U.S. hostage feared executed by captors
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U.S. <strong>hostage</strong> <strong>feared</strong> <strong>executed</strong> <strong>by</strong> <strong>captors</strong><br />
By ED BLANCHE<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
BEIRUT, Lebanon — A Shiite Moslem<br />
terrorist group said today it<br />
would execute American <strong>hostage</strong> William<br />
Buckley in retaliation for Israel's<br />
raid on PLO headquarters in<br />
Tunisia, a leading newspaper said.<br />
The terrorist Islamic Jihad said in<br />
a statement delivered to the West<br />
Beirut offices of the independent daily,<br />
An-Nahar, that Buckley would be<br />
killed after the statement was published.<br />
The paper published the statement<br />
in its Friday morning editions. The<br />
same text also appeared in a leftist<br />
newspaper As-Safir. There was no<br />
other word on Buckley's fate.<br />
In Washington, White House deputy<br />
press secretary Larry Speakes said<br />
the White House had "no independent<br />
confirmation" of the report. State<br />
Department spokesman Joe Reap<br />
said, "We have nothing on it. We are<br />
of course checking it."<br />
The newspaper said that at 1 a.m.<br />
today it received an envelope containing<br />
the group's statement and a<br />
color polaroid photograph of Buckley,<br />
but there was no indication when or<br />
where it was taken.<br />
Buckley, 57, one of six Americans<br />
that Islamic Jihad claims it is holding<br />
<strong>hostage</strong>, was kidnapped March 16,<br />
1984, outside his home in Beirut. He<br />
was a political officer at the U.S.<br />
Embassy in the Lebanese capital.<br />
Buckley, held in captivity the longest<br />
of any of the Americans, looked<br />
pale and drawn and had a beard in<br />
the photograph. He was wearing a<br />
gray track suit with yellow stripes<br />
across the chest.<br />
The newspaper quoted the<br />
statement purportedly issued <strong>by</strong> the<br />
shadowy extremist group as saying:<br />
"We declare that in revenge for the<br />
blood of our martyrs, we announce<br />
the execution of the resident American<br />
agent in the Middle East and the<br />
first political officer at the American<br />
Embassy in Beirut, William Buckley,<br />
right after the publication of this<br />
statement."<br />
An Israeli air strike Tuesday devastated<br />
the Palestine Liberation Organization<br />
headquarters in a suburb<br />
of Tunis, the Tunisian capital. Government<br />
sources said 61 Palestinians<br />
and 12 Tunisians were killed.<br />
The Islamic Jihad statement declared<br />
that "beyond any doubt" the<br />
Israeli raid "was carried out and<br />
planned jointly <strong>by</strong> the United States<br />
and Israel under the supervision of<br />
American intelligence (CIA).<br />
"The Israeli warplanes were supplied<br />
with fuel from American<br />
warships in the Mediterranean, it<br />
said.<br />
The United States has denied it had<br />
any advance warning of the Israeli<br />
raid and denied participating in it.<br />
Islamic Jihad is believed <strong>by</strong> foreign<br />
diplomats to be an umbrella group of<br />
several radical Shiite factions. It is<br />
believed to have ties to the Ayatollah<br />
Ruhollah Khomeini, the Shiite Moslem<br />
leader of Iran.<br />
The Islamic Jihad statement said<br />
that Buckley was "tried and found<br />
guilty of involvement in American<br />
Intelligence crimes in this world."<br />
The statement said: "We are responsible<br />
for the blood of Moslems in<br />
every part of the world and we understand<br />
that America and Israel are<br />
responsible for the killing of Moslems<br />
in Tunisia."<br />
Islamic Jihad had demanded in<br />
exchange for the Americans' freedom<br />
the release of 17 men convicted<br />
and imprisoned in Kuwait for the<br />
December 1983 terrorist bombings of<br />
the U.S. and French embassies in<br />
Kuwait.<br />
Three of the 17 have been sentenced<br />
to death <strong>by</strong> hanging. Kuwait has<br />
refused to release any of them.<br />
The statement said Islamic Jihad<br />
would make public later Buckley's<br />
"confessions and some documents<br />
that we found in his possession.<br />
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William Buckley, before, captivity (left) and during (right).<br />
"We warn the American government<br />
and Israel that they shall both<br />
pay handsomely in Lebanon, Washington<br />
and across the world because<br />
the arm of our strugglers ,is long<br />
enough to reach the aggressors," the<br />
statement said.<br />
if added: "We are not against the<br />
American people and only recently<br />
we have released the Rev. Benjamin<br />
Weir to prove this. But we are certainly<br />
against American policy and<br />
the spies who represent it, who sow<br />
Soviet arms proposals surprise West<br />
By LARRY THORSON<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
LONDON (AP) — European leaders<br />
yesterday began studying a surprise<br />
set of Soviet proposals on<br />
nuclear arms reductions that analysts<br />
said appeared designed to take<br />
advantage of divisions in the Western<br />
alliance.<br />
Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev<br />
told French legislators in Paris that<br />
he was offering a 50-percent reduction<br />
in the superpowers' strategic<br />
nuclear arsenals and a ban on space<br />
weapons — both proposals aimed at<br />
the United States.<br />
He also made two proposals related<br />
to Europe: a reduction in intermediate-range<br />
missiles and direct talks<br />
with Britain and France on reduction<br />
of their independent nuclear arsenals.<br />
Britain, France and other European<br />
governments had no immediate<br />
substantial comment.<br />
The European allies who are accepting<br />
U.S. intermediate-range nuclear<br />
missiles will be watching the<br />
Dutch reaction since Gorbachev said<br />
the Soviets had reduced to 243, or the<br />
June 1984 level, the number of SS-20<br />
missiles on "stand<strong>by</strong> alert" in the<br />
European zone.<br />
The Dutch had said they would<br />
accept 48 cruise missiles from the<br />
United States only if the Soviets had<br />
more than 378 such missiles deployed.<br />
NATO recently said the Soviets had<br />
441 missiles deployed, making Dutch<br />
acceptance of cruise missiles seem<br />
inevitable, but Gorbachev's speech<br />
signaled a new situation. The Dutch<br />
Foreign Ministry said merely that it<br />
was studying his statement.<br />
"The Soviet pressure on the Netherlands<br />
is mounting," Joris Voorhoeve,<br />
spokesman for the right-wing<br />
Liberal Party in the Dutch coalition<br />
government, said in the Netherlands.<br />
But Voorhoeve said the Soviet proposal<br />
was no reason to refrain from<br />
deploying cruise missiles. He noted<br />
that Soviet SS-20s are mobile systems<br />
and can be put back in place quickly.<br />
Four other NATO allies — Britain,<br />
West Germany, Italy and Belgium —<br />
have accepted intermediate-range<br />
American missiles as part of an alliance<br />
program to counter the Soviet<br />
buildup of SS-20s. The Dutch decision<br />
is due Nov. 1.<br />
Lynn Davis, an American political<br />
scientist who is assistant director of<br />
the London-based International Institute<br />
for Strategic Studies, said the<br />
Soviet proposals appeared to be a<br />
new attempt to widen divisions between<br />
the United States and its European<br />
allies.<br />
"That is consistent with Soviet proposals<br />
in the past which have tried to<br />
divide the Europeans from the Americans,"<br />
Davis said. "But now he's<br />
made some fairly specific proposals<br />
which are intriguing, and taking the<br />
initiative now with Western public<br />
opinion."<br />
Davis cautioned on. the SS-20s, "We<br />
don't know if the Soviets are talking<br />
about reduction of the number in<br />
Europe only, still leaving additional<br />
numbers deployed in Asia."<br />
She noted there were disputes<br />
about how many Soviet missiles were<br />
in Asia and how many were in a<br />
"swing force" that could be targeted<br />
on either Europe or Asia.<br />
All the U.S. allies faced demonstrations<br />
<strong>by</strong> anti-nuclear campaigners<br />
before the missiles were deployed,<br />
and there are divisions in the European<br />
political scene on the issue.<br />
In Britain , for example, the opposition<br />
socialist Labor Party reaffirmed<br />
Thursday its policy of unilateral nuclear<br />
disarmament. Labor has been<br />
ahead of Prime Minister Margaret<br />
Thatcher's Conservative Party in recent<br />
opinion polls, and could turn its<br />
anti-nuclear platform into government<br />
policy if it wins national elections,<br />
which must be held <strong>by</strong> 1988.<br />
President Reagan's Star Wars program<br />
for researching space-based<br />
defense weapons is far from universally<br />
popular in Europe. Britain has<br />
expressed interest in joining the research,<br />
but France has rejected the<br />
idea.<br />
Both Britain and France previously<br />
have refused to be included in the<br />
superpowers' nuclear arms talks.<br />
Britain has 64 nuclear missiles deployed<br />
in four submarines.<br />
France launched its sixth missilelaunching<br />
submarine early this year-<br />
Reagan responds to proposal<br />
CINCINNATI (AP) — President<br />
Reagan raised no objections yesterday<br />
to the Soviet Union's proposal for<br />
separate arms talks with Britain and<br />
France but suggested the Kremlin<br />
was making an almost meaningless<br />
gesture <strong>by</strong> offering to cut back its<br />
medium-range missiles in Europe.<br />
Reagan said the Soviets have not<br />
promised to destroy the mediumrange<br />
missiles that are targeted on<br />
Europe, but simply have suggested<br />
moving them elsewhere.<br />
"To simply drive them up into the<br />
Ural Mountains or someplace else<br />
and then say that they're not a threat<br />
to Europe makes no sense," Reagan<br />
said. "They can be brought back any<br />
time they want to turn on the gas."<br />
Reagan, visiting a soap manufacturing<br />
plant during a trip to promote<br />
his tax-overhaul program, stopped<br />
briefly after lunch to answer reporters'<br />
questions about the arms package<br />
unveiled in Paris <strong>by</strong> Soviet leader<br />
Mikhail Gorbachev.<br />
"Everything they're saying is a<br />
change in their position," Reagan<br />
said.<br />
In Geneva, the United States and<br />
the Soviet Union are holding threetier<br />
negotiations dealing with space<br />
weapons, strategic nuclear weapons<br />
and medium-range missiles.<br />
Reagan said he would not discuss<br />
the details of Gorbachev's proposals<br />
"because that is going to be. dealt<br />
with <strong>by</strong> our negotiators" in Geneva.<br />
However, referring to the Soviets'<br />
three-warhead SS-20 missiles, Reagan<br />
said, "As I understand it, the only<br />
proposal they've made is one that<br />
would not be destroying any of their<br />
weapons. It would simply be moving<br />
them ... It can move from place to<br />
place."<br />
Asked if he thought Gorbachev was<br />
trying to drive a wedge between the<br />
allies with his proposals, Reagan<br />
replied, "Oh, I don't know whether<br />
they're trying to do that or not. It<br />
would be nice to hope that they may<br />
have gotten religion."<br />
In past years, the Soviet Union<br />
persistently has tried to get the United<br />
States to include the British and<br />
French nuclear forces in the U.S.-<br />
Soviet arms talks. Washington has<br />
always refused, saying that the British<br />
and French missiles are independent<br />
of U.S. control.<br />
f\ 'J<br />
AP Laserpholo<br />
corruption on earth and who train<br />
criminals to massacre Moslems."<br />
Weir, 61, a Pres<strong>by</strong>terian minister<br />
kidnapped in west Beirut on May 8,<br />
1984, was freed Sept. 14.<br />
He said when he returned to the<br />
United States that the kidnappers<br />
warned they would start executing<br />
their <strong>hostage</strong>s and abduct other<br />
Americans if Kuwait did not free the<br />
17 people imprisoned there.<br />
Buckley, a bachelor, is from Medford,<br />
Mass. He became a Foreign<br />
Service officer in 1983, after 18 years<br />
as a civilian employee of the U.S.<br />
Army, serving in Washington and<br />
Vietnam. He was assigned to Beirut,<br />
his first State Department post, in<br />
September 1983.<br />
In addition to the Americans, 11<br />
other foreigners — French, British<br />
and Soviet citizens — have been kidnapped<br />
and are believed being held in<br />
Lebanon. Arkady Katkov, a Soviet<br />
Embassy official who was kidnapped<br />
with three other embassy employees<br />
Monday, was found dead Wednesday.<br />
Callers claiming to represent the<br />
fundamentalist Sunni Moslem organization<br />
Islamic Liberation Organization<br />
said they were responsible for<br />
kidnapping the Soviets and killing<br />
Katkov. Callers demanded that Syria,<br />
the main Soviet ally in the Middle<br />
East, call off its militia allies besieging<br />
Sunni fundamentalists in the<br />
northern port of Tripoli.<br />
Anonymous callers claiming to<br />
speak for the group have since<br />
warned in telephone calls to news<br />
agencies in Beirut that they will send<br />
suicide bombers to blow up the Soviet<br />
Embassy on Friday if the Syrianbacked<br />
leftist offensive is not halted.<br />
There were hopes that the three<br />
other Soviets may be spared after the<br />
Iranian Embassy in Damascus announced<br />
a cease-fire in Tripoli.<br />
PSU will ask state<br />
to fund construction<br />
By DAMON CHAPPIE<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
The University will request state<br />
funding Monday to construct a .$20<br />
million research center and a $19<br />
million engineering building here, a<br />
senipr Ụniyersity.administrator said.<br />
The administration plans to submit<br />
a capita l funding request to the state<br />
Department of Education for the two<br />
new building's at University Park and<br />
a new library at the Behrend Campus,<br />
said the official who asked not to<br />
be identified.<br />
Charles Hosier, vice president for<br />
research and dean of the graduate<br />
school, confirmed that plans for a<br />
major research building are in the<br />
works, but a site on the University<br />
Park campus has not yet been selected.<br />
"This would be a building for general<br />
research and scholarly purposes,"<br />
Hosier said, adding that there<br />
has been a great need for experimentation<br />
space across campus.<br />
"The problem is that we have a<br />
great potential for research, but<br />
many investigators are holding back<br />
from writing proposals because we<br />
can't show industry and the contractors<br />
where the physical space is that<br />
this research is going to take place,"<br />
Hosier said.<br />
"We.are all just bursting at the<br />
seams for space," he added.<br />
The building will not be assigned to<br />
a single discipline such as engineering<br />
or agriculture, but will be<br />
open to all departments that can<br />
justify the need for space, Hosier<br />
said.<br />
George McMurtry, dean of the college<br />
of-engineering for administration<br />
and planning, said engineering<br />
faculty members are aware of the<br />
plans for a new engineering building.<br />
The building would primarily be<br />
used for research activity and offices<br />
for new faculty members, McMurtry<br />
said.<br />
Office space has been difficult to<br />
find as the college expands its programs<br />
and instruction, he said.<br />
A great deal of construction is<br />
Clarification<br />
A recent article in The Daily<br />
Collegian reported that Francis<br />
Stoffa, executive director of On<br />
Drugs, Inc. and member of the<br />
University President's Alcohol<br />
Task Force, had visited various<br />
fraternity parties to see if Interfraternity<br />
Council party rules<br />
were being followed and to identify<br />
fraternity party problems.<br />
The artwork and headline that<br />
appeared with this article misrepresented<br />
the intent of Stoffa's<br />
visits as attempts to police the<br />
parties. Stoffa said he discussed<br />
his plans with IFC President<br />
John Rooney prior to the visits.<br />
He added that he presented the<br />
presidents of the eight fraternities<br />
he visited with identification<br />
and explained that they were not<br />
required to let him in.<br />
The Collegian regrets any misunderstanding<br />
that occurred as a<br />
result of the headline and artwork.<br />
under way in engineering including<br />
an engineering services center that<br />
will house shop equipment. Another<br />
building is planned to be constructed<br />
to house engineering activity while<br />
the Mechanical Engineering Building<br />
and Electrical Engineering West are<br />
being renovated.<br />
Hosier said the new construction<br />
activity is a reversal of a 10- to 12-<br />
year-old policy that halted new construction<br />
at the University Park campus<br />
in favor of renovation.<br />
"We said we would not expand the<br />
number of buildings years ago, but<br />
things have evolved in hindsight that<br />
this was a bad policy to follow,"<br />
Hosier said.<br />
"We are going to pay for that" with<br />
the research activity the University<br />
is losing because it does not have<br />
adequate facilities, he added.<br />
But the momentum pushing the<br />
University to the forefront of research<br />
and creating new knowledge,<br />
a hallmark of University President<br />
Bryce Jordan's administration, is<br />
gaining as demonstrated <strong>by</strong> the growing<br />
contributions from industry for<br />
research conducted at the University.<br />
"We've had our backs against the<br />
wall for some time," Hosier said. But<br />
he said he believes the University is<br />
beginning to move toward national<br />
recognition in research and development<br />
with the construction of the<br />
new buildings.<br />
"It doesn't seem to be such a large<br />
gamble at all. In fact, it will really<br />
make this a much stronger university,"<br />
he said.<br />
The funding request must be approved<br />
<strong>by</strong> the General Assembly and<br />
Gov. Dick Thornburgh.<br />
Jordan said at a press conference<br />
this week that the complete budget<br />
requests would become public Monday<br />
when it is sent to the state Department<br />
of Education. However,<br />
vice president for financial services<br />
George Lovette, who refused to answer<br />
questions except through his<br />
secretary, said the budget will not be<br />
discussed publicly until the University<br />
Board of Trustees meets Nov. 14-<br />
15.<br />
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inside<br />
• George Simkovich, a University<br />
metallurgy professor, has<br />
developed a group of new metal<br />
alloys that may spark a change<br />
in the materials used to build<br />
equipment operating at high<br />
temperatures Page 3<br />
index<br />
arts 18<br />
business 2<br />
opinions 10<br />
sports 13<br />
state/nation/world 8<br />
weather<br />
Today, lots of clouds with some<br />
breaks later in the day. High 57.<br />
Tonight, partly cloudy and cool.<br />
Low near 45 Heidi Sonen
2—The Daily Collegian Friday Oct. 4. 1985<br />
business<br />
University fund nearly tripled<br />
By SCOTT A. ALDERFER<br />
Collegian Business Writer<br />
The University's $36.1 million Associated Trust Fund<br />
has nearly tripled in value since 1980, said David E.<br />
Branigan, special assistant to the University treasurer.<br />
Last week, The Daily Collegian reported an incorrect<br />
figure of 64 percent as the fund increase.<br />
