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Military Strengths<br />

I Argentina vs Britain<br />

<strong>aca</strong> <strong>PH</strong><br />

£rfTied<br />

S 185,500<br />

Forces<br />

^ :;> 130,000 Army<br />

|- 19,500 Air Force<br />

S 36,ooo Navy<br />

$fe 1 • Carriers<br />

#^ 1 Cruisers<br />

feBv 9 Destroyers<br />

*$&$ 8 Frigates<br />

IISS 4 • • Submarines<br />

s><br />

* * All Diesel • • Nuclear<br />

* 10 Planes, 18 Helicopters<br />

* 2D Pianos, 4 Helicopters<br />

343,646<br />

176,248<br />

92,701<br />

74.697<br />

2«<br />

14<br />

46<br />

32 • •<br />

Great Britain draws war zone,<br />

threatens to attack Argentines<br />

By ED BLANCHE<br />

Associated Press Writer<br />

LONDON (AP ) — Defense Secretary John Nott<br />

drew a line around the disputed Falkland Islands and<br />

said any Argentine warships that cross it from next<br />

Monday on "will be treated as hostile and are liable<br />

to be attacked by British forces."<br />

Nott told the House of Commons last night the 200-<br />

mile "maritime exclusion zone" around the South<br />

Atlantic archipelago would become effective 11 p.m.<br />

Sunday EST and "our first naval action will be<br />

intended to deny the Argentine forces on the<br />

Falklands the means to reinforce and re-supply from<br />

the mainland," he said.<br />

The defense secretary said the exclusion zone<br />

applied to "any Argentine warships and Argentine<br />

naval auxiliaries."<br />

The official Argentine news agency Telam said<br />

Nott's statement was an attempt by the British<br />

government "at psychological intimidation, lacking<br />

valid legal arguments."<br />

The British dispatched a flotilla of ships led by two<br />

aircraft carriers from Portsmouth to the Falklands<br />

on Monday. But Nott said last week that "a<br />

substantial number of Royal Navy ships" were at<br />

sea, declining to give their number or position.<br />

Britain's new Foreign Secretary Francis Pym<br />

warned Argentina's military rulers earlier yesterday<br />

that Britain "does not appease dictators," but<br />

warmly welcomed U.S. efforts to defuse the Falkland<br />

crisis, which began when Argentina invaded and<br />

occupied the crown colony on Friday. Secretary of<br />

State Alexander M. Haig Jr. prepared to fly to<br />

London and Buenos Aires in a bid to defuse the crisis.<br />

In Buenos Aires, Argentina's interior minister said<br />

his nation would defend the Falklands "to the last<br />

Argentine soldier" and Britain could not threaten<br />

Argentina into making concessions.<br />

Officials gave no indication of whether any British<br />

warships or submarines would be within the<br />

"maritime exclusion zone" by Monday, but Britain<br />

has a naval base at Ascension Island about 4,400<br />

miles away and port facilities at nearer islands.<br />

¦ British officials said last weekend it would take 10<br />

to 14 days for the Portsmouth flotilla to arrive.<br />

Nott's announcement came at the end of the second<br />

emergency Commons debate in four days on the<br />

Argentine invasion of the South Atlantic Falklands<br />

colony.<br />

Pym accused Argentina of "the rape of the<br />

Falklands," and declared to the Commons: "We<br />

intend to see that the . . . islands are freed from<br />

occupation and returned to British administration at<br />

the earliest possible moment."<br />

The Foreign Office said Pym "warmly welcomes<br />

President Reagan's decision to send Mr. Haig to<br />

London. He comes as a friend and ally to consult with<br />

us on an issue of great importance to us both — the<br />

implementation of Security Council resolution 502 for<br />

which both countries voted" Saturday. The resolution<br />

calls for the withdrawal of Argentine forces from the<br />

Falklands.<br />

As the British navy readied more warships to join<br />

the armada heading for the islands 250 miles off<br />

southern Argentina, Pym told the Commons the fleet<br />

"should show the Argentine regime we mean<br />

business."<br />

The 40-ship flotilla is "a formidable demonstration<br />

of our strength and our strength of will," he said. The<br />

British armada "may be called upon to face . . .<br />

formidable challenges," he added.<br />

Argentine Interior Minister Gen. Alfredo Saint<br />

Jean spoke with journalists before leaving Buenos<br />

Aires for the archipelago to take part in the swearing<br />

in of the islands' first Argentine governor in 149<br />

years.<br />

The military junta in Buenos Aires said earlier it<br />

was confident that "an honorable and just peace"<br />

could be negotiated, but stressed it will not pull its<br />

troops out as a condition for talks.<br />

However, Argentina's ambassador at the United<br />

Nations, Eduardo Roca hinted that the junta might<br />

consider a pullout as part of an overall settlement.<br />

This heightened the prospect that some kind of peace<br />

formula could be worked out before the bulk of the<br />

British fleet arrives off the Falklands in about two<br />

weeks' time. Advance elements could be there<br />

sooner.<br />

Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's Conservative<br />

government, facing the greatest crisis of its three<br />

years in power, has said it will not negotiate over the<br />

Falklands until Argentine forces withdraw.<br />

. Pym estimated the Argentine force at some 3,000<br />

troops, but reports from Buenos Aires have indicated<br />

there could be larger forces on the rugged islands,<br />

which have been British since 1832. About 1,800 sheep<br />

farmers live on the bleak islands.<br />

Please see related story, Page 6.<br />

Federal government<br />

agrees to dispose of<br />

radioactive TMI core<br />

1HH HHB x-;r I<br />

Baas**<br />

7 killed as<br />

gas truck<br />

explodes<br />

By JACK SCHREIBMAN<br />

Associated Press Writer<br />

By RICH KIRKPATRICK<br />

Associated Press Writer<br />

HARRISBURG (AP)- The owners of<br />

the Three Mile Island nuclear'plant and the U.S.<br />

Department of Energy signed an agreement<br />

yesterday assuring that the federal government<br />

will dispose of the damaged core of TMI's Unit 2<br />

reactor.<br />

Calling the agreement a "major<br />

accomplishment," officials from General<br />

Public Utilities Corp. of New Jersey and the<br />

DOE signed the papers at an informal<br />

ceremony in Gov. Dick Thornburgh's office.<br />

Robert Arnold, president of GPU Nuclear<br />

Corp., which runs the plant, said the core would<br />

not be removed until 1985.<br />

GPU must reimburse the government for the<br />

estimated $10 to $20 million cost of packaging<br />

the core, moving it to research laboratories in<br />

Idaho and eventually disposing of it, said Shelby<br />

Brewer, DOE assistant secretary.<br />

"The signing of this agreement should be<br />

recognized as a major accomplishment in<br />

establishing a plan for removal of radioactive<br />

wastes from TMI," Arnold said.<br />

TMI Unit 2 was crippled in the nation's worst<br />

commercial nuclear arccident in March 1979<br />

when the core lost part of its cooling shield of<br />

water and partially melted. The adjacent Unit<br />

1, undamaged in the accident, has been closed<br />

since then.<br />

TMI officials also said yesterday they have a<br />

$25 million plan for repairing damaged steam<br />

generator tubes in the Unit 1 reactor and could<br />

have it ready to return to service by year's end.<br />

DOE originally was committed to taking only<br />

15 percent of the core, Thornburgh said. With<br />

the agreement and one between DOE and the<br />

Nuclear Regulatory Commission, TMI will not<br />

become a long-term disposal site for<br />

radioactive wastes, the governor said.<br />

GPU has said that its cleanup timetable<br />

depends on securing financial aid from outside<br />

sources. Thornburgh has proposed a $760<br />

million cost-sharing plan involving GPU, the<br />

federal government, the electric industry and<br />

the states of Pennsylvania and New Jersey.<br />

The company also says it needs TMI Unit 1<br />

back in service to produce money for cleanup. A<br />

restart would release $37.5 million a yegr in<br />

customer revenue and another $7 million now<br />

spent each month for replacement power, the<br />

company has said.<br />

The restart was delayed by cracks discovered<br />

several months ago in 8,000 to 10,000 steam<br />

generator tubes.<br />

In a plan outlined yesterda to the NRC, the<br />

company would expand and reseal the tube<br />

walls to prevent further leaking.<br />

TMI spokesman David Osterhout said the<br />

technique has not been used in this country, but<br />

was effective in a Belgium nuclear plant.<br />

Osterhout said the company doesn't feel it<br />

needs NRC approval to begin the repairs<br />

because they pose no health or safety hazard.<br />

The repairs are planned to begin in July and be<br />

completed by fall. The $25 million cost will<br />

come from TMI Unit l's $94 million capital and<br />

maintenance budget, the company said.<br />

Krishna<br />

Photo by Eric Hegodus<br />

Stambha Dasa, spiritual leader of the State College Krishna house/temple, speaks during a<br />

Sunday evening session at the Krishna house about the need to understand the causes of<br />

everything. A vegetarian feast followed the session.<br />

Please see KRISHNAS, Page 4.<br />

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - A gasoline tanker<br />

truck exploded in a "raging inferno" when a<br />

bus hit it inside a tunnel early yesterday, setting<br />

off a 100-mph firestorm that roared through the<br />

tube and incinerated seven people.<br />

"It was a raging inferno in here," said<br />

California Highway Patrol officer Jim Mattos,<br />

who noted that the number of victims could go<br />

up. "It is theoretically possible that there were<br />

victims completely incinerated."<br />

The initial blast was followed by about 20<br />

smaller explosions and a 2'/2-hour fire that<br />

destroyed much of the tunnel. Officials said<br />

some of the 8,800 gallons of gasoline in the<br />

tanker leaked into a nearby reservoir and could<br />

cause an "environmental tragedy."<br />

Hours after the 12:16 a.m. (3:16 a.m. EST)<br />

disaster, smoke and steam still clouded the<br />

3,371-foot tube, one of three in the Caldecott<br />

Tunnel complex that runs beneath a hill<br />

separating the San Francisco Bay area from<br />

Contra Costa County suburbs.<br />

Rush-hour tra ffic backed up 10 miles as<br />

motorists were diverted to the few alternate<br />

routes. One westbound tunnel remained open.<br />

The firestorm left foot-deep piles of tiles in the<br />

charred guts of the tunnel, Fire Capt. John<br />

Speakman said. Sprinklers that are triggered<br />

by 1,000-degree heat went off throughout the<br />

tube.<br />

Speakman said that a 5-mph breeze normally<br />

blows west-to-east against traffic in the tunnel.<br />

He said the force of the explosion turned the<br />

tube into a kind of horizontal chimney that<br />

carried flames and smoke at an estimated 100<br />

mph.<br />

'1<br />

Israeli army blockade fails to break strike<br />

By DANIEL A. GREBLER<br />

Associated Press Writer<br />

MAJDEL SHAMS, Golan Heights (AP )- A 39-<br />

day Israeli army blockade imposed on the people<br />

of the Golan Heights has failed to break the back<br />

of opposition to Israel's annexation of the<br />

territory.<br />

Although the blockade was lifted Monday, the<br />

area's four main villages are still on strike. -<br />

A pile of bloodstained clothing and a heap of<br />

spurned Israeli identity cards attest to the<br />

struggle that has engulfed the Golan Heights since<br />

Israel annexed the Syrian territory last<br />

December.<br />

The unrest follows a new outbreak of resistance<br />

by Arabs on the occupied West Bank of the Jordan<br />

River, but only by coincidence. Palestinian<br />

nationalism plays no role here, and complex proand<br />

anti-Israeli sentiments were muted during the<br />

15-year occupation preceding annexation.<br />

Then, last February, Israel told the Golan's<br />

15,000 Arabs they would have to carry blue Israeli<br />

identity cards. The Arabs feared they would<br />

become Israeli citizens, and began a general<br />

strike.<br />

•<br />

Eleven days later the army set up roadblocks,<br />

'We 'll continue the strike even though we don't<br />

food or even milk for the children.'<br />

have much<br />

Nasi Ibrahim, 28-year-old tailor<br />

disconnected Golan phones and in effect cut off the! accused of doing so willfully and thus<br />

villages from the outside world. Journalists were: collaborating with the occupier.<br />

barred.<br />

The government says 4,500 identity cards have<br />

Leftist members of Israel's Parliament who been issued j covering virtually all Golan families.<br />

visited the villages came back accusing the army; Those who have no card still cannot leave their<br />

of imposing "a military dictatorship" and making; villages.<br />

innocent women and children suffer.<br />

"We'll continue the strike even though we don't<br />

Deputy Premier Simcha Ehrlich retorted that iff have much food or even milk for the children ,"<br />

they were suffering, "they are doing so<br />

said Nasi Ibrahim, a 28-year-old tailor. '<br />

voluntarily" because it was they who began the He said his people were willing to accept the<br />

strike.<br />

military rule that has governed the Golan Heights<br />

Israeli authorities and pro-Israel Arabs insist since their capture from Syria in 1967.<br />

that the majority of Golan residents oppose the "But we won't accept Israeli identity cards,<br />

strike but are afraid to defy its radical instigatorsi<br />

because we are Syrian Arabs and we won't give up<br />

or the powerful clergy, who have imposed a socialI<br />

our nationality," said Ibrahim.<br />

ban on anyone accepting an identity card.<br />

Israeli authorities have sought in vain to<br />

Israeli officials believe the Arabs had to be seeni<br />

convince the Golan Arabs that identity cards have<br />

to be forced to accept the cards, lest they be nothing to do with citizenship. Many of the cards<br />

have been dumped in the road or pushed under the<br />

door of the local Interior Ministry office.<br />

The Israelis say that in a classic illustration of<br />

the dilemma, some Golan Arabs have thrown<br />

away the cover of the identity booklet while<br />

keeping the inner pages to show at roadblocks.<br />

At one point the resistance turned violent when<br />

the Israelis shot and wounded four demonstrators,<br />

saying the Arabs tried to grab guns from soldiers.<br />

Ibrahim took a reporter down a rocky lane to<br />

show him the scene of the April 2 clash. He pointed<br />

to a pile of identity cards and some blood-stained<br />

clothing heaped over a stone wall. Shell casings<br />

lay nearby. "You see, this is where they shot our<br />

people," he said.<br />

Supporters of Israel here blame the Israeli<br />

government for not cracking down harder and<br />

sooner on the radicals.<br />

"If the army had come here the day after<br />

annexation instead of waiting until February, it<br />

would have been more successful," says Salman<br />

Abu-Salah, an insurance agent and outspoken<br />

supporter of Israeli rule.<br />

Saadi Abu-Jabel, a teacher, believes the Israelis<br />

gave the populace too much freedom. "They<br />

choked on it, they couldn't swallow it and now they<br />

can't spit it out."<br />

inside<br />

• State College Manor Nursing<br />

Home employees postpone their<br />

scheduled strike and continue negotiations<br />

Page 10<br />

• The men's volleyball team ups<br />

its record to 28-2 by trouncing rival<br />

Pitt for the fourth time this season.<br />

Page 11<br />

weather<br />

Deja vu? Another spring snowstorm<br />

may affect the Middle Atlantic<br />

and New England states tomorrow.<br />

Increasing cloudiness this afternoon,<br />

high near 37. Mostly<br />

cloudy with snow developing overnight,<br />

low near 26. Snow tapering<br />

off to snow showers late tomorrow<br />

and becoming windy. Several inches<br />

are possible, —by Mark Stunder<br />

index<br />

Comics/crossword 19<br />

Living 4<br />

News briefs 7<br />

Opinions : 8<br />

Sports 11<br />

State/nation/world 6


Can you afford not to look this good?<br />

J. B. Hunting<br />

Present Address<br />

Permanent Address<br />

888 IM. College Ave. 258 Redtree Ave.<br />

State College, PA 16801<br />

Augusta, ME00349<br />

(814) 377-3928 (904) 756-0029<br />

Objective<br />

To find an entry-level position in personnel management with a progressive<br />

retail company.<br />

Education<br />

The Pennsylvania State University, 1978-1982<br />

Bachelor of Science Degree — Business Management<br />

Cumulative Grade Point Average: 3.33<br />

Area of Concentration: Personnel Management<br />

Activities, Honors<br />

Eight terms on Dean's List<br />

Alpha Alpha Beta social fraternity<br />

Marketing Club<br />

Intramural tennis<br />

Bloodmobile volunteer aide<br />

Work Experience<br />

September 1980 - present<br />

The Clothes Store, State College, PA<br />

As assistant manager, I coordinated work schedules for nine part-time<br />

employees, maintained a periodic merchandise inventory and assisted<br />

customers.<br />

September 1978 - June 1979 and September 1979 - June 1980 '<br />

University Research Center, University Park, PA<br />

Catalogued graduate student research projects and worked with other<br />

employees to integrate the department's files into the university's com<br />

puter system.<br />

June 1977 - August 1978<br />

J. C. Penney, Augusta, ME<br />

Began as a stock clerk and moved up to a general sales position in the<br />

sporting goods department.<br />

Other Interests<br />

Enjoy jogging, squash, racquetball and most other sports, coin collecting<br />

playing the guitar and singing.<br />

Re'ferences available upon request.<br />

Not when you find yourself in<br />

competition with scores of other,<br />

qualified applicants.<br />

A resume produced by the Collegian's<br />

professional production staff will give<br />

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At Collegian Production, we offer a<br />

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Our professional production staff will be<br />

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Come see us today, in room 7 Carnegie<br />

Building, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.<br />

We can help you look this good.<br />

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All interested parties are invited to AUDITION<br />

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Complete dinner includes choice of juice,<br />

