prolong the<br />

life of their daughter," Gelman said. "The<br />

unusual thing about Karen Ann Quinlan was<br />

that once the respirator was removed under<br />

court order, she continued to live, and live,<br />

and live."<br />

"There were many others like her who<br />

remained in a vegetative state with no real<br />

likelihood of ever coming back to possess<br />

those human qualities other people possess,"<br />

he said.<br />

o<br />

4BH||^HBnKaUjg^* © ,979 V0LK<br />

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• • ••<br />

9 A<br />

Dilemmas with technology<br />

Gelman said the Quinlan case, and the<br />

whole argument of bioethics, is related, in<br />

part, to "the expanded technology and the<br />

ability to prolong or maintain life almost<br />

indefinately."<br />

'(The Karen Ann Quinlan case is) probably the first case that<br />

got as widespread publicity, because it involved an attempt<br />

by her parents to make a decision to forego the use of the<br />

respirator to prolong the life of their daughter. The unusual<br />

thing about Karen Ann Quinlan was that once the respirator<br />

was removed under court order, she continued to live, and<br />

live, and live.'<br />

Sheldon R. Gelman, professor of social work and director of the<br />

University's Social Work Program<br />

Leonard J. Waks, University professor of<br />

science, technology and society, agreed that<br />

advancing technology is driving many of<br />

today's bioethical dilemmas.<br />

"It's a slow and changing evolution.<br />

Through all technology, there are unanticipated<br />

risks," Waks said. "Technology is<br />

going to, over time, have effects we can't<br />

assess."<br />

Robert A. Walker, professor of science,<br />

technonogy and society-health education,<br />

said the United States is presently in a stage<br />

of "half-way technology," where health-care<br />

is constantly being improved for the next<br />

generation.<br />

"We're in an adolescent period," Walker<br />

said.<br />

"Clearly, it is the role of the human being to<br />

take the risks associated with technological<br />

development," he said.<br />

Technology advances cause skyrocketing<br />

health care costs. This raises the question of<br />

who will receive expensive medical care,<br />

Gelman said.<br />

j;<br />

I<br />

"Someone eventually has to pay for (technology's)<br />

application," he said.<br />

Such long-term implications of medical<br />

technology are now being addressed with the<br />

artificial heart, as some critics claim the<br />

risks and costs are too high. Others say the<br />

heart is worth it.<br />

Danner Clouser, humanities professor at<br />

the University's Hershey Medical Center,<br />

said the main bioethical dilemma surrounding<br />

the artificial heart involves the cost and<br />

consequently, the allocation of resources.<br />

These resources, he explained, are limited<br />

public funds.<br />

"The question is, who should get (the<br />

artificial heart)? Of course, this dilemma is<br />

true of any new technology," Clouser said.<br />

Using the artificial heart "is just so incredibly<br />

expensive," he said. "I've been told that<br />

for the first artificial heart transplant, we<br />

could have given free pap tests to all the<br />

women in the country. This would have saved<br />

many lives."<br />

However, Gelman said artificial organs is<br />

just one of the issues linked to economics.<br />

"With limited funds, should we prolong the<br />

lives of severly handicapped children or an<br />

elderly person with minimal brain function,<br />

or should we reallocate these resources?"<br />

Gelman said.<br />

Waks said to find an answer, people must<br />

look at each situation and ask whether there<br />

is any value in prolonging life.<br />

"We have to look at the quality of life,"<br />

Waks said. "If a person is paralyzed and<br />

isolated and can't go on living the life they<br />

carved out for themselves, there's a serious<br />

question."<br />

"I don't have shallow views on life ... and<br />

I'm all for health care of the elderly," Waks<br />

explained. "I'm not talking about interventions<br />

that are useful — many are. What I'm<br />

not for is the death-extending process."<br />

One should ask whether respirators and<br />

other "life-sustaining" medical treatments<br />

are prolonging life or extending death, he<br />

said.<br />

o<br />

© 1979 VOLK<br />

The struggle for solutions<br />

Waks is one of many professors, physicians,<br />

clergy members, and families who are<br />

struggling for answers.<br />

According to a March 17 New York Times<br />

report, the American Medical Association<br />

recently ruled it is ethically appropriate for<br />

doctors to withhold "all means of life prolonging<br />

medical treatment" from patients in<br />

irreversible comas but not necessarily terminally<br />

ill.<br />

This policy, it was reported, will be of<br />

greatest concern to the estimated 10,000 people<br />

who are in irreversible comas in institutions<br />

throughout the country today.<br />

Gelman said the policy "may give courts<br />

some direction in terms of what the current<br />

medical thinking is," when they deal with<br />

life-and-death cases.<br />

"The courts don't have any medical expertise,"<br />

Gelman said, adding that they look for<br />

opinions among physicians.<br />

Gelman said although the United States has<br />

begun addressing bioethical issues, the costs<br />

and allocating resources is not "something<br />

we've formally dealt with in this country."<br />

"England, for example, has a policy that no<br />

one who develops kidney disese and is above<br />

the age of 55 can be provided access to kidney<br />

dialysis," he said. "People over 55 who can<br />

secure the costs themselves may certainly<br />

receive dialysis. We're talking about public<br />

funds, however."<br />

"It may seem like a coarse approach (to<br />

the federal government's) role, something<br />

we're not ready to deal with yet in this<br />

country," he said,<br />

"Bioethical dilemmas that have been faced<br />

for years were always handled by small<br />

numbers of people without much public scru-<br />

'(The study of ethics) can't be reduced to a formula. In the<br />

medical community, doctors have to penetrate to the heart<br />

of the lives before them. An ethics problem can't become<br />

like a physics problem.'<br />

—Leonard J. Waks, University professor of science, technology and<br />

society<br />

tiny as to either the process or the outcome,"<br />

Gelman said.<br />

"Today people are thinking about these<br />

things," he added.<br />

He pointed to the well publicized cases of<br />

Elizabeth Bouvia, the quadriplegic who<br />

asked for medical assistance in starving<br />

herself to death; Baby Fae, an infant who<br />

received a baboon s heart, and Baby Doe, a<br />

severely handicapped Indiana infant who<br />

was denied medical treatment by the parents<br />

and state courts.<br />

Just as the medical community is recognizing<br />

and dealing with biomedical ethics, the<br />

general public is becoming more aware of the<br />

bioethical dilemmas faced today, Gelman<br />

said.<br />

"Most people would prefer not to be aware,<br />

however. It's very difficult for any individual<br />

to make a decision that involves whether or<br />

not somebody lives or dies," he said.<br />

But Gelman explained there are no simple<br />

answers.<br />

Each day physicians, families and courts<br />

learn what may be the best ethical choice for<br />

one patient may be the worst for another.<br />

This is why bioethical decisions must be<br />

made on a case-by;case basis, remembering<br />

that life is a basic human right, he said.<br />

Gelman said exactly who makes life and<br />

death decisions is a leading issue. Some<br />

physicians are becoming more reluctant to<br />

make decisions that were traditionally theirs.<br />

"Some welcome the input of others, including<br />

the family," he said.<br />

Ethics committees form<br />

Gelman said one result of the Baby Doe<br />

case was a recommendation that hospitals<br />

develop intricate review, or ethics, committees<br />

to provide counsel and advice.<br />

"The notion of ethics committees has<br />

grown rather dramatically in the last three or<br />

four years," Gelman said. "They deliberate<br />

very difficult, tragic choice decisions."<br />

Gelman is one of about a dozen members of<br />

a recently established ethics committee at<br />

Centre Community Hospital, which includes<br />

health care professionals, social workers,<br />

and clergy members.<br />

"The group should serve as an adviser and<br />

consultant in difficult situations in which a<br />

physician or other health care provider really<br />

is torn between the directions they can go —<br />

between treating and not treating, between<br />

resuscitating and not resuscitating," Gelman<br />

said<br />

Jack Branigan, executive director of<br />

Centre Community Hospital, emphasizes that<br />

the committee is "strictly an advisory<br />

board."<br />

Brannigan said the non-medical perspective<br />

of the committee is extremely important.<br />

"The committee is a recognition on the part<br />

of our medical community that there is a<br />

need to consider ethical issues associated<br />

with life and death," he said.<br />

A similar ethics committee has been established<br />

at Hershey in response to new regulations<br />

following the Baby Doe case.<br />

Clouser said this group — the Infant Care<br />

Review Committee — meets to review cases<br />

when physicians are considering whether to<br />

withdraw life support.<br />

In response to the growing importance of<br />

bioethical decision-making, many medical<br />

schools are beginning to offer and even require<br />

courses in medical ethics, Gelman said.<br />

"Eventually, that kind of course will be an<br />

integral part of the medical education curriculum.<br />

There are courses now in ethics for<br />

nurses, engineers, and business people," he<br />

said. "What it does is inform people that the<br />

decisions that people in various professions<br />

make have implications for the broader society."<br />

Waks said, however, that the study of<br />

ethics, "can't be reduced to a formula."<br />

"In the medical community, doctors have<br />

to penetrate to the heart of the lives before<br />

them," he said. "An ethics problem can't<br />

become like a physics problem."<br />

"Ethics — if it's of any life — comes from<br />

compassion, not from logic," Waks said.<br />

"And this compassion comes from experience."<br />

"What might be more valuable (than an<br />

ethics course) would be to confine doctors to<br />

a hospital room," Waks said. "It would be<br />

like a criminology student going to jail for a<br />

day."<br />

Coleen Rickabaugh (freshmen-pre-medical)<br />

is pleased that an ethics course may be a<br />

required part of her future medical curriculum.<br />

"You can form opinions on your own, but<br />

you should be presented with options," she<br />

said.<br />

Gelman said, "Those who have made (life<br />

and death) decisions have made them after<br />

what they believe to be very careful consideration."<br />

Gelman reiterated that no matter what an<br />

individual decides, it has to be made on a<br />

case-by-case basis, with no set rules or regulations<br />

to follow.<br />

"They've got to be careful that they're not<br />

absolutely sure that they did the right thing,<br />

because the minute you're absolutely sure<br />

about anything, it makes it very easy the next<br />

time to reach the decision," he explained. "If<br />

it comes easy, you can lose sight of the<br />

individual case you're dealing with and start<br />

to fit people into categories — there always<br />

has to be a question."<br />

"You should always take the process very<br />

seriously, without any quick or snap judgements."


•<br />

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state/nation/world ^.^c^i<br />

" * Tuesday, March 25. 1986<br />

¦II^HHIII^HHBHMHHHnHHaHHa^HIMHUaHHHIMHiHHaHMHIIMHHHaBHBHHBaHH^<br />

The Daily Collegian<br />

Tuesday. March 25. 1986<br />

Aid debated as Nicaraguan troops enter Honduras<br />

By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON<br />

Associated Press Writer<br />

WASHINGTON, D.C. - President Reagan turned his<br />

powers of persuasion on the Senate yesterday, lobbying<br />

for a strong Vote endorsing his $100 million aid package<br />

for Nicaragua's anti-government rebels.<br />

As the president telephoned Senate leaders, an official<br />

at the White House told reporters of preliminary and<br />

unconfirmed reports that the Sandinista regime in Managua<br />

had sent more than 1,000 troops across the border<br />

with Honduras, apparently to search out their Contra<br />

foes.<br />

The official, \vho briefed reporters on the condition he<br />

not be identified by name, said the reports indicate the<br />

apparent Nicaraguan attack was larger in scale than any<br />

of the more than 100 previous Nicaraguan incursions into<br />

Honduras.<br />

Reward fund now<br />

$900,000 for info<br />

into tampering<br />

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The overthe-counter<br />

drug industry, prompted<br />

by the latest recall of three medications,<br />

boosted its reward fund yesterday<br />

to $900,000 for information<br />

leading to the conviction of drug<br />

tamperers.<br />

The announcement by the Proprietary<br />

Association came as technicians<br />

for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration<br />

and the FBI continued examining<br />

capsules of Contac, Dietac and<br />

Teldrin.<br />

Small concentrations of rat poison<br />

were found in nine capsules, prompting<br />

a recall Friday by SmithKline<br />

Beckman Corp. A man calling himself<br />

"Gary" said he tampered with<br />

'the drugs to force the Philadelphiabased<br />

drug manufacturer to stop<br />

producing capsules.<br />

The reward fund started in 1982<br />

when Johnson & Johnson offered<br />

$100,000 after Tylenol poisonings in<br />

Chicago that left seven dead. Another<br />

$100,000 was added when a woman in<br />

suburban New York died after taking<br />

cyanide-laced Tylenol earlier this<br />

year.<br />

Mary Simons, assistant director of<br />

public affairs for the Proprietary<br />

Association, which represents the<br />

over-the-counter drug industry, said<br />

the group added $700,000 to the fund<br />

"for information leading to the arrest<br />

and conviction of any person or persons<br />

responsible for a series of criminal<br />

tamperings with over-the-counter<br />

medicines dating back to 1982."<br />

The reward money is aimed specifically<br />

at the two Tylenol poisonings<br />

and last week's tamperings of<br />

SmithKline products, she said.<br />

The association set up a toll-free<br />

phone line, 1-800-222-3081, to receive<br />

confidential information on tampering.<br />

Frank Young, head of the FDA, and<br />

Proprietary Association senior vice<br />

president John Walden defended the<br />

use of capsules on the CBS Morning<br />

News yesterday.<br />

"There is no such thing as tamperproof<br />

medicine," said Young. "And<br />

capsules have advantages — they are<br />

time-released and you can see<br />

through them," which could help<br />

detect tampering.<br />

"They (capsules) aren't more of a<br />

threat. The consumer will decide if<br />

they want them," said Walden.<br />

The tainted Contac, Dietac and<br />

Teldrin capsules were found in stores<br />

in Houston and Orlando. Young said<br />

authorities are no closer to finding<br />

who is responsible than when the<br />

tampering was discovered last week.<br />

The poisonous substance used was<br />

warfarin, an anticoagulant and the<br />

active ingredient in rat poison, the<br />

FDA said. No injuries have been<br />

reported.<br />

Meanwhile, House Speaker Thomas P. O Neill Jr said<br />

he is planning a trip during Congress' Easter recess next<br />

week to Venezuela and other Latin American nations that<br />

have encouraged the Contadora process of negotiation in<br />

the region.<br />

O'Neill led the battle against the ' aid plan in the House<br />

which voted 222-210 to reject it last week. A second House<br />

vote, which may result in passage of a modified Reagan<br />

plan, possibly with new conditions and restrictions attached,<br />

is set for April 15.<br />

Senators at the forefront of the issue said Reagan is<br />

resisting attempts to forge a bipartisan compromise that<br />

would "fence" the $70 million portion of the aid package<br />

earmarked for weapons pending the outcome of peace<br />

negotiations.<br />

A second round of House and Senate votes would be<br />

required to release the weapons money.<br />

Senate Democratic leader Robert C. Byrd of West<br />

Message of peace brought<br />

U.S. by 'Soviet Samantha<br />

By JUDIE GLAVE<br />

Associated Press Writer<br />

NEW YORK — Following the<br />

path of friendship blazed by schoolgirl<br />

Samantha Smith, an 11-yearold<br />

Soviet girl visited a Brooklyn<br />

elementary school yesterday and<br />

received high marks from her<br />

American counterparts.<br />

Katerina Lycheva was greeted<br />

by hand-painted and crayonscribbled<br />

signs of welcome at P.S.<br />

276 in the Canarsie section.<br />

Children who would normally<br />

wait until the last minute to enter<br />

the building crowded into a front<br />

hallway, eager to get a peek at the<br />

Soviet youngster.<br />

The fifth-grader from Moscow<br />

was given a bouquet of flowers,<br />

then treated to folk, rock and gospel<br />

songs by the elementary school<br />

band and chorus.<br />

Katerina reciprocated, playing<br />

the theme song of (he international<br />

children's peace movement,k"May<br />

There Always Be Sunshine," on the<br />

piano.<br />

Katerina's peace mission, sponsored<br />

by the San Francisco-based<br />

Children As The Peacemakers, is<br />

in memory of Samantha, a Manchester,<br />

Maine, girl who visited the<br />

Soviet Union in 1983 after writing a<br />

letter to then-Soviet leader Yuri<br />

Andropov. Samantha died last<br />

summer in a plane crash.<br />

Katerina, called Katya by<br />

friends, is making the 12-day tour<br />

with Star Rowe, 10, the daughter of<br />

a San Francisco street artist, Star<br />

won an essay contest sponsored by<br />

Children as the Peacemakers to<br />

select a traveling companion.<br />

At the Brooklyn school, Katerina,<br />

speaking at times through an<br />

interpreter, told about 500 students<br />

that she shared their hopes for<br />

peace.<br />

"I bring with me messages from<br />

kids at my school which I will give<br />

you and that way you will not only<br />

be friends with me but friends with<br />

my Soviet friends as well," she<br />

said.<br />

to<br />

AP Laiorphoto<br />

Soviet "peacemaker" Katerina Lycheva, left, gets some reassurance from<br />

her travel companion Star Rowe of San Francisco on arrival at New York's<br />

LaGuardla airport Sunday. Each girl lighted a candle at the airport in an<br />

effort to promote world peace.<br />

Friendship and peace were the<br />

watchwords of the day.<br />

"We want her to learn that we<br />

want peace as much as she wants<br />

peace and that we can do it together,"<br />

said sixth-grader Jason Cooper.<br />

But not all the students had cultural<br />

exchange on their minds.<br />

"I think she's cute," said Kenny<br />

Mondschein, 11, who said he knew<br />

a thing or two about Soviets since<br />

his great-great-grandmother came<br />

from Russia.<br />

"I know they speak a different<br />

language and that they play different<br />

sports and they're maybe better-educated."<br />

he said.<br />

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He paused to think a minute.<br />

"And they eat different, too," he<br />

added. "My grandma brought<br />

these disgusting things over from<br />

there, cow's feet in gelatin."<br />

Earlier yesterday, Katerina was<br />

a guest on NBC's "Today" show,<br />

where she spoke of Samantha.<br />

"Samantha was very much like<br />

our Soviet girls," she said. "We all<br />

saw something very familiar and<br />

very nice and she was close to our<br />

hearts."<br />

Today Katerina is to see the<br />

Statue of Liberty. She will visit<br />

Washington on Wednesday and<br />

Thursday; Houston, March 28-30;<br />

and Los Angeles, March 31-April 1.<br />

ft<br />

Virginia said Reagan called him yesterday morning and<br />

"made a pitch for his proposal."<br />

Byrd said he told the president a second congressional<br />

vote on whether to send arms was important to the<br />

building of a bipartisan consensus.<br />

"We didn't see eye to eye on a second vote," Byrd said<br />

and quoted the president as saying such an arrangement<br />

would ease pressure on the Sandinista regime to negotiate.<br />

"I told him I look at it from the other side," Byrd said.<br />

"If there is a second vote (to approve the arms) the<br />

Sandinistas will be under more pressure to talk to us."<br />

Byrd said he could support some money for the guerrillas<br />

now, coupled with a cease-fire, bi-lateral U.S.-Nicaraguan<br />

negotiations and "a second vote."<br />

Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., told reporters<br />

he believes the president has a persuasive case for the<br />

aid money.<br />

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Dole said he hopes that, rather than the bare majority<br />

required, 70 to 80 senators will back the proposal to send a<br />

message to the Sandinista regime that Reagan has strong<br />

bipartisan support, "that the free ride is over, that we are<br />

not going to stand by and watch them consolidate their<br />

totalitarian control over yet another country on our own<br />

doorstep."<br />

Sen. Alan Cranston, D- Calif., continued his opposition<br />

to the plan, saying that while the president may not want<br />

the United States to become involved militarily in Nicaragua,<br />

"the policy he is following is likely to get us into war,<br />

whether he wants it or not, and whether he realizes it or<br />

not."<br />

"The president and his supporters have tried to frame<br />

the debate in such narrow terms so it Will appear that<br />

funding the counter-revolutionary rebels is the only<br />

answer for a patriotic American who supports democracy,"<br />

said Cranston.<br />

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AP Laterpholo<br />

A choco-edible tradition<br />

Dorothy "Doll" McClellan Is shown preparing to remove a 3-ioot-tall chocolate Easter bunny from Its mold In this<br />

recent photo. McClellan has been making chocolate bunnies for 40 years at Gardner's Candles In Tyrone.<br />