The correct increase of an estimated 288 percent is due<br />
to investment gains and new contributions, with $17<br />
million of the $23.6 million increase coming from gifts, he<br />
added. About $8 million of the $17 million was donated in<br />
the last year.<br />
"Investment returns are highly satisfactory," said<br />
Raymond D. Nargi, assistant University treasurer.<br />
"Equity (common stock) returns of 41 to 42 percent in the<br />
past year are among the highest of similar funds in the<br />
nation."<br />
For the year ending'June 30, equity returns for the<br />
Associated Trust were 4i:2 percent, he said.<br />
"Equity and fixed income (bonds) segments generally<br />
have outperformed respective market benchmarks over<br />
the past one-, three- and five-year periods," Nargi said.<br />
Nargi cited the Standard and Poor's 500 Index of<br />
investment returns for the three-year period ending<br />
June 30 as showing a 26.3 percent return, while the<br />
Associated Trust Fund received a 31.7 percent return.<br />
In the same period, while the Shearson Lehman American<br />
Express Intermediate Bond Index showed a 17.3<br />
percent return, the Associated Trust Fund received an<br />
18.3 percent return.<br />
The Associated Trust is funded <strong>by</strong> 500 to 600 separate<br />
endowments. It provides student scholarships and loans,<br />
as well as a Four Diamonds endowed chair at the<br />
University's Hershey Medical Center. Branigan pointed<br />
out that funds raised <strong>by</strong> the Interfraternity Council's<br />
annual dance marathon are handled separately from the<br />
endowed chair fund , contrary to a report in last Friday's<br />
Collegian.<br />
The Four Diamonds endowed chair will eventually<br />
sponsor a faculty member in the College of Medicine to<br />
teach pediatric oncology — the study and treatment of<br />
cancer in children — at the Hershey facility.<br />
"We wanted to at sometime attract an outstanding<br />
professor in pediatric oncology . .. who would be the key<br />
person in directing the oncological program diagnosis,<br />
care and research," said Herbert Kraybill, director of<br />
development at the medical center.<br />
"Pediatric oncologists are pretty hard to come <strong>by</strong>," he<br />
continued. "We don't have, at the present time, a fulltime<br />
professor in oncology." He said the medical center<br />
has on its sta ff two doctors of oncology whose salaries are<br />
supplemented <strong>by</strong> interest from the Associated Trust<br />
Fund.<br />
Kraybill pointed out that the principal of the Four<br />
Diamond investment is never touched — only the interest<br />
is used for research and to supplement oncological staff<br />
salaries.<br />
Market erratic, little changed<br />
By CHET CURRIER<br />
AP Business Writer<br />
NEW YORK — The stock market<br />
was little changed yesterday at the<br />
close of an erratic session.<br />
Stocks involved in takeover news<br />
and rumors provided most of the<br />
action as the market struggled to<br />
recover from Wednesday's selloff in<br />
health-care issues.<br />
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials<br />
slipped .56 to 1,333.11.<br />
Volume on the New York Stock<br />
Exchange tailed off to 127.54 million<br />
shares from Wednesday's 2Vfe-month<br />
high of 147.33 million.<br />
Health-care stocks took a drubbing<br />
Wednesday as two hospital-management<br />
companies, Hospital Corp. of<br />
America and American Medical International,<br />
issued disappointing<br />
earnings statements.<br />
Some of them remained under pressure<br />
yesterday. Hospital Corp.<br />
dropped V* to 30M> and AMI ='8 to 16=/n.<br />
In yesterday's trading, takeover<br />
rumors and speculation prompted<br />
buying in Gould Inc.," up 4V4 at 34%,<br />
and Texas Oil & Gas, up 1% at 18M- .<br />
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150.01 million shares.<br />
Standard & Poor's index of 400<br />
industrials rose .31 to 206.16, and<br />
S&P's 500-stock composite index was<br />
up .30 at 184.36.<br />
The NASDAQ composite index for<br />
the over-the-counter market gained<br />
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closed at 224.00, up .01.<br />
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Merchants skeptical of proposal<br />
By SUSAN HOUSEMAN<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
The State College Municipal Council<br />
is considering a proposal that<br />
would require residential developers<br />
in the commercial district to provide<br />
1.5 parking spaces per housing unit.<br />
But some Downtown Business Association<br />
members say they will not<br />
support the proposal if it interferes<br />
with retail development.<br />
Pat Daugherty, DBA president,<br />
said he spoke to 12 of the 60 DBA<br />
members he represents and they all<br />
agree that Allen Street and College<br />
Avenue should remain the core area<br />
of downtown retail sales.<br />
A public hearing will be held Oct. 14<br />
at the State College Municipal Building<br />
to consider the parking plan.<br />
After speaking with the DBA's<br />
Parking and Traffic Committee,<br />
Daugherty said he learned the committee<br />
favored the proposed ordinance<br />
although it still believes<br />
downtown must remain a growing<br />
commercial district.<br />
"We'd like to maintain attractive<br />
buildings downtown and more parking<br />
in terms of convenience and numbers,"<br />
Daugherty said. "In order to<br />
encourage customers we must let<br />
them know we know about the problem<br />
and we must be supportive of<br />
anything that adds a few additional<br />
spots."<br />
Chris Capozzi, president of the Organization<br />
for Town Independent Students,<br />
said he supports the borough's<br />
proposal to increase residential parking.<br />
Current ordinances require 1.5<br />
parking spaces per unit for all residential<br />
developments outside , the<br />
commercial district, Capozzi said.<br />
He pointed out that University Gateway,<br />
a S6-unit apartment complex<br />
at 616 E. College Ave. provides 16<br />
»9<br />
parking spaces for its tenants.<br />
"My constituents live downtown, so<br />
I'm in favor of parking," Capozzi<br />
said.<br />
"Parking goes along with building<br />
residences. An apartment builder has<br />
an obligation to provide certain<br />
things for his clients: heat, hot water,<br />
sewage, electricity, plumbing and<br />
parking. It's a fact of our society that<br />
people come with cars," he said.<br />
Daugherty said a developer must<br />
think about his target renter before<br />
providing parking spaces.<br />
"If it's an apartment for students<br />
with 60 units then maybe they'll only<br />
need 12 (parking) spots," he said.<br />
"But if it's a 60 unit apartment for<br />
professionals and their families then<br />
they'll need at least 60 spots."<br />
In an' effort to give developers an<br />
incentive to "build up" the downtown<br />
commercial district, Capozzi said the<br />
borough council eliminated an ordinance<br />
about 10 years ago which required<br />
residential developers to<br />
provide.adequate parking space.<br />
The council has been looking at the<br />
downtown parking problem for more<br />
than a year now, said Planning Commission<br />
chairman Roger Downs, but<br />
it was not until September that the<br />
problem was officially addressed.<br />
Daugherty expressed doubts about<br />
requiring parking areas for every<br />
new residential development built in<br />
the downtown commercial district,<br />
but agreed parking is a problem.<br />
"There are three things I see wrong<br />
with requirements for parking,"<br />
Daugherty said at the Planning Commission's<br />
Sept. 19 meeting. "The first<br />
(is) practicality of cost, the second<br />
(is) the appearance of units with<br />
parking areas, and third (is) the<br />
safety of adding entrances along Beaver<br />
and College Avenues."<br />
Daugherty, who argued that parking<br />
demands are created <strong>by</strong> people<br />
who work and shop downtown, said<br />
the borough should coordinate the<br />
development of lots and charge those<br />
who park there with no expense to the<br />
taxpayer.<br />
"The borough has a responsibility<br />
to see that the commercial district is<br />
a viable, vibrant area ," Daugherty<br />
said. "The town shouldn't become<br />
one dimensional in any way, either all<br />
stores or all parking."<br />
But Daugherty said even if apartments<br />
provided parking for residents,<br />
they would not be able to get it<br />
free.<br />
"College students may need more<br />
parking, but the cost of land is so high<br />
downtown that to think of being able<br />
to park for no cost is unreasonable,"<br />
he said. "The cost will have to be<br />
included with the rent and if it's not<br />
included then it will be anywhere<br />
from $25 to $40 a month with the hope<br />
that when you come home your spot is<br />
vacant."<br />
Currently, A.W. & Sons charges an<br />
additional $20 a month for parking at<br />
its complexes: Beaver Hill, 340 E.<br />
Beaver Ave., Cedarbrook, 320 E. Beaver<br />
Ave., and Garner Court, 309 E.<br />
Beaver Ave.<br />
Capozzi said many downtown students<br />
are forced to park their cars on<br />
campus where space is limited. Also,<br />
parking on campus may be inconvenient<br />
and possibly dangerous for car<br />
owners who park near Beaver Stadium<br />
and walk to their cars at night, he<br />
said.<br />
Downs said a major parking study<br />
is being conducted <strong>by</strong> Cambridge<br />
Systematics, which will give the basic<br />
factual information needed, and it<br />
should be completed in a few weeks.<br />
"The new parking study will show<br />
where the primary parking areas are<br />
downtown and whether the problem<br />
is caused <strong>by</strong> employees, shoppers or<br />
college students," Daugherty said.<br />
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School of Communications<br />
STUDENT<br />
HEARING<br />
A hearing designed to obtain student input into the<br />
new School of Communications will be held at 7:30<br />
p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 8, in Room 158 Willard. The<br />
school's Academic Program Committee is seeking<br />
student opinion on proposed course offerings,<br />
majors, etc., for the new school. All students in<br />
advertising, film, journalism, communications studies<br />
and telecommunications are urged to attend the<br />
hearing.<br />
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•
LSAT, GMAT tricks debated<br />
By JOHN L. SPENCE<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
Although a California author said<br />
reading his two books on law and<br />
graduate school aptitude test-taking<br />
tricks can result in higher<br />
scores, administrators of the exams<br />
refute the claim.<br />
David M. White said using the<br />
tricks in his books, The LSAT Exposed:<br />
Tricks fro m 12 Tests and<br />
The GMA T Exposed: Tricfes from<br />
20 Tests, will help students get<br />
higher scores on the Law School<br />
and Graduate Management Aptitude<br />
Tests, sometimes without<br />
even reading the test questions.<br />
But William Broesamle, president<br />
of the Graduate Management<br />
Admission Council, said although<br />
he has not seen the GMAT book,<br />
White's arguments in the past have<br />
been mostly invalid.<br />
"Without having seen Mr.<br />
White's (new) book, my biggest<br />
concern ... is that those who buy<br />
the book will be misled," Broesamle<br />
said.<br />
White, a graduate of Boston College<br />
and Harvard Law School , said<br />
he originally got the idea for the<br />
books while researching test bias<br />
on the LSAT. After reading past<br />
LSAT and GMAT tests, White said<br />
he realized they contained what he<br />
termed "open secrets."<br />
By reading and interpreting<br />
these secrets, White said he was<br />
able to devise a system of tricks to<br />
answer test questions.<br />
Paul Richard, a spokesman for<br />
the Law School Admission Council,<br />
copyright owner of the LSAT, said<br />
although the council expects people<br />
to prepare for the test, the LSAT<br />
cannot be taken successfully using<br />
tricks.<br />
Nevertheless, White maintained<br />
some of his tricks are remarkably<br />
accurate. For example, he said,<br />
the "gerund trick" — marking the<br />
"A" answer when the first word of<br />
a question ends in "-ing" — is<br />
correct 72 percent of the time.<br />
On the LSAf, White said the<br />
questions in one section of the test<br />
can be answered <strong>by</strong> merely identifying<br />
key words. White said when<br />
the word "must" is in a question ,<br />
the answer "A" is usually correct.<br />
Charles Maguire, administrative<br />
director of the University's Masters<br />
of Business Administration<br />
program, said many people like<br />
White claim certain tricks can help<br />
students take tests like the GMAT.<br />
But no tricks can make up for 16<br />
years of education, he said.<br />
Maguire said the GMAT is a very<br />
well-researched test and has been<br />
validated many times.<br />
"The GMAT does exactly what it<br />
is supposed to do," he said. "It<br />
clearly predicts academic success<br />
within • a graduate business<br />
school."<br />
Jordan honored <strong>by</strong> former school<br />
University President Bryce Jordan has been named a<br />
distinguished alumnus <strong>by</strong> faculty members and trustees<br />
at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where<br />
he earned a doctorate in musicology in 1956.<br />
Jordan is being recognized for his contributions to<br />
higher education and is one of four UNC graduates<br />
receiving the award this year, according to a press<br />
release from Penn State's Office of Public Information.<br />
Before becoming Penn State president in 1983, Jordan<br />
was executive vice chancellor for academic affairs for<br />
the University of Texas System. He accepted that position<br />
1*<br />
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Hi<br />
HI<br />
in 1981 after completing a 10-year term as president of the<br />
University of Texas at Dallas.<br />
Jordan began his career in higher education at the<br />
University of Texas System in 1968 as vice president for<br />
student affairs. He also served as interim president of the<br />
Austin campus from 1970-71.<br />
Jordan earned his bachelor's and master's degrees in<br />
music from UT-Austin in 1948 and 1949, respectively. In<br />
1956, he received his doctorate in historica l musicology<br />
from UNC.<br />
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PSU prof awaits alloys patent<br />
By ADAM BOONE<br />
Collegian Science Writer<br />
George Simkovich, a University<br />
metallurgy professor, has developed<br />
a group of new metal alloys that may<br />
spark an important change in the<br />
materials used to build jet engines,<br />
furnaces, steam boilers and other<br />
equipment operating at high temperatures,<br />
said a research scientist for<br />
Research Corp.<br />
Hans Eckhardt, a technical research<br />
scientist for Research Corp. of<br />
Tucson, Ariz. — a foundation that<br />
aids in researching and patenting<br />
inventions — said the new metal<br />
alloys invented <strong>by</strong> Simkovich are now<br />
being processed for a U.S. patent.<br />
Simkovich said he has developed a<br />
new method for creating metal alloys<br />
that will reduce the cost of producing<br />
some machines operating at high<br />
temperatures.<br />
These new alloys offer many advantages<br />
over traditional types of<br />
high-temperature metals, he said.<br />
Simkovich said many metals typically<br />
used in furnaces or engines will<br />
form natural protective coatings that<br />
often chip or crack when exposed to<br />
extreme temperature changes during<br />
engine cooling. In the past, metals<br />
were coated with a more temperature-resistant<br />
metal to prevent cracking.<br />
"A coating may be physically or<br />
chemically deposited upon the surface<br />
of the metal itself,"'Simkovich<br />
said.<br />
However, using the artificial-coating<br />
method causes several problems,<br />
he said.<br />
The metal coatings can be chipped<br />
w<br />
G<br />
or scarred, exposing the underlying<br />
metal they protect, he said. High<br />
temperatures can slowly evaporate<br />
the coating. The coating may also<br />
dissolve into the underlying metal.<br />
"Any coating you put on is just a<br />
coating; eventually it must deteriorate,"<br />
Simkovich said.<br />
These initial problems may be<br />
overcome <strong>by</strong> alloying the base metal<br />
with a protective metal, Simkovich<br />
said.<br />
In this process, the base metal and<br />
a protective metal are mixed together<br />
into one special metal called an<br />
alloy, he said. Consequently, the new<br />
metal can form its own protective<br />
coating.<br />
"(Metals) that grow their own protection<br />
are self-healing," Simkovich<br />
said. "You come in and hit it with a<br />
hammer and knock off a (chip) and<br />
(the coating) will eventually grow<br />
again."<br />
Simkovich said traditional alloys<br />
often use chromium as the protective<br />
metal in amounts from 15 to 30 percent<br />
<strong>by</strong> weight in the alloy. Because<br />
chromium is scarce, the process can<br />
be very costly, Simkovich said. However,<br />
an alloy using inexpensive silicon<br />
causes the metal mixture to<br />
become brittle.<br />
Simkovich's invention uses a different<br />
type of alloy to provide protection<br />
for the metal without these problems,<br />
he said.<br />
Simkovich said his alloys use silicon<br />
nitride — a silicon, nitrogen compound<br />
— as the alloying material.<br />
He said the substance does not<br />
make the base metal brittle in the<br />
same way that adding pure silicon<br />
does.<br />
The Twenty rty-First<br />
CenturyOverture<br />
The Daily Collegian Friday, Oct. 4, 1985—3<br />
ey Pi Phi s<br />
UJe 're Seeing Stars<br />
Love<br />
The Phi<br />
Also, Simkovich said, his alloys use<br />
less chromium than more traditional<br />
alloys and are less expensive.<br />
He added that because his alloys<br />
are self-healing, they do not wear out<br />
as quickly as more traditional protective<br />
materials.<br />
Simkovich said in laboratory tests,<br />
his silicon nitride alloys performed as<br />
well as or better than the alloys<br />
typically used in industry.<br />
Combining cheaper cost and selfhealing<br />
durability makes Simkovich's<br />
alloys research findings "very<br />
encouraging," he said.<br />
Simkovich's research and findings<br />
must be investigated further <strong>by</strong> Research<br />
Corp., an organization working<br />
with universities across the<br />
country.<br />
Research and inventions carried<br />
out <strong>by</strong> university professors are forwarded<br />
to Research Corp. for patent<br />
investigations, said Steve Bacon, a<br />
representative of the corporation.<br />
The foundation assigns its team of<br />
scientists to examine the invention<br />
and determine whether it is feasible<br />
and original enough for patenting<br />
with U.S. and foreign potent offices,<br />
he said. <<br />
If a patent is granted, the Research<br />
Corp. markets and licenses the invention<br />
to interested companies, Eckhardt<br />
said. Profits and royalties are<br />
divided between Research Corp., the<br />
university, the inventor, and the inventor's<br />
department, Simkovich said.<br />
Eckhardt said fewer than' 10 percent<br />
of the inventions sent to the<br />
corporation are endorsed <strong>by</strong> their<br />
scientists. He added that Simkovich's<br />
alloys have passed this important<br />
stage.<br />
FIBO - OZK - riBo - OZK - riBo - OZK - nBO - OSK - rreo - OZK - IIB
4—The Daily Collegian Fridav, Oct. 4. 1985<br />