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Watch out for bikes


Program explores world of disabled<br />

dents' need for notetakers and interpreters in classes,<br />

The University has a small deaf population, Hutton said,<br />

and a lack of qualified interpreters even though federal<br />

law requires universities guarantee interpreters upon<br />

admittance of a deaf individual,<br />

The panelists agreed public awareness of disabilities is<br />

crucial. Other peoples' attitudes often handicap a person<br />

more than their disability does, Toth said,<br />

"We're not asking for special treatment; we're asking<br />

for equal treatment," she said,<br />

To conclude, ABLED President Laurie Koehler, who is<br />

legally blind, emphasized the difference between a disabil-<br />

ity and a handicap.<br />

A disability is a clinical description of a physical, social<br />

or emotional problem that affects an individual's life,<br />

Handicaps are only those limitations imposed by the<br />

disability that make success more difficult,<br />


B ¦<br />

The Daily Collegian<br />

Thursday, April 8<br />

i<br />

V< ¦'f *<br />

/iv<br />

i<br />

ftBa^aatwari<br />

- i i VISHP'<br />

EE5r r~<br />

~^l<br />

in W&~<br />

¦oa F«g3 il*<br />

• iMti<br />

o>N»tV<br />

• I»\<br />

x pjj<br />

d i®<br />

*> Ia«3<br />

Among the regulars at the Krishna house<br />

is 19-month-old Anna Kochersperger. Her<br />

parents, Denise and Steven, frequent the<br />

Krishna dinners for the philosophy, the<br />

food and the devotees.<br />

Krishnas offer spiritual insight, vegetarian feasts<br />

By LINDSAY NAYTHONS<br />

Collegian Staff Writer<br />

On any Sunday, while many University<br />

students are eating their dinner, a small<br />

group of students and area residents is<br />

receiving a sermon and food of the gods,<br />

all courtesy of the Hare Krishnas of State<br />

College. . .<br />

The Krishnas, according to their<br />

spiritual leader , Stambha Dasa,<br />

welcome anyone to their early-evening<br />

meals. They are always available to<br />

provide spiritual enlightenment for those<br />

'who are remorseful over their<br />

materialistic existence or to give<br />

theological insight to those who are just<br />

'curious about a different lifestyle.<br />

Upon entering the Krishna's<br />

neighborhood temple, at 103 E. Hamilton<br />

Ave., one must remove his shoes before<br />

being greeted by Indian ornaments,<br />

Vedic literature and one or more of the<br />

devotees ("Hare Bo!" is their informal<br />

greeting), who sit and rap with those so<br />

inclined.<br />

At about 5 p.m. the devotees begin<br />

chanting their mantra: "Hare Krishna,<br />

¦Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare<br />

Hare. Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama<br />

Rama, Hare Hare."<br />

The purpose of the mantra: to get<br />

closer to Godhead. The type of crowd<br />

that attends: as varied as the food.<br />

The Krishna house is awash in the<br />

smells of incense and vegetarian dishes<br />

such as Laddhu, a sweet made with chick<br />

pea flour and nuts; Puri, a type of bread;<br />

Halava, a cakey grain pudding; Subji, a<br />

mix of vegetables and cheese; Boga, a<br />

mix of rice and potato; and Lassi, a drink<br />

of grape juice and yogurt. The food and<br />

drink is called Purshadam, meaning<br />

blessed by Krishna.<br />

After about a half hour of repeating the<br />

chant over and over, rising and falling<br />

through several mellow and intense<br />

verses, it is time for the sermon to begin.<br />

Usually led by Stambha, it attempts to<br />

relate to the crowd the basic tenets and<br />

values of the Krishna Consciousness<br />

movement.<br />

On one Sunday, with more than 20<br />

people sitting on the floor around him,<br />

Stambha spoke on the need to understand<br />

the causes of everything. By not " /<br />

understanding, he said, "we try to<br />

conquer nature and get slapped in the<br />

face. Because nature's never been<br />

defeated."<br />

A Krishna woman speaks to guest at one<br />

'I'm only bored when I'm not doing what I'm supposed to be doing (serving<br />

Krishna) .. Chanting is the most satisfying and ideally it should be done as<br />

much as possible.'<br />

"What is matter and what is spirit?"<br />

he asked rhetorically. "Krishna explains<br />

clearly — all is connected to the absolute.<br />

Nothing exists in itself." .<br />

After the sermon and a question-andanswer<br />

session, which normally follows<br />

the philosophical lecture, the meal is<br />

served, and guests can mingle with each<br />

other and with the devotees.<br />

For Frederick Walker St. Clair III of<br />

State College, the evening was "very<br />

interesting. Stambha's got some good<br />

points about certain religions that say<br />

'This is the way you have to be.' That's<br />

why I don't like organized religions."<br />

After her first time with the Krishnas,<br />

Eva Smith (9th-recreation and parks)<br />

was "really impressed ."<br />

She said she was "kind of hesitant<br />

about coming out to the house" because<br />

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

they're so intelligent. Their frame of<br />

thought is much better, like their whole<br />

outlook on life.<br />

Smith said she was "definitely going to<br />

go again."<br />

"Some parts of Christianity are<br />

egotistical . . . this is probably the most<br />

diverse lifestyle around," said Fred<br />

Langer (7th-health planning<br />

administration).<br />

"(Stambha) made a lot of valid points,<br />

but I wouldn't think of converting from<br />

Catholicism," Terry Pascarella (12thaccounting)<br />

said.<br />

Pascarella attended the dinner to<br />

determine how the Krishna's lifestyle<br />

differs from the more commonplace<br />

University students' lifestyle for her<br />

Higher Education 101 assignment.<br />

For the Krishna devotees who live at<br />

the house/temple, the lifestyle is a<br />

repetitive series of actions, the sole<br />

purpose being to prepare for and attain<br />

the next incarnation after the present<br />

body dies, thus escaping from the<br />

repetition and pain of material existence.<br />

e<br />

"I'm not gonna' go get brainwashed,"<br />

was how Michael Dennis reacted when a<br />

Photo by Eric C. Hegedus<br />

of the group's vegetarian feasts.<br />

musician friend asked him to go to one of<br />

the Krishna dinners more than a year<br />

ago.<br />

Now, Dennis is the newest devotee<br />

living with the Krishnas and will receive<br />

his Sanskrit name soon.<br />

At that first dinner, he found<br />

Stambha's lecture "very compelling .-..<br />

he was so bold and convincing .. . they<br />

were stong thoughts" for someone who<br />

was just interested in music at the time.<br />

"I do it for myself, but I realize at<br />

every moment who I want to serve,"<br />

Dennis said. And Dennis said he likes the<br />

Krishnas' motto: "Simple living and<br />

high thinking."<br />

According to Dennis, many University<br />

students are afraid of the Krishnas.<br />

"Their fear is based on a<br />

misunderstanding. They're afraid — that<br />

we may be right — that our way may be a<br />

rational thing."<br />

Uddhava Dasa reiterated the fear<br />

concept: "They're afraid of something<br />

different. They think we're from Mars."<br />

(The Dasa surname is common among<br />

devotees. It means servant.)<br />

Uddhava has been living with the<br />

Krishnas for three months. Before<br />

coming to State College, he lived at a<br />

temple in Baltimore since 1974. Prior to<br />

that, he belonged to a traveling temple —<br />

a converted bus — in his home state of<br />

California.<br />

At first, he was thinking about<br />

becoming a Buddhist monk but decided<br />

to join the Krishnas instead. This was<br />

after hearing some of the philosophy.<br />

Since becoming initiated, he's gone on a<br />

pilgrimage to India as have many<br />

Krishnas in the West.<br />

•<br />

While standing outside Schwab<br />

Auditorium — the site of Jed Smock's<br />

springtime tirades against University<br />

students' hedonism — one warm day<br />

handing out "Back to Godhead"<br />

magazines, Dennis said: "People tell me<br />

time and time again how much they<br />

appreciate our gentlemanly behavior.<br />

We don't yell . . . Smock wasn't in control<br />

of his own senses or his own mind — you<br />

could see it all over his face."<br />

Later that day, Matt Hirsch (13thbusiness)<br />

rode by on his bicycle and<br />

readily accepted a magazine from<br />

Dennis.<br />

Hirsch said he and his roommates<br />

"love the pictures. We put them on our<br />

walls . . . they're very mystical.<br />

"People are very ethnocentric in this<br />

country... the magazine has interesting<br />

articles of another culture," Hirsch said<br />

as he pedaled away.<br />

•<br />

Purananda Dasa, 35, graduated from<br />

Queens College in New York as an<br />

accounting major and put in a fourmonth<br />

stint on Wall Street as a budget<br />

analyst.<br />

But "it was all a game. I didn't see any<br />

future for personal satisfaction," he said.<br />

So he joined the Krishnas. .<br />

He's been at the Hamilton Avenue<br />

house for only two months but went<br />

around the country, living at different<br />

temples for six years prior to settling<br />

down, for now, in State College.<br />

Purananda uses his accounting<br />

experience for the Krishnas, balancing<br />

the budgets of the house/temple and the<br />

Krishna farm, located near Lewistown.<br />

"We don't give up what we know, we<br />

use it as a service for Krishna," he said,<br />

— Purananda Dasa<br />

"This is much more practical and<br />

fulfilling. Before it was for some<br />

temporary, personal satisfaction.<br />

"I'm only bored when I'm not doing<br />

what I'm supposed to be doing (serving<br />

Krishna). Chanting is the most satisfying<br />

and ideally it should be done as much as<br />

possble," he said.<br />

It's important to be "more tolerant<br />

than a tree," Purananda added with a<br />

nod of his head. "We're all so small and<br />

insignificant among the universe." A<br />

pause. "One must become humble."<br />

Later in the evening, while a videotape<br />

of the Krishna Movement in America<br />

was showing, several guests mulled over<br />

what they had experienced.<br />

"You meet different people here than<br />

you'd meet at a party. And the food's<br />

good," John Conway (8th-psychology)<br />

said.<br />

Tom Rodina (9th-environmental "*<br />

engineering) is "starting to get into it<br />

and learning more about it" by "reading<br />

a lot."<br />

Lance Johnson (I2th-advertising) liked<br />

the meal and the philosophy but said he<br />

felt "they really seem to deny<br />

themselves of too much, though they do<br />

have a point... I think there's a happy<br />

medium to be found somewhere between<br />

their spiritualism and many people's<br />

materialism."<br />

"I find Stambha a most interesting<br />

character who often engages in rather<br />

polemical conversations," James<br />

Englehardt (8th-comparative literature)<br />

declared.<br />

"He's a fine adversarious to debate<br />

metaphysics with .., and the food's<br />

great and healthy for you," he said.<br />

Would Englehardt ever think of joining<br />

the Krishnas?<br />

"Well, while I can envy their lifestyle, I<br />

feel that they undergo and endure many<br />

privations. They close doors .. . one<br />

should be as eclectic as possible."<br />

However, Englehardt felt that "many<br />

average students limit themselves too,<br />

like when they think 'Oh boy! We gotta'<br />

go get drunk and get laid!' "<br />

«<br />

One Krishna devotee who doesn't live<br />

at the house/temple but comes to the<br />

dinners is 29-year-old Rukmini,<br />

originally from California and now a<br />

resident at the 600-acre Krishna farm.<br />

Rukmini said she was raised in a<br />

Jewish family and is "really close with<br />

her parents.<br />

"They may not understand our<br />

lifestyle, but they appreciate the wisdom<br />

of it."<br />

Rukmini said many different socioeconomic<br />

and religious backgrounds are<br />

represented in the devotees' past and<br />

"they all seek their answers in this<br />

philosophy now.<br />

"Penn State students are very<br />

introspective and serious when<br />

compared to California students," she<br />

said. The masses of them, she pointed<br />

out, "are gross materialists, but you can<br />

find a cream of the students."<br />

The students here are "really fun," she<br />

decided, but "Stambha gets on their case<br />

and that's great — he's a very important<br />

person to have on this campus. He's<br />

A woman sits in contemplation behind a notebook of Krishna literature<br />

teaching the students important things.<br />

9<br />

"We are hidden from Krishna by a<br />

cloud, but that cloud is Him," Stambha<br />

said at one point in the sermon. Certainly<br />

not hidden from anyone, and absolutely<br />

endearing to everyone, was 19-month-old<br />

Anna Kochersperger, accompanied by<br />

her parents, Denise and Steven.<br />

Denise said she and her family go to<br />

the dinners because they like the<br />

philosophy, the food and most of all, the<br />

devotees. "They're all very nice." ,<br />

The house/temple is not the only place<br />

the Kocherspergers go to spend time<br />

with the Krishnas. "We've been to the<br />

farm many times," and when Anna is old<br />

enough for school "she'll be going to the<br />

farm school," Denise said.<br />

Why? For one thing, the<br />

Kocherspergers are vegetarians and<br />

sending Anna to a public school, in State<br />

College, would be something extra "to<br />

high as a 25:1 student-teacher ratio.<br />

Moreover. Denise told of a school agedeal<br />

with," she said.<br />

Just as important, Denise said, is the *<br />

student-teacher ratio at the farm school<br />

(which is fully accredited by the state<br />

board of education). The farm school<br />

usually has a 1:1 ratio, "with the older<br />

children teaching the younger ones."<br />

State College schools, she said, have a<br />

group <strong>aca</strong>demic achievement test that •<br />

was conducted statewide and the results<br />

of the tests showed that students at the<br />

farm school scored just as high or higher<br />

than Pennsylvania public school students<br />

did.' .<br />

Anna obviously enjoys the music and<br />

singing that pervades the house during<br />

the chanting of the mantra. Indeed, sheis *<br />

an adorable, animated, precocious child<br />

given to sporadic fits of dancing and<br />

unpredictable walks around the temple<br />

with copies of "Back to Godhead, '<br />

whereas Steven catches up to her and<br />

patiently goes through the magazines<br />

with her. The pictures seem to<br />

simultaneously amuse, frighten and<br />

intrigue her.<br />

Rukmini first came in contact with the<br />

Krishna Consciousness movement in<br />

California in the heady, tumultuous year^<br />

of 1968. It was there and then that she *'<br />

met A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami<br />

Photo by Eric C. Hegedus<br />

Prabhupada, the Spiritual Master of this<br />

century, who made a pilgrimage from<br />

India in 1965 at the age of 70 to bring the<br />

Movement to America.<br />

Swami Prabhupada worked his way<br />

through Greenwich Village and Haight- '<br />

Ashbury during the Vietnam War era,<br />

turning hippies off of drugs and onto the<br />

Krishna Movement.<br />

Stambha thinks the hippies "were<br />

contaminated by materialism. All their<br />

free love and intoxication only served as<br />

an adulteration of spiritual objectives.<br />

They didn't change their self-conception<br />

at all. They were just bodies with long<br />

hair, most of whom are now working for<br />

the power structure they decried but<br />

which gives them their material reward<br />

(money).<br />

"It was fun while it lasted but really it<br />

was just a v<strong>aca</strong>tion for dropouts," he<br />

asserted.<br />

Rukmini is quick to emphasize that the<br />

Krishnas are not hippies: "We're<br />

happies!"<br />

/'<br />

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jMPfl^lM|ram l*ES5» " ."'' "<br />

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Stambha Dasa serves Krishna vegetarian food specialties<br />

^~>' 8<br />

Photo by Eric C Hegedus<br />

Stambha Dasa has lead life of achievement<br />

By LINDSAY NAYTHONS<br />

Collegian Staff Writer<br />

Stambha Dasa, spiritual leader of the Krishna<br />

house/temple at age 32, has had a life of achievement.<br />

But not in the ordinary sense of the word.<br />

Stambha, during his formative years, "was not the<br />

proverbial loner," he readily admits. But he "did enjoy<br />

being alone" and he "always read a lot," when he could<br />

find time between playing "lots of" sports and getting<br />

elected class president twice during high school.<br />

While growing up in Atlanta, Stambha (the Sanskrit<br />

name given to him by his spiritual master) says he<br />

came to sense that there was more to life than eating,<br />

sleeping, mating and defending (the four needs of<br />

animals). • ,<br />

After dropping out of Atlanta Law School, Stambha<br />

entered the esoteric world of Krishna Consciousness<br />

and realized that "knowledge of the self isn't really<br />

wisdom." Meaning, as he puts it so often, "We are not<br />

our bodies ; our bodies are just like clothing," which one<br />

changes after each physical incarnation until the Soul,<br />

through good Karma, makes it Back to Godhead.<br />

He is now dividing his time between studying Sanskrit<br />

and Krishna literature as well as writing a book on<br />

epistemology — the origins, methods and limits of<br />

human knowledge and perception.<br />

(The Krishna devotees shave their heads to humble<br />

themselves in the eyes of Krishna and to disdain the<br />

vanity that the materialists hold in such high esteem).<br />

University students who haven't seen Bro Cope<br />

around lately may be disheartened to learn that<br />

Stambha and the Krishnas will not shout in public. Most<br />

of their public work is spent handing out literature on<br />

campus and answering questions.<br />

However, Stambha knows Bro Cope: "Bro's a real<br />

schizo-type guy. He glowers at me sometimes and other<br />

times he's real nice to me."<br />

The Krishnas have been living at 103 Hamilton Ave.<br />

for the past three years and Stambha characterizes the<br />

community's attitude towards the Krishnas as<br />

changing:<br />

"Initially, there was a good deal of prejudice; I think<br />

fear would be a good description. People are afraid of<br />

things they don't understand. And although many<br />

people accepted us, because in college you're supposed<br />

to be 'liberal,' people were still internally hampered<br />

even when they showed external liberality.<br />

"But gradually, I think, by virtue of lecturing in the<br />

classrooms, our programs at the temple and the<br />

distribution of books and magazines, people have come<br />

to understand that our culture and heritage are very old<br />

and we're not just some new cult."<br />

With the sudden surge in popularity and influence of<br />

New Right/Moral Majority "televangelists" in the<br />

country, many people on the left/liberal side of the<br />

political spectrum have suffered undue consternation.<br />

But Stambha is not bothered by these conservatives or<br />

^heir liberal counterparts:<br />

"The danger is that both extremes share'a lack of<br />

knowledge which produces the problems. In other<br />

words, the fault of both the left and the right is that they<br />

fail to answer the question 'Who is the self?' and they've<br />

both adopted the model that we are our material bodies.<br />

"Now, for example, the people who claim to be<br />

fundamental Christians may say that ultimately the<br />

Soul will go to heaven but their whole lifestyle is to<br />

satisfy the senses of the body. And actually their<br />

religion consists primarily of augmenting their<br />

endeavors. They fail to take the spiritual process<br />

seriously or to realize themselves as spiritual beings.<br />

All they can fall back on is a vague mysticism or some<br />

sentimental, emotional appeal to dogma; they can only<br />

sustain their views by their fanaticism.<br />

"Therefore, they cause intelligent people to flatly<br />

reject religion. These (New Right and Moral Majority<br />

evangelists) have done more harm than all the atheists<br />

in the world put together."<br />

If you ask Stambha whether or not he considers<br />

himself to be an emotional person, he'll tell you:<br />

"No, I don't. I think by virtue of being philosophically<br />

inclined, I always had a tendency to look at things in a<br />

very philosophical way. Although I was always<br />

concerned with suffering, death and the 'meaningless of<br />

life,'.my concern was more turned to trying to<br />

understand why these things were happening and if in<br />

fact there was some way to solve these problems. I was<br />

always very disgusted wth emotionalism.<br />

"We don't believe in abnegating the body or in<br />

stoicism, but the question is 'What is the proper<br />

understanding of who the self is and what is the body?'<br />

and therefoVe, 'How should I use my body?'<br />

"The body should be taken care of and we don't<br />

neglect the sufferings of others but the central fact is<br />

that the self is a spiritual being. The body may be<br />

properly used to fulfill the goals of the self. The body is<br />

not an end in itself , which is why so many people are<br />

afraid of death ; the end of their existence as they know<br />

it.<br />

"In other words, as we perceive of ourselves, then we<br />

will create a suitable environment. For example, if a<br />

person thinks of himself as an artist, he will surround<br />

himself with paint and an easel or if he thinks he's a<br />

scholar, he'll acquire his perfect five-foot bookshelf and<br />

his desk. So, in the same way, society structures a<br />

suitable environment to meet what it considers are its<br />

needs. Society then becomes a group of bodies seeking<br />

only to gratify the physical senses in nice ways. We<br />

never question whether or not our happiness is actually<br />

in materialism, and that's pretty much a solidified<br />

orthodoxy at this time, especially in the history of the<br />

Western world."<br />

The Krishnas' motto, "Simple living and high<br />

thinking," is evident in Stambha's demeanor and his<br />

philosophy: "Conceptually, the self is denigrated to the<br />

march of technology. Technology promises many things<br />

to please the senses. This space shuttle business was<br />

nonsense. It was a distraction, a waste.<br />

"We feel that Krishna Consciousness must be<br />

presented to intelligent people because man has •<br />

something over and above the animals. Man has his<br />

reason, he can question his existence. If he doesn't, then<br />

he's just a sophisticated, technological animal."<br />

Stambha considers himself "an eternal spiritual<br />

being," who is only in his body "temporarily." After he<br />

"dies," he will return to his original spiritual state, he<br />

says, and won't have to return to the material world.<br />

Some of his other opinions follow:<br />

"Being popular consists largely in prevaricating<br />

effectively and being willing to go along with the lies of<br />

others.<br />

"Religions which perpetuate the idea that man was<br />

given dominion for his unbridled enjoyment, and that all<br />

living beings simply exist as servants for his happiness,<br />

we consider criminal. All life forms were created by<br />

God and we have no right to destroy any. Man's<br />

dominion, by virtue of his higher development, means<br />

he has a higher responsibility."<br />

One should not eat the meat of animals just because<br />

the Bible says to go forth and conquer and dominate,<br />

Stambha says. "A king has dominion over his domain<br />

but that doesn't mean he eats the citizens." On the<br />

contrary, it means "he has a greater responsibililty to<br />

look after them and make arrangements for their<br />

peaceful living. He has a trust, a responsibility.<br />

"Everything belongs to God and all living beings are<br />

His " children. Until we understand this, our<br />

philanthropism and humanitarianism' is incomplete<br />

"We inherently seek selfish ends. And we may<br />

overlay our selfishness with subtleties such as<br />

philanthropy or we may expand our selfishness to our<br />

family or our nation , but it is still a set of interests which<br />

revolve around the self as the nucleus.<br />

"The intellegentsia in the West has prostituted itself<br />

to the pursuit for knowledge. This is why I'm in a college<br />

community, because it's very important for society to<br />

be guided by intelligence, not power.<br />

"But in today's society, the intellegentsia have been<br />

purchased by power, and they're doing research for<br />

technological salesmen. They see their intelligence as a<br />

way of earning money. The pursuit of absolute<br />

knowledge and absolute paradigms of ethics, which can<br />

provide firm morrings for society, has become \<br />

forgotten and it's considered to be irrelevant. Our<br />

society has so cleverly ridiculed the pursuit of<br />

absolutes, and therefore most of the intelligent people<br />

are just finding ways of entertaining themselves<br />

aesthetically, esoterically, or they're just selling their<br />

intelligence to research anddevelopment, which<br />

ultimately produces objects for purely physical<br />

consumption."<br />

THE<br />

PARTY'S<br />

OVER<br />

All too often , when the party ends, the trouble begins.<br />

People who shouldn 't be doing anything more active than<br />

going to sleep are driving a car. Speeding and weaving their way to<br />

death. Before any of your friends drive home from your party, make<br />

sure they aren 't drunk . .<br />

Don 't be fooled because they drank onlv beer or wine. Beer<br />

and wine can be just as intoxicating as mixed<br />

•<br />

drinks.<br />

And don ' t "kid yourself because they may have had some<br />

black coffee. Black coffee can 't sober them up well enough.<br />

FRIENDS<br />

DON'T LET<br />

FRIENDS<br />

DRIVE DRUNK<br />

l : or frt-o information, write to:<br />

l)IUINK[>IUVKK.IIo When's the last time you wrote to mom ?<br />

GOOD FRIDAY WORSHIP<br />

IN THE MARKET PLACE<br />

In the midst of 'business as usual'<br />

in a nuclear war-threatened world on<br />

Penn State campus and downtown<br />

State College the 14 stations of the<br />

cross will be observed to remind us<br />

Sponsored by of ui the tiie death ueciu i of ui the UIB Prince nmw of ui reauc Peace<br />