Severe earthquake rocks Indonesia<br />

WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) — A severe earthquake rumbled<br />

across a remote section of Indonesia, the U.S.<br />

Geologial Survey said yesterday.<br />

The earthquake, measuring 6.7 on the Richter scale,<br />

occurred at 4:32 a.m. Tuesday (2:32 p.m. EST Monday)<br />

and was centered near the north coast of West Irian, said<br />

Don Finley, a spokesman for the U.S. Geological Survey.<br />

The Richter scale is a measure of ground motion as<br />

recorded on seismographs. Every increase of one number<br />

means a tenfold increase in magnitude. Thus a reading of<br />

7.5 reflects an earthquake 10 times stronger than one of<br />

6.5.<br />

A 6 reading is a severe earthquake; 7 is a "major"<br />

earthquake, capable of widespread heavy damage, and 8<br />

is a "great" quake, capable of tremendous damage.<br />

The earthquake was centered near the north coast of<br />

West Irian, which is the Indonesian half of the island of<br />

New Guinea, according to earthquake scientists in Golden,<br />

Colo. Preliminary readings placed the epicenter of the<br />

earthquake about 130 miles west of Jayapura and about<br />

2,250 miles east of the Indonesian capital of Jakarta.<br />

"There are no reports of damage or injuries," Finley<br />

said. "There doesn't seem to be a great deal there."<br />

An earthquake of 3.5 on the Richter scale can cause<br />

slight damage in the local area, 4 moderate damage and 5<br />

considerable damage.<br />

The San Francisco earthquake of 1906, which occurred<br />

before the Richter scale was devised, has been estimated<br />

at 8.3 on the Richter scale.<br />

Oil prices continue to drop<br />

By JOHN C. GIVEN<br />

AP Business Writer<br />

NEW YORK — "Oil prices went into<br />

a tailspin yesterday after OPEC<br />

broke off a nine-day attempt to come<br />

up with a plan for cutting production<br />

and reducing excess world supplies.<br />

Analysts said they expected prices<br />

to hover around $10 to $12 a barrel<br />

until the cartel finds a way to limit<br />

output. The analysts said they did not<br />

foresee prices going much lower than<br />

that because demand would pick up.<br />

Contracts for May delivery of West<br />

Texas Intermediate, the benchmark<br />

U.S. crude, plummeted nearly $3 a<br />

barrel to around $11 in early trading<br />

yesterday on the New York Mercantile<br />

Exchange. The price moved up to<br />

$12.34 by 2 p.m. EST, still down<br />

sharply from Friday's close of $13.94.<br />

April contracts for unleaded gasoline<br />

slid from Friday's close of 44<br />

cents a gallon to 40.4 cents.<br />

"We could have $11, $12 oil for 1986<br />

and 1987 — perhaps into 1988," said<br />

economist John Lichtblau, head of<br />

the Petroleum Industry Research<br />

Foundation in New York.<br />

In Washington, D.C. Philip Verleger,<br />

an analyst with Charles River<br />

Associates, a consulting firm, said he<br />

expected crude prices to range between<br />

$10 and $12 for a while, which<br />

he said would bring some cutbacks in<br />

production.<br />

"In particular, I think we may see a<br />

reduction in output from Alaska,<br />

which will no longer be competitive<br />

on the U.S. Gulf Coast," he said.<br />

Oil prices have fallen dramatically<br />

since late November, when crude oil<br />

traded at $30.01 a barrel on the New<br />

York Mercantile Exchange.<br />

"I think they will be heading higher<br />

eventually, but until OPEC comes out<br />

with an agreement (on limiting production)<br />

we'll see continued pressure<br />

on prices," said Ed Dellamonte, an<br />

analyst at the Prudential-Bache Securities<br />

Inc. investment firm.<br />

Over the past two weeks in the<br />

United States, all grades of gasoline<br />

decreased an average 7.91 cents a<br />

gallon, said Dan Lundberg, an industry<br />

analyst who surveys 17,000 gasoline<br />

stations in 50 states bi-weekly for<br />

his Lundberg Letter.<br />

Since January, prices have fallen<br />

24.26 cents a gallon, to an average of<br />

95.76 cents a gallon for all grades —<br />

full-service and self-service including<br />

all taxes, he said over the weekend.<br />

The Los Angeles-based analyst said<br />

retail prices could drop an additional<br />

2 to 3 cents before leveling off.<br />

Verleger, at Charles River Associates,<br />

forsaw even steeper cuts.<br />

"It's possible (gasoline) prices<br />

could dip into the mid-60s for a while,<br />

at some self-service independent gasoline<br />

stations during the summer. I<br />

don't expect it'll last at that level for<br />

too long, but I suspect we may have<br />

three to four months at that level."'<br />

Members of the 13-nation Organization<br />

of Petroleum Exporting Countries<br />

have seen their share of a<br />

bloated world market cut away by<br />

such non-OPEC producers as Britain,<br />

Mexico and Norway. At the same<br />

time, prices have fallen because of<br />

the excess supply.<br />

The plunge accelerated in December<br />

when OPEC formally abandoned<br />

Phil, rioters<br />

arrested<br />

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - A Vietnamese<br />

man who fired a rifle at a<br />

group of white men as they shouted<br />

racial slurs and threw rocks through<br />

his windows expressed shock at the<br />

taunts yesterday and regret over the<br />

shooting.<br />

One bullet, which police said may<br />

have ricocheted, grazed the temple of<br />

one of the men early Sunday morning<br />

as they stood outside the second-floor<br />

apartment in a mostly white northeast<br />

Philadelphia neighborhood.<br />

Chong Popowski, 19, said his mother<br />

was playing cards with three<br />

friends late Saturday night when the<br />

four men starting yelling taunts, followed<br />

quickly by rocks through the<br />

windows.<br />

Popowski said he took a rifle outside,<br />

fired a shot in the air, went back<br />

inside and fired more shots, along<br />

with a family friend, Luu Van<br />

Troung, 30.<br />

The injured man, Glen Emberger,<br />

21, his brother, Michael Emberger,<br />

27; Joseph Haggerty, 27; and Harry<br />

Morrison, 25, all of Philadelphia,<br />

were charged with ethnic intimidation,<br />

criminal trespassing, terroristic<br />

threats and criminal mischief.<br />

Popowski and Troung were<br />

charged with aggravated assault,<br />

simple assault and possession of an<br />

instrument of crime.<br />

All six were freed on bail. Police<br />

were stationed on the block and a<br />

representative of the city's Commission<br />

on Human Relations had talked<br />

to the Popowski and Emberger families<br />

to ease tensions, a spokeswoman<br />

said.<br />

price and production quotas in favor<br />

of trying to win a bigger share of the<br />

market by cutting prices.<br />

In a nine-day session that ended<br />

yesterday, OPEC producers agreed<br />

that the tactic had failed in its goal of<br />

forcing non-cartel members to join in<br />

limiting production to support prices.<br />

But they also failed to agree on how<br />

to apportion output within the cartel<br />

—a goal that has proven increasingly<br />

difficult to enforce in recent years.<br />

Lichtblau said the fact that the<br />

OPEC delegates said they would<br />

meet again in three weeks "shows<br />

that they are desperately tring to<br />

come to some kind of understanding.<br />

They see the situation getting worse<br />

than they predicted."<br />

And with prices down by more than<br />

half in five months, "the situation is<br />

hurting everyone," he said. "Maybe<br />

the delegates are going home and<br />

explaining to their governments that<br />

this intolerable situation is getting<br />

worse — and that they won't get help<br />

from non-OPEC countries unless they<br />

do something themselves."<br />

Lichtblau said crude prices could<br />

fall below his expected range of $11-<br />

$12 a barrel — but only temporarily,<br />

because of "market factors."<br />

Below $10, many wells "Would no<br />

longer be profitable to operate, and<br />

within six to eight months, increasing<br />

numbers would be forced to shut<br />

down, he said.<br />

At $8 to $9, he added, "we'll have a<br />

tremendous switch from coal to natural<br />

gas all over the world."<br />

The growth in demand coupled with<br />

the decrease in supply would force<br />

prices back up, Lichtblau said.<br />

i


By KATHLEEN CASEY<br />

Collegian Staff Writer<br />

Do national security, the presidency,<br />

Third World affairs or international<br />

politics interest you?<br />

The political science department is<br />

looking for qualified undergraduates<br />

Ds>ll cni fiorvf 1 wno ma»,ta ' n a serious interest in<br />

l UII Ovrl UCrLlla politically related subjects to attend<br />

_ _ national student conferences addres-<br />

CDSlfPnOQ TOf sing those topics.<br />

OCQI Vrl ICO I \Ji ''The object of the conferences is<br />

m<br />

for (our) students to interact and<br />

COnTGrfinC© exchange ideas with students from<br />

vw ¦¦¦W- WB BWW other universiyes and co ii egeS) » said<br />

AOnrlirl^fAC Vicki Norton > political science de-<br />

CsCll lUIUd lv?0 partment administrative assistant.<br />

"Students from other universites<br />

and colleges are open to influences<br />

different than our gwn and their<br />

views on a same subject may be<br />

different," Norton said.<br />

Because many conferences deal<br />

V—.<br />

with a variety of topics, the conferences<br />

are not open only to students<br />

majoring in political science, Norton<br />

said.<br />

Last November, David Tubbs (senior-political<br />

science), attended a<br />

conference at the U. S. Military Academy<br />

at West Point titled, "United<br />

States Foreign Policy Consensus:<br />

Prognosis and Implications."<br />

The conference posed the question,<br />

"Is there a consensus, for the first<br />

time since post World War II, in<br />

American foreign policy under the<br />

Reagan administration?"<br />

The purpose of the conference was<br />

"to give an opportunity for future<br />

leaders of America to interact,"<br />

Tubbs said. "There are different conceptual<br />

frameworks between military<br />

academy students and civilian<br />

college students," Tubbs said.<br />

This month, Kenneth Martin (10th<br />

Secunty Policy" in Washington, D.C.<br />

Noted speakers included: Edwin<br />

Meese III, attorney general; Admiral<br />

William J. Crowe Jr., chairman of the<br />

Joint Chiefs of Staff ; and Kenneth L.<br />

Adelman of the U.S. Arms Control<br />

and Disarmament Agency; as well as<br />

panel speakers from the news media<br />

such as Andrea Mitchell, NBC White<br />

House correspondent, and David R.<br />

Gergen, managing editor of U.S.<br />

News and World Report.<br />

"I didn't know what to expect.<br />

However, I did have the misconception<br />

that I would learn a lot about the<br />

presidency and presidential theory,"<br />

Martin said. He said he learned more<br />

about the speakers and how they<br />

handled Reagan's policy lines —<br />

police log<br />

• A State College man reported<br />

being threatened Sunday afternoon<br />

with a knife by his former girlfriend ,<br />

who apparently entered his apartment<br />

while he was sleeping, State<br />

College Bureau of Police Services<br />

said. No charges have been filed<br />

against the woman.<br />

• A University housekeeping supervisor<br />

reported the theft of linens<br />

worth $450 from the ground floor<br />

laundry locker in Hamilton Hall Monday,<br />

University Police Services said.<br />

coiiege siuuenis, IUDDS saiu. whether wneiner they mey followed ioiiowea them mem or not. • A man was apprehended Sunday<br />

This month, Kenneth Martin (10th '"The best thing about the confer- for the attempted theft of a $299<br />

semester-political science/computer ence was probably meeting so many chainsaw from a display at Stover's<br />

science) and Kirsten Nakjavani (se- people in the same field of study and Small Engine Shop at the Nittany<br />

nior-foreign service) attended a post- learning how much opportunity there Mall, State College police said. The<br />

Geneva Summit conference on "Con- is in the international relations field," man was not cited .<br />

gress, the Presidency and National Nakjavani said. —by James A. Stewart<br />

Are y ou<br />

interested in Christian healing 9<br />

Learn more at<br />

DRIVERS NEEDED DRIVERS NEEDED<br />

^VESXJ VIO<br />

S Lunch & Dinner<br />

The Daily Collegian Tuesday. March 25, 1986—5<br />

O^irm<br />

notes<br />

• Gamma Sigma Sigma will meet<br />

at 6 tonight in 106 Boucke.<br />

• Free University will hold a vegetarian<br />

cooking class at 6 tonight in 220<br />

Willard.<br />

• Friends of Latin America will<br />

meet at 7 tonight in 251 Willard.<br />

• The Barbell Club will meet at 7<br />

tonight in 318 Willard.<br />

• The Management Club will meet<br />

at 7 tonight in 365 Willard.<br />

• The College Republicans will<br />

meet at 7 tonight at 500 E. College<br />

Ave., Apt. 708.<br />

• The Sailing Club will meet at<br />

7:30 tonight in 314 Boucke.<br />

DRIVERS NEEDED DRIVERS NEEDED<br />

PIZZERIA<br />

and Sub Shop<br />

"Reality: Matter or Mind?" |Spe7iaiThis Week<br />

a lecture by 1 Ffe poppingon .*<br />

Charles W. Ferris . Any Slze P, * za |<br />

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B . —not valid with other coupons—<br />

8p m, HUB Reading Room |free delivery 5 p.m. - 2 a.m. s<br />

Sponsored by Christian Science Organization, Penn State £ 234-8007 128 E. Colleqe Ave. S<br />

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I<br />

FALL SEMESTER 1986<br />

NEW ONE-CREDIT STS COURSES<br />

"AN UPROARIOUS TALE!<br />

It is always alive and exhilarating...<br />

lyrically mad and absolutely compelling."<br />

-VIm.nl Cii/NE1V YORK TIMES '<br />

"AN AMERICAN MASTERPIECE!<br />

to fill those holes in your schedule with integrative<br />

general education<br />

* * * * * One of the most important American films to<br />

Are the media thought-police? Sharpen your critica l<br />

be released in years.THE PERFECT MOVIE! 1<br />

fUmarJ D,.u,/CANN£7T NEWSPAPERS<br />

thinking toward daily media exposure; for example,<br />

the New York Times, NBC Nightly News. All Things<br />

"A FASCINATING FILM.<br />

Considered, etc.. etc.<br />

Wildly comic and deeply compassionate."<br />

STS IN THE MEDIA<br />

fafllh CrM<br />

STS 497C 969131 Profs. Berner and Walker<br />

* * * * *<br />

A course of non-courses, of course! Register for SPE-<br />

CIAL SEMINARS IN STS and be able to earn one<br />

credit while attending non-class events on campus.<br />

Organizational meeting at first class session; two synthesizing<br />

sessions in 13th and 14th weeks of the semester.<br />

STS 497D 969140 Prof. Walker<br />

* * * * *<br />

SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY: IMPACT ON PER-<br />

SONAL FAITH. Everybody knows that modern<br />

science and technology drive out religious faith - or<br />

do they? Penn State faculty speak about their beliefs<br />

within our high tech society. Help for distinguishing<br />

what endures from what needs to be changed in a<br />

contemporary religious worldview.<br />

STS 497E By appointment.<br />

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"SEX AND SALVATION IN AN<br />

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Directed by John Huston (1979), Starring Brad<br />

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Flannery O'Connor's remarkable novel about the<br />

uproarious soul searching* of a young red-neck<br />

southerner is lovingly adapted by John Huston.<br />

Brad Dourif plays Hazel Motes, the blasphemous<br />

founder/preacher of the "Church without Christ."<br />

"A viciously funny portrait of a tortured man<br />

stumbling backward toward salvation."<br />

Newsweek<br />

t<br />

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Take a quack at life —<br />

write a letter to the Editor<br />

Tuesday, March 25<br />

7:30pm in Schwab Auditorium, $2 general admission<br />

Artists Series/Center for the Performing Arts<br />

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REGIST RATION ALERT FOR WORLD CITIZENS<br />

FALL SEMESTER 1986<br />

STS 105 FOOD FACTS & FADS (MWF 10:10-11:00, 3 cr.). Sex, air, water and food are the<br />

898031 personal and societal necessities. Everything else is of secondary importance. STS 105 v<br />

(co-listed with FD SC 105) makes that point and examines historical, physiological and f]<br />

technological aspects of eating and food. Instructor: Manfred Kroger, Food Science.<br />

rj<br />

STS 200 CRITICAL ISSUES IN STS (MWF 1:25-2:15, 3 cr.). An overview of the interactions H<br />

89o040 of perspectives from humanities, sciences and technology, and their integration in s<br />

addressing social policy issues. Instructors: STS Faculty.<br />

U<br />

STS 200H CRITICAL ISSUES IN STS (MWF 1:25-2:15, 3 cr.). An overview of the interactions<br />

898059 of perspectives from humanities, sciences and technology, and their integration in orj<br />

addressing social policy issues. Instructors: STS Faculty.<br />

^<br />

STS 297A COMPUTERS & SOCIETY (MWF 10:10-11:00, 3-4 cr.). An integrated approach to fh<br />

912683 the role of computers in society with hands-on experience in programming and *\<br />

graphics. Topics include: Artifical Intelligence - is it either?; Computers and Art - creatively<br />

Vj<br />

bound or unleashed?; Hackers vs. Big Brother - who controls knowledge in the age of *\<br />

information?; the Communications Revolution - what do you say after you've said hello? £<br />

Instructors: Richard Devon, Engineering, and Rob Fisher, Professional Artist and STS. «<br />

STS 297B GLOBAL BUSINESS (TR 2:30-3:45, 3 cr.). The social and technological conditions r)<br />

969113 responsible for internationalization of business since 1945 and the consequences for y<br />

American cities and regions. Instructor: Craig Humphrey, Sociology.<br />

^<br />

STS 297C AGRICULTURAL SYSTEM IN ECONOMICAL CONTEXT (TR 9:45-11:00, 3<br />

912665 cr.). Functional and evolutionary aspects of agricultural systems in prehistoric and W<br />

contemporary cultures, with emphasis on sustainability, energy-use, and ecological stability. U<br />

Instructors: J. Cordell Hatch, Agricultural Communications and Christopher Uhl, Biology. Z<br />

STS 420 ENERGY AND MODERN SOCIETY (TR 8:00-9:15, 3 cr.). A discussion of £j<br />

898068 historical, current and future energy sources, their utilization, and their effect on 0<br />

American society and the world. Instructor: Bruce E. Knox, Materials Science. - (/}<br />

STS 430 GLOBAL FOOD STRATEGIES (TR 11:15-12:30, 3 cr.). Concerned about the<br />

898077 devastating drought in Africa, the "population bomb" in Asia and the US role in<br />

third world development assistance? Learn what can be done about world hunger in an informal<br />

STS OFFICE: 128 WILLARD BUILDING<br />

PHONE: 865-9951<br />

and interactive atmosphere, where the roots and solutions to third world poverty are explored from<br />

an interdisciplinary, holistic perspective. Instructor: Dorothy Blair, Nutrition.<br />

STS 432 MEDICAL ETHICS (TR 2:30-3:45, 3 cr.). Examination of such topics as euthana-<br />

898095 sia, the relationship between practitioner and patient, and the moral and political<br />

aspects of medicine. Instructors: Robert Price, Philosophy and John Packard , Nursing.<br />

STS 450 NUCLEAR ARMS RACE ISSUES (TR 10:10-11:00, 2-3 cr.). Physical and social<br />

898103 scientists consider nuclear arms race issues; unique impact of nuclear weapons on<br />

warfare, international politics, ecology, economy.<br />

STS 496 INDEPENDENT STUDIES (1-18 cr., by appointment)<br />

898112<br />

STS 497A HEALTH, TECHNOLOGY AND SOCIETY (TR.2:30-3:45, 3 cr.). HOW THE<br />

912638 HEALTH ARE YOU? Who controls your health in a technological society? How<br />

does this happen? What can you do about it? What is victim blaming? Can I afford health? Have<br />

science and technology "medicalized" us? Wellness, wholeness, healing, holism, salvation — which<br />

is it? The impact of science, technology and social thought on human health; examining historical,<br />

present and future options for health maintenance. Seminar format with readings and guest<br />

discussants. Instructors: Fred Eisele, Social Policy and Robert A. Walker, Health Educator, STS.<br />

STS 497C STS IN THE MEDIA (W 8:00-8:50, 1 cr.). Analysis and evaluation of how various<br />

969131 forms' of media characterize scientific and technological developments in the society.<br />

Instructors: Thomas Berner, Journalism and Robert A. Walker, STS.<br />

STS 497D SPECIAL SEMINARS IN STS (M 8:00-9:55, 1 cr.). The opportunity to strengthen<br />

969140 one's integrative education around STS issues through guided critiques of universitywide<br />

non-course special programs. Instructor: Robert A. Walker, STS.<br />

STS497E SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY: IMPACT ON PERSONAL FAITH (Appt., 1<br />

cr.). Help for distinguishing what endures from what needs to be changed in a contemporary<br />

religious worldview. Instructors: Penn State Faculty.<br />

Recommended<br />

AM ST 450H THE MACHINE IN THE GHETTO (W 7:35-9:30 p.m., Appt., 3 cr.). Instructor<br />