Relaxation takes practice<br />
By NICOLE MILES<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
Athletes must realize how their bodies react to stressful<br />
competition to counteract its effects, said an associate<br />
professor of physical education from the University of<br />
California at Fullerton.<br />
"It is crucial to recognize your manifestations of stress<br />
and the way you handle them ," Ken Ravizza said. He<br />
spoke Tuesday night at a discussion titled "Stress Management:<br />
Lessons From World Class Athletes."<br />
Ravizza advises a variety of athletic teams on how to<br />
handle stress in competitive situations. The stressful<br />
situation will be different for each athlete, he said,<br />
depending on its intensity, how much stress the athlete<br />
can handle, the duration of the situation and the amount<br />
of other types of stress in the athlete's life, Ravizza said.<br />
"Understanding the stressor (the element causing the<br />
stress) is crucial so you can prepare to deal with it, and<br />
then being sensitive to the ways you manifest the stress,"<br />
Ravizza said.<br />
Ravizza said each sport and performance is different,<br />
and each athlete has a different way of reacting to<br />
stressful situations.<br />
Ravizza said gives athletes "pre-performance routines,"<br />
a series of activities used to regain the athlete's<br />
concentration during a stressful situation. It starts with<br />
basic relaxation training, and then training with distrac-<br />
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tions like tape recordings of the coaches yelling.<br />
He makes them practice under stresses similar to those<br />
they experience during performance so they learn how to<br />
deal with it.<br />
"Once you grind it out and can physically do it, it's just<br />
a matter of doing it while the pressure is on," he said.<br />
He strives to increase the quality of practice time <strong>by</strong><br />
setting team and individual goals. He also uses a "twominute<br />
drill," where a person sets a realistic, short-term<br />
goal in order to regain concentration.<br />
He also recommends the two-minute drill for students<br />
who have difficulty concentrating on studying.<br />
If people commit themselves to an activity for two<br />
minutes, they will find that they will continue it after the<br />
two minutes is up, Ravizza said. To help gain motivation,<br />
they should do things that are easier for them first and<br />
recognize when they are in a stressful situation, Ravizza<br />
said. If they succeed at that, they will have more motivation<br />
to move on to something harder.<br />
He said he also incorporates injured players into the<br />
practice to curb the depression that comes with injury<br />
and makes the athlete imagine himself going through the<br />
practice routine, Ravizza said.<br />
It's not easy to overcome stress during competition, he<br />
said.<br />
"A lot of people are looking for the magic answer,"<br />
Ravizza said. "It takes an incredible amount of pracitce<br />
and training it's not a simple solution."<br />
<<br />
n><br />
—1<br />
c/><br />
I ARTISTS<br />
w<br />
SERIES<br />
"This was the kind of musical<br />
experience a listener may hope to have<br />
once or twice in a lifetime".<br />
LONDON OBSERVER<br />
The<br />
Cleveland<br />
Quartet<br />
Softball tournament<br />
to aid Second Mile<br />
By COLBY STONG<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity, 524<br />
Locust Lane, will host its first annual<br />
softball tournament at the Blue and<br />
White golf courses this weekend to<br />
benefit the Second Mile of Centre<br />
County.<br />
The single elimination tournament<br />
will begin at 9 a.m. Saturday and<br />
conclude with the awards ceremony<br />
at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, said Craig McGuinn,<br />
softball tournament co-chairman.<br />
Games will be played from 9<br />
a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.<br />
After a team loses, it will play a<br />
consolation game.<br />
Teams will be divided into three<br />
categories: fraternities, independents<br />
and coed, McGuinn said. So far,<br />
20 fraternities, 12 independents and<br />
several coed teams have entered. He<br />
said applications are available in the<br />
HUB basement and the deadline to<br />
register is 5 p.m. today.<br />
First and second place trophies will<br />
be awarded to teams in each category,<br />
McGuinn said.<br />
To raise money for the Second Mile<br />
each team is required to pay a $40<br />
entry fee, he said, adding that T-<br />
shirts are also being sold for $3.50.<br />
Each team is given 10 free T-shirts<br />
for entering.<br />
Second Mile, 1840 N. AthertonSt., is<br />
a private, non-profit organization designed<br />
to help adolescent children in<br />
need, said Jeff Goldsmith, director of<br />
community relations for Second Mile.<br />
The majority of money raised comes<br />
from special events and donations, he<br />
said.<br />
The organization has four major<br />
programs set up to help children,<br />
including a friend program, which<br />
helps children act in large group<br />
activities. Second Mile also operates<br />
a summer camp program, a foster<br />
care program, and an assistance<br />
fund.<br />
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Psalm 147:1<br />
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Colder Square II
Ordinance amendment likely<br />
An amendment to make alcohol<br />
consumption in or on a parked car a<br />
violation in the borough is likely to be<br />
added to the open container ordinance<br />
Monday night at the State<br />
College Municipal Council meeting,<br />
some council members said.<br />
Both Council Member Dan Chaffee<br />
and Council President Mary Ann<br />
Haas said they expect the amendment<br />
to easily pass a council vote<br />
since none of the council members<br />
have given any opposition to it.<br />
Haas said the amendment calls for<br />
the open-container violation to apply<br />
to people consuming alcohol in or on a<br />
vehicle on all public streets or alleys.<br />
However, the amendment would not<br />
apply to moving vehicles since that<br />
would be a violation of the state<br />
drinking and driving law.<br />
"This is a natural extension of the<br />
open-container law since we've had<br />
complaints about public streets,"<br />
Haas said.<br />
Chaffee, who is chairman of the<br />
collegian notes<br />
• Student Counselors are available<br />
to listen to student concerns. Call<br />
863-2020 or drop in 135 Boucke 4 p.m.<br />
to midnight daily.<br />
• Applications for the Student<br />
Counselor Program are available in<br />
135 Boucke.<br />
• The International Cultures Interest<br />
House will meet at 6 tonight in<br />
102 Forum.<br />
• Interlandia will sponsor recreational<br />
folk dancing from 7:30 to 11:30<br />
tonight in the HUB Ballroom.<br />
council's public safety committee<br />
that recommended the amendment to<br />
council, said the problem of drinking<br />
in and on parked cars heightened this<br />
summer when residents living<br />
around Orchard Park near Orchard<br />
Road complained about softball teams<br />
drinking around their cars after<br />
games.<br />
Along with other area parks, the<br />
Pugh Street parking garage has also<br />
been a problem in the downtown<br />
area.<br />
State College Police Chief Elwood<br />
Williams said while this has been a<br />
problem in downtown State College,<br />
the amendment was proposed because<br />
of complaints from the residential<br />
areas.<br />
Williams said he does not expect<br />
the amendment to meet public opposition.<br />
"This is very consistent with<br />
the feeling of many- people in town<br />
and consistent with (University President<br />
Bryce) Jordan's alcohol task<br />
force," he said, —<strong>by</strong> Jeanette Krebs<br />
• The Conversant Program of International<br />
Students has openings on<br />
its one-day bus trip to New York City<br />
tomorrow. The trip costs $20. For<br />
more information contact the office<br />
in 222 Boucke,<br />
• The College Democrats will hold<br />
a .Rock Against Hunger Relief in<br />
America featuring three live bands at<br />
8 Saturday night in the HUB Ballroom.<br />
• The Ballroom Dance Club will<br />
meet at 7 p.m. Sunday in 133 White<br />
Building.<br />
THE UNIVERSITY CONCERT COMMITTEE PRESENTS<br />
CT<br />
arries<br />
ay<br />
oi<br />
police log<br />
• Two 10-speed bicycles belonging<br />
to Carolyn Barbieri, 410 Simmons,<br />
and Lori Kaswer, 12 McElwain, were<br />
seen Wednesday night being loaded<br />
onto a truck parked at the McElwain<br />
Hall loading dock, University Police<br />
Services said. Police said they are<br />
investigating.<br />
• James Colestock, 320 S. Pugh St,<br />
reported a television tuner missing<br />
from his residence yesterday, the<br />
State College Bureau of Police Services<br />
said.<br />
• Denise Headley, 433 W. College<br />
Ave., reported $25 worth of food missing<br />
from her residence yesterday<br />
morning, State College police said.<br />
• Jeffrey Ertel, Maintenance<br />
Building foreman, reported Wednesday<br />
that an unidentified vehicle<br />
caused minor damage when it struck<br />
the right front side of a landscape<br />
departmental vehicle parked at the<br />
Pollock Landscape Building, University<br />
police said.<br />
• A bicycle belonging to Greg Kelling,<br />
414 Pinchot, was reported missing<br />
Wednesday from a Pinchot Hall<br />
bike rack, University police said.<br />
• A traffic control barricade was<br />
observed Wednesday in the window of<br />
a room in Hastings Hall, University<br />
police said. The occupants will be<br />
referred to the Office of Student Conduct,<br />
police said, adding they are<br />
uncertain if the barricade is one of<br />
eight missing since Monday from the<br />
construction site near parking area<br />
83.<br />
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For Further Information and Applications, Contact<br />
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222 BOUCKE BUILDING<br />
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TELEPHONE: (814) 865-7681<br />
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6—The Daily Collegian Friday, Oct. 4, 1985<br />
PUC will allow Bell<br />
to up dial tone rates<br />
By ROD SNYDER<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
HARRISBURG - The Public Utility<br />
Commission indicated Thursday<br />
that it would allow Bell of Pennsylvania<br />
to increase the cost of local dial<br />
tone service for residential and business<br />
telephone customers.<br />
The PUC, in a non-binding poll,<br />
appeared to agree with Bell's argument<br />
that the cost of "dial-tone"<br />
service should be raised to more<br />
accurately reflect the cost of providing<br />
the service.<br />
A PUC spokesman said the dialtone<br />
charge is only for hooking into<br />
the telephone system and doesn't<br />
include the cost of making calls.<br />
"The PUC rightly recognizes the<br />
need to increase dial-tone line rates,"<br />
said Bell Vice President James Brenneman.<br />
"But even with this increase,<br />
the price customers pay will be far<br />
below what it costs us to provide the<br />
service."<br />
It could not be immediately determined<br />
how much the local dial tone<br />
rate would'increase from the present<br />
$3.71. The commission is scheduled to<br />
vote on the rate case Oct. 17.<br />
The indication came in a poll in<br />
which commissioners announced<br />
their stands on various issues involving<br />
Bell's proposed $238.6 annual rate<br />
increase. The poll will be used to let<br />
the PUC staff draft an order reflecting<br />
the majority view of the commission.<br />
Last week, the commissioners<br />
polled on other issues in the case.<br />
Preliminary estimates show they will<br />
allow only a total increase of between<br />
$28 million to $35 million, according to<br />
staff members.<br />
The PUC also said Thursday that it<br />
would likely reject Bell's proposal to<br />
charge those customers without unlimited<br />
calling service <strong>by</strong> the length<br />
of their calls.<br />
"It is clear that the PUC has denied<br />
timing for local calls, and this is<br />
disappointing," said Brenneman. "It<br />
is clear to us that those who make the<br />
most use of the public telephone network<br />
ought to bear more of the cost of<br />
the network."<br />
The commission also indicated it<br />
would lift a restriction, imposed in<br />
Bell's last rate case, that prohibited<br />
new customers from having two-party<br />
lines and old customers from<br />
switching to party lines.<br />
Commission allows mail-order drugs for aged<br />
By MAUD S. BEELMAN<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
HARRISBURG — The state's regulatory review<br />
commission yesterday cleared the way for elderly<br />
people to receive mail-order prescription drugs as<br />
part of Pennsylvania's low-cost medical program<br />
for the aged.<br />
After two hours of hearings on whether the rules<br />
were intended to apply to local and mail-order<br />
pharmacies equally, the Independent Regulatory<br />
Review Commission unanimously approved the<br />
expansion of the Pharmaceutical Assistance Contract<br />
for the Elderly.<br />
F. Nicholas Willard, director of the American<br />
Association of Retired* Persons' pharmacy service,<br />
said the regulations put a burden on mailorder<br />
pharmacies that was not shared <strong>by</strong> local<br />
pharmacies doing over-the-counter business.<br />
Mail-order pharmacies must keep patient histories<br />
while local pharmacies are not required to do<br />
so.<br />
"I sympathize with you in some of your observations,<br />
but you haven't told me anything that's<br />
wrong with these regulations," Commissioner<br />
John McGinley told Willard.<br />
Commissioners rejected arguments that all<br />
pharmacies in the PACE program were covered<br />
<strong>by</strong> mail-order regulations. But McGinley suggested<br />
that the Department of Aging review its<br />
policies regarding local pharmacies to see if they<br />
could benefit from some of the mail-order regulations.<br />
Rep. Peter Wambach, D-Dauphin, a member of<br />
the House Consumer Affairs committee, said<br />
lawmakers wanted to place the same burden of<br />
patient verification and history on local pharmacies<br />
that also do a mail-order business.<br />
Linda Smith, counsel for Aging, denied that<br />
mail-order pharmacies were being unduly burdened.<br />
All PACE pharmacies, regardless of the<br />
method of delivery, must identify patients through<br />
a signed Universal Claim Form.<br />
Aside from the patient history file, the only other<br />
major difference was that mail-orders were required<br />
to fill prescriptions within 48 hours of the<br />
order, she said.<br />
"So I really can't understand why there's such a<br />
disagreement about delivery," Smith said. "I<br />
think Mr. Willard is hung up on a matter of<br />
principle. They just don't like the distinctions that<br />
are being drawn."<br />
Smith disputed that it was burdensome to require<br />
mail-order pharmacies to maintain patient<br />
histories, saying "that's the state of the art" in the<br />
mail-order industry, as was the 48-hour turnaround<br />
time. She said the histories were necessary<br />
to make up for the "deficit" of no personal contact<br />
between the pharmacist and patient.<br />
New Greenpeace nears French nuclear test site<br />
PAPEETE, Tahiti (AP ) - The new<br />
Greenpeace flagship is expected to<br />
arrive off France's Mururoa Atoll<br />
nuclear testing site tomorrow on a<br />
protest mission the Rainbow Warrior<br />
was preparing to lead when French<br />
secret agents sank it.<br />
French naval officials said , the<br />
1,600-ton converted tugboat was in the<br />
area of the Marquesas Islands on<br />
Wednesday and turned toward Mururoa<br />
yesterday.<br />
The new flagship, named the<br />
Greenpeace, became the international<br />
environmentalist organization's<br />
flagship after the Rainbow Warrior<br />
was sunk <strong>by</strong> two explosive charges<br />
July 10 at its berth in Auckland, New<br />
Zealand. A crew member from Holland<br />
was killed in the bombing.<br />
Greenpeace diverted the ship,<br />
which has a crew of about 40, from a<br />
planned mission to Antarctica when<br />
the Rainbow Warrior was attacked.<br />
Four other protest vessels were<br />
bound for Mururoa: the ketch Vega,<br />
with five people aboard; the Breeze<br />
and Alliance, each with seven crew,<br />
and the Varagian, which left New<br />
Zealand after the others and is weeks<br />
away.<br />
The Vega was said to be 30 to 40<br />
miles from Mururoa, the Breeze 300<br />
miles out and expected to arrive over<br />
the weekend, and the Alliance about<br />
650 miles away.<br />
Bernard Gerard, France's high<br />
commission for French Polynesia,<br />
said the navy would intervene if necessary<br />
to keep the protesters away<br />
from the testing site. Greenpeace<br />
spokesmen have said the flotilla will<br />
take a positon just outside French<br />
waters.<br />
The French frigate Balny is shadowing<br />
the Greenpeace and four other<br />
navy ships are in the area, including<br />
a light transport.<br />
i<br />
appalachian<br />
outdoors<br />
X<br />
Siate College Pres<strong>by</strong>terian Church<br />
132 West Beaver Avenue<br />
238-2422<br />
Services 8:45 and 11:05 a.m.<br />
Church School 9:50 a.m.<br />
College-Age Fellowship Wednesday 7 p.m<br />
Harry L. Strong, Pastor<br />
Paul E. Gilmore, Associate Pastor<br />
Timothy J. Mooney, Seminary Intern<br />
Thinking of Law School?<br />
Ms. Heley Cavey, an admissions recruiter from the Boston<br />
University Law School will be on campus Tuesday, October 8th,<br />
from 9:00 a.m.-12:00 noon.<br />
If you would like an appointment to discuss law at Boston<br />
University, please contact Ms. Jane Tarbox<br />
in room 107 Burrowes Building,<br />
8:00 a.m.-12:00 noon, Monday through Friday, 865-7515.<br />
If Elizabeth Barrett<br />
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Sundays 10:45 AM<br />
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PHILADELPHIA (AP ) - A needle-nosed<br />
Concorde landed in Philadelphia<br />
International Airport for the<br />
first time yesterday, amid hopes <strong>by</strong><br />
officials that the supersonic airliner<br />
will begin making stops at least annually.<br />
The 9-year-old plane, which can fly<br />
at twice the speed of sound, arrived<br />
from London in wind and drizzle as<br />
part of British Airways' charter arrangement<br />
with Cunard Line Ltd.<br />
The plane drew dozens of spectators<br />
to the overseas terminal, and<br />
British Airways obliged them with<br />
peeks inside the sleek, white plane<br />
with blue and red trim.<br />
Some of the 100 passengers will<br />
return to London <strong>by</strong> sea aboard the<br />
Queen Elizabeth II luxury liner.<br />
Another Concorde flight will arrive<br />
in November as part of the Concorde-<br />
QE 2 package, Cunard spokeswoman<br />
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to begin scheduling one or two such<br />
charters each year between Philadelphia<br />
and London, she said.<br />
Yesterday's visit was the first Concorde<br />
stop here since commercial<br />
Concorde travel began in January<br />
1976.<br />
After the Concorde landed, nose<br />
high and its long, fin-like wings seemingly<br />
sweeping the runway, a man<br />
dressed as the Phillie Phanatic, mascot<br />
to Philadelphia 's major-league<br />
baseball team, bounded down steps<br />
from the plane.<br />
A technological marvel that took<br />
years to become profitable for British<br />
Airways and Air France, each of<br />
which owns seven Concordes, the<br />
plantrmakes twice-daily trans-Atlantic<br />