various peace<br />

All ARE WEICOME<br />

organizations,<br />

churches and in- Time: Friday April 9<br />

dividual<br />

9:15-11:30 a.m.<br />

peacemakers Meeting Place: outside Eisenhower Chapel<br />

The Sisters and Pledges of the Gamma Phi<br />

Beta Sorority are extremely proud to announce<br />

their new initiates :<br />

Barbie Craig-<br />

Maria Fulginitti<br />

Maura Guthrie<br />

Valerie Innes<br />

Congratulations!<br />

Gamma Phi Beta — SO years of Perm State Proud<br />

U-154<br />

Ann C. Popovich<br />

Kimberly Gail Rainey<br />

Janice Lorayne Simons<br />

"Often television tries to tell a<br />

story when it really doesn't have<br />

time to tell it completely,<br />

leaving people with the<br />

impression they have the full<br />

story. The tragedy is that many<br />

viewers believe they are getting<br />

all the news, so they don't<br />

bother reading a newspaper."<br />

the Centre Daily Times<br />

quote from Fred Friendly,<br />

former CBS News President<br />

in a March 1982 speech<br />

at New York University<br />

«-


Haig to travel to London for Falkland discussion<br />

By R. GREGORY NOKES<br />

Associated Press Writer<br />

WASHINGTON (AP ) - Secretary of State<br />

Alexander M. Haig Jr. was ordered by President<br />

Reagan yesterday to travel to London and<br />

Buenos Aires to consult over the Falkland<br />

Islands crisis, and one administration official<br />

declared "we're going to be the honest broker"<br />

of the dispute.<br />

Both Great Britain and Argentina, meanwhile,<br />

expressed some willingness to arrive at a<br />

peaceful settlement. But Britain also declared a<br />

200-mile war zone around the Falklands, effective<br />

next Monday, saying that any Argentine<br />

ships in the area "will be treated as hostile and<br />

are liable to be attacked by British forces."<br />

Haig was scheduled to leave for London<br />

sometime after midnight. He will confer with<br />

British Foreign Secretary Francis Pym and<br />

probably also with Prime Minister Margaret<br />

Thatcher before continuing to Buenos Aires<br />

later in the week.<br />

In Kingston, Jamaica, an administration official<br />

accompanying Reagan on a. visit to the<br />

Caribbean declared "there is cause to suppose<br />

that the United States has now been accepted as<br />

a mediator" in the dispute.<br />

Other spokesmen, however, had shied away<br />

earlier from using the term "mediator" with<br />

regard to the Haig mission.<br />

"Obviously, we're going to be the honest<br />

broker," said the official traveling with Reagan.<br />

He said both sides were looking for a<br />

solution but "their threshold of pain remains a<br />

question."<br />

The official, who asked not to be identified,<br />

also said the Soviet Union could "try to take<br />

advantage" as the dispute continues "pretending<br />

to be the champion of the third world."<br />

"Inevitably, we'd end up as mediator," he<br />

said, adding, "what is the alternative — to stay<br />

out of it?"<br />

This official also said that he thought the<br />

United States had a six-to-10 day warning about<br />

the potential crisis. In London, criticism of<br />

Thatcher has rested in part on claims that she<br />

had advance warning of Argentina's plans and<br />

failed to head them off.<br />

Asked about the British war-zone declaration,<br />

deputy White House press secretary Larry<br />

Speakes said "I would not steer you to indicate<br />

this was any surprise to the United States."<br />

Speakes said "the secretary of state is about to<br />

embark on a trip to London, and I'm sure the<br />

entire range of matters involving the South<br />

Atlantic situation will be discussed."<br />

On Capitol Hill, Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C,<br />

chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee<br />

on the Western Hemisphere, said the<br />

United States "should seek to mediate British<br />

and Argentine concerns, bearing in mind that<br />

the best policy is to recognize Argentine sovereignty<br />

over the islands."<br />

"The stakes are too high for the United States<br />

not to take a part in this controversy," Helms<br />

said.<br />

He said the original British takeover of the<br />

islands violated the Monroe doctrine and added<br />

that he had "every confidence that proper<br />

guarantees could be negotiated concerning the<br />

rights of the islanders."<br />

In London, a statement issued by the Foreign<br />

Office said Pym "warmly welcomes President<br />

Reagan's decision to send Mr. Haig to London.<br />

He comes as a friend and ally to consult with us<br />

on an issue of great importance'to us both —the<br />

implementation of Security Council resolution<br />

502, for which both countries voted" Saturday.<br />

The resolution calls for the withdrawal of Argentine<br />

forces from the Falklands.<br />

In New York, Argentina's ambassador to the<br />

United Nations, Eduardo Roca, hinted that his<br />

government might consider a pullout as part of<br />

an overall settlement.<br />

Haig will be working against an unofficial<br />

deadline. A massive British naval force is<br />

scheduled to arrive in the Falklands within two<br />

weeks to retake them by force if necessary,<br />

according to the fleet's instructions.<br />

However, if there is the prospect of a peaceful<br />

settlement acceptable to the British, it's possible<br />

the fleet will simply'drop anchor to await<br />

developments.<br />

Meanwhile, Alan Romberg, the deputy State<br />

Department spokesman, said the United States<br />

had indications "a couple of days" in advance<br />

of Friday's invasion of the Falklands by Argentina<br />

that such action was being planned.<br />

Romberg also declined to say that the United<br />

States is neutral in the dispute, even though<br />

Defense Department officials have insisted the<br />

U.S. government will not take sides.<br />

The Daily Collegian<br />

Thursday, April 8<br />

Reagan promotes Caribbean trade<br />

By JAMES GERSTENZANG<br />

Associated Press Writer<br />

KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) — President Reagan,<br />

on the first stop of a trip designed to amplify U.S.<br />

friendship with the island nations of the Caribbean,<br />

said yesterday he is determined to expand "the<br />

opportunity of your people to trade freely with us."<br />

Reagan, greeted by Prime Minister Edward Seaga<br />

and school children who danced the calypso beneath<br />

a blazing sun, told his hosts that "Jamaica is an<br />

inspiration to all of us who believe freedom and<br />

economic development are compatible and mutually<br />

reinforcing."<br />

"The people of Jamaica and the people of the<br />

Caribbean are the hope of economic recovery of this<br />

region so vital to us," Reagan said.<br />

He said he and his wife were "delighted to visit<br />

Jamaica as so many Americans do each year." The<br />

president then headed for a formal meeting with<br />

Seaga, followed by a state dinner. •<br />

Several hundred Jamaicans lined an airport fence<br />

for the president's arrival aboard Air Force One. \<br />

Seaga told Reagan he wished he could remain<br />

longer than the scheduled 19 hours, so he could gain<br />

"a personal impression" of "the degree of welcome<br />

the people of Jamaica" would express to him.<br />

While the president and the prime minister conferred<br />

at Jamaica House, where Seaga's office is<br />

located, Nancy Reagan attended a tea given by Mitsy<br />

Seaga, the prime minister's wife, and then planned to<br />

visit the children's ward at Bustamante Hospital.<br />

The president spent part of the three-hour, 45-<br />

minute flight to Kingston being briefed by Deputy<br />

Secretary of State Walter Stoessel and Steven Bosworth,<br />

a deputy assistant secretary for interamerican<br />

affairs.<br />

Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr., who was<br />

to have accompanied by the president, was instead<br />

dispatched to London and Buenos Aires to seek a<br />

solution in the Falkland Islands crisis.<br />

The people of Jamaica and<br />

the people of the Caribbean<br />

are the hope of economic<br />

recovery of this region so<br />

vital to us.'<br />

— President Ronald Reagan<br />

Jamaica is the third largest island in the Caribbean.<br />

It gained its independence from Britain 20 years<br />

ago.<br />

Reagan's visit is the first by an American president<br />

to either Jamaica or Barbados, his second stop.<br />

"It is an area which has not, frankly, received highpriority<br />

treatment in America's foreign policy over<br />

the years," said an administration official, requesting<br />

anonymity.<br />

In his airport remarks, Reagan told the prime<br />

minister: "The progress that you are making here<br />

with your own program shows what can be done when<br />

people living in a democratic society are given the<br />

opportunity to work and enjoy the fruits of their<br />

labor."<br />

"The United States can best help by expanding the<br />

opportunity of your people and those of your neighbors<br />

to trade freely with us, to give them a chance to<br />

produce and sell their products in a competitive free<br />

market," Reagan said.<br />

The president saluted the "strong democratic tradition"<br />

of Jamaica and said, "The success of our<br />

venture depends on cooperation, and cooperation is<br />

easier between friends who share the same ideals."<br />

Reagan left behind a U.S. capital in the grip of a<br />

late blast of wintry weather.<br />

The primary topics on his schedule here were the<br />

president's Caribbean Basin initiative proposed to<br />

Congress last month to provide $350 million in social<br />

and economic aid, and Jamaicia's own economic \**\ < JrK ' ***** S9*"**"<br />

.<br />

V<br />

problems.<br />

A senior American official said later that Reagan,<br />

in his meeting with the Jamaican, focused on the<br />

"very encouraging turnaround" in the Jamaican<br />

economy, which the aide said "has now bottomed<br />

out." ¦<br />

\<br />

The Argentine-British clash over the Falkland |<br />

Islands did not come up, U.S. officials said. 1<br />

The official said that Reagan's Caribbean plan p<br />

represented ''more than a temporary reaction'' to the |<br />

region's problems but rather a "permanent commit- 1<br />

ment of the United States to the well-being of the 1<br />

region." 1<br />

The administration is seeking to add $50 million to |<br />

its current allocation of $112 million to Jamaica this *<br />

year and is asking for approximately $150 million in i[<br />

economic assistance for the fiscal year beginning<br />

Oct. l.<br />

According to the official, who asked that he not be<br />

identified by name, the two leaders discussed Central<br />

America and agreed on the need to support "the<br />

strengthening of moderate political elements."<br />

The official said that the election a week and a half<br />

ago in El Salvador was the subject of a brief discussion<br />

and the leaders agreed that the size, of the<br />

turnout indicated a support for democracy.<br />

This source said that Seaga expressed appreciation<br />

for the U.S. financial support but did not seek greater<br />

aid.<br />

j<br />

Seaga told reporters his talks with Reagan had<br />

been "productive, fruitful and very amiable.<br />

Noting that the drafting of the Caribbean basin<br />

initiative began with his visit to the Reagan White<br />

House, the first by a foreign leader, Seaga said he had '<br />

to "express satisfaction" with the results.<br />

He praised the Reagan administration for giving<br />

"critical support at the right time."<br />

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Committee approves early-retirement plans<br />

HARRISBURG (AP ) — The House<br />

Education Committee has approved two<br />

early-retirement plans for school employees<br />

to ease the impact of teacher<br />

layoffs and to provide a remedy for<br />

"teacher burnout."<br />

Both plans were amended into a Senate<br />

bill and sent to the House floor.<br />

One of the plans, proposed by Gov.<br />

Thornburgh, would provide a one-time<br />

retirement option in which teachers age<br />

55 or older could retire with full benefits<br />

if they have at least 25 years of service.<br />

Presently, teachers must wait until<br />

age 60 to retire with full benefits.<br />

Thornburgh has said that proposal<br />

would save school districts up to $72<br />

Senator arrested after brawl with policeman<br />

<strong>PH</strong>ILADEL<strong>PH</strong>IA (AP ) - State Sen.<br />

Milton Street was arrested yesterday<br />

when he got into a fight with a policeman<br />

who was stopping him for failure to<br />

appear in court on a private criminal<br />

complaint, police said.<br />

Street, a Philadelphia Republican, had<br />

just turned himself in at Municipal Court<br />

where a bench Warrant had been issued<br />

for his arrest for an incident on a picket<br />

line during last fall's teachers strike,<br />

according to his attorney, Hugh C. Clark.<br />

The bench warrant had been withdrawn<br />

during Street's court appearance.<br />

"I'm sure the police officer believed at<br />

the time that the warrant was outstanding,"<br />

said Assistant District Attorney<br />

William Chadwick, who is prosecuting<br />

the private complaint against Street.<br />

Following yesteray's incident, Street<br />

was charged with aggravated assault,<br />

simple assault, resisting arrest and making<br />

terroristic threats, said Det. William<br />

Egenlauf.<br />

million a year and would help reduce the<br />

number of layoffs that will result from<br />

dropping enrollments.<br />

He estimated that 10,700 teachers<br />

statewide would have the option of retiring<br />

early.<br />

The retirment;plan proposed by the<br />

Pennsylvania State Education Association<br />

would allow teachers to retire at full<br />

pension after 30 years of service — including<br />

military service — regardless of<br />

their age.<br />

The PSEA proposal is intended to bring<br />

younger teachers into the schools and<br />

allow teachers who are "burned out" to<br />

retire early.<br />

AP losorphoto<br />

Sen. Milton Street<br />

Pesticide found in milk of nursing mothers<br />

m<br />

ENGINEERING STUDENTS!<br />

D EA N > E<br />

Kunkle Activities *<br />

Center — Hammond Bldg .<br />

Tonight , Thursday, April 8 from<br />

7:30-9:30 PM<br />

The College of Engineering Deans are:<br />

Wilbur L Meier, Jr. Dean<br />

George J. McMurtry Associate Dean for Instruction<br />

Edward H. Klevans Associate Dean for Research<br />

William H. Gotolski Assistant Dean for Instruction<br />

at Univ. Park<br />

Ernest R. Weidhaas Assistant Dean for Instruction<br />

at Commonwealth Campuses<br />

Robert E. McCord Assistant Dean for Continuing<br />

Education<br />

Refreshments Will Be Served!<br />

Sponsored by Engineering Undergraduate Council<br />

o<br />

GOOD FRIDAY SERVICE<br />

Helen Eakin Eisenhower Chapel<br />

Friday, April 9, 1982<br />

Noon to 3:00 p.m.<br />

A service of hymns, prayer and meditations on the seven words of Christ<br />

Sponsored by campus ministries and religious organizations, in cooperation<br />

with the Office of Religious Affairs at Penn State<br />

Noon Part I "Father, forgive them"<br />

The Penn State Catholic Center<br />

Meditation: Rev. Fr. Andrew Campbell, O.S.B.<br />

12:25 Part II<br />

12:50 Part III<br />

1:15 Part IV<br />

1:40 Part V<br />

2:05 Part VI<br />

"Today you shall be wtth me in paradise<br />

The Episcopal Ministry at Penn State<br />

Meditation: Rev. Fr. Tak Yue Pong<br />

"Woman, behold your Son . . . man ,<br />

behold your mother!"<br />

The United Ministry at Penn State<br />

Meditation: Rev . NedE. Weller<br />

"My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?<br />

Unity Christian Campus Ministry<br />

Meditation: Pastor Gerald Loyd<br />

"I Thirst"<br />

Faith United Church of Christ , State College<br />

Meditation: The Rev. Marcus Meckstroth<br />

"It is finished"<br />

Calvalry Baptist Church, State College<br />

Meditation: The Rev. Richard Ottoson<br />

2:30 Part VII "Father, into thy hands I commend my Spirit"<br />

The Lutheran Student Parish<br />

Meditation: The Rev. Dennis Hall<br />

Scoops<br />

t^.-i'<br />

HONOLULU (AP) - A pesticide that "This is a level that is very, very safe,"<br />

was discovered in the city's milk and ice * said Henry Yim, president of the exec-<br />

committee of the Hawaii chapter of<br />

cream supply has turned up in the breast iutive<br />

milk of nursing mothers, but state health 1the American Academy of Pediatrics.<br />

officials say it is safe for women to The heptachlor apparently entered the<br />

continue breast-feeding their babies. 1breast milk when the women drank large<br />

Samples of milk from six nursing worn- « amounts of fresh cow's milk. Last month<br />

en revealed unusually high amounts of a « recall was ordered of all fresh milk on<br />

the chemical heptachlor, which is used to 1the island of Oahu, where 90 percent of<br />

kill ants on pineapple plants and is sus- 1Hawaii's population lives, after officials<br />

pected of causing cancer.<br />

ifound heptachlor levels exceeded federal<br />

Heptachlor levels in the samples were 1limits.<br />

four to 10 times the average level found Since that time, four partial recalls<br />

in Hawaii mothers' milk two years ago, Ihave been ordered , including an ice<br />

health officials said at a news confer- < cream callback Monday, and the state<br />

ence. 1health director has resigned under fire.<br />

Michigan mass slayingI is 3rd in 2 months<br />

YALE, Mich. (AP ) - A mother and IBruce Lindke of the St. Clair County<br />

her four children were found shot to JSheriff's Department.<br />

death in their rural home yesterday, and<br />

authorities were investigating the case<br />

"There was no apparent robbery in the<br />

as a murder-suicide. ?<br />

shooting deaths," Lindke said. "We are<br />

It was Michigan's third mass slaying in * investigating it as a murder-suicide. We<br />