968286 Daniel Walden, American Studies.


CATA to<br />

fiSe suit<br />

against<br />

corrapiex<br />

The Centre Area Transportation<br />

Authority last night approved<br />

plans to file suit against Parkway<br />

Plaza Apartments for an alleged<br />

breach of contract by the complex.<br />

CATA General manager Kevin<br />

Abbey said the suit alleges Parkway<br />

Plaza did not make full payment<br />

for its 850 residents' bus<br />

passes.<br />

Abbey said Friday was the final<br />

day Parkway Plaza had to honor<br />

its contract with CATA. He said<br />

CATA sent Parkway Plaza a letter<br />

Feb. 19, notifying them of the 30-<br />

day limit.<br />

Parkway Plaza spokesmen<br />

could not be reached for comment.<br />

But Parkway Plaza Controller<br />

Sara Zabriskie said on March 19,<br />

CATA allegedly broke the contract.<br />

Zabriskie said Parkway<br />

Plaza had met all contract<br />

agreements and did not believe it<br />

must pay a 100 percent, $75 increase<br />

for residents' bus passes<br />

the third year of the contract.<br />

CATA posted notices on buses<br />

and shelters for Parkway Plaza<br />

and Logan House residents<br />

March 19, notifying them that the<br />

authority planned to confiscate the<br />

passes on March 22.<br />

In response, Parkway Plaza notified<br />

its tenants that it would<br />

provide money for them to buy<br />

three-month CATA passes for the<br />

remainder of the term of the original<br />

pass.<br />

Abbey said CATA sent a letter<br />

March 21, notifying Parkway Plaza<br />

that the authority did not plan<br />

to confiscate passes but wanted<br />

the complex to make full payment.<br />

Abbey said the authority received<br />

two letters stating Parkway<br />

Plaza would attend CATA's<br />

board meetings. However, he said<br />

no one representing Parkway Plaza<br />

has attended their meetings<br />

this year.<br />

Someone dropped off a box of<br />

about 540 bus passes at the authority's<br />

dispatch office yesterday,<br />

Abbey said. A Parkway^ Plaza<br />

memo was attached and the words<br />

"passes being turned in per individual"<br />

were written on it, he<br />

added.<br />

Abbey said CATA did not request<br />

the passes be returned, and<br />

that CATA will continue actions to<br />

recover payment.<br />

—by K.J. Mapes<br />

Bus stop plan hits yellow light<br />

By DEBBIE SKLAR<br />

Collegian Staff Writer<br />

Plans for the relocation of the<br />

College Avenue and South Allen<br />

Street bus stop to the corner of<br />

Fraser Street and College reached<br />

a snag when the University's engineering<br />

department questioned the<br />

effects of the new stop on classroom<br />

experiments taking place in<br />

Hammond Building.<br />

The move would relieve congestion<br />

of the College/Allen intersection<br />

making it safer for pedestrians<br />

while clearing the view of Old<br />

Main, said Ralph Zilly, University<br />

vice president of business.<br />

Zilly said the engineering department<br />

may have problems with the<br />

stop location in front of Hammond<br />

because sound and vibrations that<br />

accompany the bus stop may hinder<br />

classroom experiments.<br />

Kevin Abbey, the Centre Area<br />

Transportation Authority general<br />

manager, said the relocation,<br />

which will affect both CATA and<br />

Campus Loop buses, has been in<br />

the preliminary stage for four<br />

years and no problems had been<br />

encountered until the engineering<br />

department expressed its concerns.<br />

A spokesman for the engineering<br />

department refused to comment on<br />

the situation.<br />

He added that a temporary relocation<br />

is now being planned so tests<br />

can be completed by the University's<br />

Department of Physical Plant<br />

at the request of the engineering<br />

department. The tests will show<br />

the overall effects of the relocation<br />

on classroom experiments.<br />

Although no date for the move<br />

has been set, Zilly said a test has<br />

been conducted at the new stop site<br />

on sound and vibrations and a<br />

second testing will be conducted<br />

after the temporary move to find<br />

the actual effects on the class experiments.<br />

If the tests cause negative effects<br />

on the classroom experiments the<br />

move will not become permanent,<br />

he said.<br />

Abbey said, "The move will provide<br />

the town with a safer intersection,<br />

shelter during the rain and<br />

aesthetic benefits to Old Main. The<br />

only negative affect will be the net<br />

loss of six to eight parking spaces<br />

(near Hammond Building)."<br />

The parking meters now at the<br />

proposed site of the new bus stop<br />

will be relocated to the old bus stop,<br />

he added.<br />

CATA and the University would<br />

be involved in the relocation with<br />

Penn State contributing the land,<br />

design work and the assisting in<br />

finding an appropriate construction<br />

bid, Abbey said.<br />

"The design plans would have to<br />

be approved by both the (University)<br />

Board of Trustees and the University<br />

administration because it<br />

involves University land," he<br />

added.<br />

The project will be funded by<br />

grants CATA received — 80 percent<br />

federal funds, about 16 percent<br />

state funds and about 3<br />

percent local funds. No University<br />

money will be spent.<br />

PSU part of system<br />

to study the Earth<br />

By ADAM BOONE<br />

Collegian Science Writer<br />

A nationwide network of universities,<br />

including Penn State, may help<br />

fvirther the understanding of the<br />

Earth's interior.<br />

Shelton S. Alexander, University<br />

professor of geophysics, said Incorporated<br />

Research Institutions for Seismologys<br />

hopes to link seismographic<br />

research stations to create a network<br />

covering the continent.<br />

The seismograph network will link<br />

earthquake watch stations, eventually<br />

through satellite communications,<br />

to facilitate extensive earthquake<br />

observations, Alexander said.<br />

Alexander, also vice president of<br />

the IRIS board of directors, said the<br />

group hopes to use the PASSCAL<br />

system — a portable series of seismograph<br />

detectors that can provide<br />

more detailed images of the Earth's<br />

crust than previously were possible.<br />

The system uses 1,000 individual<br />

sensors to detect tremors in the surface<br />

and produces, through sophisticated<br />

computer manipulation, a<br />

detailed three-dimensional image of<br />

the area immediately below the<br />

Earth's surface.<br />

"It's like a telescope to look into the<br />

Earth and focus on specific objects,"<br />

he said.<br />

The images are made possible because<br />

earthquake waves have different<br />

properties when they travel<br />

through different materials.<br />

The system may detect natural<br />

Earth tremors or artificially created<br />

vibrations like those used in the oil<br />

industry to detect oil reserves, Alexander<br />

said. However, the new technology<br />

used in the project makes it<br />

possible to refine the resolution of the<br />

deep-Earth images, providing more<br />

detail than the systems used by the oil<br />

industry.<br />

The seismograph network and<br />

PASSCAL will be supplemented by a<br />

computer network that will link all<br />

member institutions to a special<br />

group of "super computers" like<br />

those located in Princeton, N.J., he<br />

said. The computer network will allow<br />

seismology researchers anywhere<br />

in the world to instantly access<br />

the gathered data from the IRIS<br />

project, he said.<br />

Robert Masse, branch-chief of the<br />

U.S. Geological Survey branch in<br />

Denver, Colo., said the IRIS project<br />

was begun by the individual research<br />

institutions with backing from the<br />

National Science Foundation. Although<br />

the IRIS foundation has no<br />

direct affilitation to the USGS, the<br />

two groups will work as partners in<br />

their attempt to learn more about the<br />

nature of the Earth's interior, he<br />

said.<br />

Masse said the IRIS project has<br />

had a very positive effect on seismographic<br />

research.<br />

Alexander said IRIS was organized<br />

in 1984 and now includes more than 48<br />

institutions nation-wide.<br />

The international interest has<br />

made a federation of world-wide seismograph<br />

stations a definite possibility,<br />

Masse said, adding that a global<br />

network could enhance understanding<br />

of the Earth's interior.<br />

"(Because of IRIS,) global .coverage<br />

will improve much faster than<br />

the USGS alone will be able to do," he<br />

said.<br />

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Christopher Lutz (freshman-liberal arts) puts his heart and 'sole' into<br />

studying as he enjoys some early spring sunshine on the steps of Pattee.<br />

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Collegian Photo/ Dan Olsekl<br />

Many students have been hitting the books out in the open air as warming<br />

temperatures hint of things to come.<br />

General ed proposal up for vote<br />

New general education legislation,<br />

which would require students to take<br />

a courses in four areas of academic<br />

studies, will be voted on by the Faculty<br />

Senate today at \ p.m. in 101<br />

Kern.<br />

Laurie Dieffenbach, student member<br />

of the senate's General Education<br />

Implementation Subcommittee, said<br />

that if the legislation is passed, students<br />

will have to take three credits<br />

of the humanities, arts, natural sciences,<br />

and social and behavorial sciences.<br />

• Breadth courses introduce and integrate<br />

major areas of knowledge,<br />

according to the subcommittee's report<br />

to the senate.<br />

Jerry Covert, subcommittee chairman,<br />

said exceptions will be made to<br />

allow certain degree programs to<br />

bypass breadth courses in their<br />

areas.<br />

He said this is "considerably different<br />

from the past when students were<br />

more or less forced into taking<br />

courses whether or not they were<br />

relevant to the student."<br />

However, he noted that because the<br />

actual course proposals for general<br />

education have not been decided on,<br />

no bypasses have been approved yet.<br />

Covert said all students could appeal<br />

to their deans if they want to<br />

bypass a breadth course. .<br />

If the legislation is approved by the<br />

senate, it will be implemented as part<br />

of the general education program,<br />

scheduled to begin Summer Session<br />

1988. — by Carolyn. Sorisio<br />

Faculty becoming entrepreneurs to aid business<br />

By PETER D. TENNY<br />

Collegian Business Writer<br />

Some University professors are taking<br />

their expert knowledge outside the classroom<br />

and becoming "faculty entrepreneurs" by<br />

conducting research, advancing academics<br />

and solving practical problems in the private<br />

sector, said the Dean for Research in the<br />

College of Business Administration.<br />

, Paul Rigby said University faculty are<br />

addressing real world problems by participating<br />

in the Division of Research of the<br />

College of Business Administration.<br />

"The Division of Research is an incubator<br />

designed to develop and facilitate faculty<br />

research, but a predominate problem is that<br />

research involving extensive empirical data<br />

is expensive, and if the funds aren't there the<br />

research can't be done," Rigby said.<br />

The Division of Research eliminates this<br />

obstacle by securing the external support of<br />

foundations and grants from private industry.<br />

This approach is similar to the way entrepreneurs<br />

would undertake a project they<br />

would like to do, but don't have the financial<br />

resources, he said.<br />

"Our objective is to encourage and develop<br />

'faculty entrepreneurship' by securing external<br />

funding for research," Rigby said. "We<br />

are a vehicle, which enables important research<br />

to be done, which otherwise might not<br />

be possible because of cost considerations.<br />

Last year external funding for research at<br />

the University exceeded $1 million, and at<br />

least 50 foundations and companies were and<br />

still are involved including: the National<br />

Science Foundation, E.I. duPont de Nemours<br />

& Co., General Electric, Westinghouse, Rockwell<br />

International, Control Data, Chrysler,<br />

Price Waterhouse, General Dynamics, Polaroid,<br />

Union Carbide, IBM, and state and local<br />

governments.<br />

While those companies often have their<br />

own research and development programs,<br />

they participate in University research programs<br />

because they want to see research<br />

done in a particular area. Companies also<br />

support research projects because of strong<br />

University support for doing research in a<br />

certain area and the companies can participate<br />

in the research agenda through an<br />

advisory board.<br />

Rigby stressed that "we are not engaged in<br />

consulting contracts for these companies. We<br />

do research for the discipline, not for the<br />

company. But sometimes the company can<br />

vicariously benefit from the increased level<br />

of understanding."<br />

Rigby, a professor of management science<br />

and the overall director of the Division of<br />

Research, said, "we have found it easier to<br />

obtain funding for a program rather than an<br />

individual person or project."<br />

For this reason, the Division of Research is<br />

'We enable important research to be done.'<br />

—Paul Rigby, dean for research in the College of Business<br />

Administration<br />

broken down into seven different centers or<br />

institutes that include: the Institute for the<br />

Study of Business Markets, the Center for<br />

Regional Business Analysis, the Center for<br />

Issues Management Research, the Blankman<br />

Strategic Decision Making Program, the<br />

Institute for Real Estate Studies, the Pension<br />

and Welfare Research Program, and the<br />

Center for the Management of Technological<br />

and Organizational Change.<br />

All are different in their focuses, but similar<br />

in their objectives, which are to identify<br />

problem areas of mutual interest between the<br />

business and academic communities, determine<br />

what must be done and then develop<br />

ways of dealing with the problems.<br />

James Dean Jr., the assistant director of<br />

the Center for the Management of Technological<br />

and Organizational Change, said the<br />

focus of their research is on the effects of<br />

Advanced Manufacturing Technology, including<br />

robotics and computer integrated<br />

manufacturing. CMTOC has done research<br />

projects in areas of organizational interfaces,<br />

which studies how different components in an<br />

organization are interdependent. In addition,<br />

CMTOC studies the justification decision<br />

process of investment in advanced manunfacturing<br />

technology, Dean said.<br />

"Mostly companies do purely technical<br />

research, ours is applied organizational research,"<br />

said Dean, also an assistant professor<br />

of organizational behavior.<br />

Arnold Shapiro, associate professor of actuarial<br />

science and director of the Pension<br />

and Welfare Research Program, said "we do<br />

applied research in the area of actuarial cost<br />

methods and assumptions, and employee<br />

benefits such as employee stock ownership<br />

and pension plans."<br />

William Anderson, the assistant director of<br />

the Center for Regional Business Analysis,<br />

said, "the center's research concerns a continuous<br />

analysis and monitoring of the Pennsylvania<br />

economy.<br />

"We provide a monthly overview of the<br />

area's entire economic situation, which includes<br />

research on industry trends, unemployment,<br />

income levels, consumer price<br />

indices, economic growth and decline, seasonal<br />

adjustments, forecasting and economic<br />

effects of enterprise development," Anderson<br />

said.<br />

These research projects are not privy to<br />

faculty in the College of Business. The Center<br />

for Regional Business Analysis, for example,<br />

did a study that included not only business<br />

professors, but encompassed faculty from<br />

the colleges of Agriculture, The Liberal Arts,<br />

Human Development, and Earth and Mineral<br />

Sciences as well, Rigby said.<br />

The research often erases departmental<br />

lines and crosses college boundaries, Rigby<br />

said.<br />

"You can't study organizations in a vacuum,"<br />

Dean added. The idea is to develop a<br />

university without walls where everyone<br />

within the university and outside of it can<br />

learn.<br />

"Developing faculty entrepreneurs has<br />

also enhanced academic-industry relations,"<br />

Rigby said. "Although academia and industry<br />

have different objectives, we've been able<br />

to work together and make this a joint venture."<br />

The approach of developing "faculty<br />

entrepreneurship" has worked well at a number<br />

of other universities, including a Finance<br />

Institute at the University of Washington, the<br />

Center for Research in Technology and Strategy<br />

at Drexel University, and projects on<br />

human resources and strategic planning at<br />

Columbia University.


Reins of power change hands at ARMS<br />

By JILL GRAHAM<br />

Collegian Staff Writer<br />

The Association of Residence Hall Students<br />

named John Dalrymple as its new executive vice<br />

president and Lanny Dillon as the new director of<br />

the Residence Hall Advisory Board at its transition<br />

meeting last night in 226 HUB.<br />

The meeting marked the departure of Patty<br />

Martin, former ARHS president, and Joe Cronauer,<br />

former vice president, and the induction of<br />

the new president Kent Jute and vice president<br />

Joy Orlosky.<br />

The two new executives appointed Dalrymple<br />

and Dillon, who received unanimous approval<br />

from the ARHS Council.<br />

Dalrymple (junior-marketing) is the treasurer<br />

of the Centre Halls Residence Association and cochairman<br />

of the Workshop Committee. Along with<br />

his other duties as executive vice president, he will<br />

also serve as the chairman of the Board of Directors<br />

of the Penn State Movie Co-Op.<br />

"One of the first things I'd like to do is help the<br />

president and vice president unify the council,"<br />

Dalrymple said.<br />

"From there we can work on motivating the<br />

(residence hall) area presidents and representatives<br />

to go back to their areas and get the government<br />

to function more on that level," he said.<br />

In choosing the new executive vice president,<br />

Jute said that one of the main things he and<br />

Orlosky looked for was someone they could work<br />

well with in ARHS as well as personally.<br />

Joy Orlosky (left) and Patty<br />

"This year we observed a strong relationship<br />

between the president, vice president and executive<br />

vice president," Jute said.<br />

"We wanted someone with which we could have<br />

a strong bond also... the three of us have to work<br />

together and care about each other enough to know<br />

if someone's having a problem."<br />

The new RHAB director, Dillon, was chairman<br />

this year of the RHAB Resident Damage Reduction<br />

Committee, a group that assesses damage<br />

done to the residence halls and attempts to find<br />

ways to reduce it.<br />

Martin<br />

Collegian Photo / Craig Singer<br />

Dillon (sophomore-political science) said that<br />

his goals include making RHAB a more closely<br />

knit group and increasing its involvement with<br />

ARHS.<br />

"In the past year RHAB has had some problems<br />

internally. We wanted to avoid that by putting<br />

someone in there who's really ging to feel for the<br />

people in RHAB — someone who's going to listen<br />

and take advice," Jute said.<br />

"We also looked for a very dedicated and hardworking<br />

person because RHAB is very demanding<br />

and a big responsibility," he said.<br />

Conway begins stint as IFC president<br />

By JOHN SPENCE<br />

Collegian Staff Writer<br />

Pat Conway of Alpha Chi Sigma<br />

fraternity was installed as Interfraternity<br />

Council president last night.<br />

As president, Conway (junior-political<br />

science) will serve as leader of<br />

the University's 50 fraternities.<br />

Outgoing President John Rooney<br />

said the past year was a successful<br />

one, even though the greek system<br />

faced a number of tough issues.<br />

"We've shown that the greeks can<br />

stand firm and work with the University,"<br />

Rooney said.<br />

Conway, former University relations<br />

chairman for the IFC, said he<br />

hoped to live up to what Rooney had<br />

accomplished as president. He also<br />

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238-6021 ACORN 232 S. Allen<br />