trips to New York and three trips<br />
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Passengers pay extra for the speed,<br />
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way from New York to London, compared<br />
with $1,988 in first class on<br />
other British Airways flights.<br />
One fellow who is sold on the Concorde<br />
is the pilot who took it out of<br />
Philadelphia. Capt. John Hutchinson<br />
said he has flown about 70 different<br />
kinds of planes in 30 years and puts<br />
the Concorde at the top.<br />
Passengers can sip their champagne<br />
or gin and tonic traveling 1,350<br />
mph at 35,000 feet, he said, and see<br />
"nothing but a ripple on the surface of<br />
their drink."<br />
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The Daily Collegian Friday, Oct. 4, 1985—7<br />
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Soviets prepared for 'sad news' ~j<br />
By MONA ZIADE<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
BEIRUT, Lebanon - The Soviet<br />
Union's senior diplomat in Beirut<br />
said yesterday he expects "sad<br />
news" about three colleagues held<br />
<strong>by</strong> kidnappers who already have<br />
killed one embassy employee.<br />
The kidnappers seized the Soviets<br />
on Monday and threaten to kill<br />
them all unless Moscow forces Syria,<br />
its main Middle East ally, to stop<br />
an offensive <strong>by</strong> Syrian-backed leftist<br />
militias against Moslem fundamentalists<br />
in the northern port of<br />
Tripoli.<br />
An anonymous caller claimed the<br />
kidnappers were members of the<br />
Islamic Liberation Organization.<br />
Anonymous callers also have said<br />
suicide bombers will blow up the<br />
Soviet Embassy in the Corniche<br />
Maazra district of west Beirut, the<br />
capital's Moslem sector.<br />
Yuri Souslikov , the embassy<br />
charge d'affaires and Moscow's<br />
ranking diplomat, said his government<br />
had asked Syria "to exert<br />
pressure on the concerned Lebanese<br />
parties to secure their release."<br />
The battle for Tripoli still raged<br />
Thursday, with Syrian gunners<br />
bringing heavy artillery fire to bear<br />
in support of their allies, but there<br />
were no reports of other captives<br />
being killed.<br />
Gunmen abducted three Soviet<br />
diplomats and the embassy doctor.<br />
The body of cultural attache Arkady<br />
Katkov, 32, was found in a west<br />
Beirut garbage dump Wednesday,<br />
shot through the head.<br />
The Soviets have strengthened<br />
security at their embassy complex.<br />
Scores of heavily armed men of<br />
Walid Jumblatt's Druse Moslem<br />
militia and the Moscow-oriented<br />
Lebanese Communist Party ringed<br />
the walled, tree-shaded compound<br />
Thursday.<br />
Druse fighters in combat fatigues<br />
manned anti-aircraft machine guns<br />
mounted on trucks stationed at the<br />
main gate.<br />
The kidnappers' silence coincided<br />
with Iranian efforts to negotiate a<br />
cease-fire in Tripoli , Lebanon's second-largest<br />
city, where more than<br />
500 people have been killed and 1,-<br />
100 wounded in the 19-day-oId war<br />
Atlantis<br />
blasts off<br />
into space<br />
By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Atlantis<br />
joined America's space shuttle<br />
fleet yesterday with a dazzling liftoff<br />
on a mission of mystery, carrying<br />
five astronauts and a pair of military<br />
satellites built to withstand nuclear<br />
radiation.<br />
Except for the launch, which could<br />
be seen from much of central Florida ,<br />
the flight had as much secrecy as the<br />
Air Force could muster.<br />
"The crew is doing well and all<br />
systems on board the orbiter are<br />
performing satisfactorily," said NA-<br />
SA's Billie Deason after the shuttle<br />
had been in orbit nearly five hours.<br />
That was one of two announcements<br />
promised for the hush-hush<br />
flight. The other is to be a 24-hour<br />
notice that the shuttle will land at<br />
Edwards Air Force Base in California.<br />
There was no word when the satellites<br />
would be deployed , but it has<br />
been NASA's policy to get payloads<br />
out of the cargo bay at the earliest<br />
opportunity , usually on the first day<br />
aloft.<br />
Atlantis' maiden flight , the 21st of<br />
the shuttle program , was the second<br />
all-Pentagon mission. A spy satellite<br />
was delivered to orbit on the first and<br />
it was deployed 16 hours after liftoff.<br />
Despite the news blackout, there<br />
was reliable information that the<br />
astronauts will deploy two Defense<br />
Satellite Communications System satellites,<br />
an advanced model known as<br />
DSCS-3. The $100 million satellites<br />
are designed to prevent an enemy<br />
from jamming their communications<br />
and for use <strong>by</strong> the president to send<br />
emergency instructions to nuclear<br />
forces around the globe.<br />
The satellites also have been<br />
shielded against the radiation and<br />
electromagnetic pulse effects of nuclear<br />
explosions, which could short<br />
out or overload unshielded electronic<br />
components.<br />
The DSCS-3 satellites are not classified<br />
as secret, but the Defense Department<br />
has decided to black out<br />
information about most military<br />
flights of the space shuttle to "protect<br />
the identity, mission and operation of<br />
DOD cargo" and "protect information<br />
concerning vulnerabilities of the<br />
shuttle and facilities."<br />
XK<br />
AP Lascrpholo<br />
A Druse militiaman with a U.S. built automatic rifle stands guard beside a<br />
sandbaaed Dost outside the Soviet Embassy in Beirut.<br />
r.<br />
hrSfc^V-<br />
long meeting with Amin Gemayel ,<br />
Lebanon's Christian president , and<br />
security commanders that he anticipated<br />
"sad news any minute"<br />
about commercial attache Valery<br />
Mirikov, press attache Oleg Spirin<br />
and Dr. Nikolai Sversky.<br />
Sources in Gemayel's office said<br />
the discussions focused on ways to<br />
save the three Soviets and protect<br />
for supremacy.<br />
Iran has close links with both<br />
Syria and the Palestinian-supported<br />
Sunni Moslem fundamentalists<br />
who are fighting for their lives in<br />
the port city.<br />
Souslikov appeared resigned to<br />
the deaths of his kidnapped colleagues.<br />
He told reporters after an hour-<br />
4<br />
the embassy, its staff and their<br />
dependents. No details were disclosed.<br />
The Soviet charge d'affaires also<br />
delivered a letter to Gemayel from<br />
the Soviet government. The state<br />
radio said it called the kidnapping<br />
"an aggression against the Soviet<br />
Union which cannot be accepted."<br />
Katkov's corpse was recovered<br />
after after ah anonymous caller,<br />
claiming to speak for the Islamic<br />
Liberation Organization, told Western<br />
news agencies one diplomat has<br />
been <strong>executed</strong> because the fighting<br />
continued in Tripoli , which is 50<br />
miles north of Beirut.<br />
Anonymous callers telephoned<br />
news organizations Thursday to repeat<br />
the statement that the embassy<br />
would be - blown up at 9 a.m.<br />
Friday, the deadline set in the earlier<br />
calls.<br />
They said that if it was not evacuated<br />
<strong>by</strong> then, "We shall mount<br />
suicide bombing attacks to level the<br />
whole compound upon your heads."<br />
Soviet citizens in Lebanon, estimated<br />
to totaj about 150, had been<br />
urged to move into the embassy<br />
complex for safety. Diplomats declined<br />
comment on reports that<br />
Moscow might evacuate the remaining<br />
Soviets in Lebanon.<br />
The Soviets now face the same<br />
problems that caused the U.S. Embassy<br />
to move to Christian east<br />
Beirut last year.<br />
Washington moved its facility after<br />
suicide bomb attacks on U.S.<br />
facilities in the Moslem sector of<br />
the city that blew up the seafront<br />
embassy, an annex and a U.S. Marine<br />
base, killing more than 250<br />
Americans.<br />
Only the Soviet Union and a few of<br />
its East European allies maintained<br />
their embassies in west Beirut<br />
after it was taken over <strong>by</strong><br />
Moslem militias in February 1984.<br />
The area has been plagued since<br />
<strong>by</strong> kidnappings , armed robberies<br />
and assassinations.<br />
Fourteen Westerners, including<br />
six Americans, still are held <strong>by</strong><br />
kidnappers who seized them in west<br />
Beirut beginning in January 1984.<br />
The four embassy employees were<br />
the first kidnap victims from the<br />
Soviet bloc.<br />
The Daily Collegian<br />
Friday. Oct. 4, 1985<br />
Rescue workers search for boy in quake rubble<br />
By CARL MANNING<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
MEXICO CITY - Rescue workers<br />
digging with picks, shovels and<br />
their hands tried frantically yesterday<br />
to reach a 9-year-old boy<br />
believed trapped alive under tons<br />
of earthquake rubble for 14 days.<br />
Rescue workers, covered with<br />
grime and dirt from hours of digging,<br />
said they still hope to reach<br />
Luis Ramon Navarrete Maldonado,<br />
whose relatives say he is<br />
trapped in the debris along with his<br />
57-year-old grandfather, Luis Maldonado.<br />
The workers believe the boy has<br />
communicated with them <strong>by</strong> tapping<br />
on the debris surrounding<br />
him. Doctors at the scene say the<br />
child is too weak to talk. Rescue<br />
workers emerging from the old<br />
three-story colonial building said<br />
there has been no voice contact.<br />
Carlos Malbran, an Argentine<br />
engineer who is one of those in<br />
charge of rescue efforts, said he<br />
could not estimate when rescuers<br />
would tunnel through the rubble<br />
and reach the point where the child<br />
is believed trapped under an estimated<br />
20-ton mound of debris. Rescuers<br />
think they were within five<br />
feet of the location.<br />
One worker said rescuers have<br />
dug two priary, parallel tunnels<br />
and believe the boy is between the<br />
two paths. The workers say they<br />
must take a circuitous route to<br />
reach the spot where the child is<br />
believed trapped because ol the<br />
way a wall had fallen around the<br />
area.<br />
Rescuers at the site say the<br />
building collapsed during the Sept.<br />
n<br />
AP Laserpnoto<br />
Standing behind a police line, a Mexican woman waits outside an apartment building in Mexico City for rescue<br />
workers to free her son under the rubble.<br />
19 quake, apparently trapping the<br />
boy in the patio area as he was<br />
trying to flee.<br />
Alberto Maldonado, 30, said early<br />
Thursday that he believes both<br />
?<br />
Iksv./vis: ' - ,<br />
his father and nephew have responded<br />
to rescuers tapping on the<br />
rubble.<br />
"I know my father is alive," he<br />
told the AP, adding that the older<br />
man is very strong. He plays jai<br />
alai all day on Wednesdays and<br />
Saturdays."<br />
Rescue worker Jorge Sanchez<br />
Zermeno on Thursday said rescuers<br />
had been using a super-sensitive<br />
microphone system to call out<br />
the boy's name and there was a<br />
tapping response, leading workers<br />
to believe the boy is alive.<br />
He said he could not speculate on<br />
the grandfather's fate.<br />
Malbran said earlier they had<br />
signs of life "from one person."<br />
Asked if it was the boy or the<br />
grandfather, he only shrugged.<br />
The boy's paternal grandfather,<br />
Ramon Jesus Navarrete, said the<br />
child is an athlete and very strong.<br />
"It must be that God will save<br />
my grandson," he said while waiting<br />
in front of the building on a<br />
narrow street littered with trash<br />
and building debris.<br />
As the digging continued there<br />
were complaints that the search<br />
was not well organized. Family<br />
members were overheard to complain<br />
that the lack of organization<br />
was wasting time.<br />
Rescue operations at the historic<br />
building had proceeded intermittently<br />
since the day of the quake.<br />
Rescue teams from France,<br />
West Germany and Italy worked at<br />
the site until Sunday, Maldonado<br />
said. Mexican crews then continued<br />
the search.<br />
The first quake to rock Mexico<br />
City registered 8.1 on the Richter<br />
scale and a second the evening of<br />
Sept. 20 registered 7.5.<br />
The government's death toll<br />
stands at 4,600, a number that has<br />
not been updated since the weekend.<br />
Newspapers, keeping their own<br />
figures, estimate the death count<br />
much higher. El Universal, for<br />
instance, said more than 7,000 have<br />
died.<br />
U.S. government about to go broke once again<br />
By TOM RAUM<br />
AP Economics Writer<br />
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WASHINGTON, D.C. — The government of<br />
the richest nation in the world is again on the<br />
verge of running out of cash. It's become an<br />
annual ritual, one that dictates that Congress<br />
come to the rescue — protesting and barely in<br />
the nick of time — with the needed new borrowing<br />
authority.<br />
True to the script, jittery administration<br />
officials already have begun issuing warnings<br />
of dire consequences if Congress fails to raise<br />
the national debt limit — a deadline officials<br />
i<br />
.J§<br />
rm<br />
say will conn- sometime on Monday.<br />
The Treasury would be left with insufficient<br />
funds to operate the government, they warn.<br />
Federa l workers wouldn't get paid. Benefit<br />
checks would bounce, defense contractors be<br />
left in the lurch, agencies start to close. The<br />
wheels of government would grind to a halt.<br />
But while Congress frequently marches to<br />
the brink in its annual debt-limit debate, each<br />
year fiscal chaos somehow manages to be<br />
averted. The government lumbers on.<br />
The two times the government actually did<br />
start to shut down — in November 1981 and<br />
October 1984 — it was because Congress failed<br />
TMI Unit 1 reactor<br />
triggered on after<br />
6 years of dormancy<br />
By BOB DVORCHAK<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
MIDDLETOWN — Technicians<br />
triggered a nuclear chain reaction<br />
yesterday to restart the undamaged<br />
Unit 1 reactor at Three Mile Island,<br />
dormant since its sister reactor<br />
caused the nation's worst commercial<br />
nuclear accident 6>£ years ago.<br />
"The process went very smoothly.<br />
There weren't any problems," Lisa<br />
Robinson, spokeswoman for the<br />
plant's operator," GPU Nuclear Corp.,<br />
said after the self-sustaining chain<br />
reaction started shortly before 2 p.m.<br />
Over the protests of demonstrators<br />
but with the U.S. Supreme Court's<br />
approval, operators began lifting<br />
some of the 69 control rods out of the<br />
reactor at 4:30 a.m. to allow the<br />
radioactive uranium fuel to build up<br />
to the chain reaction.<br />
Technicians also removed boron<br />
from the core's cooling water. That<br />
element is often called a nuclear<br />
poison because it soaks up neutrons,<br />
the subatomic particles fired out <strong>by</strong><br />
dividing uranium atoms that otherwise<br />
would make more atoms split.<br />
"The plant is performing very well.<br />
We're very pleased," said Philip R.<br />
Clark, president of GPU, which operates<br />
the plant for General Public<br />
Utilities Corp. "The instructions to<br />
the crew are to proceed deliberately<br />
and safely with emphasis on safety."<br />
"I feel excited. I feel confident,"<br />
Clark added. He described the mood<br />
in the control room as "pleased,<br />
confident and satisified. It's a good<br />
mood, a very positive mood."<br />
TMI Unit 1 was shut down for<br />
routine refueling during the March<br />
28, 1979, accident that damaged the<br />
adjacent Unit 2.<br />
A combination of human and mechanical<br />
errors allowed cooling water<br />
to drain out of Unit 2. The reactor<br />
overheated, some of its uranium fuel<br />
rods melted and radioactive materials<br />
escaped into the environment.<br />
Although Unit l was not affected <strong>by</strong><br />
the accident, the Nuclear Regulatory<br />
Commission ordered it shut down<br />
pending hearings on whether it could<br />
be operated safely.<br />
The NRC approved the restart on<br />
to pass emergency stopgap funding measures,<br />
not because of a debt-limit impasse. And those<br />
shutdowns lasted only a half-day each.<br />
The Reagan administration has asked Congress<br />
to increase the debt limit to $2,078 trillion,<br />
breaking the symbolic mark of $2 trillion. The<br />
new level would be more than twice the limit<br />
when Reagan took office in 1981.<br />
While the House has already approved the<br />
debt limit increase, the measure is currently<br />
bogged down in the Senate, where several<br />
amendments have been talked about, including<br />
one <strong>by</strong> Sens. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, and Warren<br />
Rudman, R-N.H., to force the president and<br />
May 29, but it was delayed pending<br />
court appeals <strong>by</strong> the anti-nuclear<br />
group Three Mile Island Alert.<br />
Final NRC approval came Thursday<br />
morning after Wednesday's favorable<br />
ruling <strong>by</strong> the U.S. Supreme<br />
Court.<br />
"The democratic process worked.<br />
There have been hearings. Everybody's<br />
had a chance to be heard,"<br />
said Clark, part of the new management<br />
team installed since the accident.<br />
However, Three Mile Island Alert<br />
continued its legal fight, asking the<br />
3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in<br />
Philadelphia for a stay of TMI operations.<br />
The group said the NRC should<br />
lift GPUNuclear's license because of<br />
management integrity questions.<br />
The restart of Unit 1, built in 1974 at<br />
a cost of $400 million, will mean a<br />
savings of $72 million a year <strong>by</strong> GPU<br />
ratepayers in Pennsylvania and New<br />
Jersey.<br />
The plant will stay at less than 1<br />
percent of maximum power for several<br />
days, officials said. The reactor's<br />
100 tons of uranium fuel could produce<br />
enough steam to generate some<br />
electricity <strong>by</strong> next week, and it could<br />
at 100 percent of its 800-megawatt<br />
capacity in three months.<br />
"The job we have now is to operate<br />
it safely and effectively," Clark said.<br />
"Only after we have shown that over<br />
a period of time can we return to<br />
normal and say things are behind<br />
us."<br />
"It's a big day," said Earl Showalter,<br />
a TMI simulator instructor.<br />
"We're going to be in a fishbowl.<br />
We're going to be watched more than<br />
any other plant in the world."<br />
Sixteen people were arrested<br />
Wednesday night when 45 anti-nuclear<br />
activists protested at the main<br />
gate of the plant, located on a sandbar<br />
in the Susquehanna River 10<br />
miles southeast of Harrisburg. They<br />
were released on their own recognizance<br />
and face fines and costs of<br />
$73.50.<br />
Paula Kinney, a mother of four and<br />
a resident of Middletown for 17 years,<br />
planned to uproot her family and<br />
leave the area because of the restart.<br />
Congress to have a balanced budget <strong>by</strong> 1991.<br />
Any Senate amendment would send the issue<br />
back to the Democratic-run House, with the<br />
prospect of touching off further prolonged<br />
debate.<br />
The current limit on U.S. borrowing is $1,824<br />
trillion and it is this level that the Treasury<br />
says it expects to bump against on Monday.<br />
In the last accounting, the Treasury was<br />
within about $25 million of that level.<br />
As long as the governent spends more than it<br />
takes in, it must continue to borrow to operate.<br />
Outlays recently have been running at about<br />
$20 billion a month above receipts.