*<br />

less than two months.<br />

have not ruled out the possiblility of a<br />

.<br />

The St. Clair County'Sheriff's Department<br />

identified the victims as Betty In the other recent mass slayings,<br />

homicide either."<br />

Giuliani and her children — Rick, 18, < seven members of the George Post family<br />

were discovered slain on their farm<br />

Kathy, 16, Cynthia, 13,. and Dean, 10, ]<br />

according to Albert Kimmel, the Yale inear Farwell in Clare County on Feb 16.<br />

schools superintendent. < On March 13, five members of the Robert<br />

"The five people were shot to death ] Paulson family were found shot to death<br />

with a .22-caliber rifle," said Detective<br />

in their burning home in Allendale.<br />

Gallant Eagle called success despite deaths<br />

MACDILL AIR FORCE BASE, Fla.<br />

(AP ) — Operation Gallant Eagle, the<br />

desert military exercise in which five<br />

paratroopers and three soldiers died,<br />

was proclaimed a success yesterday by<br />

the commander of the U.S. Rapid Deployment<br />

Force.<br />

"It's a shame we had to have the tragic<br />

fatalities," Lt. Gen. Robert C. Kingston<br />

said. "Other than that, it was a successful<br />

operation ... we do have accidents."<br />

Kingston said such dangers are the<br />

reason for hazardous duty pay — $83<br />

more per month to enlisted men and $110<br />

to officers.<br />

IRA plans Easter violence, police report says<br />

BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) —<br />

Northern Ireland's police commander,<br />

Sir John Hermon, said yesterday that<br />

intelligence reports indicate Irish Republican<br />

Army guerrillas plan an Easter<br />

wave of attacks in the British province.<br />

In a memorandum sent to the Royal<br />

Ulster Constabulary police force, Hermon<br />

urged extra security precautions<br />

over the holiday weekend that marks the<br />

66th anniversary of the IRA's ill-fated<br />

Easter insurrection in Dublin in 1916.<br />

"The warning was issued because it is<br />

known that the IRA intend to commit<br />

more murders and cause disruption at<br />

this time," a police spokesman said.<br />

The reported guerrilla offensive was<br />

seen as a new bid by the Provisional IRA<br />

Hopes dim for 5,000 stranded on volcano<br />

VILLAHERMOSA, Mexico (AP)- Medical<br />

authorities held out little hope yesterday<br />

for 5,000 villagers stranded on the<br />

slopes of El Chinchonal volcano, out of<br />

reach of rescuers and trapped for 10 days<br />

by the lava and debris of continuing<br />

eruptions.<br />

"Every day that goes by we fear more<br />

for their lives," Dr. Rigoberto Garcia,<br />

chief of medical services in Chiapas<br />

State said. "Their principal lack must be<br />

water and the rain of rocks their biggest<br />

threat." '<br />

The military waited for suffocating,<br />

poisonous clouds to clear enough to send<br />

The paratroopers were killed March 30<br />

during a mock invasion. The results of an<br />

investigation into their deaths is expected<br />

in about two weeks.<br />

In addition, one soldier was killed in a<br />

car accident, another died when a tanker<br />

oveturned on him and a Marine was<br />

crushed to death in a vehicle accident.<br />

Gallant Eagle ¦ cost $45 million and<br />

lasted a month in the Mojave Desert of<br />

California. It involved all four branches<br />

of the U.S. military. In all, there were 151<br />

injuries.<br />

Five of the injured remain hospitalized.<br />

to restore its credibility after more than<br />

200 suspected activists were arrested in<br />

recent weeks. Many were betrayed by<br />

informers and defectors.<br />

The IRA's week-long battle against<br />

British rule in 1916 set off a guerrilla war<br />

that ended with Britain granting independence<br />

to southern Ireland, now the<br />

Irish Republic.<br />

The almost exclusively Roman Catholic<br />

guerrillas now are fighting to end<br />

British rule in Protestant-dominated<br />

Northern Ireland and unite it with the<br />

Republic.<br />

The IRA has killed five British soldiers,<br />

a police officer and an alleged<br />

informer since March 25.<br />

paratroopers with food and clothes to<br />

half a dozen small towns where the<br />

villagers are believed trapped.<br />

A pall of dense ash and dust, mixed<br />

with steam, lava and white-hot sand<br />

hangs 33,000 feet over the volcano, making<br />

daytime skies as dark as night.<br />

It moves with the shifting winds,<br />

spreading a carpet of gritty dust, kneedeep<br />

in some places, over a radius of 250<br />

miles.<br />

Medical authorities in Chiapas and<br />

Tabasco states say there is very little<br />

hope anyone could still be found alive.<br />

The eruptions began March 29.<br />

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• EDUCATION<br />

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• ENGLISH<br />

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(Survey of Mass Communications,<br />

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• MATHEMATICS<br />

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Trigonometry, Statistics)<br />