<br />

encouraged more greeks to get involved<br />

in the IFC system.<br />

Other elected IFC officers installed<br />

at the meeting were Administrative<br />

Vice President Kraig Brown (juniorhotel,<br />

restaurant and institutional<br />

management) of Theta Delta Chi and<br />

Secretary / Treasurer Geoff Blatt<br />

(junior-accounting) of Sigma Alpha<br />

Epsilon.<br />

Also installed were the appointed<br />

members of the IFC, including: Executive<br />

Vice President Jeff Peters<br />

(senior-architectural engineering)<br />

from Alpha Chi Rho; Community<br />

Relations Chairman Eric Graves (junior-marketing<br />

science) from Phi<br />

Kappa Psi; University Relations<br />

Chairman Mike Schwartz (junioreconomics)<br />

from Alpha Epsilon Pi;<br />

Board of Control Chairman Ben Siegel<br />

(junior-electrical-engineering)<br />

from Alpha Chi Sigma ; Membership<br />

Chairman Bob Butler (junior-business<br />

administration) from Kappa<br />

Delta Rho; and Chapter Programs<br />

Chairman John Lundy (sophomorepremedicine)<br />

from Acacia.<br />

In unrelated business, the IFC<br />

voted by a two-thirds margin to allow<br />

formal recognition of Alpha Tau<br />

Omega as a local fraternity at the<br />

University.<br />

Alpha Tau Omega recently petitioned<br />

the University to begin re-colonization<br />

after being inactive for the<br />

past two years. Alpha Tau Omega's<br />

charter was revoked in 1983 for four<br />

violations relating to the alleged rape<br />

of a female University student.<br />

Steve Haas, president of Gamma<br />

Omega, Alpha Tau Omega's local<br />

chapter, said fie was pleased.<br />

"We've worked hard for this," said<br />

Haas, "but it's only our first hurdle."<br />

Gayle Beyers, assistant director<br />

for student organizations and program<br />

development, agreed with Haas<br />

and said that Alpha Tau Omega had<br />

been working toward ẹstablishing a<br />

local chapter since the time they left<br />

the University.<br />

"I think this shows again that this<br />

University is accepting of more fraternities,"<br />

said Beyers.<br />

However, Beyers also said that<br />

Alpha Phi Delta fraternity, 134 W.<br />

Fairmount Ave., has apparently disbanded<br />

and left the University. Alpha<br />

Phi Delta had few members, she said.<br />

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ODinions<br />

The Daily Collegian<br />

Tuesday, March 25, 1986<br />

Unintentional statement<br />

A skeleton crept out of the closet this<br />

weekend as unaware Penn Staters flocked<br />

outdoors into the sunshine to enjoy the first<br />

days of spring.<br />

It appeared in the form of a "shantycondo,"<br />

that was erected as an "investment<br />

in fun" for-a social event on the front lawn<br />

of the Sigma Pi fraternity.<br />

Some of the partiers who erected the<br />

shack for the theme party insisted they had<br />

not intended to make a statement about<br />

divestment, apartheid or the shantytown on<br />

campus.<br />

"These guys are neither here nor there,"<br />

asserted Sigma Pi President Mike DeTomrhaso.<br />

"The last thing we want is a confrontation.<br />

It's just in fun. We're not<br />

concerning ourselves with any issues."<br />

Well think again, folks. Just by coming up<br />

with such an insipid theme, you've already<br />

said something.<br />

Maybe you disagree with the measures<br />

being taken to protest apartheid. Maybe<br />

you disagree with disinvestment. Maybe<br />

you don't care; you're just tired of hearing<br />

about the whole damn issue every day.<br />

But the bottom line is that you cannot<br />

ignore it. And because these issues have<br />

been so visible, you've been forced to think<br />

about them.<br />

And that is what's important.<br />

At a university where apathy has come to<br />

be known as the common denominator of<br />

student opinion, such a display — any<br />

display — of thought or opinion is a rarity.<br />

reader opinion<br />

El Salvador<br />

It has been six years since the assassination of Archbishop<br />

Romero of El Salvador. In that same year, four<br />

American nuns were murdered in this small Central<br />

American country.<br />

Who was Archbishop Romero? Why was he killed?<br />

Since that time, what has become of his murderers and<br />

those responsible for the murders of the nuns?<br />

Archbishop Romero was a man who advocated peace.<br />

He called on the United States to stop sending military aid<br />

to El Salvador. He accused the government of repressing<br />

the people such as an occasion on Feb. 23, 1980 when he<br />

denounced military invasions of peasant villages in which<br />

more than 50 people were killed.<br />

Romero's last words were a plea to Salvadoran soldiers<br />

to obey the words of God not to kill people. The next day,<br />

he was assassinated.<br />

A commission appointed by President Duarte to discover<br />

the truth about his murder and that of the nuns was<br />

disbanded this past fall. No reason was given.<br />

Knowledgeable sources have claimed the commission<br />

was disbanded because it had connected the right-wing<br />

death squads responsible for these killings with high<br />

military officials in the present government.<br />

U.S. aid to El Salvador increased in those six years<br />

from $50 million in 1980 to $300 million in 1986. President<br />

Reagan is asking for $500 million in this year's budget.<br />

In honor of Archbishop Romero, Friends of Latin<br />

America will be showing two videos about Central America<br />

at 7:30 p.m. March 25 in 251 Willard Building.<br />

Peter Brown, graduate-agronomy<br />

March 19<br />

Take time<br />

An event that will capture the attention of the nation<br />

this summer is the 100th birthday of the Statue of Liberty<br />

on July 4, 1986. It will be a time to contemplate the<br />

meaning of liberty for all Americans, especially in light of<br />

the infringements on liberty around the globe in these<br />

troubled times.<br />

The media will be reminding us that America is a<br />

"melting pot" of various ethnic and racial groups who<br />

came to this country and who worked together to provide<br />

For however ignorant and uninformed a<br />

statement the builders of the shanty-condo<br />

may have made, they brought to light that<br />

the shantytown and protests on campus<br />

have unconsciously forced people into making<br />

decisions and forming opinions about<br />

the issues at hand.<br />

The theme party showed that some people<br />

are tasteless and thoughtless and do not<br />

want to seriously address the issues. One<br />

fraternity brother at the party admitted<br />

that "I don't think that anyone likes those<br />

rude, ugly-looking things in front of Willard<br />

Building."<br />

But it also brought up the flipside of the<br />

coin. It is enlightening to know there were<br />

some people at the party who thought the<br />

event was m poor taste. As a Pi Beta Phi<br />

sorority member said: "This is really a<br />

crummy situation." But to this she was<br />

forced to admit that "my opinion is very<br />

different from some of my sorority sisters."<br />

Both good and bad came from the building<br />

of the shanty-condo this weekend.<br />

It brought out a laissez-faire attitude that<br />

many people suspected but could not identify<br />

before.<br />

Regardless of whether it was a good or<br />

bad statement, the fraternity and sorority's<br />

actions did say something substantial.<br />

It remains to be seen what new skeletons<br />

may appear, if any, but the significance of<br />

the shanty-condo should not go unnoticed.<br />

Let's hope this action will be followed by<br />

other more-informed opinions.<br />

a better life for themselves and their children. Many of us<br />

will seek out old family photos of our ancestors' arrival at<br />

Ellis Island as we seek to retrace their first steps on these<br />

shores.<br />

Yet I fear that in the throes of the celebration of liberty<br />

and our ethnic heritage there will be forgotten Americans:<br />

the Native Americans.<br />

Having grown up on the Seneca Reservation, I am<br />

keenly aware that for them the celebration may be a<br />

reminder of the cost of liberty, of what they gave up,<br />

willingly or coercively, of how they were forced to move<br />

their families and tribes so there would be room for all of<br />

us on this vast continent.<br />

So as you take time to explore your family history, also<br />

take time to learn about the first Americans, the Native<br />

Americans, and be mindful of their place in American<br />

history.<br />

Rita M. Oliverio<br />

doctoral candidate-counseling psychology<br />

March 21<br />

Stereotypes<br />

Stereotypes surround nearly every segment of our<br />

society, and agriculture is no exception. For instance, the<br />

words "agriculture" and "farming" are synonymous to<br />

many people. Having not been raised on a farm, I once<br />

shared this limited viewpoint. As an agriculture student,<br />

however, I have gained another perspective.<br />

The perpetuation of the stereotypes concernig agriculture<br />

is partially the fault of those in agriculture. It is<br />

difficult to represent the depth and diversity of agriculture<br />

and it is often much easier to accept an existing<br />

image. As in any field or occupation, the most visible<br />

things get attention, be they positive or negative.<br />

People see cows and tractors from highways and hear<br />

about farm foreclosures in the Midwest, but they are<br />

made aware of little else. Therefore, people do not realize<br />

that agriculturalists today are also, among other things,<br />

successful businesspeople, engineers, food scientists,<br />

horticulturalists and animal breeders.<br />

This week is National Agriculture Week and this<br />

Wednesday is National Agricultural Day. Our nation has<br />

been blessed with fertile soils, quality water, vast forests,<br />

the<br />

daily<br />

WOM!<br />

Y00 6OT THE<br />

RATf<br />

VMAT'O YOU (/S£?<br />

^HT<br />

Collegian<br />

Tuesday, March 25, 1986<br />

©1986 Collegian Inc.<br />

Anita C. Huslin<br />

Editor<br />

William G. Landls Jr.<br />

Business Manager<br />

The Daily Collegian's editorial opinion<br />

is determined by its Board of<br />

Opinion, with the editor holding<br />

final responsibility. Opinions expressed<br />

on the editorial pages are<br />

not necessarily those of The Dally<br />

Collegian, Collegian Inc. or The<br />

Pennsylvania State University.<br />

Collegian Inc., publishers of The<br />

Daily Collegian and related publications,<br />

is a separate corporate institution<br />

from Penn State.<br />

Board of Editors — Managing Editor:<br />

Jeanette D. Krebs; Opinion Editor:<br />

Doug Popovich; Assistant<br />

Opinion Editor: Alan J. Graver;<br />

News Editors: Ron Yeany, Bob King;<br />

Copy/Wire Editors: Anita Yesho,<br />

Sue Graffius, Lori Goldbach, Tim<br />

Eyster, Denise Weaver, Donna Higgins;<br />

Town Editor: Phil ' Galewitz;<br />

Assistant Town Editor: Lori Heller;<br />

Campus Editor: Amy Fellin; Assistant<br />

Campus Editor: Celeste Mc-<br />

Cauley; Sports Editor: Mark<br />

Ashenfelter; Assistant Sports Editors:<br />

Chris Raymond, Carol D. Rath,<br />

Doug Frank; Arts Editor: Pat Grandjean;<br />

Assistant Arts Editor: Victoria<br />

Jaffe; Features Editor: Kris Sorchilla;<br />

Science Editor: Nan Crystal<br />

Arens; Business Editor: Rich Douma;<br />

Graphics Editor: Tony Ciccarelli;<br />

Photo Editor: Gregg Zelkin<br />

Assistant Photo Editor: Cristy Rick<br />

ard.<br />

Board of Managers<br />

tt<br />

fm<br />

LCJ7<br />

Assistant<br />

Business Manager: Amy R. Norris;<br />

Accounting Manager: Lori A. Spossey;<br />

Office Manager: Gretchen A.<br />

Funk; Assistant Office Manager:<br />

Aileen M. Stickley; Sales Manager:<br />

Susan Shamlian; Assistant Sales<br />

Manager: Michael Kutch; National<br />

Manager: Kathleen J. Heilman; Layout<br />

Coordinator: Nancy George;<br />

Marketing<br />

Jones.<br />

Coordinator: Cathy<br />

Letters Policy: The Daily Collegian<br />

encourages comments on news<br />

coverage, editorial policy and University<br />

affairs. Letters should be<br />

typewritten, double-spaced, signed<br />

by no more than two people and not<br />

longer than 30 lines. Students' let-<br />

ters should include semester stand<br />

ing, major and campus of the writer<br />

Letters from alumni should include<br />

the major and year of graduation of<br />

the writer. All writers should provide<br />

their address and phone number for<br />

verification of the letter.<br />

a wide range of climates providing adaptability for many sonably cannot be expected to produce an effective<br />

plant and animal species.<br />

solution. It has become evident to us that many people<br />

For this we should be thankful this week and always, equate divestment with an anti-apartheid stance to the<br />

especially in the face of world hunger. Let us look beyond extent that if you don't support divestment you must<br />

the stereotypes surrounding agriculture and appreciate support apartheid, or worse yet, you must be a racist,<br />

and celebrate what we have in it.<br />

We do not support apartheid in any way and we ' do not<br />

Ellen Cherchuck, graduate-agriculture consider ourselves racist. We do not suggest that our<br />

March 21 soi uti0ns are the only means of changing South Africa's<br />

IMIierlirAr"ft-Ari<br />

policies, that they are the best or that they will be<br />

IVHdUlfCiaeU<br />

undisputably effective.<br />

Divestment, as presented in the arguments we are Our purpose is two-fold. First, we would like to invite<br />

familiar with, appears to be a policy that leaves no room those who can show a realistic, positive effect that<br />

for a peaceful resolution of the racial problems of South divestment will have in South Africa to do so. Our position<br />

Africa. As we view divestment, its main problem seems is not inflexible. We would like to know if we have<br />

to be that it is misdirected.<br />

overlooked an important aspect.<br />

If we truly desire to destroy apartheid we must realize CurrentlV) we do not believe that we have. Our second<br />

that its true causes are not economic, but social. The is grounded in the hope of 0^ning a blic<br />

attitudes that inspire racism are deeply rooted in society discussion of ^,^3 other than divestment for combatand<br />

cannot be changed by a policy aimed at penalizing tmg apartheid<br />

companies operating in South Africa. *_ '<br />

Policies that we would support as a means of effecting We believe that most, if not all, students are opposed to<br />

positive change in South Africa include supporting gov- apartheid, but that many have reserves about divestment<br />

ernmental candidates who oppose apartheid and are as a viable weapon to combat it.<br />

dedicated to ending it by exerting pressure on South It is important to note that being anti-divestment is not<br />

African officials, an extensive letter-writing campaign the same as supporting apartheid. Rather than throwing<br />

directed at making our opinions concerning divestment our support behind divestment blindly, we should first<br />

known to governmental officials and other public interest explore alternatives other than the quick and sloppy one<br />

organizations, as well as any other means capable of represented by divestment.<br />

exerting pressure in the area necessary to have an<br />

Michael Lehutsky, senior-prelaw<br />

impact.<br />

Dennis Piatt, sophomore-engineering<br />

Divestment is a"quick and easy approach that rea- March 19<br />

%<br />

„, YOUR<br />

C0U6H<br />

SWOR,.<br />

Laid back:<br />

Trying to keep an open mind isn<br />

Some people call me a wimp. I prefer to<br />

think of myself as an open-minded pacifist.<br />

Regardless of the label, I continually refuse<br />

to take a stand on issues.<br />

The problem is that I can usually understand<br />

and sympathize with both sides in a<br />

conflict of interests. I call this open-mindedness.<br />

I enjoy playing the devil's advocate. It<br />

makes people really think about what<br />

they're saying or why they believe something.<br />

Sometimes it makes them really<br />

angry, and this is lots of fun also.<br />

But basically, I'm just an agreeable type<br />

of person — very live and let live. To use an<br />

already overused phrase, I try not to "invade<br />

people's space" and I expect them to<br />

extend the same courtesy to me.<br />

It takes an exceptional amount of aggravation<br />

to set me off. At times, I've been told<br />

I'm very laid back — some call it comatose<br />

— too much for my own good. But there are<br />

some things that really tick me off big time.<br />

One of these things is umbrellas. I thought<br />

people needed licenses to own and operate<br />

lethal weapons.<br />

And no one under five feet tall should be<br />

issued an umbrella. No one! I've had my<br />

throat nearly slit and came close to losing<br />

an eye or two on several occasions by under-<br />

SsW<br />

m<br />

l<br />

tall people wielding umbrellas like swashbucklers<br />

on the high seas.<br />

Now I don't have anything against short<br />

people understand — some of my best<br />

friends are short. (Hi, Kath. Please don't<br />

hurt me. Kathy knows judo and likes to<br />

practice on people who make short jokes.)<br />

Another thing that really offends me is<br />

when people (guys mostly, I hope) spit on<br />

the street and other public places. The other<br />

day I had to walk around downtown like a<br />

drunk because I was trying to dodge the<br />

fallout of a rather prolific spitter walking in<br />

front of me. Very gross. If I want to experience<br />

vast quantities of saliva, I'll get a Saint<br />

Bernard , thank you.<br />

Not that I'm out to repress anyone. Do<br />

your thing, babe. Just don't push it on<br />

others.<br />

t<br />

always easy after too many confrontations with umbrellas<br />

For example, someone in my building has<br />

a fondness for a particular singer. This<br />

person likes to save the rest of the tenants<br />

the trouble of turning on their stereos by<br />

blasting the favored singer and usually the<br />

same song throughout the day.<br />

Over break I had a hard time eating,<br />

sleeping and functioning without the familiar<br />

refrain pulsing in the backround.<br />

The only thing I hate more than people<br />

entertaining their neighbors with their favorite<br />

tunes is when these annoying people<br />

never change the record! There are certain<br />

ways to be considerate while being obnoxious.<br />

One example are those National Rifle<br />

Association commercials. Instead of showing<br />

men with beer bellies who wear camouflage<br />

and flourescent orange clothes and<br />

baseball caps bearing the slogan "kill<br />

things," they show a woman playing a<br />

violin.<br />

And then they tell you about dismemberment<br />

insurance. Please!<br />

I can picture Buck and Jimbo watching<br />

The Dukes of Hazzard , drinking cheap beer<br />

and prolifically expelling gaseous material<br />

from both ends of the digestive tract. Then<br />

the NRA commercial comes on.<br />

Buck and Jimbo instantly perk up, as this<br />

ad features guns, which have to rank right<br />

up there with the ten best things in life.<br />

(Right after beer, four wheel drive pick-up<br />

trucks and Merle Haggard records.)<br />

"Say this NRA thing sounds like a good<br />

deal, don't it, Buck? Look — $10,000 dismemberment<br />

and accidental death insurance.<br />

That sure would have come in handy<br />

last year when I had one beer too many (if<br />

there is such a thing) and I got a little<br />

trigger happy. Blew off more than half of<br />

R.J.'s left hand. What a mess! Almost<br />

ruined our friendship."<br />

"Yeah, and remember the time Billy Bob<br />

shot that little boy's puppy? Hell, it looked<br />

just like small game — it was brown," Buck<br />

said. "That little brat's family just didn't<br />

understand. Billy Bob even offered to buy<br />

them another dog! Some folks are so ungrateful!"<br />

"Ain't that the truth," Jimbo said. "Besides,<br />

don't it say in the Declaration of<br />

Dependents or Constitution or somethin'<br />

that men have the right to kill things?"<br />

"Yeah, I think so. Oh, we're missing the<br />

Dukes! Pay attention, because these plots<br />

get pretty complex. Don't wanna miss nothing<br />

important,"<br />

When good old boys like this get loose in<br />

the woods with lethal weapons, I worry. I<br />

am, however, a great believer in the Constitution,<br />

and man's right to be left the hell<br />

alone to do his thing, including bearing<br />

arms. (Or to arm bears, which might be just<br />

about as safe.)<br />

But the NRA advertises their insurance<br />

benefits a little too lightly. People shouldn't<br />

need dismemberment and accidental death<br />

insurance. There is enough killing going on<br />

in the name of higher causes — let's not kill<br />

in the name of carelessness and irresponsibility.<br />

This could lead me to drunk driving, but<br />

I'll spare you the grief. I don't think any<br />

person with the good taste and obvious<br />

superior intelligence to read this column<br />

would ever do anything that asinine.<br />

*<br />

Well, now that I've offended all short<br />

people who carry umbrellas, all habitual<br />

spitters and hicks who like to drink beer and<br />

kill things (at the same time), I suppose I'll<br />

wrap it up. I've got some college transfer<br />

forms to fill out.<br />

Laura May is a junior majoring in animal<br />

bioscience and a columnist for The Daily<br />

Collegian. Her columns appear every other<br />

Tuesday.


opinions<br />

Collegian flowers<br />

Sometimes I just have to wonder how The Daily<br />

Collegian sets its priorities for space in the newspaper. I<br />

am referring to the excessive coverage that the Collegian<br />

devoted to the flowers sent to former editor Gail Johnson<br />

by Undergraduate Student Government President David<br />

Rosenblatt.<br />

Johnson was no longer serving as editor of the Collegian<br />

when the flowers were sent. How could Rosenblatt possibly<br />

use flowers as a way to receive favorable coverage<br />

when the flowers were not even sent to a Collegian<br />

employee?<br />

It's ridiculous that a nice gesture on the part of<br />

Rosenblatt has to lead to an inquisition. Perhaps in the<br />

future the Collegian could devote as much space to<br />

discussing many of the activities that Rosenblatt has<br />

initiated for the benefit of the students.<br />

Randy J. Maniloff, sophomore-marketing<br />

Student coalition<br />

First, let me say that I am excited to see organizations<br />

like the Black Student Coalition Against Racism actively<br />

involved in fighting social problems.<br />

It is refreshing to see this country has not lost its<br />

conviction to fight for what is "right" by the standards of<br />

justice lying within us that are all too often distorted by<br />

human wisdom.<br />

For certainly human wisdom and Godly wisdom are at<br />

opposite ends of the spectrum.<br />

But, may I be so bold to point out a rather disturbing<br />

thought which you seem to have overlooked? Realize,<br />

however, and I cannot emphasize this enough, that what I<br />

am about to tell you is not written with malicious intent<br />

but to assist you in your daily fight against racism.<br />

Could it be that you harbor deep in your hearts some of<br />

the ideologies to which you are so strongly opposed?<br />

I say this because the name of your organization, The<br />

Black Student Coalition Against Racism, seems to carry<br />

overtones contrary to what you profess. By including the<br />

adjective "black" in your name, perhaps you reveal a<br />

little of your motivation to which you are unaware.<br />

Do you see your plight as a battle against Whites or<br />

against the shortcomings of Man? By including "black"<br />

in your name, you imply the former. By including<br />

"black" in your name, you segregate yourselves from a<br />

society which is no more black than it is white or red or<br />

yellow. Do you see what I am trying to say?<br />

By segregating yourselves, perhaps you have become<br />

guilty of what you speak against. For isn't segregation<br />

simply a manifestation of racism?<br />

How can you hope to overcome racism in the rest of the<br />

world or even Penn State? Jesus said it well in Matthew<br />

7:5, "first take the log out of your own eye, then you will<br />

see clearly to take the speck out of your brother's eye."<br />

As a final note of encouragement, may I suggest you<br />

change your name to simply The Student Coalition<br />

Against Racism and wipe the black-white distinction<br />

from your own hearts?<br />

For both black people and white people have been guilty<br />

of this racism for too long and the consequences are<br />

obvious: hostility, violence, social unrest and sometimes<br />

even murder.<br />

It's time to break this cycle of hatred by loving each<br />

other as "ONE people under God." But in order to do so,<br />

we must first turn from the crippling human wisdom that<br />

has brought us to this destitute place. In short, we must<br />

seek God and His perfect wisdom. Then, and only then,<br />

will He give us the peace that we need.<br />

Stephen M. Andrews, junior-marketing<br />

Don't blow it<br />

I am an alumnus and living in Brooklyn, New York. I<br />

receive The Weekly Collegian and am pleased of what I<br />

have been seeing on the front page (instead of on the back<br />

page the way I was used to seeing news about Blacks)<br />

about the Black Student Coalition Against Racism.<br />

I am happy to see the black community of Penn State<br />

pull themselves together and fight for such a worthy<br />

cause — Penn State's divestment in South Africa —<br />

instead of fighting against each other over trivial matters.<br />

I am delighted to see Penn State's student body as a<br />

whole fighting for the liberation of black South Africans.<br />

What I am disturbed about is Omega Psi Phi Fraternity,<br />

Inc. I hope and pray by the time my letter is printed<br />

that your organization decides to join the other student<br />

organization that are members of BSCAR. If not, I hope<br />

you re-examine your reasons for not joining.<br />

I am sure that one of your reasons for not joining has to<br />

do with financial strains on your organization. You are<br />

afraid of the University not giving you funds for the<br />

future.<br />

I do not have a personal vendetta against your organization.<br />

I am pleading with you to join BSCAR and show<br />

unity amongst all the black fraternities and sororities on<br />

campus. Let's face it, this cause is a chance for us as<br />

black people to gain very valuable ground with the<br />

University. DO NOT BLOW IT!<br />

BSCAR, as a good friend of mine says, "keep on,<br />

keeping on!"<br />

Leslie A. Jones, Class of 1985<br />

Perceptions of life in a small town<br />

Once upon a time there lived a<br />

little girl named Theresa.<br />

Well, her name wasn't necessarily<br />

Theresa. And it wasn't really<br />

"once upon a time," as in "a long<br />

time ago," because this is a story<br />

about things that happen and<br />

things that people believe today.<br />

Anyhow, this little girl named<br />

Theresa grew up in a very mystical<br />

fairy-tale land very i close to The<br />

Big City.<br />

Everyone in this land spent a<br />

great deal of time visiting The Big<br />

City. They would shop or ice skate<br />

or try to become cultured by going<br />

to the ballet. But they always came<br />

back to the mystical land they<br />

called home.<br />

This land of Theresa's was mystical<br />

because everybody there was<br />

in the same socio-economic class<br />

(upper-middle) and lived in splitlevel<br />

houses, and also because half<br />

of all the streets ended in a cul-desac.<br />

One day in this fairy-tale land<br />

Theresa heard a story about a<br />

different kind of place where pe o-<br />

ple didn 't spend much time at all in<br />

The Big City. She heard that fo r<br />

entertainment they watched 30-<br />

year-old Broadway musicals in<br />

crowded high school auditoriums<br />

with poor acoustics or went to<br />

volunteer firemen 's carnivals.<br />

She heard about tractor pulls too,<br />

but didn't understand what they<br />

were.<br />

She heard that many of the people<br />

in this f ar-off land spoke in a<br />

different manner , using words like<br />

"ain 't" and expressions like "them<br />

there whatchamacallits."<br />

Someone told her that they often<br />

""w«t»'<br />

\<<br />

%: X UJJ CUC<br />

dressed differently there too. People<br />

wore flannel at other times than<br />

to bed in the middle of winter.Men<br />

wore baseball caps when they<br />

weren't playing baseball and women<br />

wore sneakers when they<br />

weren 't playing tennis. Clothing<br />

was sometimes made from fluorescent<br />

orange material.<br />

Now, Theresa wore Forenza<br />

shirts, Guess jeans and Ipanema<br />

shoes and really couldn't imagine<br />

people who would prefer to wear<br />

fluorescent orange hunting clothes<br />

in public. But then, these people<br />

had never heard of Forenza or<br />

Ipanema either.<br />

She heard , too, that people drove<br />

pick-up trucks instead of cars and<br />

that chewing tobacco was not uncommon.<br />

She marveled to think<br />

that these things she had seen on<br />

television and regarded as exotic<br />

were used every day by people<br />

somewhere in the world.<br />

The Daily Collegian Tuesday, March 25, 1986—9<br />

She pictured miles and miles of<br />

cornfields divided only by narrow<br />

dirt paths that were dotted with<br />

tractors , and occasional small<br />

groups of houses.<br />

Theresa was very thankful that<br />

she could stay in her own land close<br />

to The Big City where she didn 't<br />

have to worry about roaming farm<br />

animals and outside bathrooms.<br />

And stay there she did .<br />

• • •<br />

Now that the story's over, let's<br />

think for a minute about how people<br />

from small towns are accused<br />

of being isolated and narrow in<br />

experience. Then think about how<br />

small towns have people from every<br />

income level and all different<br />

kinds of occupations.<br />

People from small towns (many<br />

of them) also visit cities once in a<br />

while to attend a play or go shopping,<br />

although maybe not as often<br />

as Theresa does. But how often do<br />

people from cities visit small<br />

towns?<br />

They don't. And as a result, they<br />

have a warped image of what one<br />

from a small town is like.<br />

By the way, let any Theresas who<br />

might be reading please be assured<br />

that not all people in or near small<br />

towns chew tobacco or own pick-up<br />

trucks or wear flannel shits and<br />

dirty baseball caps. Nor do cows<br />

and pigs roam free in the streets.<br />

And not everyone finds the firemen's<br />

carnival to be the cultural<br />

event of the year. But it can be fun.<br />

But poor Theresa was confused<br />

by all of this. How much of it could<br />

she believe? She imagined cows<br />

roaming through yards and down<br />

streets and coming to people 's Haylee Schwenk is a senior majoring<br />

in French and a columnist<br />

back doors and mooing for 'scraps,<br />

just as the neighbors cats scratch- for the Collegian. Her column now<br />

ed sometimes at her back door. appears every other Tuesday .<br />

•^ ^fm ^* *f% ^* *j» *l* *j% *[* #j» ?j * #*» *y» ^» *^<br />

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*^» *j» *j» *j> *j» *j» »x» »j» »j» *j* *y» *i* *J* *y» *y» *J» rj*<br />