Thornburgh speaks on divestment<br />
HARRISBURG (AP) — Gov. Dick Thornburgh says the state<br />
has to be careful about insisting that state-related universities,<br />
public pensions and banks divest themselves of investments in<br />
companies that do business with South Africa.<br />
"The commonwealth of Pennsylvania, under our constitutional<br />
system, does not have an independent foreign policy," Thornburgh<br />
said Wednesday in response to a reporter's question. "Our<br />
foreign policy is set <strong>by</strong> the national government."<br />
Calling himself "an implacable foe of apartheid," Thornburgh<br />
said he applauds President Reagan's economic sanctions, such as<br />
halting the sale of South African gold coins in this country.<br />
But Thornburgh said this country must be careful not to take<br />
actions that would deny jobs to South Africans who are victims of<br />
apartheid or hurt businesses in this country.<br />
The situation must be watched closely, the governor said.<br />
"But I think for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to take<br />
steps independently of what is being done in matters of foreign<br />
policy of the government would be risky," he added.<br />
Electric rates going up slightly<br />
HARRISBURG (AP ) — The Public Utility Commission indicated<br />
yesterday that it will likely reduce rate increases proposed<br />
<strong>by</strong> Metropolitan Edison Co. and Pennsylvania Electric Co.<br />
The PUC, in a non-binding poll, indicated that it will reduce Met<br />
Ed's proposed $47.3 million annual increase to approximately $19<br />
million, according to preliminary calculations <strong>by</strong> the state<br />
consumer advocate.<br />
Pennsylvania Electric Co. may end up with about $42 milion of<br />
its requested $55.3 million boost in annual revenues, according to<br />
the calculations which could vary <strong>by</strong> the time a final vote is taken.<br />
The indications came from informal voting in which commissioners<br />
announced their stands on various issues involved in the<br />
Met Ed and Penelec rate cases.<br />
Natural gas marketing changing<br />
. WASHINGTON, D.C. — A plan <strong>by</strong> federal energy regulators to<br />
take as much as $5 billion a year from natural gas producers and<br />
turn it over to consumers in lower bills is stirring a bitter regional<br />
fight in the Senate.<br />
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission announced yesterday<br />
it intends to vote final approval next Wednesday.on a longawaited<br />
set of rules reversing the way natural gas — a fuel that<br />
provides one-fourth the nation's energy — is marketed.<br />
The current arrangement has been in place for nearly a halfcentury.<br />
The proposed rule's, aimed at breaking up pipeline monopolies<br />
and revising their purchasing practices, were approved unanimously<br />
<strong>by</strong> the agency in draft form last May in what one thencommissioner,<br />
Oliver Richard, called the "Magna Charta of the<br />
natural gas industry."<br />
Most of the nation's 10,000 gas producers and some Wall Street<br />
analysts counter that the estimated $4 billion to $5 billion in<br />
consumer savings will stymie drilling for new gas supplies.<br />
Reagan wins farm bill debate<br />
WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) — Handing President Reagan his<br />
first victory in the current farm bill debate, the House yesterday<br />
bucked its Democratic leaders and killed a proposal'to let grain<br />
farmers vote on the future shape of their own subsidy programs.<br />
The chamber voted 251-174 to strike from the bill a farmer<br />
referendum on whether to accept the price- and income-support<br />
programs laid out in the new law, or to instead substitute sharply<br />
higher supports coupled with strict marketing and production<br />
curbs.<br />
The issue was the focus of sharp philosophical division between<br />
grassroots farm groups seeking to shrink production and force<br />
farm prices higher, and the administration and more traditional<br />
farm groups fearing that to do so would ruin American farm<br />
export markets.<br />
Meteorite may have killed dinosaurs<br />
WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP ) — A giant meteorite striking the<br />
Earth 65 million years ago may have started worldwide fires that<br />
killed the dinosaurs <strong>by</strong> plunging the planet into a dark period<br />
similiar to the "nuclear winter" some suspect might be started <strong>by</strong><br />
a nuclear war, scientists say.<br />
University of Chicago researchers say they found surprisingly<br />
high amounts of soot and charcoal in clay samples from that time,<br />
an indication that worldwide wildfires may have contributed to<br />
the global extinction of dinosaurs and half the species then alive<br />
on the Earth.<br />
In a report to be published Friday in the journal Science,<br />
chemists say smoky soot from the fires would have added to the<br />
dust thrown up <strong>by</strong> the meteorite impact to block out sunlight.<br />
This would have plunged the Earth into a cold, dark period<br />
lasting for months that soon killed some plants and animals, and<br />
eventually others that depended upon this life for food or shelter.<br />
Dr. Edward Anders, Wendy S. Wolbach and Roy S. Lewis said<br />
the findings indicate soot yield from widespread vegetation fires<br />
is higher and more uniformly distributed than previously assumed.<br />
Peres calls on Hussein for peace<br />
JERUSALEM (AP) — Prime Minister Shimon Peres said<br />
yesterday that Israel will forge ahead with efforts to start<br />
Mideast peace talks and that the Israeli raid on PLO headquarters<br />
in Tunisia would not disrupt peace efforts.<br />
Peres also called on King Hussein of Jordan to say "publicly<br />
and clearly" that he favors eliminating a state of war between the<br />
two countries.<br />
Peres, replying to foreign reporters' questions in Jerusalem,<br />
rejected European and Arab statements saying that Tuesday's<br />
bombing raid would harm prospects for peace.<br />
He accused the Palestine Liberation Organization of sabotaging<br />
peace <strong>by</strong> killing three Israelis in Larnaca, Cyprus, on Sept. 25.<br />
Israel said the air strike was in retaliation for the slayings of<br />
the Israelis, which Peres called "part of a policy of the PLO to<br />
torpedo the mission of other Arab leaders that may seek peace."<br />
El Salvador rebels released<br />
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) — Four or more prisoners<br />
have been released to the Red Cross and taken to a rebel-held<br />
area, apparently as part of an exchange for the president's<br />
kidnapped daughter, sources said yestrday.<br />
At least 37 people were killed on both sides in fighting between<br />
soldiers and leftist guerrillas in eastern El Salvador, and leftist<br />
guerrillas announced their ninth ban on highway traffic this year<br />
in a continuing campaign to wreck the economy.<br />
Government and Red Cross spokesmen did not answer or<br />
return telephone calls about the reports that the prisoners were<br />
taken to rebel territory in Chalatenango Province. The reports<br />
came from unofficial but knowledgeable sources who spoke on<br />
condition of anonymity.<br />
Rebels who claimed responsibility for the kidnapping have<br />
demanded the release of 34 prisoners in exchange for Ines<br />
Guadalupe Duarte Duran, 35-year-old daughter of President Jose<br />
Napoleon Duarte, and Ana Cecilia Villeda Sosa, 23. They were<br />
seized Sept. 10 as they arrived for classes at a private college in<br />
San Salvador, <strong>by</strong> gunmen who killed one bodyguard and wounded<br />
another.<br />
*+*++++*++++**+**+ +++*++*+++++*+++*+++*+<br />
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*<br />
*<br />
*<br />
*<br />
J<br />
3f<br />
REGISTER T<br />
mmi wmwm<br />
The November 5th elections will decide three positions on the<br />
State College Borough Council<br />
I IT ONLY TAKES A MINUTE<br />
* TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE<br />
J<br />
Register now in 203 H.CI.B. or at the voter registration table on<br />
4 the ground floor of the H.CI.B.<br />
*<br />
*<br />
*<br />
*<br />
*<br />
*<br />
The Undergraduate Student Government<br />
••••• *•*••••****••*••••••• ••••**^<br />
fif \Q$C& vT<br />
In tne name of God ><br />
tne Beneficent , the Merciful<br />
*** WHO WILL WIN THE<br />
PERSIAN GULF CONFLICT?<br />
The sometimes "forgotten" and sometimes "bloody" war between<br />
Iran and Iraq still continues. It is now five years old. There is a<br />
lot of speculation on how the war will end , when it will end , and who<br />
will win. There are those who blindly condemn any war, even a<br />
defensive struggle. There are those who question why the war should<br />
continue while one side is offering peace, and finally there are those<br />
who condemn this particular war since "Muslim" blood is being<br />
shed. Furthermore, the aims and goals of each party involved in the<br />
conflict may now seem vague, and the role of other countries may<br />
not be crystal clear.<br />
After the victory of the Islamic Revolution in Iran and the fall of<br />
the Shah, the staunchist ally of the U.S. in the Middle East and ,<br />
besides Israel, the only "policeman" in the region , the U.S.<br />
contemplated ways to compensate the loss of control in Iran and<br />
reviewed candidates to fill the available position of the policeman.<br />
Efforts to influence the transitional government of Mehdi Bazargan<br />
and various espionage schemes and destabilizing tactics to pressure<br />
the leaders for a change in the course of the revolution led to a<br />
protest <strong>by</strong> university students in the form of a takeover of the U.S.<br />
embassy in Tehran. That , being the second big blow to U.S foreign<br />
policy, prompted the idea of punishing the Islamic Republic, as was<br />
recently revealed <strong>by</strong> Jody Powell:' "The one most clear and visible<br />
consequence of the taking of those <strong>hostage</strong>s is the Iran-Iraq war.<br />
Without the taking of the <strong>hostage</strong>s, that war would not have<br />
resulted...*"<br />
Saddam Hussein, the leader of the Baa'thist regime in Iraq,<br />
definitely had big ambitions. On the one hand, he had ambitions to<br />
be the "hero" of the "Arab Nation" as Jamal Abdo'Naser was once<br />
considered. On the other hand he seemed fit to become the<br />
policeman of the region, which would obtain support from the West<br />
and safeguard their interest. Saddam was chosen as the man to do<br />
the job. Immediately before the start of the war a series of meetings<br />
took place between Saddam Hussein, Henry Kissinger, 2 Brezeinski<br />
and other high level U.S. officials. 1 Although Saddam claimed to be<br />
against Israel and U.S. Imperialism, and although the U.S. had Iraq<br />
on the list of countries supporting terrorism , his apparent foes<br />
realized the saying that "the enemy of my enemy is my friend."<br />
Everything seemed just right. Saddam had a strong and welltrained<br />
army with lots of reserves, a vast amont of ammunition ,<br />
advanced equipment, and huge foreign reserves. Moreover, the<br />
ambition of repeating history <strong>by</strong> conquering the "Persian" land<br />
added to the eagerness of his army to carryout the mission. On the<br />
other hand, after the Islamic Revolution , the Iranian armed forces<br />
were in disarray and lacked the necessary preparedness to defend the<br />
country. After Saddam Hussein unilaterally abrogated the 1975<br />
Algiers Agreement and stated claims over the Shatt-al-Arab waterway<br />
and three small islands in the Persian Gulf , the war started on<br />
Sept. 22, 1980 when Iraq invaded Iran and occupied several<br />
provinces. The news of the invasion spread almost instantly<br />
throughout the West and speculations were centered on the number<br />
of days it would take the Iraqi army to topple the government of the<br />
Islamic Republic.<br />
It was soon realized that there were some miscalculations and the<br />
establishment in Tehran was much stronger that what was thought.<br />
In the meanwhile Iraq was preparing revised maps of the region, as<br />
Saddam Hussein had declared on Dec. 23, 1980 at a session of his<br />
cabinet that "... the occupied provinces would continue to remain<br />
under the domination of Iraq and that they would be annexed to the<br />
map of Iraq." 4 The plan was later verified from the maps found in<br />
the bunkers of the destroyed Iraqi units.<br />
It did not take the Muslim people of Iran much over a year to<br />
recuperate, organize the weak army and establish a strong Revolutionary<br />
Guards Corps. Soon, with great sacrifices, they lifted the<br />
siege of Abadan and liberated Khorramshahr and forced the Iraqi<br />
army to desert most of the occupied territories and retreat to its<br />
borders. The sweet dream turned into a nightmare as the collaborators<br />
realized that the Islamic Revolution cannot be defeated.<br />
Soon "peace loving" groups popped up like mushrooms and<br />
spread the words of peace between the two countries. Apparently<br />
Footnotes<br />
Iranian Muslim Student Association<br />
1. Jody Powell, the Press Secretary duing the Carter Administra<br />
tion. Interview in ABC's "Night Line" program on Nov. 1, 1984<br />
2. Wall Street Journal, Feb. 8, 1980.<br />
3. Pacifica News Service, Aug. 1980.<br />
these groups had not realized that the victim had been suffering from<br />
the atrocities of the aggressor for about twenty months. Only after it<br />
was sensed that the hero of the "Arab Nation" could not defeat the<br />
Islamic Revolution , they discovered why war and not peace. One<br />
wonders where those "concerned Muslims" that condemn the victim<br />
for not accepting an imposed peace and continuing the bloodshed<br />
were when the Iranian Muslims were being massacred in the<br />
occupied provinces. Where were they when the civilian men and<br />
youth of Iran were being transferred to Iraq as prisoners of war,<br />
their towns and villages being destroyed , their mosques and schools<br />
being leveled , their brothers and sisters of Iranian origin being<br />
driven away from their homes in Iraq.<br />
Iraq i s failure to achieve the planned objectives resulted in closer<br />
ties between the U.S. and Iraq for more direct aids. This change of<br />
policy was later announced when ambassadors were exchanged.<br />
Although the U.S., like the Soviets and the French, has publicly<br />
maintained the status of neutrality, her complicity in the conflict has<br />
surfaced in the form of electronic surveillance protection given to<br />
Iraqi warplanes <strong>by</strong> U.S. Air Force AWAC's operating out of Saudi<br />
Arabia ,' <strong>by</strong> the transport of American made war material from<br />
Egypt to Iraq,' and <strong>by</strong> the engagement of the State Department in a<br />
vast worldwide campaign to prevent most arm-suppliers from selling<br />
any military related equipment to Iran. Of course other U.S. allies in<br />
the region , such as Egypt, Jordan and Morocco, have corroborated<br />
the aggression <strong>by</strong> supplying manpower and equipment. Saudi Arabia<br />
and Kuwait have actually subsidized the aggression with petrodollars.<br />
Racing to take part in the crime, the "neutral" French and the<br />
Soviets, lured <strong>by</strong> the petrodollars and agreeing in principle on this<br />
issue with the U.S., supply advanced fighter planes and sophisticated<br />
tanks to Iraq.<br />
Unable to win in the battlefields , Saddam Hussein resorted to<br />
using chemical weapons, attacking merchant vessels, threatening<br />
international civil aviation, and finally escalating the bombing of<br />
large Iranian cities in recent months. All of these hopeless efforts are<br />
aimed at weakening the morale of the Islamic forces and breaking<br />
the resistance of the brave Muslims and undermining their loyalty to<br />
the revolution. These latest attempts were foiled <strong>by</strong> the massive and<br />
unique participation of the people on June 14, 1985 in a demonstration<br />
in support of the continuation of the defensive struggle against<br />
the aggressors.<br />
The leaders of the Islamic Republic deplore war and bloodshed<br />
and welcome any effort to safeguard the observance of the accepted<br />
norms of international law. They believe that if justice is not brought<br />
about <strong>by</strong> world public opinion , there is no alternative but to resort to<br />
force and , as always, seek support and guidance from God<br />
Almighty, the Exalted. In order to end the imposed war and to<br />
ensure a lasting peace in the region and remove the threat to<br />