• NATURAL SCIENCE<br />

(General Biology Chemistry I & II)<br />

• PSYCHOLOGY<br />

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• SOCIOLOGY<br />

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inion<br />

The Daily Collegian<br />

Thursday, April 8<br />

About those better <strong>aca</strong>demics<br />

By all odds, <strong>aca</strong>demics has been our<br />

overriding consideration in the<br />

change to a semester calendar. "<br />

—University Provost Edward D.<br />

Eddy, March 13, 1981.<br />

Indeed, one of the administration's<br />

main arguments for the semester<br />

calendar was that the change would<br />

improve the University's intellectual<br />

climate.<br />

Has there been a foreshadowing of<br />

improvement? Well, not really.<br />

Last month, the Liberal Arts Curricular<br />

Affairs Committee unanimously<br />

approved a proposal for basic English<br />

composition courses under the new<br />

calendar and sent the proposal to the<br />

Faculty Senate.<br />

There's only one problem — the<br />

committee wasn't pleased with the<br />

proposal.<br />

Even though the committee didn't<br />

like the proposal, its members approved<br />

the plan because they wanted<br />

the proposal forwarded to the Senate's<br />

Curricular Affairs Committee so "other<br />

departments can get on with their<br />

business."<br />

Many departments were waiting to<br />

see what the English department<br />

would do before submitting their curriculum<br />

and program revisons to the<br />

senate's Curricular Affairs Committee.<br />

And the deadline for all departments<br />

to submit curriculum and program<br />

revisions to the commmittee is<br />

April 23. Hence the great rush.<br />

The department's initial proposal<br />

suggested that students take English<br />

15, a basic composition course in their<br />

freshman year and English 220, a<br />

more in-depth composition course in<br />

their junior year.<br />

But, because of lack of funds and<br />

*<br />

faculty, that proposal never became a<br />

reality. The original proposal would<br />

have cost the University more money<br />

because the entire teaching load for<br />

the second composition course would<br />

be put on University Park.<br />

So, the department settled for another<br />

proposal. The new proposal will<br />

offer English 15 to replace English 10.<br />

English 15 will be an intensified version<br />

of 10, restructured to take advantage<br />

of the 14-week semester. The<br />

second half of the requirement may be<br />

fulfilled by any of four courses at the<br />

200 level anytime after the beginning<br />

of a student's fourth semester.<br />

Members of the liberal arts committee<br />

think the reduction of quality<br />

comes in the number of composition<br />

courses for some students. Under the<br />

term calendar, many students took<br />

English 10 and 20 and then another<br />

writing course.<br />

According to the department's first<br />

proposal, students would not have<br />

been able to use technical or business<br />

writing to fulfill their basic composition<br />

requirements.<br />

Because the English proposal has<br />

been submitted to the faculty senate's<br />

Curricular Affairs Committee, other<br />

deparments are probably preparing<br />

their course revisions now. Ideally,<br />

the only consideration in their proposals<br />

is providing quality <strong>aca</strong>demics.<br />

But this is the real world. This is a<br />

state-related University. We all know<br />

what inflation means. We shouldn't<br />

kid ourselves.<br />

Apparently, money and faculty<br />

manpower has become the overriding<br />

concern in the change to the" semester<br />

calendar despite all the pedagogical<br />

talk about providing a better learning<br />

environment.<br />

Thursday April 8, 1982<br />

Phil Gutis<br />

Editor<br />

Sharon Taylor<br />

Managing Editor<br />

John Allison<br />

Editorial Editor<br />

2 * M '81<br />

THr-p/tiW aiie&tAw<br />

M\<br />

daily Collegian<br />

©1982 Collegian Inc.<br />

Paul Rudoy<br />

Business Manager<br />

Judy Smith<br />

Asst. Business Manager<br />

Michael Conklln<br />

Office Manager<br />

The Daily Collegian's editorial opinion is<br />

determined by its five-member Board of<br />

Opinion, with the editor holding final responsibility.<br />

Opinions expressed on this'<br />

page are not necessarily those of Collegian<br />

Inc. or The Pennsylvania State University.<br />

Letters Policy: The Daily Collegian encourages<br />

comments on news coverage, editorial<br />

policy and University affairs. Letters should<br />

be typewritten, double-spaced, signed by<br />

no more than two people and not longer<br />

than 30 lines. Students' letters should include<br />

the term, major and campus of the<br />

writer. Letters from alumni should include<br />

the major and year of graduation of the<br />

writer. All writers should provide their address<br />

and phone number for verification of<br />

the letter.<br />

The Collegian reserves the right to edit<br />

letters for length, and to reject letters if they<br />

are libelous or do not conform to standards<br />

of good taste. Because, of the numbers of<br />

letters received, the Collegian cannot guarantee<br />

publication of all the letters It receives.<br />

Mail letters to: The Daily Collegian; 126<br />

Carnegie Building; University Park, Pa.<br />

16802. Names may be withheld on request.<br />

Complaints: News and editorial complaints<br />

should be presented to the editor. Business<br />

and advertising complaints should be presented<br />

to the business manager. If the<br />

complaint is not satisfactorily resolved,<br />

grievances may be filed with the Accuracy<br />

and Fair Play Committee of Collegian Inc.<br />

Information on filing grievances is available<br />

from Gerry Lynn Hamilton, executive secretary,<br />

Collegian Inc.<br />

About the Collegian: The Daily Collegian<br />

and The Weekly Collegian are published by<br />

Collegian Inc., an independent, non-profit<br />

corporation with a board of directors composed<br />

of students, faculty and professionals.<br />

Students of The Pennsylvania State<br />

University write and edit both papers and<br />

solicit advertising material for them. The<br />

Daily Collegian is published Monday<br />

through Friday and distributed at the University<br />

Park campus. The Weekly Collegian<br />

is mailed to Commonwealth campus students,<br />

parents of students, alumni and<br />

other subscribers who want to keep abreast<br />

of University news.<br />

The truly needy?<br />

For four years of an expense-paid v<strong>aca</strong>tion in<br />

a beautiful valley with athletic facilities, a<br />

lively bar scene, four pools, movies galore and<br />

cultural events, enroll in the Pennsylvania<br />

State University . . . Pennsylvania's first land<br />

grant university . ..<br />

Is this what higher education is all about? Is<br />

college a four-year v<strong>aca</strong>tion for students to freeload<br />

off the federal and state government??<br />

Many people would say yes. They maintain<br />

that President Reagan is right — waste and<br />

fraud are rampant in student aid programs and<br />

the branching student aid programs need<br />

trimmed.<br />

On the other side of the coin, there are those<br />

who say that student aid programs can't absorb<br />

any more cuts without depriving thousands of<br />

worthy students of an education.<br />

Who's right and who's wrong? Or is there<br />

some middle-ground? Should student aid programs<br />

be spared the axe while other programs<br />

are asked to pull in their belts? Do most<br />

students abuse financial aid programs? Or are<br />

they merely trying to cope in the ever-escalating<br />

world of college tuition?<br />

On Tuesday, April 13, The Daily Collegian will<br />

devote its Op-Ed to financial aid. If you would<br />

like to submit a letter (one page, doublespaced)<br />

or a forum (two to three pages, doublespaced),<br />

please bring it to 126 Carnegie by<br />

Saturday, April 10 at 5 p.m.<br />

The life and times of a real cool guy named Joe<br />

Special to The Daily Collegian: selected<br />

excerpts from the forthcoming<br />

book , "Joe Guy: A Fictional Character<br />

in Realityland. "<br />

Chapter 1<br />

It was a cathedral sky, pale blue and<br />

delicate fluff in two dimensions. They<br />

lay far below it, horizontal on a basically<br />

round planet. Millions of thin, green<br />

grass blades lay beneath them.<br />

"I think I shall be a .. . PALEONTO-<br />

LOGIST! !!" Karl (with a K) said.<br />

Joe Guy looked at the dinosaurs in the<br />

clouds, not at his brother.<br />

"And part-time Pope," Karl (with a<br />

K) said.<br />

"I wanted to'be the Pope but now I<br />

want to be the President," Joe Guy<br />

said. "The Pope can't get married and<br />

I'm gonna marry someone like Debbie<br />

Reynolds and dance a lot. And I can still<br />

help the world as President."<br />

They lay still for a while more and let<br />

the planet carry them around like a<br />

mammoth carousel. They pointed to the<br />

Brontosauruses, Tyrannasauruses, Stegasauruses<br />

and Triceratops that<br />

plodded by smoothly above them.<br />

"Wouldn't it be great if we had arms<br />

long enough to reach through them?"<br />

Karl (with a K) asked.<br />

Joe Guy nodded.<br />

Chapter 4<br />

Joe Guy sat on a folding chair in the<br />

dark, hot gym and watched the crowd<br />

flow out of sync with the rotating lights.<br />

The Bear came over and sat down<br />

next to him.<br />

"Didja ask her"?" the Bear said after<br />

¦a while.<br />

J3t<br />

&<br />

"Yeah."<br />

"Said no, huh?"<br />

"Yeah."<br />

They sat in silence. The band played<br />

on.<br />

"She was perfect," Joe Guy said.<br />

"Beautiful, charming, witty, intelligent<br />

"Those legs . . ." the Bear said.<br />

" ... and her hair . . ."<br />

"Eyes."<br />

"Eyes. Yeah."<br />

"Wasn't supposed to happen like this,<br />

Bear."<br />

He watched the crowd flow. The song<br />

ended and the crowd spit her out towards<br />

him. Her blue eyes flamed<br />

brighter as she approached.<br />

"I'm sorry," she said. "I didn't mean<br />

to hurt you."<br />

"You didn't hurt me," Joe Guy said.<br />

(For some reason unexplained in the<br />

text, the author has placed two chapters<br />

of his previous book , "Write<br />

Right," in this novel as Chapters 9 and<br />

10. This reviewer has determined that<br />

this is just a poor attempt at marketing<br />

an unsuccessful guide to fiction techniques<br />

and has nothing whatsoever to<br />

do with the storyline or theme of the<br />

novel. )<br />

Chapter 10<br />

You are God. It is up to you to create<br />

a character that can survive on its own<br />

and one that will serve a purpose (it<br />

may only be to entertain). The character<br />

must be fully realistic, must have a<br />

past, a present and a determinable<br />

future.<br />

Don't limit yourself. Your fictional<br />

character can be or do anything you<br />

want it to, BUT what it does must be in<br />

line with other aspects of the character.<br />

In other words, your character can do<br />

anything you want it to, but it must not<br />

Jot '<br />

CroY<br />

only be believed by the reader, but also<br />

by you, the creator.<br />

Chapter 12<br />

"Joe, you get out of bed right now! I<br />

will NOT put up with you just lying<br />

TOc (y\jy<br />

^<br />

\^l ^pNce<br />

around in bed the whole day long. Not<br />

anymore."<br />

The door slammed shut and Joe Guy<br />

rolled over. The door opened again.<br />

"And your father said you'd better<br />

have a job by the end of the month or<br />

out you go!"<br />

The door slammed again.<br />

Joe Guy laid on his back and stared at<br />

the poster he had on the ceiling. It was<br />

red and orange and had the words<br />

"Truth is consistency" printed on it. He<br />

remembered how he had painted it last<br />

year and had hung it over his bed to<br />

remind him of his salvation.<br />

Now he stood up and walked over to<br />

the shelf across the room. Joe Guy<br />

picked up the old stuffed horse, worn<br />

smooth by handling, and said, "When<br />

will I be fictional?"<br />

The horse of course said nothing.<br />

Chapter 36<br />

"Now listen, Guy. We've been waiting<br />

four years for someone with the<br />

right credentials to come along and<br />

we're not about to let you slip through<br />

our hands."<br />

Joe Guy established eye contact,<br />

waited and then looked down to his<br />

quiche as if in thought. He picked up a<br />

big forkful-of the quiche and waved in<br />

front of Rhenquist's face because he<br />

knew it would work.<br />

"Let's talk price," Joe Guy said.<br />

Chapter 52<br />

"Mr. Guy ! Mr. Guy!"<br />

Joe Guy turned around and held his<br />

sunglasses up on his forehead.<br />

"Look," he said, "I'm trying to lead<br />

my life and all you guys want to do is<br />

record it. If I stopped and talked to you<br />

everytime you wanted to ask me a<br />

question, I wouldn't have time to do all<br />

these sensational things that you guys<br />

write about all the time, and then we'd<br />

all be out of work."<br />

The press corps laughed. They loved<br />

Joe Guy.<br />

Chapter 105<br />

(Joe Guy is dreaming. He is on the<br />

pre-birth plane guaranteeing his reservations<br />

for his lifetime on Earth.)<br />

The mart behind the desk consulted<br />

the ledger.<br />

"Here it is. Yes. Guy, Joseph. Scheduled<br />

for the . .. last generation? Bit of<br />

the adventurer in you, eh?"<br />

"A bit," Joe Guy said. "I figured it<br />

would be a fun time to hang around.<br />

Never a dull moment, you know?"<br />

The cosmiclerk nodded.<br />

''Look, I've been thinking about it,<br />

and . ; ." Joe Guy said. "Would it be too<br />

late to sign up for the Prior notification<br />

option?' "<br />

"Could spoil the whole thing."<br />

"I've thought of that. But I think the<br />

benefits could outweigh the hazards.<br />

Besides this is my fifth Earth-life and<br />

all."<br />

"Say no more," the clerk said and<br />

scribbled in his ledger. "You'll be notified<br />

just before the end-of-the-world<br />

begins. This whole scene that we just<br />

went through will be replayed for you ;<br />

in a dream."<br />

Chapter 124<br />

Even before the announcement broke<br />

off suddenly and the loudspeaker was<br />

only spitting crackles, mayhem filled<br />

the aisles.<br />

Men and women pushed and ran in all<br />

directions, charging for the doors and<br />

the stairs to the basement. Here and<br />

there an infant screamed from abandoned<br />

strollers. Where the aisles were<br />

too congested people ran over glass<br />

countertops.<br />

Joe Guy walked slowly, picking spots<br />

where he would not get too abused by<br />

the insane crowd. A new wave of hysterical<br />

women rushed toward him. He<br />

* *<br />

+<br />

Ifr<br />

L^<br />

w<br />

Illustrations by the author<br />

stepped behind a column and waited<br />

them out. At the end of the wave ran a<br />

pretty blonde.<br />

Joe Guy caught the blonde by the<br />

arm, whirled her around and shook her<br />

by the Shoulders.<br />

"Calm down," Joe Guy said. "It's<br />

only the end of the world."<br />

The blonde's jaw dropped. She stared<br />

at Joe Guy through huge eyes.<br />

"My name's Joe Guy," he smiled.<br />

"What's yours ?"<br />

Mark Green is a 12th term journalism<br />

major and a columnist for The Daily<br />

Collegian.<br />

I \<br />

< *£-. TV?<br />

^ ooy


Complex rationale<br />

In response to your editorial "A 'precedent'<br />

that's worth a try," I agree with your'assertion<br />

that "student government should not be afraid to<br />

take the intiative in providing services for students."<br />

. .<br />

My rationale for vetoing the senate's bill to<br />

extend campus loop hours on weekends on a trial<br />

basis is sort of complex.<br />

When Ken Reeves and I were elected last year,<br />

we stated that "The more people we involve in our<br />

decision-making process, the better the decision<br />

will be and the' more likely that decision will be<br />

accepted."<br />

However, I would like to address the problem of<br />

quality in the work of the student government as<br />

well as The Daily Collegian Board of Opinion.<br />

Three years ago, the University raised the price<br />

of riding the campus loop from ten cents to 25<br />

cents. This,decision was made over the summer<br />

of 1979 without student input. (SURPRISE!)<br />

When Fall Term started that year, the Undergraduate<br />

Student Government Senate formed ah<br />

ad hoc committee to investigate the price increase.<br />

After weeks of research, fact-finding and<br />

surveying of undergraduate and graduate<br />

^opinion<br />

students, the committee proposed that the campus<br />

loop be free from 9 p.m. to midnight every<br />

night.<br />

As you are well aware, the loop is still only a<br />

quarter and it's free from 9 p.m. to midnight.<br />

Now comes along the USG Senate 1982. The<br />

senate decides it would like to try an experiment<br />

with the campus loop. Congratulations for a noble<br />

effort.<br />

Although the effort is noble, I believe the senate<br />

is "solution jumping." They have arrived at a<br />

solution, excuse me; "experimenting," without<br />

identifying the problem, without fact-finding,<br />

without identifying alternative solutions to the<br />

"problem" and without surveying the students.<br />

Where was the committee work on this issue?<br />

What constituencies were represented: grads,<br />

handicapped, etc.?<br />

The Collegian Board of Opinion is also guilty of<br />

lazy work. The Collegian's editorial was about<br />

whether or not the veto should be overridden. Do<br />

the students want this experiment?<br />

What about the students that we are supposed to<br />

be representing and informing? Don't they have<br />

any opinion? Or, are USG and the Collegian going<br />

to waste their time "fiddling" while the students<br />

burn?<br />

William J. Cluck, USG president<br />

April 7<br />

Congrats, Leni and Lee<br />

Congratulations to Leni Barch and Lee Facetti<br />

on winning the Undergraduate Student Government<br />

elections. Congratulations are also in order<br />

to all of the other fine candidates who ran for USG<br />

president and vice president.<br />

I had the opportunity to meet with these young<br />

men and women at my home recently, when I<br />

invited them to discuss student concerns with me.<br />

I was very impressed with their intelligence,<br />

maturity and enthusiasm. These young people are<br />

an asset to our area. I'm proud to know them and I<br />

hope that I can help them in the achievement of<br />

their goals.<br />

Sylvia Stein<br />

Candidate for state Representative, 77th District<br />

April 6<br />

Not handicapped<br />

This is in reference to the letter written by<br />

Richard Oakes that was in the April 5 issue of The<br />

Daily Collegian. We are not trying to cut down<br />

Richard since he has the same attitude that many<br />

people do, but it is attitudes like this one that<br />

cause attitudinal barriers ; barriers which are<br />

greater than physical barriers, especially at Penn<br />

State.<br />

First of all, the word "handicapped" was misused.<br />

A handicap is a limitation which keeps a<br />

person from succeeding. The word he should have<br />

used is "disability," a clinical description of a<br />

physical, social or emotional problem that affects<br />

a person's life.<br />

Secondly, the disabled people here on campus<br />

are mostly students and staff , and are not here for<br />

therapy. While there are therapy programs on<br />

campus, the majority of people seen around<br />

campus aren't here solely for therapy but rather<br />

for education or a job.<br />

<<br />

Another point we would like to correct is the<br />

while both of us are disabled, neither one of us<br />

feels "less fortunate." In fact, both of our initial<br />

reactions was "less fortunate than what?" One of<br />

us plans to be a blind photographer and the other<br />

plans to be a crippled farm veterinarian (no, I'm<br />

not kidding), and we're both well on our way to<br />

accomplishing these goals. Most disabled people<br />

don't feel "less fortunate." Why should we?<br />

Finally, don't try> to befriend us just because<br />

we're disabled. That's as bad as avoiding us.<br />

We're normal human beings, just like you. In fact,<br />

we feel that everyone who has Richard's attitude<br />

is much more handicapped than we are.<br />

Sheryl Davis, Gth-dairy production<br />

Laurie Koehler, 9th-rccreation and parks<br />

April 7<br />

Who's holier than thou?<br />

Maybe it's the festive Easter spirit (God knows<br />

it's not the weather) or the sudden increase for<br />

pro-Jesus fanatics that seem to keep knocking at<br />

my door, that has made me arrive at an important,<br />

but overlooked question — who's religion is<br />

right?<br />

Obviously you don't have to be a great philosopher<br />

to come to the conclusion that if one's<br />

right, the other one is wrong. Who's wrong? If the<br />

Jews are right about their beliefs about Jesus and<br />

the beliefs of the Christian's Easter, are billions of<br />

Catholic and other Christians wrong? Or furthermore,<br />

vice-versa.<br />

It would seem to me that people have turned the<br />

whole idea and purpose of worship into a game.<br />

The people who come to my door seem to be<br />

saying "Join us now so we can win this game of<br />

religion."<br />

Well, I'm sorry folks. I absolutely refuse to take<br />

sides on whose religion is right and who's is<br />

wrong. I'm sure whoever is up there dictating our<br />

actions and feelings did not want the beliefs and<br />

worship of him (or her) to turn into a "holier than<br />

thou" game.<br />

Edward Lion III, lOth-political science<br />

April 7,<br />

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10—The Daily Collegian Thursday, April 8, 1982<br />

"We are optimistic and hope not to have to<br />

strike/<br />

— David Cormier, union vice president<br />

Nursing Home workers postpone strike<br />

By TRACY EDWARDS<br />

Collegian Staff Writer<br />

A possible strike by State College Manor Nursing Home<br />

employees has been postponed and negotiations are continuing,<br />

Michael Becker, the home's administrator, said yesterday.<br />

"The strike is kind of on hold pending further notice," Becker<br />

said.<br />

The union of 140 nursing home employees, the National Union<br />

of Health Care Employees, District 1199P, had filed a' strike<br />

notice that became effective yesterday at 7 a.m. The union has<br />

a 72-hour period, which will end 7 a.m. Saturday to take any<br />

action, including a strike, Becker said. '<br />

The union and the nursing home administration, in negotiations<br />

Tuesday, agreed to extend the current contract until April<br />

19 and continue negotiations, said David Cormier, vice president<br />

of the union.<br />

Because the union's 72-hour period to call a strike will expire<br />

Saturday, the union filed a new strike notice, so that if the<br />

parties do not come to any agreement, the union still has the<br />

option to strike.<br />

The new period will begin on April 19 at 7 a.m., and remain in<br />

effect until 7 a.m. April 22. If the workers decide to strike they<br />

must do so in that 72-hour period.<br />

If the two parties come to an agreement, a new contract will<br />

6e drawn up with the administration's final offer to the union,<br />

Becker said.<br />

Cormier said the union did not accept the administration's<br />

original contract offer and had scheduled the strike because the<br />

offer contained no increase in salary or benefits for the next 18<br />

months. .<br />

Because the union found the previous offer unacceptable, the<br />

two parties are trying to work out an agreement concerning<br />

wage increase and benefits in the current negotiations, Becker<br />

said.<br />

If the parties reach an agreement, the new contract will be<br />

retroactive to April 4, Cormier said.<br />

The union has filed the new strike notice so the workers have<br />

the security of something to fall back on if they need to, but the<br />

union is hoping for a settlement, Cormier said.<br />

"We are optimistic and hope not to have to strike," he said.<br />

In Tuesday's negotiations, the administration changed its<br />

original offer of no wage or benefits increase for the next 18<br />

months to an offer of a 5-cent per hour wage increase for every<br />

$2 Medicaid gives the nursing home, Cormier said.<br />

"They put a nickle on the table," he said.<br />

The workers consider the 5-cent increase still too small,<br />

especially since it is conditional — depending on extra funds to<br />

the home from the government, Cormier said.<br />

A federal mediator has been ,involved in the negotiations<br />

since the start of the talks and will be there next week for the<br />

continuing talks, Becker said.<br />

Nursing center offers programs<br />

By <strong>PH</strong>IL EVANS<br />

Collegian Staff Writer<br />

Wide variety<br />

The Nursing Consultation Center<br />

will offer a wide range of programs<br />

this spring designed to further an<br />

individual's awareness of physical<br />

and mental problems, programs that<br />

will culminate in a two-day health fair<br />

on April 29 and 30.<br />

Two programs — "Learn to Relax,"<br />

about methods of tension release, and<br />

"Human Sexuality as an Adult," concerning<br />

misunderstandings about sexual<br />

functions — will begin today, said<br />

Alice Tetreault, director of the Nursing<br />

Consultation Center.<br />

The "Learn to Relax" program will<br />

attempt to isolate the participants'<br />

concerns and then structure a technique<br />

allowing them to release accumulated<br />

tension, Tetreault said.<br />

"They gain a way of placing themselves<br />

in a state of relaxation that<br />

would only take about five or ten<br />

minutes," she said.'lt is something<br />

that can be done anywhere."<br />

The program will consist of four<br />

practice sessions over a five-week<br />

period, with the initial session from<br />

of sessions include tension release<br />

3:30 to 5 this afternoon, Tetreault<br />

said. The class size will be limited to<br />

12 people. The cost will be $10 for the<br />

four-session course.<br />

Also scheduled to start today is the<br />

"Human Sexuality as an Adult" program,<br />

which attempts to identify<br />

facts and fallacies about sexual anatomy<br />

and function of the participants,<br />

Tetreault said. The course will have<br />

four sessions from 6:30 to 8 p.m. and<br />

will cost $12.<br />

She said the course will focus on<br />

four sexual concerns: perception, response,<br />

expectation of pleasure during<br />

intimacy, and prevention of<br />

problems. Instructors will attempt to<br />

answer individual questions.<br />

The Nursing Consultation Center,<br />

located in Human Development East,<br />

will also be the location of the Health<br />

Fair, which will have many exhibits,<br />

films, and screening tests geared to<br />

all adults, Tetreault said.<br />

The fair will offer visitors the<br />

chance to undergo screening tests for<br />

hearing, vision and blood pressure<br />

and will present discussion groups on<br />

prenatal concerns and marriage relations,<br />

she said.<br />

lyiany groups, in addition to the<br />

Nursing Consultation Center, will be<br />

involved in the Health Fair, including<br />

the American Red Cross and various<br />

departments in the College of Human<br />

Development, Tetreault said. _<br />

This year's Health Fair is an outgrowth<br />

of a program sponsored last<br />

year by the University at the Ritenour<br />

Health Center, and Tetreault said she<br />

hopes to offer more, programs for<br />

visitors.<br />

The future of the fair will be held<br />

next year largely depends upon the<br />

interest shown through student turnout<br />

in this year's fair, she said.<br />

Later this spring - the center will<br />

begin a program titled "Being Able to<br />

Talk About It," which will try to make<br />

participants recognize the reality of<br />

stress in their lives, Tetreault said.<br />

. "It will promote strategies to improve<br />

communication in interpersonal<br />

relationships," she said.<br />

The program will consist of three<br />

two-hour sessions from 6:30 to 8:30<br />

p.m. beginning May 6.<br />

More information on any of the<br />

programs is available at the Nursing<br />

Consultation Center.<br />

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Thursday, April 8<br />

Spikers whip Panthers, again<br />

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AP Laserpholo<br />

Darwin Cook of the New Jersey Nets (left) plows into a falling Oarryl Dawkins of<br />

Philadelphia. Cook got called for the foul and the Sixers got the win last night at<br />

Ihe Meadowlands Arena.<br />

Erving burns Nets<br />

in 116-113 victory<br />

By RUTH BONAPACE<br />

AP Sports Writer<br />

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP)<br />

—Julius Erving, the Philadelphia<br />

76ers' top scorer, had expected to take<br />

it easy against the New Jersey Nets to<br />

conserve his energy for the NBA playoffs.<br />

But he was on the court for 40<br />

minutes last night, scoring 38 poirfts to<br />

lead the Sixers to a 116-113 victory<br />

over the scrappy Nets.<br />

"Prior to tonight's game I had been<br />

getting less than 30 minutes," Erving<br />

said. "Normally, he (Coach Billy Cunningham)<br />

would have taken me out,<br />

but we weren't getting the points.<br />

"Just playing good defense against<br />

that team is not good enough," he<br />

sajd. "They can score so you have to<br />

keep countering.<br />

"Early in the game we didn't get a<br />

lot of things offensively. It just so<br />

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lot.".<br />

The game was close until Erving<br />

poured eight points into a 16-2 rally<br />

that erased a 46-45 Nets lead and put<br />

the Sixers ahead 61-48 with seconds to<br />

go in the half.<br />

The Nets battled back early in the<br />

final quarter with Albert King scoring<br />

six points in a 9-2 spurt that narrowed<br />

the gap to 88-84.<br />

With 33 seconds to go, Ray Williams<br />

hit a three-point field goal that cut<br />

Philadelphia's lead to 110-107. But two<br />

free throws each by Erving and Caldwell<br />

Jones pushed the lead to seven.<br />

Williams followed with another<br />

three-pointer to make it 114-110, but<br />

Erving added another jumper for the<br />

Sixers.<br />

The victory improved Philadelphia's<br />

record to 54-22 and dropped the<br />

Nets to 39-37. The loss ended New<br />

Jersey's four-same winning streak.<br />

By TONY SMITH<br />

Collegian Sports Writer<br />

It's amazing how an underdog can<br />

rise up and play an inspired game<br />

when it sees that its opponent is playing<br />

an uninspired game. Often the<br />

underdog will lose anyway, but for a<br />

while, at least, it will appear as though<br />

it's as good as its opponent, if not<br />

better.<br />

Applying this to team sports, the<br />

men's volleyball team last night faced<br />

a similar situation when it took on<br />

underdog Pitt in Pittsburgh.<br />

Actually, the Lions (28-2 ) took the<br />

Panthers in three straight games, upping<br />

its conference record to 8-0 and<br />

clinching the No. 1 seed at the Eastern<br />

championships April 30-May 1. But, as<br />

the score indicates ( 17-15, 15-12, 15-5) ,<br />

Penn State had its troubles early. The<br />

Lions, rated No. 4 in the country, are<br />

coming off of an impressive win over<br />

No. 9 Rutgers-Newark on Saturday. In<br />

fact, Penn State embarassed Rutgers'<br />

in straight games. Consequently, a<br />

minor letdown against unranked Pitt<br />

was not unexpected.<br />

This letdown was most evident in the<br />

first game of the match, according to<br />

Penn State Coach Tom Tait. The Lions<br />

had 28 kills in that game, but also an<br />

inordinate amount of errors (13).<br />

"We started out pretty slowly, with<br />

less intensity than we had against<br />

Rutgers," Tait said. "On the other<br />

hand, Pitt did things sharply, and<br />

executed well. It was fortunate that we<br />

came back to win (the first game)."<br />

The Panthers were led by strong<br />

play from outside hitters Gary Grossner<br />

and Bill Knuth, while middle blocker<br />

Brian Devine also did a strong job of<br />

attacking. The three of them caused<br />

problems for the Lions, especially in<br />

the first game.<br />

Tait said that questionable officiating<br />

was also a factor, especially late in<br />

the first game when the Lions were<br />

called for some illegal hits.<br />

"I think that some of the questionable<br />

calls may have made the game<br />

tighter than it should have been," Tait<br />

said.<br />

At any rate, Penn State started to<br />

come around in the second game of the<br />

match. Tait said his team received<br />

better serving in that game and sharpened<br />

itself offensively. The blocking<br />

game was also stronger. Yet Pitt, still<br />

believing it could compete on the same<br />

level as Penn State, again gave the<br />

Lions more than they bargained for.<br />

However, the Panthers lost the second<br />

game and were not the same team<br />

after that.<br />

"They (Pitt) were playing real well,<br />

until they realized that they were not<br />

going to beat us," Tait said.<br />

In the third game, the Lions executed<br />

very sharply, with 10 kills and<br />

only two errors. In fact, the total<br />

amount of errors in the second and<br />

third games combined , (six) was less<br />

than half of the amount in the first<br />

game.<br />

Penn State, playing without setter<br />

Bruce VanHorn (who did not make the<br />

trip because of an exam), received<br />

some strong play from his replacement,<br />

Ken Kraft. Tait said that Kraft<br />

made some great saves and outstanding<br />

blocks, and that his teammates<br />

rallied around him and supported him<br />

well.<br />

Although the victory was an unemotional<br />

one, Tait was pleased with the<br />

results.<br />

. We got out of it what we wanted,<br />

Tait said, "We wanted our guys to<br />

come back from that win over Rutgers<br />

and execute crisply, and that's what<br />

they did."<br />

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"i'ncredibly fast<br />

they "change the nature of the golf course" overshadow<br />

the familiar figures of Jack Nicklaus and Tom<br />

Watson going into today's scheduled opening round of<br />

the 46th Masters tournament.<br />

But the greens — the principal topic of pre-tournament<br />

conversation — might not be so fast if the<br />

weather forecast holds true.<br />

A 70 percent chance of rain Wednesday prompted<br />

tournament officials to adopt a contingency plan<br />

calling for an unusual double round of 36 holes Friday<br />

— assuming Augusta National is playable then.<br />

"We're going to do our best to get this thing done on<br />

Sunday," said Hord Hardin, the Masters chairman. If<br />

there is a rainout and a wet course will not accommodate<br />

a double round Friday, a double round Sunday is<br />

another possibility, Hardin said.<br />

At the same time, he announced that two greens,<br />

now in their second season with bent grass, had<br />

become a little too fast even by Masters' standards<br />

and ground crews had been instructed to correct<br />

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"It was felt that they had become so fast as to be<br />

unfair," Hardin said. He did not identify the holes.<br />

It could have been any of the 18. All the greens are<br />

fast, so slick they are intimidating.<br />

Other leading contenders in the elite international<br />

field of 76 are Bill Rogers, the current British Open<br />

champion and 1981 Player of the Year, Ray Floyd ,<br />

Jerry Pate, Johnny Miller, Hale Irwin, Craig Stadler,<br />

Seve Ballesteros of Spain, U.S. Open titleholder<br />

David Graham of Australia and , of course, Watson<br />

and Nicklaus.<br />

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Photo by Molodoo O. Snokc<br />

Bruce Vanhorn (1) and Mark Kraynik (16) extend themselves to reach a volley in a<br />

recent men's volleyball game. The Lions didn't have to extend themselves last<br />

night in Pittsburhg, defeating the Panthers for the fourth time this season.<br />

Islanders paste Penguins<br />

behind Trottier and Co.<br />

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AP Sports Writer<br />

UNIONDALE, N.Y. (AP ) - Mike Bossy and Clark<br />

Gillies scored early goals 52 seconds apart, and Bryan<br />

Trottier stretched his record postseason scoring streak to<br />

26, games last night as the New York Islanders defeated<br />

Pittsburgh 8-1 in the first round of the NHLplayoffs..<br />

Trottier scored two goals and had an assist as the<br />

Islanders began their quest for a third straight Stanley<br />

Cup.<br />

Gillies also scored twice and added two assists, and the<br />

Islanders thoroughly dominated play. They outshot the<br />

Penguins 19-5 in the first period and 37-23 overall and set<br />

the club record of 24 consecutive home games without a<br />

loss. The Islanders have a 22-0-2 at Nassau Coliseum since<br />

Montreal beat them 5-4 last Dec. 29.<br />

Bossy, who holds every NHL single-season scoring<br />

record for right wings, did not take a full turn because of a<br />

knee injury suffered in Sunday's regular-season windup, a<br />

7-2 loss to the Penguins. But he started the scoring at 5:52,<br />

beating Pittsburgh goalie Michel Dion on a 20-footer from<br />

the right circle with both teams a man short.<br />

Trottier, who has 16 goals and 24 assists in his 26-game<br />

playoff scoring streak, started the play by stripping the<br />

puck from defenseman Ron Stackhouse behind the Penguins'<br />

net. The Islanders' star center had managed only<br />

one goal and seven assists in the final 10 regular-season<br />

games.<br />

Flyers top Rangers 4-1 in opener<br />

NEW YORK (AP) — Darryl Sittler scored two goals, and<br />

the Philadelphia Flyers used tight goaltending by Pete<br />

Peeters to defeat the New York Rangers 4-1 in last night's<br />

opening game of their first-round NHL playoff series.<br />

The second game in the best-of-5 Patrick Division<br />

semifinal will be played tonight at Madison Square Garden.<br />

Sittler, acquired in mid-January from Toronto, scored<br />

on a first-period power play, poking his own rebound past<br />

Rangers goalie Ed Mio. He connected again 2'/i minutes<br />

into the third period as the Flyers opened a 3-1 lead.<br />

Ed Johnstone opened the game's scoring for New York,<br />

putting the Rangers' first shot of the night behind Peeters<br />

at 3:10 of the first period. But then New York's Nick Fotiu<br />

was sent off for boarding at 5:44, and 47 seconds later,<br />

Sittler tied the score.<br />

The Flyers moved in front on a 35-foot slap shot by Brian<br />

Propp with 4:36 left in the first period. The light behind the<br />

Rangers net did not go on, but referee Bryan Lewis<br />

awarded the goal and television replays indicated that the<br />

puck had gone in.<br />

The second period was scoreless as the Flyers threw up a<br />

tight-checking defensive curtain around Peeters, who<br />

finished the night with 35 saves.<br />

Sittler made it 3-1 early in the third period and then<br />

rookie Ray Allison scored Philadelphia's second powerplay<br />

goal of the night at 5:17. Veteran Bill Barber, who had<br />

assisted on Sittler's opening goal, set up Allison with<br />

Ranger Mikko Leinonen in the penalty box for tripping.<br />

Sittler's goals were the 26th and 27th of his 65-game<br />

playoff career, but his first for the Flyers. He had scored 32<br />

regular-season goals for the Maple Leafs and Flyers.<br />

Whalers beach Bears in Calder Cup race<br />

BINGHAMTON, N.Y. (AP ) — Paul<br />

Messier and Randy MacGregor each<br />

scored two goals, and Ray Neufeld<br />

scored the game winner with 5:59<br />

remaining last night to lead the Binghamton<br />

Whalers to a 6-4 victory over<br />

the Hershey Bears in the opening<br />

game of the American Hockey<br />

League's Calder Cup playoffs.<br />

Neufeld tipped a pass from Marty<br />

Howe through the pads of Rollie Boutin<br />

to break a' 4-4 tie and give the<br />

Southern Division champion Whalers<br />

the win.<br />

, Messier scored the game's first goal<br />

off a centering pass from Jeff<br />

Brownschidle at 5:12 into the game.<br />

Errol Rausse found Larry Skinner<br />

in front, and Lou Franceschetti<br />

scored on a power play to give<br />

Hershey a 2-1 lead after one period.<br />

MacGregor converted the rebound<br />

of Norm Barnes' point shot from a<br />

tough angle to tie the game 4:04 into<br />

the second period.<br />

Tony Cassalato's drop pass found<br />

Eddy Godin in the slot, and the left<br />

wing beat Binghamton goalie Ken<br />

Holland to the glove side for<br />

Hershey's last lead 3-2.<br />

Messier set up Don Gillen at 15:27,<br />

then scored his second goal on a giveand-go<br />

with Bob Sullivan three minutes<br />

later to give Binghamton a 4-3<br />

lead entering the final period.<br />

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12—The Daily Collegian Thursday, April 8, 1982<br />