¦*<br />

•K<br />

¦H-<br />

¦*<br />

*<br />

SOPHOMORES AND J UNIORS<br />

If you hod o 3.5 grade point overage (30 credits) at<br />

the end of your freshman year, you ore eligible for<br />

membership in:<br />

PHI ETA SIGMA HONOR SOCIETY<br />

Please bring an unofficial transcript to the HUB<br />

basement if you have not been contacted by mail<br />

Registration: March 25, 26 and 27<br />

11:00-2:00 p.m., HUB basement<br />

-.,.¦: ¦ . For more information , coll Professor Helz<br />

at 863-2416 (306 Cedor Bldg.) by 3/28.<br />

*!* *3A *1# •!* «^ *1^ •!* ^* *1» •!• *S* •!* *1* *i* »1* ^1* *!* *1* *^ *Z* *!• *1* *3e ^^ *J^ *& *1* ^^ ^^ *f c *t *^ ^^<br />

BLACK GRADUA TE STUDENT<br />

ASSOCIATION (BGSA)<br />

1986 - 1987<br />

OFFICER ELECTIONS<br />

NOMINATIONS will be open until Friday, April 4, 1986<br />

ELECTIONS will be on Wednesday, April 9. 1986<br />

Positions are:<br />

PRESIDENT<br />

VICE PRESIDENT<br />

SECRETARY<br />

TREASURER<br />

nominations will be accep ted in 136 Sparks Building<br />

*<br />

*<br />

*<br />

0143 "Jt<br />

FINANCE CLUB<br />

MEETING!!<br />

Guest Speaker:<br />

Dr. Lombra<br />

also, plans f or Washington trip discussed<br />

TUESDAY, MARCH 25<br />

321 BOUCKE<br />

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r ~ --><br />

ALL WELCOME!!<br />

Italian<br />

PIZZA & RESTAURANT<br />

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m<br />

1 FREE TOPPING<br />

WITH ANY SIZE<br />

PIZZA<br />

All You Can Eat - llam-6pm<br />

Monday: Pizza $2.59<br />

Wednesday: Spaghetti $2.99<br />

Offer Expires March 30th<br />

FREE DELIVERY AFTER 5:00 PM<br />

t<br />

..« 222 W. Beaver Beavi<br />

Jam<br />

(Under Beaver Plaza Plazi Apts.)<br />

W V? 238-SS13 238-5513<br />

7:30PM<br />

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Phi Chi Theta<br />

Women's Professional Business Fraternity<br />

presents<br />

"Career Fashions"<br />

a f ashion<br />

hair & makeup by<br />

show f eaturing<br />

f ashions by<br />

mnemo d LADVBUG<br />

C* IT*V BCAUTV s«c««s<br />

*1 donation at the door to benef it /St i<br />

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia \5/ l<br />

Tuesday<br />

Refreshes<br />

Ho^y<br />

^^ ^<br />

Door P"* es S<br />

7:00 pm °ave Pete rs<br />

HUB Fishbowl<br />

LOS T ITEMS can be f ound at THE HUB DESK<br />

M<br />

BE irak ML^^BT" Mr Ir flffjF ^w K&B MT^9 HB - " W<br />

LHo B ^nflll Wb *<br />

To hear the candidates<br />

for CI.S.G. President<br />

and Vice President<br />

DEBATE<br />

Tonight at 7:30 p«m<br />

HUB Ballroom<br />

Take Stock In Penn State —<br />

Support Student Government


SDO<br />

10<br />

BS»<br />

The Daily Collegian<br />

Tuesday. March 25. 1986<br />

Sampson<br />

improving<br />

after fall<br />

By HOWARD ULMAN<br />

AP Sports Writer<br />

BOSTON — Houston Rockets<br />

All-Star center Ralph Sampson<br />

was hospitalized but improving<br />

last night after he fell while rebounding<br />

in an NBA game with<br />

Boston, according to Celtics<br />

spokesman Jeff Twiss.<br />

"The X-rays of the neck and<br />

head were negative," Twiss said<br />

after Sampson was carried from<br />

the Boston Garden court on a<br />

stretcher and later taken to Massachusetts<br />

General Hospital.<br />

"There is no word yet on the X-<br />

rays of the mid-back."<br />

Twiss said the feeling and motion<br />

in Sampson's right leg had<br />

improved.<br />

"Movement is coming back<br />

more and more in the right leg,"<br />

he said.<br />

The fall came in the second<br />

quarter and, according to Dr.<br />

Thomas Silva, the Celtics' team<br />

physician, it "resulted in a definite<br />

loss of the right neurological<br />

process in his right leg."<br />

Sampson had no feeling and no<br />

movement in his right leg before<br />

being carried off the court,<br />

according to Silva's report. But<br />

the report said that after being<br />

taken to Boston's locker room,<br />

Sampson had "sensation and<br />

movement of his right leg."<br />

Silva said Sampson could move<br />

his right foot in the locker room<br />

and, after speaking with hospital<br />

personnel, that "improvement in<br />

the right leg is continuing."<br />

Rob Castagnoli, the shift supervisor<br />

at Mass General, said, "He<br />

is in good condition. He is being<br />

evaluated."<br />

"I think we're going to be all<br />

right, but it does scare everybody,"<br />

Silva said.<br />

Silva's earlier statement said<br />

there was "a possibility of a<br />

fracture of the mid-back."<br />

Twiss added that Sampson had<br />

had a contusion of his upper back,<br />

but his blood pressure and other<br />

vital signs were normal when he<br />

left for the hospital. He added<br />

that movement on the left side of<br />

Sampson's body was "fine."<br />

Sampson was hurt with 2:19 left<br />

in the second quarter when he<br />

leaned backward while jumping<br />

under his own basket and hit the<br />

back of his head and the upper<br />

part of his back on the floor.<br />

Houston Coach Bill Fitch: "He<br />

was in a lot of pain, a lot of pain.<br />

"I'm not concerned about thu<br />

loss. .. . The only important<br />

thing is if Ralph's back is all right<br />

and there is no disc problem....<br />

If he needs a little R&R in the<br />

Bahamas, I'll take him there<br />

myself."<br />

Houston forward Robert Reid<br />

said, "He went up for a two-handed<br />

rebound. ... He seemed to<br />

skid on the floor.<br />

"He was scared. ... Anyone<br />

would be at that time with a<br />

doctor asking if you can feel this<br />

touch or that touch... . The only<br />

thing he was saying was, 'Oh, my<br />

God. Oh, my God.' "<br />

Twiss said Sampson felt nauseous<br />

on the court but did not lose<br />

consciousness. He added that the<br />

three-year NBA veteran "was<br />

very calm" while being examined<br />

in the locker room and was<br />

able to recognize those around<br />

him.<br />

As he was wheeled on a stretcher<br />

from the locker room to the<br />

ambulance about 50 yards away<br />

in a lobby area, Sampson moved<br />

his head from side to side and<br />

also moved his arms. While on<br />

the stretcher, he was wearing his<br />

Rockets uniform, but had no<br />

sneakers on.<br />

"He said he wanted to talk with<br />

his mom," Twiss said,<br />

i The 7-foot-4 Sampson, 25, was<br />

the game's leading scorer with 17<br />

points when he was hurt with<br />

Houston leading 53-51.<br />

Sampson, who had played in all<br />

71 of the Rockets' games, led the<br />

team in rebounding with an average<br />

of 11.6 per game and was<br />

second in scoring with 19.6 points<br />

per game.<br />

Sampson was the first player<br />

selected in the 1983 draft and was<br />

that year's NBA Rookie of the<br />

Year when he led the Rockets in<br />

scoring, rebounding and blocked<br />

shots.<br />

Last season, when the Rockets<br />

drafted Akeem Olajuwon, Sampson<br />

was moved to forward. He<br />

still ranked 11th in the league in<br />

rebounding and 19th in scoring,<br />

and was selected to the second<br />

All-NBA team.<br />

Sampson came to the Rockets<br />

after a brilliant college career at<br />

Virginia, where he was an All-<br />

American for three years.<br />

Gym women upset Gators in home finale<br />

By THERESA PANCOAST<br />

Collegian Sports Writer<br />

An impromptu team meeting before<br />

the last event of the meet may<br />

have been just what the women's<br />

gymnastics team needed to upset<br />

No. 7 Florida in last night's rematch<br />

between the two.<br />

Before a crowd of 1,492, the No. 10<br />

women's gymnastics team managed<br />

to hold on and slip by Florida, beating<br />

the Lady Gators, 186.35-185.75.<br />

It almost wasn't that way. Going<br />

into the fourth and final event, the<br />

Lady Gators held a .15 point lead over<br />

Penn State and the Lady Lions gathered<br />

for a conference in the middle of<br />

the floor.<br />

'We grouped<br />

together and we said<br />

'Hey, this meet isn't<br />

over yet, they still<br />

have to go beam and<br />

they may fall, and we<br />

can really shine on<br />

floor.''<br />

—Senior Renee Bunker<br />

Head Coach Judi Avener said that<br />

when she took the team aside, she<br />

thought it might already be too late.<br />

"At that point we thought it was<br />

probably out of our grasp," Avener<br />

said. "But we knew that there was a<br />

slim chance. 'Don't go down with out<br />

a fight' was basically the message."<br />

Senior Renee Bunker said that after<br />

the beam, the Lady Lions felt<br />

"sort of a low in the air," yet added<br />

that the low didn't last too long after<br />

the team meeting.<br />

"We grouped together and we said<br />

'Hey, this meet isn't over yet, they<br />

still have to go beam and they may<br />

fall, and we can really shine on<br />

floor,' " Bunker said. "And we decided<br />

to not give up quite yet."<br />

Avener was very disappointed with<br />

the balance beam event, which saw<br />

four Lady Lions fall and with that,<br />

their usually-impervious spirit.<br />

"I think we gave up," she said.<br />

"We're very tired (from the Atlantic<br />

10 championship) and I think what<br />

happened, was when we had a little<br />

bit of trouble, the girls were just<br />

(saying), 'Oh no. I just can't fight.' "<br />

Lady Lion captain Pam Loree said<br />

that at the suggestion of Assistant<br />

Penn State's Pam Loree concentrates during her balance beam performance In last night's meet against Florida. The<br />

Atlantic 10 Champion Lady Lions (No. 10) upset the No. 7 Lady Gators, 186.35-185.75.<br />

Coach Marshall Avener, she tried to<br />

keep spirits up by asking for her<br />

teammates' mental support before<br />

her beam exercise.<br />

"This meet meant a lot to us and I<br />

knew how we didn't want to feel at the<br />

end of the meet," Loree said. "So I<br />

ran over to them and said, 'Look, we<br />

can still win this meet. They're coming<br />

to beam and we're going to floor.<br />

We can do it.'<br />

"And they're all giving me point-<br />

ers. I said, 'Don't tell me what to do.<br />

Just get the energy up now and start<br />

believing so I can feel the energy. I<br />

just want to feel every one of you up<br />

there behind me.' And that's exactly<br />

what I felt," she said.<br />

Lady Gator Elfi Schlegel, a member<br />

of the 1984 Canadian Olympic<br />

team, won the all-around with a 38.2.<br />

Florida's Tammy Smith placed second<br />

with 37.7, followed by Lady Lion<br />

junior Kathy Pomper with 37.46.<br />

Collegian Photo / Dan Oloakl<br />

In vault, Smith, who was an All-<br />

American in the event last year, won<br />

with a 9.75. Loree was second with a<br />

9.65, followed by Lady Gators Melissa<br />

Miller and Schlegel with 9.6 each.<br />

Bunker placed fifth with a 9.55.<br />

Penn State freshman Kathy Parody<br />

won the uneven bar event with a 9.7.<br />

She was followed by Pomper and<br />

Schlegel with 9.5 each. Miller took<br />

; fourth with a 9.45, and Lady Lion<br />

freshman Susan "Fly" Repmann<br />

scored a 9.4 to place fifth.<br />

Schlegel placed first on the balance<br />

beam with a 9.6. Loree was second<br />

with 9.55 and Lady Gator Erika White<br />

placed third with 9.5. Pomper and<br />

Smith tied for fourth with 9.25.<br />

On floor, Loree contributed a 9.75 —<br />

the season's highest among the Lady<br />

Lions — to win the event. Miller was<br />

second with a 9.7. She was followed by<br />

a three-way tie between Parody,<br />

Schlegel and Smith with 9.5 each.<br />

Repmann was sixth with a 9.45. Loree's<br />

performance earned her the<br />

Ann Carr Award for the.most inspiring<br />

Lady Lion performance of the<br />

evening.<br />

Avener said the meet was not even<br />

close to one of the team's better ones<br />

and the exhaustion following the Atlantic<br />

10 weekend was probably a<br />

factor.<br />

"I think they were too tired to do it<br />

and a little too discouraged to do it<br />

tonight," she said. "But they still<br />

managed to shine through somehow.<br />

"We had a decent meet, but it's by<br />

far the worst meet in the last five,"<br />

Avener added. "If (Florida's) Anita<br />

Botnen had been in the meet, we<br />

wouldn't have had a chance, the way<br />

we performed tonight."<br />

Actually, Botnen, another member<br />

of the 1984 Canadian Olympic team,<br />

was entered in the meet as an allarounder.<br />

But Botnen fell from the<br />

uneven bars — Florida's first event of<br />

the evening. Florida Head Coach<br />

Ernestine Weaver said the injury was<br />

probably a severe dislocation or hyperextension<br />

of the elbow.<br />

Weaver said she was extremely<br />

proud of her athletes. She added that<br />

she thought her team would have<br />

won, had it not been for inaccurate<br />

scoring on Penn State's floor performances.<br />

"I don't think a coach could ask any<br />

more from the kids," Weaver said.<br />

"You don't know what makes them<br />

do what they do, but they came out<br />

fighting and they did a beautiful job.<br />

"If the floor scores had not been so<br />

terribly inflated for Penn State, those<br />

kids would have won without Anita<br />

Botnen."<br />

Avener said she was happy to have<br />

beaten Florida , but at the same time<br />

was sympathetic with the Lady Gators'<br />

shortcomings.<br />

"I feel great about beating Florida,"<br />

Avener said. "I think Florida<br />

really had a tough time. The kids<br />

looked great. They had very little left<br />

to work with and they were giving it<br />

everything they've got."<br />

Baseball team looks to 'heat up' at Gettysburg<br />

By ROB BIERTEMPFEL<br />

Collegian Sports Writer<br />

As tlie weather in Pennsylvania begins to<br />

heat up, Head Coach Shorty Stoner hopes the<br />

baseball team will respond by putting the heat<br />

on opposing teams. The Lions will attempt that<br />

at 1 p.m. today in a doubleheader against<br />

Gettysburg.<br />

Penn State (10-5) is fresh off a twinbill sweep<br />

of Towson State, in which the Lions mangled<br />

their opponents by a combined score of 27-12. If<br />

Penn State manages to keep up that type of redhot<br />

offense, it could find the going a bit easier<br />

as the heart of the season approaches.<br />

Leading the way for the Lions is shortstop<br />

Gary Binduga, who is hitting at a torrid .391<br />

clip. Binduga, a senior from Pittsburgh, delivered<br />

a crucial bases-loaded triple to bust the<br />

game loose against Towson.<br />

Right behind Binduga are outfielders Rod<br />

Smith (.375) and Mike Karstetter (.356). Both<br />

players hit well in the Towson series, something<br />

Stoner hopes will continue.<br />

Smith, who will not play today due to a<br />

bruised knee, said the team's offensive output<br />

is improving daily.<br />

"I know our best came out against Towson,<br />

and I think I will carry over against Gettysburg,"<br />

he said. "We had some trouble (last<br />

week) against Navy, but I think once our bats<br />

get going the whole team will come along.<br />

We're just going to work together and score<br />

some runs."<br />

Equally important in today's game is the<br />

performance of pitching staff.<br />

Stoner will start either Glenn Bartek or Greg<br />

Becker in the first game and righthander Kyle<br />

Bartl in the second. Both Bartek and Becker<br />

are sporting 1-2 records, and earned run averages<br />

of 2.69 and 2.49, respectively. Bartl has<br />

pitched only two innings this season, giving up<br />

Lady laxers set for home opener<br />

By TODD SHERMAN<br />

Collegian Sports Writer<br />

The 1986 version of the Lady Lion lacrosse team begins<br />

its home season today, and Head Coach Sue Scheetz's<br />

squad will not only be looking to extend a winning<br />

tradition on Lady Lion Field, but to begin one for the<br />

rookie coach.<br />

At 3 p.m. today, Penn State will try to build on a 55-5-1<br />

home mark over the past nine years at the expense of the<br />

Lady Greyhounds of Loyola, Md. That potential 56th win<br />

today would make Scheetz a winner in her home debut<br />

and start the team on its way to making last year's "worst<br />

ever" 6-3 home record a memory.<br />

The Lady Lions have made their home field a terror for<br />

opposing teams since its maiden (1977) season. Penn<br />

State went 6-0 that year, and played 38 consecutive games<br />

without a loss on the field until Temple won a 12-11 game<br />

in April of 1983. Four of the five Penn State losses have<br />

been to national championship teams, and four of the five<br />

losses have been by one goal.<br />

Tri-captain Maggy Dunphy said the home success is<br />

definitely an advantage.<br />

"We are definitely more comfortable on our field,"<br />

Dunphy said. "Our fans are there and we know the field<br />

very well. The record is in the back of our minds, but only<br />

as something that gives us a positive edge."<br />

After a successful tournament at William and Mary (8-0<br />

tournament record, 59-6 scoring advantage) and a 16-6<br />

triumph Over James Madison last Saturday, the Lady<br />

Lions look like contenders once again. And according to<br />

Scheetz, Penn State so far has one very important<br />

advantage over last season's squad — not one Lady Lion<br />

has been stricken from the lineup because of injuries.<br />

"We are healthy and I think that is a big part," Scheetz<br />

said. "After the William and Mary tournament last year<br />

we had some key injuries for that first game. We don't<br />

this year and that is something I am very pleased with.<br />

"If we can start out the gante tommorrow (today), the<br />

way we ended the game against James Madison on<br />

Saturday, then I think we will be in good shape."<br />

Although Penn State won by 10, the score was only 7-5 at<br />

halftime, and the team was pressing.<br />

"We have to play our game," Scheetz said. "We can't<br />

let another team take us out of our game, which James<br />

Madison did. We play a game with patience in looking for<br />

the good shot. We can't panic — that is what we did in the<br />

game with James Madison because we got down by one<br />

goal, and we just started firing from all over the field."<br />

Loyola is not likely to take Penn State out of its game,<br />

however, because the Lady Greyhounds play the same<br />

type of passing game as the Lady Lions. But Loyola is 2-0,<br />

with wins over Penn (13-7) and Lafayette (9-7), and the<br />

Lady Greyhounds are returning 10 of 12 starters, including<br />

all members of an offense known for its scoring.<br />

"I expect them to play player-to-player," Scheetz said.<br />

"I do think they have the capabilities of playing a zone as<br />

well.<br />

"How long they will stay with the player-to-player, I<br />

don't know. But I do think they will start out with that. It<br />

should be easier for us that way. We would rather play a<br />

team that will match us up player-to-player."<br />

Scheetz said no one has emerged as a leading scoring,<br />

but that will work to her team's advantage.<br />

"That, hopefully, will be a strength for us this season —<br />

that no team will be able to gear in on one player, and they<br />

have to look at everyone because everyone is contributing,"<br />

Scheetz said. "It is a positive trait of the players<br />

themselves that they are confident enough to look to<br />

somebody else."<br />

Dunphy added that the team's confidence in itself is<br />

already starting to show.<br />

"It is great that everyone is confident not only with<br />

themselves but everyone else on the team," Dunphy<br />

said. "We look pretty good, and we put a lot together in our<br />

last game and practices have gone very well. We are<br />

ready."<br />

no runs. This will be his first start of the season.<br />

"I'm pretty excited going into the game,"<br />

Bartl said. 'Thave a chance to prove myself.<br />

The team has a lot more confidence now, and I<br />

think that's how we're going in — confident. At<br />

this point of the season you just got to take<br />

games one at a time."<br />

Smith agrees that the Lions' hurlers are a<br />

vital part of the team, and feels that their<br />

improvement is also steady.<br />

"Our pitching has been pretty consistenfso<br />

far all season," he said. "It has kept us in some<br />

games. There have been a few small inconsistencies,<br />

but that's to be expected early in the<br />

season. We'll work things out."<br />

The Lions might be confronting Gettysburg<br />

(1-2) at a good time. The Bullets are just<br />

beginning their season and their inexperience<br />

against a strong pitching staff , as well as the<br />

Penn State bats, could work to the Lions'<br />

advantage.<br />

Bullets' Head Coach Gene Hummell is in his<br />

25th season and has a lifetime record of 212-232-<br />

3, including last season's 14-10 effort. Hummell<br />

will field a young but experienced team since<br />

many of this year's sophomores saw action last<br />

season.<br />

Gettysburg's offensive leader is second baseman<br />

Seth Bendian, who has seven hits in 11 atbats<br />

for a .636 average. Bendian is trailed by<br />

leftfielder Dennis Maloney, who is hitting .364.<br />

The Bullets will start sophomore Brian Golden<br />

on the mound in the first game. Golden is the<br />

owner of Gettysburg's sole win this season — a<br />

two hit shutout against York College. Their<br />

starting pitcher for game two was not announced<br />

as of yesterday.<br />

Penn State also has a history versus the<br />

Bullets on its side. The Lions pounded Gettysburg<br />

at home last season, 12-3. Golden suffered<br />

last season's loss as the Lions took advantage<br />

of eight hits and five Gettysburg errors.<br />

Col laglan Photo / Mary Colentano<br />

Penn State's Beth Thompson (12) looks down field for an open teammate In a<br />

game against Delaware last season. The Lady Lions open their home season at<br />