international peace and security, there is no alternative but to<br />
implement justice, punish the aggressor and compensate the victim.<br />
Those that say the victim must be forced to accept an imposed<br />
peace should ask themselves do they know of any just power on the<br />
face of the earth to deter another attack <strong>by</strong> Saddam once he has<br />
recovered and gained strength? The strategy of imposing a ceasefire<br />
without due attention to the structural issues in the conflict will<br />
create an unstable border between Iran and Iraq worse than the<br />
borders of Occupied Palestine and will provide an opportunity for<br />
hegemonic powers to blackmail and spread their influence.<br />
Let there be no doubt about the future. Islam is on the rise, and<br />
the Islamic Republic, having proved that it is able to stand up and<br />
struggle for justice and the implementation of the Islamic laws,<br />
despite attacks from evil forces, grows stronger day <strong>by</strong> day. The<br />
heroic Muslims of Iran, more resolute than ever before, continue to<br />
defend Islam and the rights of the oppressed. The wave of the<br />
Islamic movement can be felt in Lebanon, Egypt, Sudan, Iraq and<br />
elsewhere. The future belongs to the Muslim masses and their<br />
beloved leaders. It is those kings and puppet rulers, installed <strong>by</strong><br />
overnight coups and lacking any mass support , that have no place in<br />
the future. It is hoped that justice loving people are keen and alert<br />
enough to avoid siding with evil forces.<br />
4. An AP dispatch at the time.<br />
5. Nation, Oct. 25, 1980.<br />
6. New York Times, May 27, 1982<br />
The Daily Collegian Friday. Oct. 4. 1985—9<br />
October 2. 1985<br />
*<br />
*<br />
*
ODimons<br />
10<br />
The Daily Collegian<br />
Friday, Oct. 4. 1985<br />
Hall of Shame?<br />
There's a cancer growing on major<br />
league sports, and it's spreading more with<br />
each coming season. But in this case, drugs<br />
won't treat the problem — they are the<br />
problem.<br />
In recent weeks, some of baseball's finest<br />
players — including former stars Willie<br />
Stargell and Willie Mays and current stars<br />
Keith Hernandez and Joaquin Andujar —<br />
have been accused in drug-tfefficking trials<br />
for allegedly using cocaine and other illegal<br />
substances. Many of the Pittsburgh Pirates'<br />
1979 World Series squad, including Dave<br />
Parker, Dale Berra and John Milner, have<br />
also been linked to cocaine use.<br />
And the list seems to go on.<br />
What kind of example does this set for the<br />
little league players who grow up idolizing<br />
these players, or those high school and<br />
college players who are close to signing<br />
contracts with major league clubs? Will<br />
their careers be cut short <strong>by</strong> overzealous<br />
cocaine dealers looking to make an easy<br />
buck?<br />
How could such behavior be allowed to<br />
mar the tradition associated closely to the<br />
ail-American ideal?<br />
Life must have been simpler in the days<br />
of the Lou Gehrigs, Babe Ruths and Joe<br />
DiMaggios; the game had more romance<br />
and playing was its own reward. Pete Rose<br />
reminisced not long ago that he played<br />
baseball for the Philadelphia Phillies for<br />
$12,000 a year at first and loved it every bit<br />
as much then as he does now.<br />
But something must have happened along<br />
the way.<br />
Television brought the game into the<br />
public's living room and poured millions of<br />
dollars into big city teams to broadcast<br />
games. The Curt Flood case more than 15<br />
years ago, where for the first time players<br />
were allowed to declare free agency, paved<br />
the way for players to name their price to<br />
the highest bidder. And greedy owners,<br />
ever more eager for winners, paid millions<br />
of dollars to these players. That's the tragedy<br />
of it.<br />
It seems too many athletes are playing<br />
reader opinion<br />
It s murder<br />
As the dates of three people's deaths at Rockview<br />
Correctional Institution near, we all must realize that<br />
capita] punishment does not do what it is supposed to do.<br />
Therefore, it should be abolished and these and others'<br />
lives should be spared.<br />
Executions are more premeditated than most murders.<br />
And killing is no way to show that killing is wrong.<br />
Granted, these people have committed serious crimes<br />
and society must protect itself against these people. We<br />
must protect ourselves, our families and our children. But<br />
is this the best method? Is this a just method. It is called<br />
the criminal justice system.<br />
One argument for executing people who commmit<br />
violent (i.e. capital) crimes is that it teaches others if<br />
they kill or rape, they themselves will be killed. This<br />
concept of general deference assumes that violent criminals<br />
clearly rationalize and weigh the consequences<br />
before doing grave violence. Most people who murder do<br />
not see past their actions they are so caught up in passion,<br />
or drugs or alcohol, according to Amnesty International,<br />
a world-wide movement working for human rights. They<br />
also said that when the crime is premeditated, the<br />
for headlines and multi-million dollar contracts.<br />
And, with all the accusations and<br />
charges flying around and planting seeds of<br />
doubt in everyone's mind, playing for the<br />
love of the game seems to be a part of<br />
ancient history — a part of the old hall of<br />
fame.<br />
What is lacking in the professional athlete<br />
that would make him take drugs? What<br />
outside pressures are too overwhelming for<br />
him to handle without believing artificial<br />
stimulants are the answer? Isn't the natural<br />
high that comes with playing with the best<br />
athletes of the game enough?<br />
Obviously, it isn't.<br />
Heroes like Stargell, the 1979 co-National<br />
League Most Valuable Player who powered<br />
the Pirates to two World Championships,<br />
and Parker are now looked upon as criminals,<br />
not heroes, <strong>by</strong> the little leaguers.<br />
What does Yogi Berra think about all<br />
this? What would have happened to the<br />
baseball tradition had Yogi, Jackie Robinson<br />
or Mickey Mantle succumbed to outside<br />
pressures and used artificial stimulants?<br />
They didn't need any dope-induced high to<br />
play the game; they played with heart and<br />
guts and sometimes played with pain.<br />
No tears should be shed for the players<br />
who are charged with drug-trafficking.<br />
They were the lucky athletes who succeeded<br />
in a job where others failed. They<br />
traveled to the largest cities, ate at the<br />
finest restaurants, and stayed at the nicest<br />
hotels. They lived in a world that less skilled<br />
athletes can only dream of. Sadly enough,<br />
however, this dream world is becoming a<br />
nightmare as players abuse themselves and<br />
the reputation of their sport.<br />
The cancer that is spreading over major<br />
league sports must be treated. The traditions<br />
of baseball and football must be as<br />
respected as they were when players gave it<br />
their "all" for the love of the game — not for<br />
the money; not for the headlines; but solely<br />
for the love of the game. The tradition of<br />
any major league sport should not be<br />
marred with the tragedy and shame of<br />
drugs.<br />
individual rarely believes he or she will be apprehended<br />
let alone <strong>executed</strong>. This sense of I-will-get-away-with-it<br />
cannot be wiped out of the criminal mind unless we<br />
execute all murderers arid so quickly after conviction.<br />
But mandatory capital punishment is unconstitutional as<br />
cruel and unusual punishment.<br />
General deterence is also questioned <strong>by</strong> the Supreme<br />
Court's 1976 conclusion of 25 years'of research that there<br />
is no conclusive evidence that shows the death penalty<br />
deters violent crime.<br />
Since 1972, 62 percent of the people on death row have<br />
been unskilled, service or domestic workers; and 60<br />
percent were unemployed at the time of their crimes.<br />
Since 1930, 90 percent (405) of the men <strong>executed</strong> for rape<br />
were black. In Texas, blacks who kill whites are 87<br />
percent more likely to receive a death sentence than those<br />
with black victims.<br />
Is this criminal justice? Or institutional racism and<br />
systemic oppression of the poor?<br />
I repeat: Because the death penalty does not do what it<br />
purports to do, because it is the most extreme punishment,<br />
it must be abolished. We must stop our state<br />
(ourselves?) from killing and calling it justice.<br />
Edward A. Dougherty, junior-English<br />
•a<br />
opinions<br />
The Daily Collegian Fridaj Oct. 4. 1985—11<br />
SPRINGSTEIN:<br />
The man, the myth, the voice — liver, lover, poet<br />
"Oo-oo-oo>-ooh. Wooooh-ooh-oooh"<br />
Springstein, "I'm on Fire."<br />
"Aaaaaagh. Aaaaaaagh-aaarrgh"<br />
Springstein, "Jungleland."<br />
"O-o-ooo-ooooooooo; u-o-ooo-ooooooooo; 0-o-o-o-ooooh,<br />
u-o-o-o-oooon, wowo-wo-wo-wooooooooh"<br />
— Springstein,<br />
"Born to Run."<br />
(Hey, is that spelling right? ) ¦<br />
1 -><br />
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a. "» <<br />
v * »<br />
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12—The Daily Collegian Friday, Oct. 4, 1985<br />
Students continue S. African boycott<br />
By TOM BALDWIN<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Students<br />
pressed a school boycott in several black areas<br />
yesteray, emptying classrooms in an attempt to<br />
force the dismantling of apartheid.<br />
In Natal Province, black trade unions and<br />
community groups called off a month-long boycott<br />
of white businesses, saying it threatened to<br />
divide opponents of the South African government's<br />
institutionalized racial segregation policy<br />
Ṗolice said they shot and killed a young black<br />
rioter in Kwazekele, a riot-torn black township<br />
near Port Elizabeth. The victim, whose age was<br />
unavailable, was shot dead when army vehicles<br />
were stoned, according to police. The school<br />
boycott appeared to be most effective in black<br />
townships near the large cities of the Transvaal<br />
Province, the most populated and industralized<br />
of South Africa's four provinces.<br />
While soldiers guarded vacant schoolyards in<br />
Soweto, outside Johannesburg, students roamed<br />
the rutted streets. The same was true in townships<br />
near Pretoria , 25 miles to the north, according<br />
to residents there.<br />
There were only scattered reports of stonethrowing<br />
and "intimidation," the term used <strong>by</strong><br />
South African authorities to describe militant<br />
Blacks forcing students not to attend school.<br />
A spokesman for the national Department ol<br />
Education and Training confirmed that many<br />
black schools around the two cities were empty,<br />
although boycotts appeared to fade around Cape<br />
Town.<br />
In Mamelodi, near Pretoria , all 10 high schools<br />
were empty, the spokesman said.<br />
Classroom boycotts have been used <strong>by</strong> students<br />
seeking to better their education and end<br />
white domination.<br />
Boycotts in early 1984 preceded the past .13<br />
months of black rioting that has killed more than<br />
750 people, <strong>by</strong> unofficial count. The great majority<br />
of the dead have been black.<br />
In Natal Province, along the country's Indian<br />
ocean shore, black unions and community action<br />
groups yesterday called off a month-old boycott<br />
of white retailers. A nationwide boycott that has<br />
closed some white business continues.<br />
Natal has been torn <strong>by</strong> violence among Blacks,<br />
primarily between supporters of Inkatha , a Zulu<br />
movement, and backers of the United Democratic<br />
Front, the largest multiracial organization<br />
fighting white rule.<br />
The Democratic Front supported the boycott<br />
but Inkatha opposed economic pressure except<br />
as a last resort.<br />
"We now believe that the continuation of the<br />
boycott threatens to divide rather than unify due<br />
to the peculiar situation we face in Natal," the<br />
participants said in a statement. They noted that<br />
the black chamber of commerce, an Inkatha<br />
affiliate, had threatened violence to end the<br />
boycott.<br />
Also yesterday, the Council of the Cape Province<br />
Law Society, which speaks for lawyers of all<br />
races, said it wduld assist anyone wanting to file<br />
charges of brutality or torture against police.<br />
Political detainees have complained for years<br />
they are abused <strong>by</strong> interrogators. The number of<br />
complaints rose sharply over the past year,<br />
particularly after a state of emergency was<br />
imposed in July.<br />
In Washington, D.C, State Department deputy<br />
spokesman Charles Redman took exception to<br />
statements Wednesday <strong>by</strong> South African President<br />
P. W. Botha, who criticized President Reagan<br />
and said attempts at residential integration<br />
in the United States had failed.<br />
"President Botha's comments on segregation<br />
were disappointing and clearly at odds with our<br />
own history and principles," Redman said.<br />
Reagan promises economic burst with tax reforms<br />
By TERENCE HUNT<br />
Associated Press Writer<br />
CINCINNATI — President Reagan,<br />
battling against predictions Congress<br />
will not approve a new tax system<br />
this year, said yesterday that skeptics<br />
soon will find themselves enshrined<br />
in the "Great Mistakes Hall<br />
of Fame."<br />
Trying to rouse Americans to demand<br />
an overhaul of the current tax<br />
code, Reagan promised that his program<br />
of lower tax rates and fewer<br />
deductions "will give us a new burst<br />
of economic achievement."<br />
Reagan made a pitch for his program<br />
during a visit to the Procter &<br />
Gamble soap manufacturing plant<br />
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here and at a separate appearance<br />
before Cincinnati business people.<br />
The trip marked the 19th city or town<br />
Reagan has visited to put pressure on<br />
Congress to enact his plan.<br />
Despite Reagan's efforts, members<br />
of Congress say there does not appear<br />
to be much enthusiasm among their<br />
constituents for tax reform, and that<br />
trade and the budget deficit attract<br />
more attention.<br />
Rep. Richard Gephardt of Missouri,<br />
chairman of the House Democratic<br />
Caucus, said Wednesday that<br />
unless Reagan can generate more<br />
support for a new tax system, "My<br />
sense is that this is a very troubled<br />
subject in Congress."<br />
Reagan said he knows that many<br />
MEET THE AUTHOI<br />
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people are saying it will be impossible<br />
to get a bill through Congress this<br />
year.<br />
To those skeptics, Reagan said , "I<br />
have a few other choice predictions<br />
I'd like them to consider:<br />
• "In 1899, Charles H. Duell, commissioner<br />
of the U.S. Patent Office,<br />
said this: 'Everything tha t can oe<br />
invented has been invented.'<br />
• "With the advent of sound tracks<br />
for motion pictures in the '20s, Harry<br />
Warner of Warner Brothers said this:<br />
'Who the hell wants to hear actors<br />
talk?'<br />
• "Here's one for a great baseball<br />
town like Cincinnati. In 1921, Tris<br />
Speaker of the Cleveland Indians said<br />
this: 'Babe Ruth made a big mistake<br />
when he gave up pitching.'"<br />
Zeroing in on his critics, the president<br />
said, "Today's nay-sayers will<br />
soon take their place beside Tris<br />
Speaker in the Great Mistakes Hall of<br />
Fame. Just as sure as Ruth could hit<br />
homers and (Pete) Rose can break<br />
records, during this session of the<br />
Congress, America's tax plan will<br />
become law."<br />
However, even Republican congressional<br />
leaders do not show as<br />
much optimism as Reagan.<br />
At a meeting with Reagan this<br />
week, however, Dole said he would be<br />
willing to keep the Republican-controlled<br />
Senate in session after<br />
Thanksgiving .<br />
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Application for absentee ballots<br />
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POETRY READING<br />
MAY SARTON<br />
"A Celebration of<br />
Women<br />
- Friends & Lovers<br />
Myths & Goddesses<br />
MONDAY, OCT. 7<br />
8 PM<br />
ROOM 121 SPARKS<br />
SPONSORED BY:<br />
Women's Studies Program<br />
Speech Communications Dept<br />
Center For Women Students<br />
Religious Studies Program<br />
Gerontology Center<br />
JO '
SDoris<br />
13<br />
The Daily Collegian<br />
Friday, Oct. 4, 1985<br />
Eagles headed for<br />