Laxers put the freeze on Towson State, 14-1 1<br />

By PAUL ALEXANDER<br />

Collegian Sports Writer<br />

On a day that the football team was forced<br />

indoors for its spring drills because of snow and<br />

30-degree temperatures, the men's lacrosse team<br />

braved the poor conditions enroute to a convincing,<br />

14-11 win over the Tigers of Towson State.<br />

The game was moved from Jefferey Field to the<br />

snowplowed Astroturf field aside of the Indoor<br />

Sports Complex. The few fans that weren't influenced<br />

by the weatherman, jogged in place to<br />

maintain feeling in their feet as the Lions, many<br />

in shorts, involved themselves in a very heated<br />

and fast-paced contest.<br />

Sophomore attackman Gary Martin continued<br />

to be the catalyst in the Lion offense by scoring<br />

five-goals and assisting on two others. Head<br />

Coach Glenn Thiel recalled that last year after<br />

four games, Martin had yet to score a goal. This<br />

year, already, he has 15 goals and 12 assists. .<br />

"Gary (Martin) put the ball in the goal so well<br />

today," Thiel said. "He just had a super game."<br />

The Lions got on the board first when senior<br />

midfielder Brian Herzer beat Towson goaltender<br />

Mark Williams very early in the first quarter.<br />

Martin extended the Lions' lead after goaltender<br />

Joey Guterding made a fine stop at the defensive<br />

end and triggered a fastbreak that culminated in<br />

the Martin goal.<br />

Towson State was projected to be an evenly<br />

matched opponent for the Lions. This couldn't<br />

have been a more accurate prediction. At the end<br />

of the first quarter, the statistics were identical.<br />

The score was tied at three and both teams<br />

managed to get off nine shots.<br />

This trend continued until halftime. Bill Turri,<br />

Rich Russo and Jay Starapoli netted second<br />

quarter goals as the Tigers kept coming back. The<br />

Lions managed to take a 6-4 lead into the waning<br />

minutes of the half , but two quick goals by<br />

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third quarter and if not for some gutsy goaltending<br />

by Mark Williams, the Lions' 10-7 lead<br />

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Delligatti managed to beat Guterding to start<br />

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the fourth quarter and give Towson some much<br />

needed momentum. The Tigers kept some preesure<br />

on the Lions, but Guterding loomed large in<br />

the Penn State cage.<br />

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goal on a timely pass from Martin, but after<br />

another Towson penalty, Starapoli gave Penn<br />

State a 14-8 lead and quite a bit of confidence.<br />

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Towson continued to play scrappy, but it also<br />

sent a scare into the Lions by scoring three<br />

unanswered goals and all but eliminating that<br />

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Phillies, Mets try again today<br />

By RAL<strong>PH</strong> BERNSTEIN<br />

AP Sports Writer<br />

<strong>PH</strong>ILADEL<strong>PH</strong>IA (AP) - When the<br />

Philadelphia Phillies and New York Mets<br />

finally open the 1982 baseball season, it<br />

should be a different type of ball game,<br />

thanks to a new artificial surface at<br />

Veterans Stadium.<br />

The hew turf is softer, and should<br />

reverse the effect of the old one, giving<br />

the edge to the fielders instead of the<br />

hitters.<br />

It is now scheduled to get its first<br />

baseball test today (1:05 p.m. EST),<br />

following two weather-related postponements<br />

of the opening day game and<br />

festivities.<br />

Phillies president Bill Giles, who has<br />

the reputation of playing in the face of a<br />

tornado warning, bowed to the elements<br />

again yesterday. The game was snowed<br />

out Tuesday, and yesterday, the official<br />

announcement said it was called off<br />

because of unseasonable cold and wind.<br />

"It's so cold that the players wouldn't<br />

be able to hold the ball. It just didn't<br />

make any sense to play under those<br />

conditions," Giles said.<br />

Giles said the weather forecasters told<br />

him that with the wind-chill factor, it<br />

would have been below 20 degrees.<br />

"You can't ask people to sit and watch<br />

a game under those conditions," Giles<br />

said.<br />

Giles said the forecast for today was<br />

little wind with temperatures in the 40-45-<br />

degree range.<br />

The Phillies reported to the stadium<br />

yesterday and took batting practice in<br />

the hitting cages located on the locker<br />

room level. Some also ran outside to keep<br />

their legs in shape.<br />

Giles explained the change in the turf,<br />

which Pete Rose said would keep the ball<br />

from picking up speed. In previous years<br />

on the old carpet, the ball rocketed<br />

through the infield.<br />

Giles said Rose told him the new turf<br />

would produce better fielding plays and<br />

fewer groundball hits.<br />

"The padding is thicker. The fiber is<br />

more dense, more per square inch,"<br />

Giles said. "It makes it (the turf) slower<br />

and softer.<br />

"The old turf also had a grain which<br />

made it lean one way or another. The<br />

new one has no grain.<br />

"I guess we'll just have to look for<br />

better fielding plays and fewer basehits,"<br />

said the front office boss.<br />

Giles said the change wouldn't be good<br />

for Rose, who is set this season to pass<br />

Hank Aaron as the game's second best<br />

all-time hit producer. He needs 75.<br />

Rose, who will be 41 April 14, then<br />

hopes he can play long enough to pass Ty<br />

Cobb for first place in the career total hit<br />

category. Rose needs 495 to break Cobb's<br />

record, which would make 1984 the earliest<br />

he could accomplish the feat.<br />

Giles is rooting for Rose to keep getting<br />

base hits. It creates interest and brings<br />

out the fans.<br />

The two canceled games marked the<br />

first time the Phillies postponed a home<br />

opener since 1979, when rain wiped out a<br />

game with Pittsburgh.<br />

Although 40,000 tickets were sold for<br />

the opener, Giles said he expected 20,000<br />

to 30,000 today. He said the club would<br />

exchange tickets for another game for<br />

those who can't make the revised opener.<br />

The players generally don't feel the<br />

delay will affect the sharpness they attained<br />

in spring training. .<br />

Buc give up on home opener<br />

By GARY MIHOCES<br />

AP Sports Writer<br />

PITTSBURGH (AP) — With more frigid weather predicted,<br />

the Pittsburgh Pirates yesterday abandoned efforts to open<br />

their baseball season here against the Montreal Expos.<br />

That means the Pirates will travel to St. Louis for a Saturday<br />

afternoon game with the Cardinals, while the Expos will go to<br />

Philadelphia tomorrow for a game with the Phillies.<br />

The Expos-Pirates opener was originally set for 12:35 p.m.<br />

Tuesday.<br />

A spring snowstorm prompted an initial postponement until<br />

yesterday. When the freeze lingered, the Pirates pushed the<br />

start back another day until today.<br />

Then the Pirates announced yesterdaythat the today's start<br />

had been ruled out because of predicted snow and freezing rain<br />

here today.<br />

So the Pirates will travel to St. Louis -and Montreal, then<br />

return here for another try at their home opener in an April 16<br />

game with the Chicago Cubs.<br />

Despite the postponements, the Pirates and Expos both took<br />

batting practice yesterday in an indoor cage at Three'Rivers<br />

Stadium.<br />

The cage, located in a room adjacent the Pirate clubhouse, is<br />

15 feet wide. It was improved this season with synthetic turf<br />

and extra lighting.<br />

"You don't accomplish as much as you would outside, but it's<br />

better than not swinging at all," Pirate shorstop Dale Berra<br />

said after taking his swings.<br />

"That's not to say that if you didn't hit for two or three days<br />

you still wouldn't go four-for-four," Berra added, "But it just<br />

feels better. You always like to do something."<br />

Rick Rhoden, scheduled to be the Pirates starting pitcher, did<br />

some throwing in the batting cage with rookie catcher Brian<br />

Harper.<br />

• At the time, the final decision hadn't been made on whether<br />

or not the teams would try to play here today.<br />

"It does make it more difficult," said Rhoden.<br />

"You get yourself ready to pitch a game, you have the right<br />

number of days off , and then all of a sudden, you have two,<br />

three, four more off. It throws you a little out of whack, but it's<br />

no different than any of the other players," Rhoden said.<br />

The Pirates said that only tickets for the original home<br />

opener with the Expos would be honored for the April 16 game<br />

with' the Chicago Cubs. The game will be played at 12:35 p.m.<br />

instead of at night, as originally scheduled.<br />

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14—The Daily Collegian Thursday, April 8, 1982<br />

By PAUL ALEXANDER<br />

Collegian Sports Writer<br />

The selling of a program<br />

leers doing fine job promoting hockey program<br />

"The selling of a program" has been the ulterior<br />

motive of one of the fastest growing sports teams at<br />

Penn State.<br />

The ice hockey club probably has more people<br />

working behind the scenes than any other university<br />

sport. The main reason being the leers are a club and<br />

not a university sport. That means the leers are<br />

without the services of the Sports Information Department.<br />

The club has a staff of 60 people, 30 of which are<br />

very active, trying to deluge the residents of State<br />

College and University Park with hoards of leer<br />

propaganda.<br />

This requires a budget of around $8,000 that is<br />

carefully allocated by club president Joe Battista and<br />

his staff at the annual summer marketing meeting.<br />

"We plan a marketing strategy each summer,"<br />

Battista said. "We develop formal proposals and<br />

presentations for our prospective sponsors."<br />

This year's squad utilized the sponsorships of<br />

several local businesses. Pepsi-Cola of Altoona and<br />

John's Derailures footed the bill for WQWK's weekly<br />

hockey talk show with Lou Kalb and McDonald's<br />

sponsored "scoro" for every home game.<br />

Our overall strategy is to flood all possible mediums<br />

in the area," Battista said. "We try to present a<br />

sphere of excitement that is associated with the game<br />

of hockey."<br />

The leers have volunteer staff members that write<br />

and publish a weekly newsletter that is stuffed into<br />

the student-produced program before every home<br />

game. Artists design the pictures that appear in the<br />

Collegian advertisements and the flyers that are<br />

distributed on the various bulletin boards around<br />

campus. They also have writers for the radio spots.<br />

All of these promotional vices have enabled the<br />

leers to continue to grow, while the trend in collegiate<br />

sports is to cut back, according to Battista.<br />

"We're one big happy family," Battista said. "We<br />

have a common goal that unites us and all the<br />

volunteers have a great deal of fun while the majority<br />

of them are gaining good practical experience in<br />

their respective fields."<br />

Battista has also implemented a new project — an<br />

alumni fund that goes back to the men who played<br />

hockey at Penn State in the 1940's. He said it's<br />

exciting to see how enthusiastic the alumni have been<br />

and eventually, Battista would like to start an endowment.<br />

This concerted effort on behalf of the hockey club<br />

has hyped the interset in hockey in the area, while at<br />

the same time the leers have received a great deal of<br />

national recognition.<br />

The Pittsburgh Press has expressed an interest in<br />

covering the leers next season and both Hockey News<br />

and Hockey Magazine told Battista that the leers<br />

would be featured in one of their future issues.<br />

All of this has put Penn State hockey on the map.<br />

No longer will they have to scrounge for formidable<br />

opponents.<br />

In fact, next year's schedule figures to be almost<br />

masochistic, considering the NCAA Division II and<br />

III teams that will be invading the Indoor Sports<br />

Complex next season.<br />

Also, the leers will be playing in the Oswego Miller<br />

Beer Tournament, one of the biggest NCAA Division<br />

II tournaments in the East. They've also been offered<br />

an all-expense paid trip to play in Alabama against<br />

the Tide.<br />

The hockey club has another, rather lofty goal. The<br />

club wants to be a self-funding varsity team.<br />

But considering the the accomplishments of this<br />

past season (a title in the Penn State Invitational and<br />

third in theNational Club Championships in Colorado)<br />

, anything is possible.<br />

A lofty goal, yes. Out of the question, no.<br />

Householder leads Reds over Cubs<br />

CINCINNATI (AP ) - Rookie outfielder<br />

Paul Householder drove in two<br />

runs with a homer and a triple last<br />

night as the Cincinnati Reds defeated<br />

the Chicago Cubs 6-2.<br />

Householder lined a two-out homer<br />

over the right field wall in the fourth<br />

inning off starter Dickie Noles, 0-1. The<br />

right fielder, also tripled to score Johnny<br />

Bench from first in the sixth inning.<br />

Householder had two of the four hits<br />

allowed by Noles in 5 2-3 innings.<br />

Cincinnati starter Bruce Berenyi, 1-<br />

0, shut out the Cubs for six innings and<br />

got relief help from Joe Price in the<br />

seventh and Tom Hume in the eighth.<br />

Berenyi struck out five, walked four<br />

and surrendered five hits, blanking the<br />

Cubs until Tye Waller singled and<br />

scored on Bump Wills' two-out triple in<br />

the seventh inning.<br />

Astros 3, Cardinals 2<br />

HOUSTON (AP) r- Houston's<br />

Tony Scott and Luis Pujols<br />

smashed run-scoring doubles, and Joe<br />

Niekro and Joe Sambitp combined on a<br />

seven-hitter last night to lead the Astros<br />

to a 3-2 victory over the St. Louis<br />

Cardinals.<br />

Braves 6, Padres 4<br />

SAN DIEGO (AP ) Dale Murphy<br />

stroked a single, double and home run<br />

and Brett Butler added three singles<br />

and drove in two runs as the Atlanta<br />

Braves defeated the San Diego Padres<br />

6-4 yesterday.<br />

Atlanta scored three times in the<br />

third as loser John Montefusco allowed<br />

four hits and walked a batter.<br />

Lady Cagers corral two standouts<br />

Women's basketball Coach Rene Portland<br />

has successfully recruited two players<br />

to add to her nationally ranked Lady<br />

Lion team for the 1982-83 season.<br />

Patti Longenecker, a 5-8 guard from<br />

Lancaster-McCaskey High School and 5-<br />

11 forward Lorraine McGirt from St.<br />

Maria Goretti High School in Philadelphia<br />

have signed letters of intent to play<br />

with Penn State next year.<br />

According to Portland, Longenecker<br />

has great quickness and she will fit in<br />

nicely with the transition style, the Lady<br />

Lions like to play.<br />

Longenecker led McCaskey to the<br />

PIAA State championship this year by<br />

averaging 18 points.seven rebounds.and<br />

2.5 assists per game.<br />

McGirt led St.Maria Goretti to a second<br />

place finish in the Philadelphia Catholic<br />

Championships. She averaged 17.5<br />

points, 15 rebounds, and 3.5 assists per<br />

game.<br />

Mc Girt is expected to play a swing<br />

guard position with the Lady Lions.<br />

-by John Severance<br />

No surprise: baseball games off<br />

Once again, the baseball team has<br />

fallen victim to the elements as its doubleheader<br />

with Lock Haven scheduled<br />

for today has been postponed until next<br />

Tuesday, due to the frigid weather and<br />

the snow.<br />

So far this season, the Lions (1-2) have<br />

had to postpone twinbills against Mansfield<br />

and Lafayette and cancel the doubleheader<br />

with Rutgers. The second<br />

game of the twinbill against Bloomsburg<br />

last week was also called off because of<br />

rain.<br />

This weekend, Penn State is scheduled<br />

to play Mansfield on Saturday and Howard<br />

on Sunday, but the way the weather<br />

has been going, don't count on it.<br />

•by John Severance<br />

Equestrian team rides high in N.J<br />

The equestrian team competed in the<br />

Rutgers University Intercollegiate Horse<br />

Show in Old Wicke, New. Jersey on Sunday,<br />

and tied with the host Knights in<br />

reserve high-point college. Centenary<br />

College took high-point college.<br />

Lady Lion, Lisa Kozik was the show's<br />

reserve high-point rider. Penn State first<br />

places were taken by Lianne Shumaker,<br />

open horsemanship over fences and Kozik<br />

in novice horsemanship over fences<br />

and novice horsemanship. Renee Nodine<br />

took first in novice horsemanship over<br />

fences and Chris Francesconi was first in<br />

novice horsemanship.<br />

Lloyd cruises in Family Circle<br />

HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. (AP) -<br />

Chris Evert Lloyd cruised to an easy<br />

victory yesterday in the second round of<br />

the $200,000 Family Circle Magazine Cup<br />

tennis tournament, while three other<br />

seeded players fell victim to upsets.<br />

Yesterday marked the debut of Lloyd,<br />

a six-time Family Circle champion, in<br />

this year's tournament at the Sea Pines<br />

Racquet Club.<br />

In other matches, ninth-seeded Virginia<br />

Ruzici was upset in three sets by<br />

Korea's Duk Hee Lee, 7-5, 4-6, 6-4. *><br />

h<br />

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• Glasses professionally selected and fitted<br />