3 this afternoon against Loyola at Lady Lion Field.<br />

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Spikers take three games in Maryland<br />

By GLENN SCHUTZ<br />

Collegian Sports Writer<br />

The men's volleyball team took three giant<br />

strides toward the national championship over the<br />

weekend in Maryland.<br />

With victories over Maryland, Navy and Eastern<br />

Intercollegiate Volleyball Association rival<br />

George Mason, the No. 4 Lions boosted their<br />

season record to 27-7 and gave themselves a<br />

comfortable lead in the EIVA.<br />

Penn State and No. 8 George Mason lived up to<br />

their "big game" billing as "both teams played a<br />

great game" according to Head Coach Tom Tait.<br />

At the outset of the match, however, it apeared<br />

that George Mason was playing a better game<br />

than the Lions by taking the first game 15-8.<br />

"In the first game, Mason played nearly flawless<br />

ball," Tait said. "They were clicking completely<br />

and we were playing sort of tentatively."<br />

The Lions, however, quickly showed the fans<br />

and George Mason why they are ranked fourth in<br />

the nation, when it regrouped and came back<br />

fighting. Penn State clinched the next three<br />

games, 15-8, 15-9 and 16-14.<br />

"We regrouped between the first and second<br />

games," Tait said, "and decided that we had to<br />

play steady ball and not worry about our opponent.<br />

That's what we did."<br />

Sophomore Jose Rubayo attributed the first<br />

game loss to George Mason's new setter and ind With a victory as important as the George<br />

overall offensive style.<br />

Mason match was, one might expect the team to<br />

"They came out with a differnet style of fense," Rubayo said. "Once we readjusted, we that was not the case.<br />

of- be riding an emotional crest, but according to Tait,<br />

knew what to expect."<br />

"The win might have made it harder for us," he<br />

After the Lions defeated George Mason earlier<br />

said. ''George Mason was our critical match but<br />

this season, many memebers of the George Mason ;on we couldn't let up against the other teams the next<br />

squad believed that it was a "tainted win" for day."<br />

Penn State and many believed that Mason would nld But the Lions did not let up the next day against<br />

come out on top this time around.<br />

Maryland when it posted wins of 15-6, 15-6 and 15-3.<br />

"That turned out not to be the case," Tait said.<br />

The Terrapins did manage to salvage a victory in<br />

Penn State had several standout players in the :he the third game of the match, 16-14.<br />

match including Chris Chase, who recorded 43 Navy attempted to prove itself to the Lions after<br />

kills (a .486 kill percentage), and Javier Caspar, ar, being trounced only a week before. Nonetheless,<br />

who had 93 assists.<br />

the Midshipmen were again, no match for Penn<br />

The Lions also had excellent help from their<br />

State as it won 15-7, 15-12 and 15-6.<br />

bench in the likes of Mike Hogan with 10 kills (.563) 53) "Navy was stronger, different than when we<br />

and Bob Faux, who added key back-row assistancenitely<br />

gave us a harder time, but we steadied out<br />

,is- saw them last week," Rubayo said. "They defi-<br />

"We have a quality bench to go along with our lur and beat them."<br />

starters," Tait said. "We can always expect major<br />

Tait was pleased with the performance of his<br />

production from any of them."<br />

squad this weekend especially with the way it<br />

Hogan agreed that the team has a top quality<br />

played as a unit despite mental and physical<br />

bench this season.<br />

fatigue.<br />

"We go out there and do what we have to do," he "The total weekend was a very demanding one<br />

said. "I think that our bench is real strong this lis for the team both mentally and physically," he<br />

year."<br />

said. "I'm pleased with the steadiness of the<br />

On Saturday, the team moved on' to College<br />

guys."<br />

Park, Md., to take on No. 18 Navy and the University<br />

of Maryland.<br />

to play under such tiring<br />

jr- Tait was also happy that his team had a chance<br />

circumstances.<br />

Starless lady cagers still shined brightly<br />

A lot of tears were shed after the women's<br />

basketball team ended a 24-8 season with its 85-<br />

72 loss to Rutgers in the semi-finals of the<br />

NCAA tournament last Thursday. And with<br />

them, a lot of rationalizations were offered.<br />

Attempting to ease a little of the pain of the<br />

defeat, someone suggested that this was, after<br />

all, a transitional year for the Lady Lions. They<br />

had lost last season's starting center, Kahadeejah<br />

Herbert, to graduation and with her had<br />

gone 18 points and 8.6 rebounds per game. Also<br />

departed were Lorraine McGirt who left to<br />

concentrate on academics, and Jane Gilpin,<br />

homesick for California.<br />

Those kinds of v explanations were nothing<br />

new for the Lady Lions, who had been told by<br />

outsiders how much Penn State missed Herbert<br />

since before the beginning of the season. And<br />

by this time, guard Suzie McConnell had had<br />

just about enough of it.<br />

"One person doesn't make a team," she<br />

snarled. Her anger Was justifiable.<br />

The implication of that line of speculation<br />

was that the Lady Lions didn't really belong in<br />

the same Final Four with the likes of Rutgers<br />

and Western Kentucky. Those two teams had<br />

been in the AP Top 10 all year and the former<br />

had beaten Penn State three times during the<br />

regular season.<br />

The Lady Lions ought to be content with the<br />

Atlantic 10 trophy they managed to swipe from<br />

under the noses of the more deserving Lady<br />

Knights, so the logic went, and just forget all<br />

this business about a national championship. In<br />

the rarefied air of the NCAA tournament, Penn<br />

State was just plain out of its league.<br />

What nonsense.<br />

* flUfiW'"- ***"<br />

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The 1985-86 Lady Lions were indeed a different<br />

team than the one that went to the NCAAs<br />

last year and arguably, not as talented, but to<br />

imply that it was not as good, is to demean the<br />

courageous efforts of some of the East's finest<br />

players.<br />

There has been an awful lot of confusion over<br />

the words "most talented" and "best" as if one<br />

was synonomous with the other. They are not.<br />

Ask the Villanova men's basketball team,<br />

winners of last year's NCAA tournament. Ask<br />

LSU, this year's Cinderella team. Or better yet,<br />

ask Penn State forward Joanie O'Brien.<br />

As she put it, "There's a difference between<br />

great players, and great players who are<br />

winners."<br />

That difference means intangibles; the nonstatistical,<br />

unmeasureable advantages that<br />

carried Penn State when the injured reserve<br />

was getting deep and Atlantic 10 losses adding<br />

up. For a start, it includes smart coaching,<br />

momentum, emotion, pride and pure luck. The<br />

trick has been harnessing those advantages, in<br />

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the moments when they matter most.<br />

At various times during the course of the<br />

season, Penn State did just that — coming up<br />

with big wins over Ohio State, Louisiana Tech<br />

and Rutgers in the Atlantic 10 tournament. And<br />

even in the losing effort at NCAAs, Penn State<br />

hung tough for 30 minutes on the strengh of<br />

those same intangibles.<br />

Possibly the most important has been the an<br />

unlikely combination of stellar performances<br />

from star players and bench strength that often<br />

resulted in makeshift lineups, but kept Penn<br />

State in the win column on a regular basis.<br />

Greatness was expected from players like<br />

McConnell and forward Vicki Link, and they<br />

delivered. McConnell, who averaged 12.6 points<br />

per game and was second in the nation in<br />

assists last year, did pretty much the same<br />

thing this time around, averaging 12 points per<br />

game and finishing second in the nation in<br />

assists.<br />

Link, meanwhile, increased her points per<br />

game average from 9.5 last season, to a teamleading<br />

15.5 in 1985-86. In addition, she paced<br />

the team in rebounding, following Herbert's<br />

footsteps in leading Penn State in both categories.<br />

Just as important, though, was the unexpected<br />

strong performance from the bench.<br />

Guard Patti Longenecker spent the better part<br />

of the early season on the sidelines, but when<br />

starter Vanessa Paynter went down with a<br />

knee injury against Rutgers Jan. 18, she filled<br />

in with a vengeance. When the Lady Lions had<br />

their chance to get even with Rutgers in the<br />

conference championship, Longenecker played<br />

a key role in Penn State's game plan, shutting<br />

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down play-making guard Tehcher Austin.<br />

Lisa Faloon, the team's sixth man in the<br />

beginning of the season, was called upon to<br />

replace injured forward Joanie O'Brien and<br />

made her presence known with a devastatingly<br />

accurate outside jumper.<br />

And Laura Hughes, a sub throughout the<br />

season, came in off the bench against Rutgers<br />

in the conference championship and pulled<br />

down seven key rebounds. What she didn't use<br />

in the championship, she saved for the NCAAs.<br />

It was Hughes' 13 points that kept Penn State<br />

neck and neck with Rutgers until the Lady<br />

Knights pulled away mid-way through the<br />

second half.<br />

Even O'Brien, returning late in the season<br />

from a seemingly endless string of knee injuries,<br />

contributed. Her 16-point performance<br />

paced the Lady Lions in their 63-59 victory over<br />

N.C. State in the second round of the NCAA<br />

tournament.<br />

No, Penn State never found a single player of<br />

Herbert's caliber. What it got instead, was a<br />

fistfull of superior efforts from the team's<br />

"lesser lights," and enough determination to<br />

carry it as far as it went the year before with<br />

supposedly a better team. All but O'Brien and<br />

Longenecker will return next year, no small<br />

consolation in a conference where nearly everybody<br />

else's stars are coming back, too.<br />

If the Lady Lions can harness the same<br />

determination and pride that carried them in<br />

1985-86, there's no reason to believe they can't<br />

achieve even greater heights in the near future.<br />

Matt Herb is a senior majoring in journalis m<br />

and a sports writer for The Daily Collegian.<br />

The Daily Collegian Tuesday, March 25, 1986—11<br />

Lady fencers finish<br />

on disappointing note<br />

By JULIE BURGHARDT<br />

Collegian Sports Writer<br />

Whether you chock it up to luck,<br />

fate or destiny, it just was not in the<br />

cards for the women's fencing team<br />

this season. On March 21, the Lady<br />

Lions placed a disappointing 10th at<br />

the NCAA championships at Princeton,<br />

N.J., although they were seeded<br />

10th heading into the competition.<br />

Sophomore Lauren Fox was unable<br />

to fence due to a sudden illness, and<br />

from there, things appeared to be<br />

headed downhill. Fox is one of the<br />

team's key fencers, according to former<br />

team member, Assistant Coach<br />

Jana Angelakis.<br />

"You come to expect a certain<br />

number of wins, and then that doesn't<br />

happen," Angelakis said. "It wasn't<br />

so much the pressure, just the knowledge<br />

that she couldn't be put in."<br />

For sophomore Johanna Picard,<br />

not having Fox available made things<br />

more difficult than usual.<br />

"It was bad because she's a good<br />

fencer," Picard said. "It had an<br />

effect on us mentally. Not that we<br />

thought we were going to lose, but<br />

that we were going in there without<br />

everybody."<br />

Senior captain Sue Page agreed<br />

with her teammates.<br />

"She (Fox) is one of our better<br />

fencers. We could have had more<br />

wins if she was in," Page said. "But<br />

even so, things could have turned out<br />

better if everyone else had been fencing<br />

at their best, which is what you<br />

have to do to win at nationals. We<br />

could have made the top five or top<br />

eight at least."<br />

Angelakis said she thought the<br />

team would do better, despite being<br />

seeded 10th from the start.<br />

"I expected the team to move up,<br />

as far as results go," she said. "But<br />

losing three out of four matches made<br />

that impossible."<br />

The squad was soundly defeated by<br />

Temple — a team they have been<br />

unable to defeat all season. The<br />

matches were much closer against<br />

Notre Dame, who emerged as the<br />

No. 2 team and Ohio State.<br />

The fourth team the Lady Lions<br />

were scheduled to fence, Cal State-<br />

Fullerton, left before the tournament<br />

was over, so Penn State won that<br />

match on a forfeit.<br />

All the teams the Lady Lions went<br />

up against were squads they had<br />

previously faced. Picard said she<br />

would have liked to have faced some<br />

different opponents , including<br />

schools from the western part of the<br />

country.<br />

"She fenced fine," Angelakis said.<br />

"I'm not saying she fenced 100 percent,<br />

but she fenced well."<br />

For Page, this was the last competition<br />

of her collegiate career. Although<br />

she was disappointed with the<br />

season's results, she said that the fact<br />

that she will not be back next year<br />

has nqt really sunk in yet.<br />

Although losing an experienced senior<br />

is never looked upon favorably,<br />

next year's team just might be able to<br />

pull off a championship.<br />

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Blue Devils hope to<br />

dance to the crown<br />

By JODY TAYLOR<br />

Associated Press Writer<br />

DURHAM, N.C. - In a season<br />

when more than one team has been<br />

called Cinderella in the ballyhooed<br />

search for the NCAA basketball<br />

champion, Duke believes there has<br />

been more than one pumpkin.<br />

"I think we're Cinderella," Mike<br />

Krzyzewski, coach of the top-ranked<br />

Blue Devils, said yesterday. "The<br />

dance is just longer."<br />

"If all those other teams are Cinderella<br />

, it must have struck midnight,"<br />

senior forward David<br />

Henderson said. '<br />

Duke, 36-2, reached the NCAA Final<br />

Four with a 71-50 victory over<br />

Navy Sunday in the East Regional<br />

final at East Rutherford, N.J. The<br />

Blue Devils will meet second-ranked<br />

Kansas Saturday at Dallas, and if<br />

they win, will face the winner of the<br />

Louisville-Louisiana State game for<br />

the championship.<br />

This will be the Blue Devils' first<br />

trip to the Final Four since 1978, when<br />

they lost to Kentucky, 98-94, in the<br />

final.<br />

Krzyzewski said the trip will not be<br />

all business.<br />

"I think you have to make sure you<br />

appreciate your moment now,"<br />

Krzyzewski said. "If I'm wrong, I'll<br />

pay the price for it. With a mature<br />

team, you have a greater chance to<br />

do it ... if we remember who we<br />

are.''<br />

Confidence, Krzyzewski said, is not<br />

a problem. Since Duke ascended to<br />

the No.l ranking Feb.25,<br />

Krzyzewski said college basketball<br />

watchers have been waiting for the<br />

Blue Devils to stumble.<br />

"Teams come into games thinking<br />

they can beat us," Krzyzewski said.<br />

" 'We match up well with Duke.' I've<br />

heard that for 38 games."<br />

"I heard this one time: 'Duke is<br />

No. 1 and they're dangling,' " Henderson<br />

said. "I don't know what it will<br />

take. I think many other teams in the<br />

nation would like to have accomplished<br />

this.<br />

"Before the Navy game, I kept<br />

hearing, 'What is Duke going to do<br />

with David Robinson?' " Henderson<br />

said. "In my eyes, what was David<br />

Robinson going to do with Duke?"<br />

Krzyzewski said the Blue Devils<br />

will concentrate on what he believes<br />

has gotten them this far — defense.<br />

"I ve given them a lot of freedom<br />

on offense, but we're strict on defense,"<br />

Krzyzewski said. "On defense,<br />

they are supposed to be at a<br />

proper place at a proper time. If they<br />

don't, we get beat."<br />

One pleasant surprise against Navy<br />

was Duke's rebounding. The Blue<br />

Devils outrebounded the Middies, 49-<br />

29, surprising Robinson, the 6-foot-ll<br />

Navy center.<br />

"Nobody has pounded us like that,"<br />

Robinson said. "Every time I turned<br />

around they had a rebound."<br />

"Rebounding does not come naturally<br />

to us," Krzyzewski said. "It's<br />

not going to come to us. We have to go<br />

after it. We have to concentrate on it<br />

— concentrate on areas of weakness.<br />

(But) if we outrebound our opponents<br />

by an average of 19 in the Final Four,<br />

I'll be happy."<br />

AP Laserphoto<br />

Duke's Mark Alarie (32) goes up for a shot against Old Dominion during the<br />

second round of the NCAA tournament earlier this month. Alarie and his No. 1<br />

Blue Devil teammates advanced to this weekend's Final Four by defeating Navy<br />

Sunday in Greensboro, N.C. Duke will meet No. 2 Kansas on Saturday for the<br />

right to advance to the championship game.<br />

Kansas looks to avoid<br />

repeat of first meeting<br />

By DOUG TUCKER<br />

AP Sports Writer<br />

LAWRENCE, Kan. - The Kansas<br />

team that will play Duke in the semifinals<br />

of the NCAA basketball tournament<br />

is much improved over the one<br />

that lost 92-86 to the Blue Devils in<br />

December, Danny Manning said yesterday.<br />

"We're a much better team, but so<br />

are they," Kansas' 6-foot-ll sophomore<br />

said.<br />

The Kansas-Duke game Saturday<br />

in Dallas will match the No. 1 and<br />

No. 2 teams in the country.<br />

Manning, the Player of the Year in<br />

the Big Eight Conference and hero of<br />

the 75-67 victory over North Carolina<br />

State in Sunday's Midwest Regional<br />

final, said the Jayhawks again will<br />

lose to the Atlantic Coast Conference<br />

champions — if they play with the<br />

same lack of intensity as in the earlier<br />

game.<br />

The prelude to the NCAA semifinal<br />

game came early in December at<br />

New York in the final of the NIT Big<br />

Apple tournament.<br />

"It was like they wanted to win<br />

more than we did," Manning said.<br />

"The thing I remember about that<br />

game is all the loose balls we didn't<br />

get and all the rebounds they got and<br />

we didn't get. They have a great team<br />

and they beat us. But we really<br />

weren't very aggressive that night."<br />

Perhaps the sharpest, most painful<br />

memory of the loss to Duke belongs to<br />

senior forward Ron Kellogg, one of<br />

four Kansas starters with more than<br />

1,000 career points.<br />

"I remember the man I was guarding,<br />

David Henderson, scoring 30<br />

points against us," he said. "It's the<br />

most points anybody ever scored<br />

against me. He was making his first<br />

start of the year and I didn't have any<br />

idea of what to expect. Coach (Larry)<br />

Brown told me to be careful because<br />

he was a tough player. He was. He<br />

penetrated hard to the basket and<br />

went right past me. That's one of the<br />

things we're going to have to correct."<br />

Brown agreed with Manning on the<br />

improvement of his 35-3 team, which<br />

won the Big Eight regular season and<br />

postseason titles and set a conference<br />

record for victories.<br />

"I know as a coach I'm more comfortable<br />

with this team today than<br />

back in December," he said. "I want<br />

the kids to be proud of what they<br />

accomplished in getting to the Final<br />

Four. But I don't want them to be<br />

content. Not yet. We still have a goal<br />

of a national championship. That's<br />

within our grasp."<br />

Calvin Thompson, the senior guard<br />

who scored 26 points in the overtime<br />

victory against Michigan State in the<br />

Midwest semifinals, said it did not<br />

take long for the Jayhawks to stop<br />

celebrating being the first Big Eight<br />

team in 12 years to reach the Final<br />

Four.<br />

"We took our showers after we beat<br />

North Carolina State Sunday," he<br />

said. "And then we started thinking<br />

about Duke. Getting to the Final Four<br />

was one of our goals this season. Just<br />

one."<br />

Collegian Inc. reserves the<br />

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Reading Room, 208 South Allen<br />

and also at Grahams.<br />

EARN THOUSANDS STUFFING<br />

envelopes. Rush $2.00 and selfaddressed,<br />

stamped envelope:<br />

Murdock Enterprises 309 Runkle,<br />

University Park.Pa 16802.FREE<br />

EXTRA SET of prints and one day<br />

developing, choice of finishes ,<br />

passport photos. General Photo<br />

325 E. Beaver 237-0011.<br />

GAY/LESBIAN SWITCHBOARD.<br />

237-1950/6—9p.m. daily. Raps,<br />

Events, Referrals.<br />

SUMMER TRAVEL? INTERNA-<br />

TIONAL youth hostel cards now<br />

available at center. For travel,<br />

114 Hiester, 238-4987.<br />

TELEVISION RENTALS, COLOF<br />

and b&w, long or short term, low<br />

rates. ACORN, 232 S. Allen, 238-<br />

6021.<br />

UNMARRIED COUPLES<br />

NEEDED for study of close<br />

relationships to fill out confidential<br />

questionalre. Couples: learn<br />

more about your relationship,<br />

receive study results, be eligable<br />

for special prizes. Wed. or Thurs.<br />

6:00 p.m. 123 Chambers.<br />

VOTE LENCH FOR town senate<br />

on March 26 and 27, 1986. Only<br />

choice in town.<br />

GRADUATING THIS SPRING?<br />

Would you like to be in a'procession,<br />

have your name called,<br />

receive your diploma on stage,<br />

invite your whole family and lots<br />

of friends, enjoy a reception afterwards?<br />

If you are from the<br />

Philadelphia area, why not consider<br />

graduating at Ogontz Campus<br />

in Ablngton? For the past<br />

several years, Penn State has<br />

offered students the option to<br />

participate in commencement at<br />

an alternative site. That means<br />

you can choose to receive your<br />

degree In ceremonies at any<br />

Commonwealth Campus. All that<br />

is necessary is the filing of an<br />

"Alternate Site Form" at 114<br />

Shields Bldg. before April 15.<br />

You need not have begun studies<br />

at the regional campus to qualify.<br />

Commencement at Ogontz Is<br />

May 15. The date varies at other<br />

campuses. If interested, act now.<br />

HAVE AN ISSUE for the status of<br />

women study group to look into?<br />

Call the women's access line<br />

863-1222.<br />

INSURANCE FOR YOUR auto,<br />

motorcycle, home, personal belongings,<br />

hospitalization. For<br />

professional courteous service,<br />

238-6633.<br />

PSU COMPATIBLE TERMINALS<br />

rent terminals compatible with<br />

PSU Mainframe, R/NET, LIAS.<br />

ACORN 232 S. Allen, 238-6021.<br />

RENT 3 MOVIES, player, 3 days,<br />

only $19.95. Always available,<br />

ACORN RENTALS 232 S. Allen<br />

238-6021.<br />

STATE COLLEGE: TWO-story<br />

house, for sale, next to Catholic<br />

Church, 8 rooms, 2 1/2 baths, 2-<br />

car garage, full basement. 234-<br />

7716.<br />

^<br />

Women's Health Services<br />

For The Heln<br />

You Need<br />

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Search 24>30<br />

4t &r*ct l^uthcron Church<br />

mum<br />

at w-oo pn.<br />

Bf lQf J except Saturday<br />

• Abortion Services<br />

• Free Pregnancy Tests<br />

• Confidential Counseling<br />

• Gyn Check-Ups<br />

107 6th St..Downtown P|h.<br />

Toll Fret: 1-800-323-4SS6<br />

"[Zeiday i New Tittament Seder<br />

Wednesday: Pjssicn Communion<br />

Thursday. M»un


Louisville coach's past<br />

protects players today<br />

By JANE GIBSON<br />

Associated Press Writer<br />

gional champion, will face Louisiana<br />

State, 26-11, the surprise winner of the<br />

Southeast Regional, Saturday at Dallas<br />

in the first semifinal game.<br />

Crum, a former assistant at UCLA,<br />

guided his first Louisville team to a<br />

Final Four berth in 1972. The Cardinals<br />

also made it in 1975, 1980, 1982<br />

and 1983, winning the title in 1980.<br />

"The first one was so long ago, it's<br />

hard to remember, but I really enjoyed<br />

it," Crum said.<br />

"I had to play UCLA and all the<br />

players I helped recruit. Playing your<br />

alma mater is one thing, but playing<br />

against the players you recruited is<br />

another. I remember we weren't good<br />

enough to beat them."<br />

'The first (Final Four ¦/1 ; appearance) was ^^^P^i^^ffw N»f «<br />

so ^W^g^',- '<br />

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long ago,<br />

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After repeat performances though,<br />