tough test in Saints<br />
By RALPH BERNSTEIN<br />
AP Sports Writer<br />
PHILADELPHIA - The Philadelphia<br />
Eagles are heading into<br />
the eye of a hurricane.<br />
The Eagles, 1-3, Sunday will<br />
play at New Orleans, where the<br />
Saints, 2-2, are the talk of the town<br />
after ambushing the defending<br />
NFL champion San Francisco<br />
49ers 20-17 last week.<br />
"Everybody around town, that's<br />
all they're talking about," Saints<br />
quarterback Dave Wilson said in a<br />
telephone interview with Philadelphia<br />
reporters yesterday.<br />
Wilson laughed when he was<br />
asked if he had ever thought the<br />
Saints, who have never won more<br />
than three consecutive games in 19<br />
NFL seasons, would have to guard<br />
against overconfidence.<br />
"But after coming off a big win<br />
as everybody is touting this one<br />
was, then we have to guard<br />
against that," Wilson said.<br />
"We've got to go ahead and<br />
forget that one (San Francisco)<br />
and realize we've got Philadelphia<br />
this week and can get above .500<br />
and hopefully get this season<br />
turned around from our 0-2 start."<br />
Wilson, who started the season<br />
with 18 straight incompletions and<br />
finished 2-22 against Kansas City,<br />
has come back to complete 51 of<br />
107 passes for 745 yards and five<br />
touchdowns.<br />
"I just keep my confidence up<br />
and hope things get better," he<br />
said.<br />
He said the Saints' confidence is<br />
"really high right now."<br />
"We realize that when we play<br />
inspired, very emotional, enthusiastic<br />
football , we can play with<br />
anybody in the league. We just got<br />
to be able to do that every week."<br />
Wilson said the Saints, who have<br />
lost to Kansas City and Denver<br />
and defeated Tampa Bay and the<br />
49ers, must control the ball<br />
against the Eagles, "score some<br />
points and hope our defense can<br />
hold them down."<br />
Wilson believes that the Eagles<br />
are a lot better than their record<br />
indicates, "especially on the defensive<br />
side of the ball. They've<br />
only given up two touchdowns in<br />
four games.<br />
"The defense plays very sound<br />
football. It doesn't do a lot of<br />
things but plays aggressive,<br />
comes after you. We have to be<br />
looking out for them. We can't be<br />
letting down against Philadelphia,"<br />
he said.<br />
Wilson, who started only two<br />
games in 1983 and 1984 before<br />
winning the starting job this season,<br />
said he is not worried that<br />
veteran Richard Todd and Bob<strong>by</strong><br />
Hebert, a former USFL star, are<br />
waiting .in the wings should he<br />
falter.<br />
"I feel I've done a good enough<br />
job the last couple of weeks that I<br />
can go out and have a sub-par<br />
performance and still feel secure<br />
in the job. I'm not looking over my<br />
shoulder. I'm just trying to go out<br />
and do my job and not worry about<br />
anything like that."<br />
Saints Coach Bum Phillips, also<br />
participating in the telephone conference,<br />
said the Eagles are "a<br />
sound football team, the kind of<br />
team I like to see but don't like to<br />
Play."<br />
"They're consistent," said Phillips.<br />
"They try to do some things<br />
that they can do and practice them<br />
over and over and do them well. I<br />
would much rather play somebody<br />
that changed formations."<br />
Eagles Coach Marion Campbell<br />
said the left ankle of his rookie<br />
quarterback , Randall Cunningham,<br />
is still tender from an injury<br />
suffered last week in a 16-10 overtime<br />
loss to the New York Giants.<br />
"He's working out, but still getting<br />
treatments," said Campbell.<br />
Cunningham is listed as a possible<br />
starter against New Orleans.<br />
Coleman leads Cards <strong>by</strong> Mets<br />
ST. LOUIS (AP ) - Vince Coleman<br />
had three hits, including a two-run<br />
single in the fourth inning, and the St.<br />
Louis Cardinals averted a threegame<br />
sweep <strong>by</strong> New York with a 4-3<br />
victory last night that restored their<br />
lead in the National League East to<br />
two games over the Mets.<br />
With the victory, the Cardinals<br />
ended a three-game losing streak and<br />
reduced their magic number to two.<br />
Any combination of two Cardinals<br />
victories or Mets losses would clinch<br />
the division.<br />
The Cardinals finish the season<br />
with three games at home against<br />
Chicago, sending Bob Forsch against<br />
Dennis Eckersley tonight. The Mets<br />
play three at home with Montreal,<br />
with Sid Fernandez going against the<br />
Expos' Bill Gullickson in the opener.<br />
If the two teams finish the season in<br />
a tie, a one-game playoff in New York<br />
Monday will decide the division.<br />
The Cardinals came into the threegame<br />
series leading New York <strong>by</strong><br />
three games, but the Mets pulled<br />
within a game with a 1-0, 11-inning<br />
victory Tuesday night and a 5-2 decision<br />
Wednesday night.<br />
The two teams were tied 1-1 in the<br />
fourth inning when Coleman drove in<br />
a pair of runs with his second hit of<br />
the night off Rick Aguilera, 10-7.<br />
Coleman went into the game with one<br />
hit in his previous 20 at-bats.<br />
Yankees 3<br />
Brewers O<br />
NEW YORK (AP) — Ron Guidry<br />
pitched seven strong innings and<br />
Rickey Henderson hit a leadoff home<br />
run in the first inning last night,<br />
AP Laserphoto<br />
New York Mets' pitcher Rick Agullera wipes the sweat from his head after<br />
giving up the game winning hit to St. Louis Cardinals' Vince Coleman In the<br />
fourth inning of last night's game in St. Louis. The Cardinals beat the Mets 4-<br />
3 to cut their magic number to two games in the National League East.<br />
Stickwomen take aim at UCOIMIM<br />
By GLENN SCHUTZ<br />
Collegian Sports Writer<br />
The women's field hockey team will<br />
have it's hands full as it takes aim at<br />
highly-ranked Connecticut, tomorrow<br />
at 1 p.m. at Lady Lion Field.<br />
The Lady Lions are ranked 13th <strong>by</strong><br />
the recent National Collegiate Athletic<br />
Association field hockey poll, while<br />
Connecticut (9-0) was unranked this<br />
week: However, this was not due to<br />
the team's poor play or easy schedule,<br />
Head Coach Gillian Rattray said.<br />
Instead, Connecticut was unable to<br />
send in it's certificate to the ranking<br />
system. Connecticut was listed at<br />
No. 8 in last week's poll.<br />
The Lady Lions (7-2) have been<br />
working on many different things in<br />
this week's practices to prepare<br />
themselves for tomorrow's battle.<br />
"Offensively we have been working<br />
on cutting off the ball," Rattray said.<br />
"We have also been working on our<br />
circle play and following the deflection<br />
of the ball off of the goalie's<br />
pads."<br />
Rattray also plans to have her team<br />
put a great deal of pressure on Connecticut's<br />
young goalie.<br />
"This is the first season that the<br />
girl is starting, so we are going to try<br />
to pressure her and see if she will<br />
crack," Rattray said. "Teams have<br />
been scoring on her, so she's not<br />
unbeatable."<br />
Team Captain Lorraine Razzi is<br />
looking forward to the confrontation<br />
with Connecticut after the seeing the<br />
positive results of this week's practices.<br />
"We have seen them play on the<br />
game films from last year and we're<br />
getting really pumped up to play<br />
them," she said. "We've been working<br />
on nothing but beating them."<br />
Despite Connecticut's power (the<br />
Huskies have scored 33 goals and<br />
given up only six goals in nine<br />
games) , Rattray is not concerned<br />
about playing them.<br />
"We are aware of how good they<br />
are, but I know that they can be<br />
beaten," she said.<br />
In fact, Rattray said she would<br />
rather coach against a top-ranked<br />
opponent.<br />
"It's always exciting to play a good<br />
leading New York over the Milwaukee<br />
Brewers 3-0 and keeping the<br />
Yankees in the American League<br />
East race.<br />
New York pulled within three<br />
games of division-leading Toronto,<br />
which lost to Detroit 2-0 and had its<br />
magic number for clinching the AL<br />
East at two. The Yankees begin a<br />
three-game series in Toronto tonight<br />
and need to sweep the Blue Jays to<br />
avoid elimination.<br />
Guidry, the leading winner in the<br />
league, raised his record to 22-6 in a<br />
game played in a cold, constant<br />
drizzle. The left-hander allowed six<br />
hits, struck a season-high 10 — all<br />
swinging — and walked only one.<br />
Guidry won for the ninth time in his<br />
last 11 decisions, and his victory total<br />
represents the second-highest of his<br />
career after a 25-3 mark in 1978.<br />
Brian Fisher pitched two hitless<br />
innings for his 14th save.<br />
Tigers 2<br />
Blue Jays O<br />
DETROIT (AP) — Tom Brookens<br />
tripled home two runs to back the sixhit<br />
pitching of Walt Terrell as the<br />
Detroit Tigers beat Toronto 2-0 last<br />
night, completing a sweep of the Blue<br />
Jays and further stalling their bid for<br />
the American League East<br />
championship.<br />
Heading into the game, the Blue<br />
Jays, who led New York <strong>by</strong> four<br />
games, needed any combination of<br />
Toronto victories and Yankee defeats<br />
totaling two to clinch the title.<br />
Terrell, 15-10, who notched his fifth<br />
complete game, struck out six and<br />
walked three. Toronto's Jim Clancy,<br />
9-6, gave up two runs on three hits in<br />
the 4 2-3 innings he worked.<br />
In the Detroit fifth, Nelson Simmons<br />
walked, went to second on Chet<br />
Lemon's single and took third on Alan<br />
Trammell's grounder that forced<br />
Lemon.<br />
Royals 4<br />
Angels 1<br />
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP ) — Frank<br />
White, George Brett and Steve Balboni<br />
hit home runs last night in support<br />
of Danny Jackson, powering Kansas<br />
City past California 4-1, and into a<br />
one-game lead in the American<br />
League Wes.t.<br />
Jackson's gave up 11 hits, in 8 2-3<br />
innings, but benefitted from two Kansas<br />
City double plays as California<br />
stranded nine baserunners. Dan Quisenberry<br />
retired the final batter for<br />
his 36th save.<br />
The Angels, who brought a onegame<br />
lead into the four-game showdown,<br />
will finish their regular season<br />
with three weekend games in Texas<br />
while the Royals host Oakland for<br />
three.<br />
team, there is a great dea l of high<br />
level skill out there," she said.<br />
The Lady Lions beat Connecticut<br />
last season as they upset the highlyranked<br />
Lady Huskies at home to end<br />
a long home winning streak.<br />
"We came out and took them <strong>by</strong><br />
surprise last year, and this year we<br />
want to do it again," the head coach<br />
said.<br />
Unlike some of the other teams that<br />
Penn State has played this season,<br />
Connecticut is neither overly quick or<br />
extremely aggressive. However, it is<br />
a "very well rounded team" in Rattray's<br />
eyes.<br />
"They are not a very flashy team ,<br />
but they play extremely well together,"<br />
she said.<br />
Razzi agrees that Connecticut is a<br />
very good team.<br />
"They are a very impressive team,<br />
with very polished stick work," she<br />
said.<br />
Looking back to last season's victory<br />
over Connecticut both Rattray and<br />
Razzi agree that it was the high point<br />
of the year and hope that tomorrow's<br />
game will be just as successful:<br />
"That was the most intense game<br />
of the season for us, and this year<br />
they (Connecticut) want to do the<br />
same thing that we did to them - beat<br />
them at home," Razzi said.<br />
Besides being a year older, the<br />
Lady-Lions believe that they are a<br />
year better and have gained a good<br />
deal more confidence.<br />
"This year we are a much better<br />
team than when we played Connecticut<br />
a year ago, we feel that we can do<br />
it now," Razzi said.<br />
After coming off an impressive<br />
victory over Maryland, Penn State is<br />
still on a high, but in Razzi's words,<br />
"we've become more motivated<br />
looking forward rather than looking<br />
back".<br />
Rattray and Razzi both realize that<br />
to defeat Connecticut the team will<br />
have to play the best that it can for<br />
the entire seventy minutes of the<br />
game.<br />
"If everyone plays the way that<br />
they can, we will have a really good<br />
day out there," the team captain<br />
said.<br />
Penn State, hampered <strong>by</strong> injuries<br />
?-><br />
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Collegian Photo / Criaty Rlckard<br />
Penn State's Chris Vftale (In white) pursues the ball as a Syracuse defender<br />
loses her stick In a game last month at Lady Lion Field. The field hockey team, 7-<br />
2 and winners of its last five in a row, hosts perennial power Connecticut at 1<br />
p.m. tomorrow at Lady Lion Field.<br />
throughout the earlier part of the<br />
season, expects to have it's team at<br />
full strength for the game. According<br />
to Razzi the team is "healthy in mind<br />
and body."<br />
Connecticut is coming off of a 2-0<br />
victory over Harvard on Tuesday. It<br />
is currently ranked No. 1 in the Mideast<br />
Division, a conference which<br />
also includes Penn State.<br />
Collegian Photo / Dan Olaakl<br />
Penn State's Steve Potter, left, dribbles the ball past a West Virginia defender in a game last month at Jeffrey Field. The<br />
No. 19 soccer team (7-3) hosts undefeated Long Island University at 7:15 p.m. tonight at Jeffrey Field.<br />
Booters face stiff test in LIU<br />
By CAROL D. RATH<br />
Collegian Sports Writer<br />
If the soccer team is to stay in contention for a national<br />
playoff bid, it may need some help from the fans, because<br />
the onset of seven of the remaining tough 11 bouts in the<br />
season will be held at Jeffrey Field, beginning at 7:15<br />
tonight with the undefeated Long Island University (7-0).<br />
The Lions (7-3) will definitely have their work cut out<br />
for them tonight after No. 12 Long Island's blowout game<br />
last Monday with Medgar Evers, 12-0.<br />
"This is probably the best team, up to this point, that<br />
will be visiting Jeffrey Field," Coach Walter Bahr said,<br />
"And for the next four Friday nights, we have the top<br />
teams coming in, starting with Long Island, Howard,<br />
Hartwick (No. 4), and Connecticut (No. 7). The best<br />
home games of the years will be coming up."<br />
Topping the Lions' surveillance list of tonight will be the<br />
Blackbird scorers of the Medgar Evers game: left wing<br />
Jorge Acosta (4 goals) , right wing Maicol Antelo (3<br />
goals), Roger Chavez (2 goals, 2 assists), Mickey Kydes<br />
(2 goals, 2 assists) and Javier Marquet (2 assists). The<br />
12th goal resulted from a Medgar Evers defender deflecting<br />
the ball into his own goal.<br />
Returning Blackbird goalie Ricardo Aguilera has allowed<br />
only three goals in the last seven games.<br />
"Most of the members of the Long Island team are<br />
Latins and they play little bit different style than the<br />
teams we've played up till now," Bahr said. "It's more of<br />
a ball-control game, a little bit more deliberate build-up<br />
from the defense and you should see some outstanding<br />
individual skill."<br />
The Lions dropped eight places to No. 19 after losing a<br />
disappointing 3-0 loss to No. 14 Duke last Sunday.<br />
"I think we're anxious to get back on the playing field<br />
after that 3-0 loss to Duke and in that loss, we were in that<br />
game up until 20 minutes left to play," Bahr said. "We<br />
thought we were going to win that game and it turned out<br />
that we took a loss. So we're anxious to get back into our<br />
winning ways."<br />
The only common opponent between LIU and Penn<br />
State has been Fairleigh Dickinson University. Long<br />
Island defeated the team from Teaneck, N.J., on Sept. 11,<br />
2-1. Ten days later, the Lions returned to Happy Valley<br />
with a 3-1 victory over FDU.<br />
"We played FDU and it was a tough game, so obviously<br />
it shows us that this is going to be a great game and we're<br />
going to have to play really well to beat them. We can't<br />
take them lightly at all," forward Dave Dabora said.<br />
"Right now we're in a situation where we really have to<br />
win the rest of our games. That's the way we're thinking<br />
— taking one game at a time."<br />
"I don't think facing an undefeated team bothers us,<br />
really," midfielder Torben Agesen said. "It just gives us<br />
an added incentive to beat them."<br />
The Lions have two advantages going into tonight's<br />
game — the home field advantage and for the first time in<br />