• Prescriptions accurately filled<br />

• Reasonable prices<br />

• Repairs and adjustments<br />

This offer good until 5 pm everyday<br />

until April 30th at<br />

New store hours<br />

Mon.-Sat. 11:00-11:00<br />

Saturday 12:00-11:00<br />

now<br />

230 Calder Way<br />

We serve Pepsi-Cola 237-8170<br />

mil<br />

ft THUR. APRILS , 8PM ONLY<br />

" 112 KERN $1.50<br />

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THIRSTY<br />

THURSDAY<br />

Get a free soft drink of any size<br />

with any purchase .over $1.50<br />

every Thursday, serving pepsi coia<br />

PEBHQ'S<br />

OPEN: Mon.-Thurs. 11 AM-12 PM<br />

Fri. & Sat.11-2:30AM<br />

Sunday 12-12 PM<br />

French 75<br />

every Thursday night<br />

at the<br />

QornQv JuounoQ<br />

100 West College<br />

U-251<br />

ARCHAEOLOGY AND THE<br />

BOOK OF MORMON<br />

TIME<br />

DATE<br />

LOCATION<br />

SPEAKER<br />

7:00 - 8:30 p.m<br />

April 8, 1982<br />

HUB Reading Room<br />

Kim Erdman. < Ph.D.<br />

* *****************<br />

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being chosen the<br />

new Nittany Lion.<br />

We knew you could<br />

do id!<br />

• Best of Luck<br />

U-103 Your brothers<br />

Cmb®<br />

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Js3Sj-'W


NBA<br />

EASTERN CONFERENCE<br />

Atlantic Division<br />

W L<br />

Last Night's Games<br />

Washington at Indiana<br />

SIXERS at New Jersey<br />

Chicago at Cleveland<br />

Atlanta at Detroit<br />

Kansas City at San Antonio<br />

Utah at Dallas<br />

Denver at Golden State<br />

Today's Qames<br />

New York (Jonas 1-8) at <strong>PH</strong>ILLIES (Carlton 13-4)<br />

St. Louis (Mura 5-14) at Houston (Knepper 9-5), (n]<br />

Only games scheduled<br />

Pet GB<br />

Tomorrow's Qames<br />

y-Boston<br />

58 17 773<br />

New York at Chicago<br />

y-SIXERS<br />

53 22 707 5<br />

San Francisco at Cincinnati, (n)<br />

New Jersey<br />

39 36 52C 19<br />

Houston at Atlanta, (n)<br />

Washington<br />

38 37 .507 20<br />

Tonight's Qames<br />

Montreal at <strong>PH</strong>ILLIES (n)<br />

New York<br />

32 43 427 20 Boston at New York<br />

San Diego at Los Angeles, (n)<br />

Central Division<br />

Portland at Phoenix<br />

Seattle at San Diego<br />

Only games scheduled<br />

x-Mllwaukee<br />

53 23 697<br />

Atlanta<br />

38 37 .507 14'A<br />

Detroit<br />

35 40 .467 17V4<br />

Indiana<br />

33 42 440 19VS<br />

National League<br />

American League<br />

Chicago<br />

29 46 ,387 23Vi<br />

Eastern Division<br />

Cleveland<br />

1S BO .200 37 Vi<br />

Eastern Division<br />

W .. L .Pet GB Baltimore<br />

WESTERN CONFERENCE<br />

Chicago<br />

1 0 1.000<br />

Boston<br />

Midwest Division<br />

St. Louis<br />

1 0 1.000<br />

Cleveland<br />

Montreal<br />

0 0 .000 Vi Detroit<br />

1 New York<br />

0 0 .000 % Milwaukee<br />

<strong>PH</strong>ILLIES<br />

0 0 .000 Vi New York<br />

PIRATES<br />

0 0 .000 Va Toronto<br />

San Antonio<br />

Denver<br />

Houston<br />

Kansas City<br />

Dallas<br />

Utah<br />

44<br />

43<br />

43<br />

26<br />

25<br />

22<br />

31<br />

32<br />

33<br />

49<br />

51<br />

53<br />

Pacific Division<br />

y-Los Angeles , 52 24<br />

y-Seattle 49 26<br />

Golden State 42 33<br />

Phoenix 42 33<br />

Portland 38 37<br />

San Diego 16 60<br />

x-cllnched division title,<br />

y-cllnched playoff spots.<br />

Tuesday's Games<br />

Atlanta 106, New York 104<br />

Washington 94, Cleveland 85<br />

Milwaukee 122, Boston 116<br />

SIXERS 117, Chicago 104<br />

Los Angeles 108, Houston 97<br />

Utah 129, Dallas 114<br />

Portland 136, Denver 122<br />

Seattle 102, Phoenix 91<br />

Golden State 110, San Diego 96<br />

587<br />

573<br />

566<br />

.347<br />

329<br />

.293<br />

684<br />

,653<br />

.560<br />

560<br />

507<br />

211<br />

1Vi<br />

18<br />

19 V5<br />

22<br />

ZVi<br />

9V4<br />

9V4<br />

13Vi<br />

36<br />

Atlanta<br />

Los Angeles<br />

Cincinnati<br />

Houston<br />

San Diego<br />

San Francisco<br />

Western Division<br />

1<br />

1<br />

0<br />

0<br />

0<br />

0<br />

Tuesday's Games<br />

Montreal at PIRATES, ppd., snow<br />

New York at <strong>PH</strong>ILLIES, ppd., snow<br />

Los Angeles 4, San Francisco 3<br />

St.Louls 14, Houston 3<br />

Atlanta 1, San Diego 0<br />

Only games scheduled<br />

Yesterday's Games<br />

Montreal at PIRATES, ppd., snow<br />

Atlanta at San Diego<br />

New York at <strong>PH</strong>ILLIES, ppd., cold<br />

Chicago at Cincinnati, (n)<br />

St.Louls at Houston, (n)<br />

San Francisco at Los Angeles, (n)<br />

a<br />

0<br />

1.000 -<br />

1.000 -<br />

1 .000 1<br />

1 .000 1<br />

1 .000 1<br />

.000 1<br />

Oakland<br />

Seattle<br />

Chicago<br />

Texas<br />

California<br />

Kansas City<br />

Minnesota .<br />

W. .. L<br />

1 0<br />

0 0<br />

0 0<br />

0 0<br />

0 ' 0<br />

0 0<br />

0 0<br />

Western Division<br />

1 0<br />

1 0<br />

0 , 0<br />

0 0<br />

0 1<br />

0 1<br />

0 1<br />

Tuesday's Games<br />

Toronto at Detroit, ppd., cold<br />

Texas at New York, ppd., snow<br />

Boston at Chicago, ppd., cold<br />

Cleveland at Milwaukee, ppd., cold<br />

Seattle 11, Minnesota 7<br />

Oakland 3, California 2, 11 Innings<br />

Yesterday's Games<br />

Boston at Chicago, ppd., snow<br />

Toronto at Detroit, ppd, snow<br />

Cleveland at Milwaukee, ppd., snow<br />

Kansas City at Baltimore, ppd, cold<br />

Seattle at Minnesota, (n)<br />

California at Oakland, (n)<br />

Today's Qames<br />

Seattle (Nelson 3-1) at Minnesota (Havens 3-6)<br />

.Pct...GB<br />

1.000 -<br />

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.000 Vi<br />

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. - -«¦ " ¦«s«Sit-. -«rVrC - -<br />

Boys of Summer ?<br />

with the season opener against the Montreal Expos postponed for the second straight day<br />

Pittsburgh Pirates, (from left) Brian Harper, Jim Smith, Jason Thompson and Bill Robinson jog<br />

Stadium<br />

AP Laserphoto<br />

beacuse of snow, members of the<br />

around the outfield at Three Rivers<br />

The American Nuclear Society<br />

The Nuclear Engineering & Physics Departments<br />

Present<br />

DR. EUGENE P. WIGNER<br />

Nobel Laureate, Physics<br />

MONDAY, APRIL 12, 1982<br />

3:00 pm — The Principle of Determinism and- its Relation to the<br />

Quantum Mechanical Measurement Process. 445 Davey<br />

7:30 pm The History of Nuclear Power<br />

112 Walker Dldg<br />

u-oie<br />

Tonight at the SRCUJCRV<br />

ft€D ftOSC<br />

COTILLION<br />

AND<br />

GIN & TONIC<br />

SPCCIAIS<br />

SUZI' G UUong tggrolls nightly 10-2<br />

«E<br />

THE WORLD IS YOUR CAMPUS<br />

^c<br />

L-


16—The Daily Collegian Thursday, April 8. 1982<br />

Assembly restructure suggested<br />

By CAROLYN PIUCCI<br />

Collegian Staff Writer<br />

The president of the Undergraduate Student Government's<br />

Academic Assembly said he plans to propose a total restructuring<br />

of the assembly in an attempt to give more services to<br />

undergraduates at the University.<br />

Chris Hopwood said he will present proposals to solve both<br />

internal and external assembly problems at the April 21<br />

meeting, and he will also ask for input from assembly members<br />

on the proposals.<br />

' "Everything is up for grabs, including the name — not for<br />

cosmetic reasons but for a new direction to give students who<br />

will be served," Hopwood said.<br />

"If we are changing everything we might as well change the<br />

name because students identify with a name, and it says<br />

something about the organization," he said.<br />

In order to best serve the students, Hopwood said,"the<br />

internal problems need to solved first before we can look<br />

outward."<br />

The assembly is too flexible right now in its policies concerning<br />

transition from old to new officers, committee responsibilites<br />

and other duties, Hopwood said. The new assembly will<br />

need more stucture and guidelines, he said.<br />

"Next year the assembly will be intensely student oriented;<br />

we will still be issue oriented, but we need more attention on<br />

students," he said.<br />

The assembly needs to offer more services to students,<br />

Hopwood said, so they can identify with the assembly and with<br />

what it can do for them. In order to have more projects to serve<br />

students, the assembly also needs to increase its resource base,<br />

he said.<br />

To have such an increase the assembly needs to be recognized<br />

as legislative body in USG, rather than a department of<br />

USG, Hopwood said. The assembly should have its own allotment<br />

of USG funds rather than asking the USG senate for<br />

money, he said.<br />

"Basically it is an identity issue. I do not feel we should have<br />

to go before the USG senate because we are also a legislative<br />

body," Hopwood said.<br />

The proposals, Hopwood said, should not scare any students,<br />

but should instead awaken students to the fact that the assembly<br />

has changed.<br />

In other business, assembly members accepted a proposal<br />

allowing student council presidents of the 10 colleges to appoint<br />

a full-time representative to the assembly.<br />

Professor speaks on Guatemalan killings<br />

By CARRIE STONE<br />

Collegian Staff Writer<br />

American foreign policy in Guatemala should have been<br />

established in the 50s, a University professor said last night.<br />

"Time is running out if it hasn't already run out," Charles D.<br />

Ameringer, professor of Latin American history, told members<br />

of Americans for Democratic Action.<br />

The Guatemalan government turned back to the right wing<br />

after the Central Intelligence Agency overthrew it in 1954,<br />

Ameringer said. If the CIA was going to intervene against the<br />

left, it should also intervene against the right, he said.<br />

Also.Rios Montt , the general who has taken over in Guatemala,<br />

may be able to moderate the established order, Ameringer<br />

said.<br />

Reuben Sairs, a member of Friends of Central American<br />

Liberty, said he thinks Montt may be able to slow down the<br />

indiscriminate killings, but he does not see any substantial<br />

change in the near future.<br />

However, trying to find information about what is happening<br />

in Guatemala is difficult, Sairs said.<br />

"There seems to be a real blackout at work here," he said.<br />

Montt spent the last four years teaching in a church school,<br />

but Sairs said that will not necessarily make the situation any<br />

better.<br />

"I refuse to recognize any military takeover as a progressive<br />

force," he said.<br />

Sairs said his personal interest in Guatemala began with a<br />

friend who had escaped the death squads. His friend was a<br />

Pentecostal Christian and refused to join the squads. As a<br />

result, they tried three times to kill him.<br />

The killings don't happen "wild west style;" people who are<br />

leaders are chosen by the government for assassination, he<br />

said.<br />

Anyone — it does not matter if they say they are communists<br />

or Sunday school teachers — may be seen as a potential threat<br />

to the government, Sairs said.<br />

Amnesty International has not been able to find any political<br />

prisoners in Guatemala because most do not live through the<br />

arrest, he said.<br />

"We think of assassination of political leaders," Ameringer<br />

said.<br />

He said in Guatemala, however, murder is used on all levels<br />

as a political device.<br />

*<br />

-"*< *;, S^-<br />

Ll


• Beta Alpha Psi accounting honor society will meet<br />

at 7 tonight in 209 S. Human Development.<br />

• Applications for Summer Orientation Leaders are<br />

available in 135 Boucke or at the HUB Desk. Applications<br />

must be returned to 135 Boucke by April 12.<br />

• The Phi Psi 500 will take place at noon on April 17.<br />

Register on the HUB ground floor between 9 a.m. and 4<br />

p.m.<br />

• The canoe division of the Penn State Outing Club<br />

will sponsor a rolling session at 9:30 tonight in McCoy<br />

Natatorium. This is the last indoor session of the year.<br />

Beginners are welcome.<br />

campus briefs<br />

» The Penn State Planners Association will have its Monday. The office will be closed today and tomorrow • Mechtild Witte, 221 Atherton Hall , University police that his bicycle was<br />

monthly meeting at 7 tonight in 216 Willard. Anyone to prepare for the move,<br />

told University Police Services that her missing from the Snyder Hall area on<br />

interested in planning is welcome.<br />

bookbag was missing from the first floor Tuesday,<br />

• The Society of Physics Students will hold a free • The HUB Craft Centre is holding registration for of Pattee on Tuesday.<br />

The value of the bicycle is estimated at<br />

tutoring session at 7 tonight in 105 Osmond Laboratory, second session craft courses and/or membership from The value of the bookbag is estimated $100, police said,<br />

noon to 5 p.m. weekdays until April<br />

at $90, University police said.<br />

,., • Amnesty """""" J International ""]" "«"«"«" will »* meet "«•-- at °_<br />

8 » tonight<br />

""" _<br />

at the<br />

Wesley Foundation, Locust and East ."«• College<br />

«"¦" ;"^ • David McNeal , 507 W. College Ave.,<br />

F0UndatlOn • L°CUSt Lane 3nd EaSt C°"ege<br />

Sue Avenue.<br />

• Volunteers to book musical talent and run the .Dave Becker, 208 Geary,<br />

told<br />

told Uni- , Vnivf »«* Police lḥat cMh }<br />

n&< a<br />

sound system are needed for the Explazaganza Summer versity police that his headphones were<br />

wallet and glasses were missing from a<br />

• The Student Assistance Center is sponsoring a Series of free concerts and movies. Sign up in 305 Kern, missing from his room on Tuesday. * oc * ed locker at Whlte Bmlding on Tues "<br />

study skills session during 6th period today in 319 HUB.<br />

The value of the<br />

¦<br />

headphones is esti-<br />

^ mis items gre va]ued © University garden plots can be obtained from 1 to 4 mated at *<br />

50 - Pollce said - pouce said<br />

• The Independent Study by Correspondence Office, weekday afternoons until April 16 at 305 Kern. Student<br />

now located in 3 Shields, is moving to 128 Mitchell on identification is required.<br />

• Jefferey Bellinger 320 Snyder told<br />

by Joe Klein<br />

• Four assistant professors in the College of • C. Gregory Knight, professor of geography,<br />

Education have received $400 awards from the participated in a NATO Advanced Study Institute<br />

college's Alumni Society Research Fund. Stephen at Chateau Bonas, France. Focusing on environ-<br />

N. Calculator, James W. Halle and Philip M. ment impact assessment, he discussed aspects of<br />

Prinz from the division of special education and research at the University dealing with the use of<br />

communication disorders and Lee F. Goldsberry coal and its impact on the environment and<br />

from the division of curriculum and instruction society. He was also recently appointed to the<br />

received the awards.<br />

editorial board of Energy and Society, a new<br />

journal issued by Sage Publications.<br />

• Thomas F. Magner, professor of Slavic languages<br />

has been awarded both a Fulbright Re- , Henry j Hermanowicz, dean of the College<br />

search Fellowship and an IREX grant to carry on of Educa( im< has been appointed by Governor<br />

research on urban dialects in Yugoslavia. He has Thornburgh to a committee composed of a select<br />

published extensively on Yugoslav dialectology group of educators. The state's Advisory Commitand<br />

sociohnguistics and will conduct the research tee on Block Grants will assist the Department of<br />

from January to June, 1983.<br />

Education in planning for the switch to block<br />

' , grant funding for education as required by the<br />

«,! a T e f ^anelos research associate in the<br />

federal Education Consolidation and Im-<br />

Office of the Dean of the College of Engineering, pr0vement Act of August 1981. Twenty-nine edurece.ved<br />

the 1982 Young Researcher Award The cationa, programs and separately funded areas<br />

$500 award was presented by the Research and wffl be co£so.idated into one block grant under the<br />

Theory Division of the Association for Educatioact<br />

nal Communications and Technology for the best<br />

report of a research project in 1982.<br />

• Associate Provost Richard Chait has been<br />

• Ralph L. Webb, professor of mechanical named to a two-year post by the Association of<br />

engineering, has been named a Fellow of the Governing Boards (AGB). He will direct a $200,-<br />

American Society of Mechanical Engineers. 000 study of "The Role of Trustees in Academic<br />