Crum said he looks at a trip to the<br />

Final Four as just another day at the<br />

, jl^9i ,<br />

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"To me, it's still my job," he said.<br />

"It feels good to see that the team has<br />

^^<br />

progressed enough<br />

jHi<br />

to make it this far, ;<br />

but I feel more of the<br />

i&JmBBHBB iSm mSBSt ' ' pressure<br />

' Jmm<br />

and ' fHiSHHHrSyr^ WT®* HrfflMBh . HHal<br />

other (intangibles) that others like<br />

AP Laserphoto<br />

fans don't."<br />

Crum said the only changes he will Bradley's Hersey Hawkins (33) battles Billy Thompson of Louisville (55) for ia<br />

make after all that experience is his<br />

rebound during second round NCAA tournament action earlier this month in i<br />

unpopular decision to shield his play-<br />

Ogden, Utah. Louisville, one of the Final Four, will test its skills agalns against<br />

ers from the media.<br />

Louisiana State in Dallas Saturday in the NCAA ChamoionshiD Championship semi-finals.<br />

LSU finally breaks<br />

streak of bad luck<br />

By DAVID McCORMICK<br />

Associated Press Writer<br />

BATON ROUGE, La. - With two<br />

players suffering from the chicken<br />

pox, the loss of its captain and scoring<br />

leader and three defeats in five days,<br />

there was no place for Louisiana<br />

State's basketball team to go but up,<br />

senior guard Derrick Taylor said<br />

yesterday.<br />

"We had to get down a little before<br />

we started to pull together," said<br />

Taylor, who combined with former<br />

reserves Don Redden and Ricky<br />

Blanton to bring the llth-seeded Tigers<br />

through four NCAA tournament<br />

upset victories en route to a Final<br />

Four matchup against seventhranked<br />

Louisville.<br />

After losing 7-foot-l freshman Tito<br />

Horford to Miami and 7-0 center<br />

Zoran Jovanovich to a knee injury,<br />

the Tigers wanted to build an offense<br />

around Nikita Wilson and John Williams.<br />

- Denny Crum, ' W W^ ^ ^^S^ ' ^T «!<br />

Louisville head coach , , ' ",, .;\ p^fe^.'^yJ^ra^HHBHi ^/ JfJ5fi#*t& lm<br />

Wilson, the team's captain and<br />

scoring leader, flunked out of school<br />

in late January — the same week<br />

Williams and another player were<br />

hospitalized with chicken pox.<br />

The Tigers then went on to lose<br />

three games during a five-day period.<br />

The losses were to Kentucky, Georgia<br />

and Georgetown.<br />

"The rest of us knew we had to pick<br />

up the slack," said Taylor, who<br />

scored 23 points in the Tigers' victory<br />

over Georgia Tech last Thursday.<br />

"Whenever you're looking to score<br />

more, it gives you a more aggressive<br />

attitude," he said. "The rest of us<br />

started playing more aggressively."<br />

Coach Dale Brown knew his other<br />

players were not the scoring equal of<br />

Wilson and Williams, who continued<br />

to be plagued with tendinitis and a<br />

virus. So he began putting more emphasis<br />

on a "freak" defense.<br />

"It's not a change-up and it's not a<br />

match-up. It's both of those and a<br />

little more," Brown explained.<br />

The defense's constantly changing<br />

patterns helped beat third-ranked<br />

Kentucky 59-57 Saturday as the Tigers<br />

held All-American forward Kenny<br />

Walker to four points in the second<br />

half after he had scored 16 points in<br />

the first half.<br />

Brown said he would rely on the<br />

same game plan against Louisville.<br />

"If we can't surprise them, and<br />

confuse them a little, we're in trouble,"<br />

Brown said. "We don't have the<br />

firepower they have.<br />

Brown said he is not adding any<br />

plays, offensive or defensive, in preparation<br />

for Louisville.<br />

"I don't know how much preparation<br />

you can do at this point," he said.<br />

"We did not run through one Kentucky<br />

play before we played them.<br />

We concentrated on what we were<br />

going to do instead."<br />

The goal will be to get five players<br />

to turn in their best performances at<br />

the same time.<br />

"Everybody is hungry now," said<br />

Redden, who scored 15 points against<br />

Kentucky. "Once we get five players<br />

clicking at the same time, we should<br />

win the national championship."<br />

LSU, 26-11, is making its first Final<br />

Four appearance since 1981, when the<br />

Tigers lost to Indiana in the opening<br />

game.<br />

fiWHMJ JplPL4 BHfl SUMMER SUBLET: BEAVER<br />

BffleWSrmSkmemRauK^^m HILL first floor. Sliding glass<br />

AAAAA FURNISHED FLOOR of door, last year's model, one bedhouse,<br />

two bedroom. Two min-


14—The Daily Collegian Tuesday, March 25, 1986<br />

.*-.»¦—¦~—.—.*..,_ ^.-— T ~- rr- — rt r f — T<br />

-<br />

Connors' antics result in fine and suspension I Bowling teams clinch<br />

M. n — K. .____.._<br />

By BOB GREENE<br />

AP Tennis Writer<br />

Sec. 10<br />

^<br />

tourney titles<br />

i i MUM<br />

¦¦ II<br />

¦¦¦ -!¦ r T r-r-ITlTTr rT - f r nil -n-r *w ilMMr'" '"MM^nMH ^^^^^^ MwaMMM<br />

NEW YORK — Jimmy Connors has<br />

been fined $20,000 and suspended for<br />

10 weeks by the Men's International<br />

Professional Tennis Council for actions<br />

that caused him to be defaulted<br />

from a tournament last month, it was<br />

announced yesterday.<br />

M. Marshall Happer III, administrator<br />

of the Pro Council, said the<br />

action was taken against Connors for<br />

violation of the provisions of the<br />

MIPTC Code of Conduct relating to<br />

the major offense of "Aggravated<br />

Behavior."<br />

The $20,000 fine is the maximum<br />

authorized by the Code and is in<br />

addition to the $5,000 assessed Feb. 21<br />

by Ken Farrar, chief MIPTC supervisor,<br />

for "Failure to Complete a<br />

Match."<br />

"At this point, I can only concentrate<br />

on my tennis," said Connors. "I<br />

will review the decision with my<br />

attorneys during the next few weeks,<br />

but for the time being, I'm concentrating<br />

on tennis."<br />

The suspension, unless delayed by<br />

appeal, will extend through the<br />

French Open, to be played May 26-<br />

June 8. This is the first time that a<br />

player has been suspended through<br />

one of the four Grand Slam tournaments<br />

for misconduct.<br />

It was the largest fine by the Pro<br />

Council since it fined Guillermo Vilas<br />

of Argentina $20,000 in 1983 for accepting<br />

an illegal $60,000 appearance<br />

fee. Vilas also was suspended for one<br />

year, but the suspension never went<br />

into effect because he appealed and<br />

won.<br />

Connors stormed off the court after<br />

being defaulted in the fifth set of a<br />

semifinal match against Ivan Lendl<br />

of Czechoslovakia in the Lipton International<br />

Players Challenge tourna-<br />

AP Laserphoto<br />

Jimmy Connors argues with an official over a call in a Lipton International Players Championship tournament game<br />

against Ivan Lendl earlier this year. The argument led to penalty points and eventually, to Connors defaulting the match.<br />

Connors has been fined $20,000 and suspended for 10 weeks as a result of the arguments during that game.<br />

ment Feb. 21 at Boca Raton, Fla. game. The 33-year-old Connors then After Farrar tried to talk Connors<br />

Connors protested what he felt was Was penalized a point when he re- into continuing play, the left-hander<br />

a bad line call in the sixth game of the fused to continue play, giving Lendl was defaulted for taking too much<br />

fifth set—a call that gave Lendl a 3-2, the game and making the fifth-set time.<br />

4-0 lead. score 4-2, Lendl. "I take full credit, good or bad, for<br />

Umpire Jeremy Shales, after a 15- Connors continued to protest, and what I've done," Connors said the<br />

second warning, gave Connors a Code was assessed a game penalty, mak- following week. "If I'm suspended,<br />

of Conduct warning for delay of ing it 5-2 Lendl. I'll just go home and ride my horses."<br />

The men's and women's bowling<br />

teams won the National Bowling<br />

Council's Section 10 Collegiate<br />

Bowling Tournament in<br />

Edgewood, Md., last weekend to<br />

earn spots in the National Collegiate<br />

Bowling Championships on<br />

May 2-4 in Houston.<br />

The men triumphed in convincing<br />

fashion, as the Lions dusted off<br />

their closest competition, Rutgers,<br />

by 695 pins.<br />

• Consistency was the key to the<br />

Lions' romp.<br />

Steve Yeity's 213 average was<br />

tops in the tournament and senior<br />

Mike Zarnick, juniors Todd Woodworth,<br />

Larry Schade and Rick<br />

Janosky and freshman Larry Margolin<br />

all had averages in the mid<br />

190's.<br />

The Lady Lions, who were lead<br />

by freshmen Jackie Sellers (194)<br />

and Laura Wolfgang (183), built<br />

up a big lead and held on to defeat<br />

second place Shippensburg University<br />

by 80 pins.<br />

The Lady Lions sport a very<br />

young team, and it was a squad of<br />

junior Patti Sivek, sophmore<br />

Joanna Nierle and freshmen Denise<br />

Meckley, Teressa Gries, Sellers<br />

and Wolfgang that won.<br />

The nationals have been commonplace<br />

to the men's team, as<br />

the Lions have finished eighth,<br />

third, and sixth over the three<br />

years leading up to this season's<br />

championship.<br />

The Lady Lions have only qualified<br />

for the nationals once before,<br />

—by Robert Williams<br />

Equestrian team claims<br />

team title in show at IUP<br />

The equestrian team captured<br />

first place Sunday in a show at the<br />

Indiana University of Pennsylvania.<br />

The Lions accumulated 32 points<br />

in the team division to narrowly<br />

edge Wilson College (31 points)<br />

and Delaware Valley College (25<br />

points).<br />

The win boosted Penn State's<br />

season total to 187 points, and<br />

keeps the team at the top of its<br />

regional standings.<br />

Christine Arnold and Marc Weber<br />

both took first place in their<br />

novice over- the-fences classes.<br />

Leigh Sellstedt placed first in<br />

the flat competition — intermediate<br />

division.<br />

Novice riders Deb Northrop,<br />

Doreen Holly and Pam Oswald all<br />

placed first in their respective flat<br />

classes.<br />

Shannon McLay was the No. 1<br />

performer in the advanced walk,<br />

trot and canter class.<br />

The team will host the next show<br />

on April 13th at Eastwood Farms<br />

in Bellefonte.<br />

by— Robert Williams<br />

AAH! D.J. PHANTOM professional<br />

disc-Jockey servies com'<br />

plete with an excellent sound<br />

and light show. 234-0211.<br />

A D.J. for $20/hr. Sound and<br />

lighting systems. Funk, Pop,<br />

New Wave. Call D.J. Douger 237-<br />

4904.<br />

DISC—JOCKEY VERSATILITY Is<br />

a Licensed entertainer with over<br />

10,000 selections. The wedding<br />

expert, reunions, formals. D.J.<br />

Larry Moore 234-0691.<br />

ILLUSIONS SONIC SERVICES<br />

DJ's, Dances, Semiformals,& any<br />

and all parties. Full light show<br />

and sound system. Specializing<br />

In modern dance music. Call<br />

Elvln at 234-8479.<br />

RAY ANTHONY AND Associates.<br />

D.J.'s now booking summer<br />

and fall weddings and class<br />

reunions, 237-7292. Limited number<br />

of spring dates available. Call<br />

Immediately If Interested.<br />

STRIPPERS AVAILABLE FE-<br />

MALE or male. Truly yours 238-<br />

4619.<br />

COMPATIBLE NON-SMOKING<br />

FEMALES looking for third person<br />

to share Beaverhill Apt. 86-<br />

87. Call Danielle 862-7869.<br />

DO YOU NEED a male roommatefor<br />

Fall 86/ Spring 87? Call Ray at<br />

862-3907.<br />

NON-SMOKING FEMALE<br />

NEEDED to share large one-bedroom<br />

parkway plaza apt. $259<br />

CLASSES:<br />

month. Study atmosphere.<br />

Fall/Spring. Cindy 238-0977.<br />

NON-SMOKING MALE roommate<br />

needed Fall 86 , Spring 87,<br />

University Terrace. Call Wayne or<br />

Eric 237-3148.<br />

ONE OR TWO roommates<br />

wanted to share new well furnished<br />

townhouse through the<br />

end of this semester 234-6872.<br />

ONE OR TWO roommates<br />

wanted to share new, well furnished<br />

townhouse through the<br />

end of this semester 234-6872.<br />

FEMALE ROOMMATE TO share<br />

large two bedroom In Cedarbrook<br />

for 86-87 school year.<br />

$158/month. All utilities Included<br />

¦ Call 862-4010, 237-7028.<br />

FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<br />

immediately to share large apartment<br />

Imperial Towers through<br />

August $145/month. Negotiable<br />

234-8942.<br />

NEED A PLACE to live In D.C.<br />

this summer? Wanted: 2 roommates<br />

to share Georgetown<br />

apartment May 31 -Aug. 16. Reasonable<br />

rates. Call Karen or Vicki<br />

862-5606.<br />

WANTED MALE ROOMMATE for<br />

accounting internship in Pittsburgh.<br />

Call Doug, 234-6045.<br />

WASHINGTON D.C: GRADUAT-<br />

ING senior seeking semi-permanent<br />

female roommate(s) for the<br />

North VA/D.C.area starting June-<br />

/July; Lori 237-4762.<br />

NON-SMOKING SERIOUS student<br />

will enjoy quiet study, private<br />

bath, thirty feet to campus<br />

466-9288<br />

ON CAMPUS SUMMER, furnished,<br />

single/double rooms.<br />

Kitchen priveledges, parking.<br />

Call 237-9732<br />

ROOMS FOR GUESTS AT COM-<br />

MENCEMENT. Historic home offers<br />

bed and breakfast for spring<br />

commencement. Six miles from<br />

campus on basline. 238-2028 after<br />

five.<br />

ROOMS FOR GUESTS AT COM-<br />

MENCEMENT- Historic home offers<br />

bed and breakfast for Spring<br />

commencement. Six miles from<br />

campus on Basline. 238-2028 after<br />

five.<br />

BALLOONS DELIVERED BY the<br />

Balloon Baboon, Teddy Bear,<br />

Blue Lion, or Big Bird. Truly<br />

Yours. 238-4619.<br />

KNITTING, CRO-<br />

CHETING, drawn thread, knitting<br />

machine. A Stitch in Time, 237-<br />

0327.<br />

HELP: WITH ANY problems; free<br />

and confidential Oasis Help Center,<br />

234-0323; available daily.<br />

HELP: WITH ANY problem; Free<br />

and confidential Oasis Help Center,<br />

234-0323; available dally.<br />

NEED TO TALK? Partners are<br />

your peers, trained to listen and<br />

help you help yourself. We're<br />

available 5-11 p.m., Monday- Friday.<br />

Drop in at 256 E. College or<br />

call 238-6739. Partners-Confidentlal,<br />

free and caring.<br />

TELEVISION, STEREO REPAIRS.<br />

Fast, expert service on most<br />

brands; videorecorders too.<br />

ACORN, 232 S. Allen, 238-6342.<br />

WANT TO RENT a room in a nice<br />

apartment for two hundred $ per<br />

month including all the facilities<br />

in Park Forest area? Call Bahman<br />

863-0786 or leave message 429<br />

McAllister.<br />

AVAILABLE IN MAY — fully furnished<br />

Jr. one bedroom apartment.<br />

$385/month including all<br />

utilities. One block from campus,<br />

234-0466.<br />

DISCOUNTS: PEPPER MILL has<br />

several quality one bedroom condos<br />

available for short-term summer<br />

leases at reduced rates. Call<br />

now for Immediate occupancy.<br />

Low rates and rent includes utilities.<br />

Also accepting applications<br />

for Fall! Call Mary at 238-0534,<br />

8:30-5:00 pm. Mon-Frl.<br />

LARGE 3-ROOM heat, water,<br />

furnished. Near campus--301<br />

South Atherton. Available now,<br />

$360/month, 238-0883.<br />

LARGE 1 BEDROOM. Beaver Hill<br />

apartment June-June lease, balcony,<br />

walk-In closet. Call 234-<br />

1080.<br />

ONE AND TWO bedroom furnished<br />

apartments available August<br />

21. Balconies, laundry,<br />

parking. One block from campus.<br />

234-4001.<br />

ONE BEDROOM APT. AVAIL-<br />

ABLE now til Aug. 15 with fall<br />

option. Grad. or professional<br />

only. Large. 1 mile from HUB.<br />

Quiet park. $310. 238-9518, 865-<br />

1213.<br />

QUIET TENANTS WANTED for<br />

fall. Grads preferred for bedroom<br />

apartment, $640.00/month. 428<br />

W. Nlttany Avenue. 238-2586.<br />

SUMMER SUBLET LARGE efficiency<br />

1/2 block from campus.<br />

Full kitchen, A/C, clean, inexpensive.<br />

234-1638.<br />

4/5 PERSON APARTMENT walking<br />

distance to campus 238-2431.<br />

CASH $$$$ PAID for American<br />

Flyer, Lionel, etc. trains. Any<br />

condition. Free estimates 238-<br />

3651 evenings.<br />

ONE BEDROOM $185.00/m April<br />

1 available April rent free. Color-<br />

TV Panasonic 19" only 18<br />

months ask $240 (very good conditlon)<br />

Call 865-9772, Shlk.<br />

ROOM: COLLEGE HEIGHTS<br />

home k/laun. Private. Male 10/12<br />

month lease. 195.00 month. 234-<br />

1987 evenings.<br />

SERIOUS STUDENT SUMMER<br />

lodging near campus, no smoking<br />

$115-135 plus utilities. Dave<br />

237-7727, 863-4436.<br />

THREE-BEDROOM HOMES available<br />

August 21. Two miles from<br />

campus. Students permitted. No<br />

pets. 234-4001.<br />

Miosis Oate<br />

424 Waupelani Drive<br />

'Unlimited Free Parking<br />

•On CATA bus line<br />

•Free Heat & Cooking<br />

•Furnished & unfurnished<br />

• Year md short-term lease<br />

•Contented Management<br />

•Large rooms & closets ,<br />

•Beautiful grounds - Free Tennis<br />

•Close to Schools and Shopping<br />

•PETS ALLOWED<br />

I<br />

the<br />

lalilli l l l<br />

RENT NOW FOR<br />

JUNE AT<br />

THESE PRICES<br />

Efficiency ;.. $295<br />

1 Bedroom .'. $325<br />

2 Bedroom $395<br />

ifBliUuHB<br />

Collegian<br />

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non-Job related handicap or disability.<br />

• Deadlines<br />

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reader opinion


The Daily Collegian Tuesday, March 25, 198ft—15<br />

nba<br />

EASTERN CONFERENCE<br />

Atlantic Dlvlilon<br />

W<br />

y-Boston 57 13<br />

x-SIXERS 47 25<br />

New Jersey 35 37<br />

Washington 33 38<br />

New York 22 50<br />

Central Division<br />

X.Milwaukee 49 22<br />

x-Atlanta 44 28<br />

x-Dolrolt 41 31<br />

Cleveland 28 45<br />

Indiana 25 47<br />

Chlcaao 24 48<br />

WESTERN CONFERENCE<br />

Midwest Dlvlilon<br />

x-Houaton 44 27<br />

x-Denvor 43 29<br />

Dallas 38 32<br />

Utah 38 38<br />

San Antonio 32 41<br />

Sacramento 31 41<br />

Pacific Division<br />

y-LA. Lakers 54 17 .761 -<br />

Portland 36 37 .493 19<br />

Phoenix 28 42 .400 25V4<br />

Seattle 27 44 .380 27<br />

LA. Clippers 26 46 .381 28V4<br />

Golden Slate 25 47 .347 29%<br />

x-cllnched playoff berth<br />

y-cllnched division tide and playoff berth<br />

Last Night's Games<br />

SIXERS at Washington<br />

Dallas at Indiana<br />

Houston at Boston<br />

Seattle al Utah<br />

San Antonio at LA. Lakers<br />

Tonight's Games<br />

Atlanta at Cleveland, 7:30 p.m.<br />

New York at Chicago, 8:30 p.m.<br />

New Jersey at Milwaukee, 8:30 p.m<br />

LA. Lakers at Denver, 9:30 p.m.<br />

Detroit at Golden Stale, 10:30 p.m.<br />

Portland at Sacramento, 10:30 p.m.<br />

L Pet. GB<br />

.814 —<br />

.653 11<br />

.486 23<br />

.465 24%<br />

.308 36<br />

.690 -<br />

.811 5W<br />

.569 8V4<br />

.366 23<br />

.347 24fj<br />

.333 25%<br />

.820 -<br />

.597 1V,<br />

.543 5Va<br />

.500 8V4<br />

.438 13<br />

•431 13V4<br />

ncaa tourney<br />

East Regional<br />

Semifinals '<br />

Friday, March 21<br />

At East Rutherford, N<br />

Navy 71, Cleveland St. 70<br />

Duke 74, DePaul 67<br />

Championship<br />

Sunday, March 23<br />

At East Rutherford, N<br />

Duke 71, Navy 50<br />

Southeast Regional<br />

Semifinals<br />

Thursday, March 20<br />

At Atlanta<br />

Kentucky 68, Alabama 63<br />

Louisiana St. 70, Georgia Tech 64<br />

Championship<br />

Saturday, March 22<br />

At Atlanta<br />

Louisiana St. 59, Kentucky 57<br />

Midwest Regional<br />

Semifinals<br />

Friday, March 21<br />

At Kansas City, Mo.<br />

N. Carolina St. 70, Iowa St. 68<br />

Kansaa 96, Michigan St. 86<br />

Championship<br />

Sunday, March 23<br />

At Kansas City, Mo.<br />

Kansas 75, North Carolina St. 67<br />

Wast Regional<br />

Semifinals<br />

Thursday, March 20<br />

At Houston<br />

Auburn 70, Nev.-Las Vegas 63<br />

Louisville 94, North Carolina 79<br />

Championship<br />

Saturday, March 22<br />

Louisville 84, Auburn 76<br />

The Final Four<br />

At Dallas<br />

Semifinals<br />

Saturday, March 29<br />

Louisiana St., 26-11, va. Louisville, 30-7<br />

Duke, 38-2, vs. Kansas, 35-3<br />

nh<br />

WALES CONFERENCE -<br />

Patrick DMslon<br />

W L T Pta GF GA<br />

X-FLYERS<br />

x-Washlngton<br />

48 22<br />

47 21<br />

4 100 311 228<br />

5 09 284 245<br />

NY Islanders 36 26 11 83 296 259<br />

PENGUINS<br />

NY Rangers<br />

33 33<br />

33 35<br />

8 74 294 273<br />

5 71 250 250<br />

New Jersey 24 4fl 3 51 276 339<br />

Quebec<br />

Montreal<br />

Boston<br />

Buffalo<br />

Hartford<br />

x-Cmcago<br />

x-St. Louis<br />

x-Mlnnesota<br />

x-Toronto<br />

Detroit<br />

Adams Division<br />

40 29<br />

37 31<br />

34 29<br />

35 33<br />

38 35<br />

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE<br />

Neurit Division<br />

36 28<br />

35 31<br />

34 31<br />

23 44<br />

18 51<br />

Smythe Division<br />

y-Edmonton 52 15 6 110 391 282<br />

x-Calgary<br />

38 29 9 81 322 289<br />

Winnipeg<br />

24 45 6 54 271 350<br />

Los Angeles 22 45 7 51 284 365<br />

Vancouver 19 40 13 51 249 296<br />

x-cllnched playoff berth<br />

y-cllrtched division tills<br />

Sunday's Games<br />

Washington 8, FLYERS 5<br />

Boston 5, Hartford 5, tie<br />

Calgary 7, Winnipeg 4<br />

Buffalo 6, Los Angeles 1<br />

Chicago 5, N.Y. Rangera 3<br />

Last Night's<br />

Quebec at Minnesota<br />

Vancouver at Winnipeg<br />

Games<br />

Tonight's Games<br />

Boston at Washington, 7:35 p.m.<br />

N.Y. Rangers at New Jersey, 7:35 p.m<br />

Edmonton at Detroit, 7:35 p.m.<br />

St. Louis at N.Y. Islanders, 8:05 p.m.<br />

5 85 307<br />

6 80 311<br />

10 78 289<br />

8 76 282<br />

3 75 305<br />

271<br />

262<br />

267<br />

273<br />

285<br />

8 80 325 322<br />

8 78 289 276<br />

9 77 303 288<br />

6 52 294 358<br />

8 38 247 381<br />

nit tourney<br />

First Round<br />

Tuesday, March 11<br />

Texas Christian 78, Montana 69<br />

Wedneadsy, March 12<br />

McNeeae St. 88, Dayton 75<br />

Providence 72, Boston U. 69<br />

SW Missouri St. 59, Pittsburgh 52<br />

Thursday, March 13<br />

Florida 81, S. Mississippi 71<br />

Georgia 95, Tenn.-Chattanooga 81<br />

Clemson 99, Middle Tennessee St. 81<br />

Marquette 79, Drake 59<br />

Brlgham Young 87, S. Methodist 63<br />

George Mason 85, Lamar 83<br />

Texas 69, New Mexico 66<br />

Louisiana Tech 67, N. Arizona 61<br />

Wyoming 79, Texas A&M 70<br />

Loyola, Calif. 80, California 75<br />

Cal-lrvlne 80, UCLA 74<br />

Friday, March 14<br />

Ohio SI. 85. Ohio U. 62<br />

Second Round<br />

Monday, March 17<br />

Clemson 77, Georgia 65<br />

Florida 77, Texas Christian 75<br />

Providence 90, George Mason 61<br />

Ohio St. 71, Texas 65<br />

Louisiana Tech 77, McNeese St. 61<br />

SW Missouri St. 83, Marquette 69<br />

Wyoming 99, Loyola, Calif. 90<br />

Tuesday, March 18<br />

Brlgham Young 93, Cal.-lrvlne 80<br />

Quarterfinals<br />

Thursday, March 20<br />

Florida 54, SW Missouri St. 53<br />

Louisiana Tech 64, Providence 63<br />

Wyoming 62, Clemson 57<br />

Friday, March 21 .<br />

Ohio St. 79, Brlgham Young 68<br />

Semifinals<br />

Last Night's Games<br />

At New York<br />

Wyoming, 23-11, vs. Florida, 19-12<br />

Louisiana Tech, 19-13, vs. Ohio St., 17-14<br />

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Great Escape<br />

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Tickets on sole weekdays 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the<br />

Beover Stadium Ticket Office


comics#<br />

Jtt^. BSD A!<br />

16<br />

The Daily Collegian<br />

Tuesday, March 25. 1986<br />

peanuts<br />

far side<br />

OKAY, PARTNER, HERE 5<br />

THE U)AY IT'S 60IN6<br />

TO BE... _<br />

IF UJE WIN , I TAKE<br />

THE CREPIT.. ><br />

IF WE LOSE, YOU<br />

TAKE THE BLAME i<br />

WHO SETS THE '<br />

CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES 7 i<br />

"b'13 © 1986 Universal Press Syndicate<br />

of a^art^-<br />

,.*.<br />

bloom county<br />

Mm<br />

WB<br />

I<br />

3-25<br />

\.i *^t<br />

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Wfh<br />

MM HII<br />

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GLUTTON<br />

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MP A/0W, FOR m BOieFIT OF<br />

ALL OUR mw Retwexs IN mm,<br />

Let '6 FIRST V(5(T1HZ


doonesbury<br />

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aspect ALLY THOSB LIVINOINA<br />

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OF TEXAS. \rci<br />

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Crossword<br />

(answers in Wednesday's classifieds)<br />

Across<br />

1 Curve<br />

4 Fool<br />

7 Previously<br />

11 Plant of the genus<br />

Lathyrus<br />

12 Cover with thin sheets<br />

14 Antiquated<br />

15 Means<br />

16 Prevaricates<br />

18 Be obliged<br />

19 Scrap<br />

20 Correspondence<br />

22 Demands payment<br />

23 .Possessing<br />

24 Indefinite amount<br />

25 Jumbo or wide body<br />

26 Bridge call<br />

27 Rabble<br />

28 Italian river<br />

30 Promise<br />

32 Man's formal coat<br />

34 Form of be<br />

35 Skill<br />

36 Fits out<br />

37 Sail<br />

40 Period<br />

41 Granary<br />

42 Canticle<br />

43 Bristle<br />

44 Annapolis grad<br />

45 Conflict<br />

Down<br />

1 Greek god<br />

2 Easement<br />

3 USMA student<br />

4 Southern state<br />

5 Tasty<br />

6 Old World ducks<br />

7 Feminine name<br />

8 Stew<br />

9 Strict<br />

10 Tries<br />

13 Fury<br />

17 Sedate<br />

21 Finish<br />

22 Exclude<br />

25 Write hastily<br />

26 Honorary commission<br />

27 Grown lamb<br />

28 Garden pavilion<br />

29 Pearl producer<br />

30 Fades<br />

31 Fanon<br />

32 Box<br />

33 Merry or black<br />

35 Turkish title<br />

38 Yellow bugle<br />

39 Vetch<br />

PK<br />

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*|c AKrLiLA APPLICATIONS I lUiNi? are available aVCMCUJIC in H l lOl IVI-*J C HUB. -*¦<br />

Deadline for applications is ¥ March 31. ^<br />

* Interviews will be scheduled at a later date. '<br />

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H<br />

Student Directors<br />

Collegian Inc. is seeking applications<br />

for the Board of Directors<br />

Collegian Inc. is a Pennsylvania non-profit 3. Permanent home address and telephone<br />

corporation, which is legally and financially number.<br />

responsible for The Daily Collegian, The 4. Semester standing and expected<br />

Weekly Collegian and Collegian Magazine. graduation date.<br />

The 12-member Board now has vacancies 5. Present major,<br />

for two students for two-year terms ending The deadline for letters of application is 5<br />

May 1988. Undergraduate and graduate p.m. Tuesday, March 25, 1986. A limited<br />

students are eligible to apply. Newspaper number of applicants will be interviewed by<br />

expertise or experience is not a requirement. the Search Committee of the Board. The new<br />

Collegian staff members are not eligible for directors will be seated during a meeting at<br />

these positions. 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 7.<br />

Collegian Inc. is responsible for:<br />

The Board of Directors inc i udes four<br />

• Overseeing the operation of The Daily students, three faculty members and two<br />

Collegian and related publications. However,<br />

people wkh professionaI quaiincations (one in<br />

as a matter of policy, the Board does not<br />

business and one in journalism).<br />

become involved in day-to-day operations. ~, ... ,., . . .<br />

.. . . Tne ecntor<br />

t f<br />

* tne business manager, who<br />

„ „ . T 8 j . ¦ * *!_ are students, also serve on the Board. The<br />

Collegian Inc. and monitoring the . , . . ,, t.<br />

- r^u x* * T general manager, who is employed by the<br />

performance of the Management Team. .. r . ¦<br />

-e^- u J i- JI i corporation, is a non-voting member.<br />

• Setting broad policy and long-range goals. ^ ' b '<br />

• Ensuring the financial independence and Current Board members are:<br />

editorial freedom of 77ie Daily Collegian and ' John H. Sulzer (president), senior<br />

related publications.<br />

assistant librarian.<br />

Collegian Inc. is self-supporting with an ' Chalres J. McNevich (vice president),<br />

annual budget of $1.3 million. The dual majoring in health and physical education,<br />

mission of Collegian Inc. is to provide a ' Blair M - Bice (treasurer), retired general<br />

quality college newspaper for Penn State and manager of Himes Printing Co. Inc. and<br />

a quality educational experience for its<br />

former publisher of the Pennsylvania Mirror,<br />

student staff members.<br />

* Gerrv Lvnn Hamilton (executive<br />

Collegian Inc. is recognized nationally as a secretary), general manager.<br />

leader in the college newspaper industry,<br />

Michael J. McDonald,<br />

which includes more than 3,000 college<br />

Mary Elizabeth Sperry, majoring in foreign<br />

newspapers. The combined circulation of service and international politics; economics;<br />

America's college newspapers is estimated at Russian.<br />

more than 10 million copies.<br />

John J - Mecholsky Jr., associate professor<br />

Interested students are invited to submit a of ceramic science,<br />

letter of application to:<br />

Leola A - Johnson, instructor of<br />

Mr. Gerry Lynn Hamilton<br />

journalism.<br />

General Manager<br />

Amta c- Huslin, editor.<br />

Collegian Inc.<br />

William G. Landis Jr., business manager.<br />

126 Carnegie Building The Board typically meets five times a year<br />

University Park, Pa. 16802<br />

during Fall Semester and Spring Semester.<br />

Letters should include your:<br />

Meetings are generally held on a Wednesday<br />

1. Reasons for seeking a directorship. night. Additional committee meetings are<br />

2. Local address and phone number. scheduled as necessary.<br />

Collegian Inc<br />

News Division<br />

{"**¥ "*% Business DM^S1 *<br />

collegian |production


18—The Daily Collegian Tuesday, March 25, 1986<br />

Candidates debate fund plan<br />

By STEVE WILSON<br />

Collegian Staff Writer<br />

Candidates stated how they would<br />

sell the state legislature on the Univeristy's<br />

differential funding plan and<br />

were asked what issues they would<br />

bring to the Faculty Senate at the<br />

fourth Undergraduate Student Government<br />

presidential candidates debate.<br />

Differential funding is a plan, developed<br />

by University President Bryce<br />

Jordan, whereby the University<br />

would get higher appropriations because<br />

it does more research than<br />

other state-related Universitites,<br />

which benefits the whole community.<br />

Graduate Student Association<br />

President Brian Del Buono, a panelist<br />

at the presidential debate, presented<br />

candidates with a hypothetical situation<br />

in which Jordan asks them to<br />

draft a strong statement in favor of<br />

differential funding. The University<br />

is currently ranked third in the nation<br />

as a research institution.<br />

Candidate Michael Metzgar said he<br />

was not familiar with the plan, But<br />

later said he talked with Del Buono<br />

during a break in the debate and had<br />

been educated on the plan.<br />

"I want to apologize for my ignorance<br />

on the issue," Metzgar said.<br />

Candidate Matt Baker pointed to<br />

the "state of our lobbying efforts"<br />

that did not get the University any<br />

more appropriations under differential<br />

funding than the University of<br />

Pittsburgh and Temple University,<br />

two other state-related schools.<br />

Del Buono questioned if that could<br />

be changed since the state legislature<br />

has more representatives from Pittsburgh<br />

and Philadelphia.<br />

Baker responded that while that<br />

was true, it fails to take into account<br />

University Commonwealth campuses<br />

in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, a<br />

lobbying resource that he said has not<br />

been used in the past.<br />

"We don't want to decrease everybody<br />

else's funding," Baker said,<br />

"but we want to get our fair share."<br />

Baker reiterated his proposal for<br />

forming the Student Association For<br />

Education as a subcommittee in<br />

'We have to make the<br />

legislature aware,<br />

through GRC, what<br />

Penn State's needs<br />

are.'<br />

— Michael Wein<br />

USG's department of political affairs.<br />

Under the SAFE plan, two students<br />

for every legislative district would be<br />

educated on higher education issues<br />

and meet with and write to the state<br />

legislators regularly, Baker said.<br />

Candidate Michael Wein proposed<br />

using USEC to gather information on<br />

the University's needs and presenting<br />

them to the legislature through<br />

USEC's lobby, the Governmental Relations<br />

Committee.<br />

"We have to make the legislature<br />

aware, through GRC, what Penn<br />

State's needs are," he said.<br />

Wein said that right now the University<br />

needs money for the "ailing<br />

physical plant," research facilities<br />

and run-down laboratories.<br />

Candidate Paul Molchany said the<br />

University receives less money per<br />

student than the other three staterelated<br />

universities and therefore<br />

should receive higher appropraitions.<br />

"Penn State should come first since<br />

we are last of the four state-supported<br />

schools," he said.<br />

Candidate Tom Begley said he<br />

would use the Alliance of Pennsylvania<br />

Student Governments to lobby for<br />

more money for higher education in<br />

general, because the University<br />

would benefit from higher appropriations<br />

in general.<br />

When asked what issues they would<br />

bring to the Faculty Senate, Wein<br />

said he would make the senate take<br />

advising more seriously by pointing<br />

out that it is "an integral part of being<br />

a faculty member."<br />

Wein pointed to the passage in the<br />

University manual on the responsibilities<br />

of advising which only takes up<br />

half a page.<br />

"Just looking at that you can tell<br />

advising is not a high priority," he<br />

said.<br />

Molchany said he would try to get<br />

the senate to support student representatives<br />

on more University committees,<br />

such as the facilities<br />

committee, so that incidents like the<br />

Beam Hall conversion do not occur.<br />

"Without a student point of view on<br />

these committees," he said, "we feel<br />

like were not being represented."<br />

Baker said he would try to make<br />

teaching more important at the University<br />

by paying and promoting teachers<br />

more for teaching than for<br />

research.<br />

"We are all here to get an education,"<br />

Baker said. "But we are not<br />

going to get an education if the teachers<br />

are not paid to teach."<br />

Metzgar said he would approach<br />

the senate with the pros and cons of<br />

the 14-week semester.<br />

Begley said a lot of students think<br />

advising is inadequate at the University<br />

and he would use that argument<br />

to get the senate to implement course<br />

refreshers and advising tests for professors.<br />

Both Baker and Wein gave two<br />

strong closing statements, apparently<br />

trying to point to their differences<br />

from other candidates.<br />

Baker, who in previous debates has<br />

stated his ticket has new approaches<br />

to the problems facing University<br />

students, asked voters to . decide<br />

whether they wanted new approaches<br />

or the same USG policies as in the<br />

past.<br />

Wein, whose ticket has emphasized<br />

experience throughout the campaign,<br />

asked voters if a president can afford<br />

to take the time to learn how USG<br />

works and build up personal credibility.<br />

During the questions from the audience<br />

period, Wein became visibly<br />

annoyed at a question asking him<br />

why no minorities were on his campaign<br />

staff. Wein stated that he was a<br />

minority and that he thought the<br />

question referred to a specific minority<br />

group.<br />

"I really wish we could stick to the<br />

issues in this debate and stop all this<br />

nonsense." he said.<br />

Hurt, Page and<br />

'Out of Africa'<br />

take fop Oscars<br />

LOS ANGELES (AP) - William<br />

Hurt, as the homosexual,<br />

movie-loving prisoner in Kiss of<br />

the Spider Woman, and seventime<br />

loser Geraldine Page, as the<br />

ailing widow determined to return<br />

to her childhood home in The<br />

Trip to Bountiful , won top acting<br />

honors at the Academy Awards<br />

last night.<br />

But Out of Africa , the story of a<br />

Danish writer's romantic sorrows<br />

in Africa, dominated the<br />

Oscars with six, including best<br />

director for Sydney Pollack.<br />

Sentimental favorite, Don<br />

Ameche was named best supporting<br />

actor as the retiree made<br />

young again with the help of<br />

visitors from outer space in Cocoon.<br />

Anjelica Huston, the vengeful<br />

Mafia princess in Prizzi's Honor,<br />

won as best supporting actress,<br />

but her father, John Huston, who<br />

directed her, lost a bid to take<br />

home father-daughter awards.<br />

No picture had been expected<br />

to dominate the awards, but Out<br />

of Africa, adapted from Isak Dinesen's<br />

writings, won for Pollack<br />

, for Kurt Luedtke's<br />

screenplay, John Barry's score,<br />

for art direction, sound and cinematography.<br />

The Color Purple which had<br />

tied Oult of Africa with 11 nominations,<br />

was shut out repeatedly<br />

in the early categories — after its<br />

director, Steven Spielberg, was<br />

denied a nomination.<br />

The Oscar for best song went to<br />

Lionel Richie's "Say You, Say<br />

Me" from White Nights.<br />

Best foreign film was Argentina's<br />

The Official Story, a moving<br />

drama of a woman who learns<br />

her adopted daughter had been<br />

stolen by the government from a<br />

political prisoner.<br />

Witness picked up awards fon<br />

original screenplay and film editing.<br />

«<br />

Amnesty International Undergraduate Group<br />

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THE STUDENT NURSES ASSOCIATION is<br />

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