Program and Personnel Planning" from January<br />

1982 until December 1983.<br />

• Deno G. Thevaos, professor of education and<br />

psychology and a University faculty member<br />

since 1947, recently retired with emeritus status.<br />

He devoted the major part of his career to<br />

developing systems of instruction. He has acted<br />

as head of the educational psychology department,<br />

was active in the University Faculty Senate<br />

and was a member of and chaired for two years<br />

the committee on scholarsip selection for the<br />

Renaissance Scholarship Fund.<br />

• Archibald Warnock III, doctoral candidate in<br />

astronomy at the University, has received the<br />

Lowell Lecture Prize from the Lowell Observatory<br />

in Flagstaff, Ariz., in recognition of his series<br />

of lectures focusing on applying statistics techniques<br />

to astronomical problems.<br />

• Kenneth R. Graves, assistant professor of<br />

art, has received a $4,000 grant from the Pennsylvania<br />

Council on the Arts. He will use the award to<br />

photogra^'i popular tourist places in Pennsylvania<br />

this summer.<br />

• Delia Durant, G. Thomas Tait and Karl K.<br />

Schwenzfeier have been named to committees of<br />

the National Collegiate Athletic Association. The<br />

committees include women's fencing, men's volleyball<br />

and men's gymnastics, respectively. All<br />

three are faculty members of the College of<br />

Health, Physical Education and Recreation.<br />

• Anthony Cutler, professor of art history, was<br />

awarded a Senior Research Scholarship by Corpus<br />

Christi College of Cambridge University,<br />

England. He will use the scholarship to write a<br />

book on the techniques of medieval ivory-carving.<br />

• Joseph H. Dahmus, professor emeritus of<br />

medieval history, is the author of a recently<br />

published book, ."Seven Medieval Historians."<br />

• Linda W. Craighead, assistant professor of<br />

education and co-author of a study titled "Behavior<br />

Therapy and Pharmacotherapy of Obesity" is<br />

the recipient of the 1981 New Researcher Award<br />

from the Association for the Advancement of<br />

Behavior Therapy.<br />

• Howard F. Kingsbury, professor of architectural<br />

engineering, was named a Fellow of the<br />

American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and<br />

Air-Conditioning at the society's annual meeting<br />

in January. It is the highest membership award.<br />

• The Association of American Colleges has<br />

elected Stanley F. Paulson, dean of the College of<br />

The Liberal Arts, as vice chairman of its board of<br />

directors.<br />

• Howard Palmer, professor of energy science<br />

and associate dean of the Graduate School, recently<br />

presented an invited paper at the NATO<br />

Conference on Soot Combustion Systems in Obernai,<br />

France. While in Europe, Palmer also lectured<br />

at the University of Gottingen, West<br />

Germany.<br />

• Three University faculty members received<br />

The Faculty Scholar Medal for Outstanding<br />

Achievement. They are: Richard J. Santen, professor<br />

of medicine and chief of endocrinology at<br />

the University's Hershey Medical Center; L. Eric<br />

Cross, professor of electrical engineering and<br />

associate director of the Materials Research<br />

Laboratory ; and Michael Mahoney, professor of<br />

psychology.<br />

• John S. Boyle, professor emeritus of . plant<br />

pathology and faculty member at the University<br />

since 1949, retired recently.<br />

HOUSE FOR SUBLET. Summer<br />

term with fall option. Great location.<br />

Reasonably priced. Lovely atmosphere,<br />

big back and front yard,<br />

spacious living quarters.Free parking<br />

for 4 cars. Call 23C-1959 or 234-<br />

4663<br />

SUMMER SUBLET-IN town, five<br />

minutes from HUB-own room-one<br />

roommate-$117/m .-234-3666<br />

PAT'S TYPING SERVICE. Versatile,<br />

very qualified, reasonable, experienced<br />

resumes, letters, term papers,<br />

dissertations. Call 237-2461<br />

BEAUTIFY YOUR RESIDENCE. Earn<br />

beautiful soilfree plants. Have a<br />

plant party. Call Kris 355-8781<br />

FOR BETTER MUSIC at lower rates<br />

at your next party, phone Entertainment<br />

Unlimited at 237-0708<br />

ThuRsdUy<br />

PircheR<br />

PARTY<br />

OpEN 4 pM<br />

"DmNk ANd DROWN!"<br />

118 S. GARNER<br />

TAKEOUTS TOO<br />

COMMONSPLACE ' COFFEE-<br />

HOUSE/ GRADUATE Student Association<br />

needs volunteers: Book<br />

musical acts, set/up and run sound<br />

system 1982/83 year. Call GSA, 865;<br />

4211<br />

ENJOY OUTDOOR CONCERTS on a<br />

summer night? It's an explazaganza!<br />

GSA needs volunteers: book<br />

musical acts, set/up and run sound<br />

system. Must be here summer 1982.<br />

Call GSA, 865-4211 ASAP<br />

INFORMATION ON ALASKAN and<br />

overseas employment. Excellent Income<br />

potential. Call (312) 741-7994<br />

Extension 7675<br />

INTERESTED IN WORKING in a<br />

summer camp with mentally retarded<br />

children and young adults?<br />

Camp Shenandoah, Winchester,<br />

Virginia may be the place. Write or<br />

call: c/o Concord, Yellow Spring,<br />

WV 26865; 304/856-3404<br />

SUMMER EMPLOYMENT WITH a<br />

National political consulting firm,<br />

specializing In media and survey<br />

research. Learn and do most aspects<br />

of our business. Start at<br />

summer break and work until fall<br />

semester or until November. Experience<br />

and degrees welcome, but not<br />

required. Good typing skills necessary.<br />

Call collect 717/236-1980.<br />

The Cromer & Young Group, Inc.<br />

SUMMERWORK PANIC? WANT to<br />

save $2000&up, travel, gain valuable<br />

experience. Hardworkers earn blg$<br />

call 2374668<br />

WANTED - SECRETARY, RECEP- """* °^°"<br />

or six exquisite (bridge-playing)<br />

women to form late night wine and<br />

ty) 4/9 return 4/11. Call between 5- LOST: BEIGE LIGHTWEIGHT Jacket<br />

bridge club. Reply Personals<br />

7pm 234-2928<br />

at Phi Who's beach party on Saturday<br />

night. Call BIN 865-7943<br />

Answers<br />

(to yesterday's puzzle)<br />

AAAALLRIGHT! WOMANS MUD<br />

wrestling at the Pink Elephant. Support<br />

the March of Dimes by participating<br />

April 18th. Register at the<br />

HUB April 12th - 18th. For Info, call<br />

238-9998<br />

ABOUT RESUMES .... Isn't It<br />

about time you put yours In the<br />

hands of the professionals at Collegian<br />

Production? Room 7 Carnegie<br />

Building, 10a.m. - 5p.m.<br />

HI POTS. Bye Pots. Face<br />

HOUSE FOR SUMMER sublet four<br />

bedroom, two baths, yard, parking,<br />

three blocks to campus. Cheap.<br />

Call 238-5711 or 237-8461<br />

IN SEARCH OF: female dorm con<br />

tract 82/83. Please help out-call 865<br />

6134<br />

MAGICIANS NEEDED TO perform<br />

May 15 at Hersheypark. Contact<br />

Lion Ambassadors, 863-1520<br />

MARK, HAPPY 22ND Birthday!<br />

Have a good one on me. Love Cindy<br />

MUSICIANS: OPPORTUNITY<br />

KNOCKS! Last Spring's hottest<br />

new band Is reforming. Guitarists,<br />

keyboardists call now 234-0754<br />

NEIL: HAPPY BIRTHDAY. Hope you<br />

blow up. Hope you blow up real<br />

good. .<br />

NEIL: HAPPY BIRTHDAY! Did I<br />

leave my edible underwear in your<br />

apt.? Reply Joyce.<br />

NEIL: NO! PLEASE! Not the Stephen<br />

Bishop album! Please! Oh<br />

God no! We'd better stop<br />

JAN AND SUE, Congratulations. WE NEED INFORMATION for docu-<br />

Hope AOPi realizes what great girls mentary on IRAs. If you have one,<br />

they're getting. Guess who. please contact Kathy, 234-4900<br />

PARES SPORTSWEAR - TSHIRTS,<br />

baseball hats, visors, golf shirts,<br />

Jerseys, trophies. Best price! Call<br />

Cliff 237-9687<br />

PREGNANT? NEED HELP? For free<br />

pregnancy testing and confidential<br />

counseling, call Birthright 237-3163<br />

AVe<br />

FOUND to - A BROWN wallet belong-<br />

Scott G f^00"*9*<br />

Available ^ at HUB desk<br />

FOUND FRIDAY APRIL 2 in Rec<br />

RAH! RAH! TRYOUTS- (final) No.<br />

17. Made eye contact while I was<br />

hooping and you were practicing. FOUND, SOFTBALL GLOVE in I.M.<br />

Do you believe in love at first sight? Fields by Rose Gardens. To Identify<br />

I do and I am. Would like to meet and claim call 865-0777<br />

you. Reply personals. P.M.<br />

m(^g^m^^<br />

REGGAE! <strong>PH</strong>ILADEL<strong>PH</strong>IA'S OWN<br />

^^^ am^s^m<br />

"House of Assembly" will be at the<br />

HH IH^KI ^L^HI^H^D<br />

Scorpion on April 22-23. Reggae!<br />

^H^^BJIkLcJLfi^HflH<br />

RIDE A LION Ambassador's bus to<br />

Penn State day at Hersheypark, May LOST: LONG HAIRED B/W cat. Lost<br />

15th, $15. Buy tickets now in HUB for two weeks in W. College area.<br />

and Dorms Call Joe 237-0409<br />

"ROCKERS" THE SCORPION pre- LOST PAIR OF glasses in brown<br />

sents MCA recording artists "The and tan case. Reward. Please call<br />

Iron City Houserockers" April 8th. 865-4129<br />

Be There<br />

LOST: TWO BASEBALL gloves near<br />

SUMMER O.L.'S WANTED: Going to Pattee on Friday, 3/2. Please call<br />

school this summer? Meet the new- 865-7015 for reward.<br />

comers. Become an Orientation , n~-r nine x-r i^r.n -r<br />

LOST 3/26 AT KDR Z<br />

Leader Aonliratlon-? In<br />

- Tan cordur °y<br />

i? 3 nl' A Pplioatlons available in<br />

¦us stadium coat w/dark brown furry<br />

BoucKe<br />

)|n)ng] Ca|| Donna 865.7054<br />

SUMMER STORAGE AVAILABLE:<br />

In our clean, containerized warehouse:<br />

options from Do-lt-Yourself<br />

to complete pickup and delivery.<br />

Packing Material also available.<br />

Stop in at Centre Carriers, 2580<br />

Clyde Avenue or call 238-6751<br />

WE DELIVER HELIUM balloons for<br />

Easter, birthdays or any special<br />

occasion. Truly Yours 238-4619<br />

SHANDYGAFF<br />

proudly present<br />

*«¦ GOLDEN OI<br />

H_ 'i: ___j '8 di9 " al Wa,Ch C ' a ' m at<br />

OLDIES<br />

with Ray Anthony<br />

Mon. & Thurs. Nights<br />

In New Orleans its Bourbon Street __ fi _l<br />

In State College it's Calder Way J§88i<br />

Dancing Nightly<br />

at 9 prri<br />

JODIFACE. SORRY I can't be there WILDWOOD HOUSE CLOSE to (A.) GOLD! CLASS rings, coins,<br />

for your birthday, but I'm sure you beach all Summer. Females call weddipg bands, neckchains, etc.<br />

and Penelope will find something Sue 238-3408. Hurry! Under Paying to 100% of gold market!<br />

fun to do! Happy 21st. Yours, Kap- $200/month<br />

Don't sell before you see me! Buying<br />

face<br />

over 10 years. Paying cash! Will<br />

pick up. 466-7713 Boalsburg<br />

ON THIS GREAT day of your birth, t/BBPSP^WW^IUBBA<br />

we'd like to thank you for your<br />

^^ HHjT^lU WI EJBHBHI GOLD AND SILVER. Will pick up.<br />

"girth."Love, The Bad News Goo MHHMJHIBHHI<br />

Leland Enterprises 238-2553<br />

Foo Boos ._.. ,. . .,,..<br />

" N S ICE HOCKEY GOALIE equipment,<br />

ARp p?!m £I!pn used. Call Roger 234-9917<br />

F0R FnB THRFP THREE HAY? DAYS AT wo N0 rHAPRF CHARGE<br />

Give a Bagel<br />

to your<br />

Sweetheart<br />

y^J'<br />

immmi<br />

130 West College Ave. Phone 238-8055<br />

'<br />

LIONEL AND AMERICAN Flyer toy<br />

trains & accessories. Clean your<br />

attic at Easter! Call 238-3651, evenings<br />

abortion<br />

free pregnancy<br />

testing<br />

confidential<br />

counseling<br />

WOMEN'S HEALTH<br />

SERVICES, INC.<br />

d<br />

(412)562-1900<br />

0"c'iW'i"' l,"l< :¦ '¦ • " ¦<br />

, Collegian<br />

• Policy<br />

Ads must be prepaid<br />

Changes cannot be made after the first insertion<br />

Cash refunds will only be given for ads cancelled<br />

vouchers will be qiven after this time.<br />

The Daily Collegian will only be responsible for one day's incorrect insertion. Please come to room 1


18—The Daily Collegian Thursday, April 8, 1982<br />

This Thursday's Special<br />

soft-serve flavor at<br />

Dairy Queen will be<br />

PEANUT BUTTER<br />

brazier<br />

230 Calder Way<br />

WE SERVE PEPSI<br />

A<br />

AAAA¥<br />

"We Want tkt JCion! "<br />

-that s what they 11 say<br />

i .oy<br />

Try our magnificent Mexican<br />

corn soup and chips for only 69'<br />

FEDWS<br />

Open: Mon-Thurs 11 a.m -12a.m<br />

Fri. S Sat. 11-2:30 a.m.<br />

Sunday 12-12 a.m.<br />

'<br />


peanuts<br />

( OKAY,TROOPS, HERE'S<br />

V OUR PLAN... ><br />

^ V^. " " • - -^<br />

doonesburv<br />

GOOD WHY, HELLO,<br />

EVENING, MR. CORCORAN.<br />

J MARK.<br />

WHAT ARE YOU<br />

I j POIN&HERE?<br />

\ (1% I/—<br />

. cb JC—&±> W<br />

1<br />

UJE'LL SEPARATE NOW,<br />

BUT WE'LL RENPEZV0U5<br />

IN EXACTLY ONE HOUR<br />

BY THAT 616 ROCK<br />

PRDSPEaiNE .OF YES. SIR. MR.<br />

COURSE. I WAS KIHGWENT<br />

SUPPOSED W MEET OVERT) THE<br />

THE PRESIDENT HERE CLASS OF'42<br />

SEEN HIM AMUNP? TENT.<br />

C^l^^Jl<br />

^^^ lM0h<br />

a<br />

WHAT<br />

m 3<br />

3<br />

shoe<br />

Mwmw?) VErXW.w^pinriM& ow ANP JUST<br />

s<br />

/I?<br />

^£T~*<br />

A MDPEL?! 'J ACEIOTTYIWNSHOW Iuuff 1$ ME. Ii<br />

RX CWOTYAHPWASKH?.! TOUNG?<br />

«<br />

HIM TO BE N IT. _«A_—<br />

^<br />

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K<br />

//<br />

r^SB<br />

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'fa m<br />

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HESAI<strong>PH</strong>EWNTEP<br />

TO' UWC7H5 OLDER<br />

CLASSESFIRST , BE-<br />

CAUSETHEYTENPW<br />

TURN IN EARLIER..<br />

MA J<br />

fl£l6NE£<br />

©VERMIS<br />

NO, OLIVIER, THAT<br />

WOULPN'T BE CALLEP<br />

A"R0CKEZV0US"!<br />

..AWI.DONT<br />

WANT SOME MJ60T<br />

CRUMMY PLAQUE! IT.WAim..<br />

I WANT MY WHAT COLOR.?<br />

NAME CHISELLED /<br />

IN MARBLE! ^.<br />

B<br />

/8l<br />

•wf. _<br />

© Jtttf eiBOn CommurittMlonB, Inc. 1982<br />

Distributed by Tribune Company Syndicate,<br />

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•<br />

^.^^<br />

-. CTt. — "- ".-<br />

-sgj^yjra-<br />

t_^_5_^S§<br />

Across<br />

1 Twig broom 40<br />

6 "— Brute?<br />

41<br />

10 Nine inches<br />

42<br />

14 Famous violin maker<br />

43<br />

15 So<br />

44<br />

16 Sea eagle<br />

45<br />

17 Cole porter tune (3 wds.) 46<br />

20 Goddess of discord<br />

46<br />

21 Words of laughter<br />

50<br />

22 TV's Mr. Grant<br />

53<br />

23 Opposite of ant.<br />

55<br />

24 Capital of Yemen<br />

56<br />

25 Record<br />

57<br />

26 Aid<br />

60<br />

28 Roasting rod<br />

61<br />

30 Mr. Whitney<br />

62<br />

33 Engaged In conflict (2 wds.) 63<br />

35 James Bond's school<br />

64<br />

36 Greek letters<br />

65<br />

37 Gershwin tune (3 wds.)<br />

Down 31<br />

1 "— In Arms<br />

2 Grinding agent<br />

3 Midwestern locale (2 wds.)<br />

4 Mayberry's town drunk<br />

5 Opposite of max.<br />

6 Mr. Allen<br />

7 Harvard club. (3 wds.)<br />

8 Musical instrument<br />

9 Exploit<br />

10 Famous doctor<br />

11 Substitute sovereigns (2 wds.)<br />

12 Miss Jackson<br />

13 —do-well<br />

18 Partner of this<br />

19 Horse's pace<br />

24 Balkaa native<br />

25 Flintstones' pet<br />

27 1934 heavyweight champ<br />

29 Miss Negri<br />

/Mill<br />

I U 'II<br />

( ( I l/l<br />

IIMI I<br />

I MIM<br />

/ I I H I<br />

32<br />

33<br />

34<br />

35<br />

36<br />

38<br />

39<br />

44<br />

19<br />

Crossword<br />

by Ccluicird Julius<br />

1 f ( I I t<br />

I" ' M ¦<br />

I ( H II<br />

I<br />

1<br />

' MIM < i in<br />

Turkish title<br />

Palm drink<br />

Up-<br />

TV network<br />

Ballet skirt<br />

Suffer: Scot.<br />

Garden tools<br />

Cart<br />

Terry-Thomas feature<br />

Of bees<br />

Ancient kingdom<br />

Proofreader s mark<br />

Statistical devices<br />

Wings<br />

War vehicle<br />

Part of a musical piece<br />

Watch over<br />

Block heads<br />

Nuisances<br />

Alter<br />

Suffix: filament<br />

45 Rhett Butler's closing word<br />

47 flowed<br />

49 Chessmen<br />

51 Warn<br />

52 Mexican money<br />

53 "I smell —"<br />

54 Soccer great<br />

55 Son of Issac<br />

56<br />

58<br />

59<br />

GOOD MoRNJ/Mfe<br />

HiNKLiY.<br />

— CjOOO MORW'N 67<br />

Boss .<br />

Common after-shave scent<br />

Words of understanding<br />

On the ocean<br />

Burial place<br />

What 22-Across does<br />

Old TV show, "— and Gladys<br />

Burden<br />

Wine's partner-<br />

Baseball city (abbr.)<br />

Durochar's nickname<br />

HMII<br />

' I f / I I 60DD<br />

'<br />

( I M0f?N/N/6j<br />

'H/AUaev.<br />

I , I I<br />

I I l t I<br />

/IIMI<br />

I M ' I 1<br />

I I I ( I I - Moiw itiG ' Boa<br />

The Daily Collegian<br />

Thursday, April 8<br />

(answers In tomorrow's Classifieds]<br />

©Edward Julius Collegiate CW79-21<br />

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30%<br />

Quid ren *s<br />

Books<br />

and Bibles<br />

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McAllister Building<br />

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20—The Daily Collegian Thursday, April 8, 1982<br />

Specialist predicts beef price increase<br />

By JIM WICKIZER<br />

of months," Moore said. "Cattle prices have been have reached their peak and should begin decreasing in<br />

Collegian Staff Writer<br />

getting stronger, not weaker."<br />

the next couple of months and stay low through the<br />

He said there are two major reasons for the predicted summer.<br />

As the Lenten season comes to a close, consumers — priCe increase. "All meat prices are going to decrease by as much as<br />

some of whom may have given up meat for the season - First, beef supplies will remain steady in the next 20 to 30 cents a pound," he said,<br />

can expect to pay slightly more for all types of beef in couple of months, so there won't be a surplus of beef on . IGA has started a new program where its meats will<br />

the next couple of months, the University Consumer the market. be 30 to 40 cents a pound less than anyone in the region,<br />

Marketing Specialist said. Second, beef will be in greater demand because a Trombley said.<br />

Harold E. Neigh, who had predicted in January that decrease in pork supplies has, in turn, decreased the The consumer will benefit greatly from the new<br />

beef prices would decrease slightly over the next couple competition pork was giving beef. program, he said.<br />

of months, said yesterday consumers could expect a "Total meat supplies are down 1 to 2 percent from last "Our profit will not be as high, but we'll make it up in<br />

slight increase in beef prices. year," Moore said. "I can't see the supply increasing volume," Trombley.said.<br />

"I see a very little change in retail prices," he said, enough to pull the price of beef down." Jim Carey, assistant manager of the Riverside Mar-<br />

"there's just not that big a demand for beef." , University. Animal Scientist Lester Burdette said he ket in the Hills Plaza, said meat prices are holding<br />

Neigh said he expects pork and ground beef prices to a iso expects prices to rise in the next couple of months, steady and haven't gone up in the past two weeks,<br />

increase very slightly. "The competition pork was giving beef has lessened," Overall, he said, beef consumption has decreased in<br />

"If the economy starts coming around in June and ne said, "and beef wholesalers' prices are increasing town because of the average price of beef,<br />

people start going back to work and get a lax reduction anrj WJH be eventually passed on to the chain stores." "All the stores in town are having special sales left<br />

in the second half of the year, beef prices should However, some area grocery stores said beef prices and right," he said. "The consumer is making out<br />

decrease slightly," Neigh said. should stay stable or decrease over the next couple of because of the competition in town."<br />

University Argicultural Economist Louis Moore said months. Andy Swarm, a meat cutter at A&P Food Stores, 1910<br />

there is no reason why beef prices should come down. steve Trombley, meat department manager at IGA N. Atherton St said meat prices have remained fairly<br />

"Beef prices should begin going up in the next couple Food Markets, 236 W. Hamilton Ave., said beef prices steady all winter.<br />

Collegian board approves<br />

readers' representative<br />

A WPSX-TV producer/director will<br />

serve as a reader s representative to<br />

The Daily Collegian, the Board of<br />

Directors of Collegian Inc. decided<br />

last night.<br />

Kathleen Pavelko said her new responsibilities<br />

are two-fold. She will be<br />

"serving as.an advocate for the'readers<br />

and providing an outsider's critical<br />

look of the paper's performance."<br />

In most cases, Pavelko will be "concerned<br />

with significant trends rather<br />

than isolated incidents," she said.<br />

In addition to handling readers'<br />

complaints by writing memos to<br />

Collegian staff members, Pavelko<br />

will write columns dealing with the<br />

problems and trends of the Collegian.<br />

The column will both point out how<br />

readers have been mistreated and<br />

attempt to teach them about the workings<br />

of a daily newspaper, she said.<br />

Collegian Editor Phil Gutis said a<br />

reader's advocate, who will not be<br />

involved in the daily operations of the<br />

newspaper, will enable readers and<br />

sources to become more satisfied with<br />

the way their complaints are handled.<br />

Also because she is not on the Collegian<br />

staff , Pavelko said she will be<br />

able to detect problems that may go<br />

unnoticed by people constantly/ confronted<br />

with them.<br />

In other business, the board appointed<br />

Sharon Taylor as the editor of<br />

the Collegian for Summer Term.<br />

—by Marcy Mermel<br />

OA 1982 •o?<br />

hand<br />

1 ESSAY COMTEST 1 ^MS5*<br />

FIRST A f \r\ 00SECOND Cfi 00 THIRD AC QO<br />

PRIZE I UU. PRIZE JU. PRIZE L J.<br />

Submit entries to USG office, 203-A HUD, or East Residence Association Office, 124<br />

Findlay, by 5:00, April 21 st. Winners announced at 7 p.m. on BROTHERHOOD DAY<br />

April 28, in Eisenhower Auditorium.<br />

Any questions, contact Keith Durris, 5-0506 or Rhonda McDaniel, 5-9295<br />

R-061 Sponsored by USG Minority Affairs, Brotherhood Day Committee<br />

206.01<br />

BUSINESS STUDENTS<br />

Put Your Future In Perspective **<br />

at Career Day '82<br />

Successful Penn State Alumni<br />

will be speaking on careers in Business.<br />

Tuesday — ' HUB<br />

April 13<br />

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BUSCH. The official beer of The Charlie Daniels Band. "

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