more than a month, they are not scheduled for a Sunday<br />
game. The team travels to Easton, to face Lafayette on<br />
Tuesday before beginning a five-game home stretch.<br />
"After five weeks of being on the road every weekend,<br />
we're really looking forward to just being home against<br />
one of the top teams and not having to worry about<br />
traveling," Dabora said. "We really haven't played too<br />
many good teams, like Top 20 teams, at home. It's (the<br />
fans) like our 12th man out there. We haven't had many<br />
big crowds, but they've been vocal."<br />
"Anytime you play at home, there's an extra advantage,"<br />
Bahr said. "The home team always has an advantage,<br />
number one, because they're familiar with the<br />
surroundings. And number two, if there is any type of a<br />
crowd, they're with you. And number three, you don't<br />
have all that disruptive business of traveling. When you<br />
play away from home, you have to figure that you're a<br />
goal behind.<br />
Bahr added that the team's three losses have all been<br />
away games — St. Louis, Akron and Duke.<br />
"If we can finish up the next 11 games with only two<br />
losses, we should be able to get an NCAA bid," Bahr said.<br />
"Any more than two losses, we're in trouble. "
14—The Daily Collegian Friday, Oct. 4. 1985<br />
Lady linksters set for Yale Invite<br />
By KELLY LANKAU<br />
Collegian Sports Writer<br />
When the women's golf team<br />
travels to New Haven, Conn., for<br />
the Yale Invitational this weekend,<br />
it will be seeking revenge on the<br />
team that beat it <strong>by</strong> less than 10<br />
strokes in the ECAC Open last<br />
weekend in Basye, Va.<br />
Head Coach Mary Kennedy said<br />
her team will be better prepared<br />
for this tournament, however, because<br />
many of the 13 teams involved<br />
in the event competed in<br />
last week's tournament.<br />
Penn State finished second to<br />
Longwood College last week but<br />
the two teams will face each other<br />
again in the 36-hole tournament on<br />
Saturday and Sunday.<br />
"We have a good opportunity to<br />
win here," Kennedy said. "We'll be<br />
facing some of the same competition<br />
as last week so we should do<br />
well."<br />
"We have a chance because we<br />
beat Longwood last week on the<br />
second day (of play)," freshman<br />
Kirsten Stone said. "We have a<br />
pretty good shot to win if we go in<br />
there and play well."<br />
Stone, juniors Lisa Dine, Erin<br />
Borowicz and Sue Highduchcck<br />
and sophmores Susan Dutilly and<br />
Valerie Krick will all compete in<br />
the tournament. Only Dine and<br />
Dutilly have played at Yale before.<br />
Kennedy said the Friday practice<br />
round will be very important to<br />
the team's performance.<br />
"The key to Yale is to have a<br />
good practice round," Kennedy<br />
said. "They'll have to learn how<br />
the greens are rolling. It's a very<br />
strategic course, a shotmaker's<br />
course."<br />
Dine said Yale has the toughest<br />
course she has played. Because of<br />
the number of blind shots, the players<br />
have to know where they're<br />
hitting the ball, she added. The<br />
large greens can be a problem for<br />
those unfamiliar with the course,<br />
Dine said.<br />
"If we can get the feel of the<br />
greens, things will fall into place,"<br />
she said.<br />
Linksters drop from tourney<br />
New England this time of year is<br />
beautiful. With the leaves turning and<br />
the maple syrup being harvested, it<br />
reminds one of a Norman Rockwell<br />
painting or the back of October's<br />
Reader's Digest. So anyone would<br />
jump at the chance to visit the area,<br />
right? Wrong.<br />
The men's golf team, scheduled to<br />
play in Amherst, Mass., at the Toski<br />
Intercollegiate Golf Tournament this<br />
weekend, has cancelled its reservations.<br />
Instead , the Lions will get ready<br />
for the Atlantic 10<br />
Championships.<br />
Head Coach Mary Kennedy said the<br />
team will participate in a 52-round<br />
qualifying match this weekend, right<br />
here at Penn State.<br />
Lions Dave Lreese, Terry Hertzog,<br />
and John Kingora, who were the top<br />
three finishers in the team's last<br />
tournament, are exempt from the<br />
qualifying rounds. — Mark Furry<br />
"Friday practice rounds give<br />
you a feel for the course," Stone<br />
said. "You /earn what kind of clubs<br />
to use and you get adjusted."<br />
Stone said she worked on her<br />
short game in preparation for this<br />
tournament and she feels more<br />
confident with her putting and<br />
chipping.<br />
Senior Kiki Tamin played at Yale<br />
last year but will not be competing<br />
this weekend because of academic<br />
committments, Kennedy said.<br />
"It wasn't that she didnl qualify,<br />
but she will forgo this tournament,"<br />
Kennedy said. "It would<br />
have been good to have her, but<br />
academics come first and she<br />
wants to be able to play in the next<br />
three tournaments."<br />
Dine said the team feels confident<br />
with the players that will be at<br />
Yale this year because everyone<br />
has been hitting well in practice<br />
this week.<br />
"It's good to have a choice of who<br />
goes and still have confidence,"<br />
Dine said.<br />
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Netmen prepared to battle in Va<br />
By MIKE HOOVER<br />
Collegian Sports Writer<br />
As the men's tennis team travels to<br />
Harrisonburg, Va., this weekend, the<br />
scenario remains the same — fierce<br />
opposition among old collegiate rivals.<br />
West Virginia and Virginia Commonwealth<br />
will be joining host James<br />
Madison as the Lions strive to put<br />
away all three troublesome competitors..<br />
"We can expect some real good<br />
tight matches," Head Coach Holmes<br />
Cathrall said. "The team will have no<br />
easy time but this is the type of<br />
competition I like to get into. It gives<br />
us a chance to test the team."<br />
After fighting a nip-and-tuck struggle<br />
with the Mountaineers at the<br />
Navy Invitational, the squad will<br />
once again prepare to engage in battle<br />
Ṫhe Penn State-West Virginia rivalry<br />
can be characterized <strong>by</strong> two<br />
teams with similiar talents meeting<br />
to see who can develope the best<br />
playing strategy and emerge the victor<br />
on a given day.<br />
"West Virginia always gives us<br />
¦<br />
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'The team will have<br />
no easy time but this<br />
is the type of<br />
competition I like to<br />
get into.'<br />
Holmes Cathrall, head<br />
coach<br />
trouble," No. 5 singles player Adam<br />
Steinberg said. "They are always a<br />
tough match. But the team is psyched<br />
after this weekend's performance.<br />
We are ready."<br />
James Madison and Virginia Commonwealth<br />
are two teams that could<br />
pose complications for the Lions as<br />
well. Last season, the squad lost a<br />
see-saw 5-4 battle to each school.<br />
"Team for team we are playing a<br />
tougher schedule than the invitational,"<br />
Cathrall said.<br />
West Virginia has stronger top<br />
seeded singles players than the Lions<br />
and a balanced doubles team as was<br />
evident in their two meetings with<br />
Penn State this season in invitational<br />
play.<br />
Penn State is drilling particularly<br />
hard at practice this week after the<br />
dismal performance <strong>by</strong> the doubles<br />
squad at the invitational last weekend.<br />
The Lions are also trying to<br />
better prepare for the heat of the<br />
South.<br />
"I feel once the team pulls together<br />
we can do it," No. 2 singles player<br />
Lee Sponaugle said.<br />
Lion player Bill Dollard is coming<br />
into his own lately on the team. Dollard<br />
played well as a last minute<br />
substitute for Verebey last weekend.<br />
This weekend, Dollard will assist the<br />
squad at the No. 3 doubles spot with<br />
Scott Grebe.<br />
"I have been playing good lately,"<br />
Dollard said. "Scott is easy to play<br />
doubles with. He is more experienced<br />
and keeps me calm."<br />
This weekend, freshman standout<br />
Dar<strong>by</strong> Meadowcroft will have an<br />
opportunity to avenge his loss to Gary<br />
Fry of West Virginia, the only person<br />
who stood in the way of a Division B<br />
Championship at Annapolis. Meadowcroft<br />
lost a three-set heartbreaker<br />
to Fry last weekend.<br />
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Lady spikers try to control own destiny<br />
By CHRISTINE BORN<br />
Collegian Sports Writer<br />
If the womens's volleyball team<br />
learned a lesson from the last two<br />
tournaments, it's that it has to be<br />
responsible for its own success.<br />
After losses to Rhode Island and<br />
Illinois State, Head Coach Russ Rose<br />
said Penn State needs to control its<br />
own game, rather than worry about<br />
the other team's. The Lady Lions lost<br />
games to both teams when they fell<br />
flat and lost control after building<br />
early leads.<br />
"We have the ability to control our<br />
own destiny," Rose said, "and if we<br />
do that and play well, we can win."<br />
In preparing for this weekend's<br />
home matchs against Atlantic 10 foe<br />
George Washington and cross-state<br />
rival Pittsburgh, Penn State has been<br />
working on control in the form of<br />
mental toughness.<br />
"They need to improve their mental<br />
attitude as an entire group," Rose<br />
said.<br />
The teamwork scenerio also works<br />
in a more concrete way. The Lady<br />
Lions must continue to communicate<br />
among themselves if they want to<br />
win.<br />
"Even when someone gets down ,<br />
they have to keep that communication<br />
going at all times," Assistant<br />
Coach Lori Barberich said. "They<br />
have to learn to play as a team and<br />
not as individuals."<br />
Penn State is taking ah 11-2 record<br />
into the weekend with a positive attitude<br />
that it can beat both teams. The<br />
George Washington match is a conference<br />
game and Rose puts more<br />
importance on that game than Saturday's<br />
match with Pitt. The Lady<br />
Colonels bring a 9-5 record to Rec<br />
Hall.<br />
"Beating conference teams is our<br />
ticket to the national<br />
championships," Rose said "and I'm<br />
more concerned about our streak of<br />
six consecutive nationals than I am of<br />
beating Pitt."<br />
The Lady Lions are also playing at<br />
home for the first time in two weeks,<br />
after playing seven matches in two<br />
tournaments on the road.<br />
"We play well at home," senior<br />
Marcia Leap said, "and its always<br />
nice to play before a home crowd."<br />
Penn State has done well at home<br />
matches this year. The Lady Lions<br />
have compiled a 6-0 record on the<br />
floors of Rec Hall and have only lost<br />
one game here, to Louisiana State<br />
University, while winning 18 games.<br />
Both match losses have come from<br />
road trips, where Penn State has lost<br />
eight out of 17 games.<br />
To continue their consistent record ,<br />
the Lady Lions have also been working<br />
on some fundamental skills.<br />
Team captain Lisa Chidester said<br />
Penn State needed improvement on<br />
its serving game after the past two<br />
tournaments and that was the primary<br />
focus of practice all week.<br />
"We've been working on serving to<br />
different areas of the court," she<br />
said, "and we need to concentrate on<br />
serving this weekend if we want to<br />
win. We have to learn to serve tough<br />
all the time and not give the other<br />
team so many easy serves to score<br />
on."<br />
Ww<br />
\<br />
V*<br />
kl<br />
Collegian Photo /Steven Kerner<br />
Penn State's Lisa Leap (9) attempts to spike the ball past two Loulsianna State<br />
defenders during a game earlier this season at Rec Hall.<br />
Even though the Pitt game is not a<br />
conference game, it will still generate<br />
the excitement that always goes<br />
along with Penn State-Pitt athletic<br />
events. The Lady Panthers are 16-3<br />
on the season and the Penn State-Pitt<br />
matchup always seems to be close<br />
regardless of the two team's records.<br />
While most team members think of<br />
beating Pitt for in-state bragging<br />
r-%<br />
v Sf/<br />
1<br />
rights, one Lady Lion has a more<br />
personal feeling toward the match.<br />
Judy McDonough's step-sister plays<br />
for Pitt and McDonough is looking<br />
forward to this weekend.<br />
"She's five days older than me,"<br />
the back row specialist said. "But<br />
when we get out there on the court, I<br />
forget she's my sister and just play<br />
against the team."<br />
Johnson, others deny point shaving accusations<br />
By JOHN MOSSMAN<br />
AP Sports Writer<br />
DENVER — Former Dallas Cowboys wide receiver<br />
Butch Johnson and three of his ex-teammates<br />
have denied any involvement in an alleged<br />
scheme to shave points in exchange for cocaine, as<br />
outlined in an FBI agent's memo.<br />
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The Dally Collegian Friday, Oct. 4, 1985—1!<br />
•<br />
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0218 ®<br />
Q96 #)••••)**•* 66 ••••••**
16—The Daily Collegian Friday. Oct. 4. 1985<br />
Confidence helps, but it takes more<br />
With a perfect record, a No. 9 ranking <strong>by</strong> the<br />
Associated Press, and a week off to give the<br />
ailing offense a chance to recover in time for<br />
Alabama , what else could Head Coach Joe Paterno<br />
ask for?<br />
Plenty, Paterno says.<br />
$ yaw *%[—<br />
ni/J<br />
yn<br />
The Lions injury list this season has been as<br />
full as local motels during the weekend of a home<br />
football game, and in a week when new wrinkles<br />
might be added to the game plan, Paterno said<br />
the extra time will give the Lions a chance to<br />
recover.<br />
"This football team isn't anywhere near where<br />
I thought it'd be at this stage," Paterno said. "I<br />
think we've got to play catch-up right now."<br />
All of which can't be good news to the Lions'<br />
next foe, No. 15 Alabama , which will invade<br />
Beaver Stadium Oct. 12.<br />
True, Paterno's squad hasn't had an easy, lime<br />
in defeating Maryland, Temple, East Carolina<br />
and Rutgers, as the offense has scored only 19<br />
second-ha'lf points.<br />
The defense, however, has let the opposition<br />
take the lead only once, 18-17 at Maryland, and<br />
the offense responded immediately with what<br />
turned out to be a game-winning field goal.<br />
Not the flashiest way to win, and not as<br />
impressive as Nebraska's 63-0 thrashing last<br />
weekend, but Paterno has seen some positive<br />
signs in his team's 4-0 beginning.<br />
"We're 4-0, and we had to fight to be 4-0,"<br />
Paterno said. He added that while some good<br />
things have come out of their victories, "there's<br />
something that hasn't been done that needs to be<br />
done for us to keep winning."<br />
Something sure to help Paterno in his pursuit<br />
of victories would be the return of tailback D.J.<br />
Dozier to the lineup. Dozier's missed the last two<br />
games because of a hamstring injury, and Paterno<br />
said he has hopes that he'll be ready for the<br />
Crimson Tide.<br />
All of which may not matter if the linemen in<br />
front of him don't heal as well. Paterno said he's<br />
reluctant to do much with offensive linemen<br />
Mitch Frerotte, Todd Moules and Rob Smith in<br />
practice and risk injuring them worse.<br />
And it's going to take a healthy Penn State to<br />
knock off the Tide which, like the Lions, is 4-0 and<br />
has this weekend off.<br />
Alabama has always presented a problem to<br />
Paterno. Last year's 6-0 loss at Tuscaloosa was<br />
his fifth loss in six tries against the Tide.<br />
Paterno said the Tide's defense is as good as it<br />
was in 1978, when Bama beat the top-ranked<br />
Lions 14-7, stopping Penn State with first and<br />
goal at the one in the process.<br />
Improvement, Paterno said, is going to have to<br />
take place to defeat the Tide.<br />
"We've got to try to be the football team<br />
against Alabama I hoped we were going to be,"<br />
Paterno said. "And that may limit our ability to<br />
do certain things. . .We have got to be better to<br />
expect to win in the future."<br />
Every week Paterno has said his team has to<br />
improve to win, and stressed the fact that the<br />
upcoming opponent was a good team. Despite<br />
what everyone else thought.<br />
Well, in Alabama Paterno is up against a team<br />
everyone knows is talented, and he has reason<br />
for concern.<br />
But one discernible difference between this<br />
year's Lions and last season's team is that Penn<br />
State knows it's talented too. And even Paterno<br />
nas said the team's confidence is good — to a<br />
point.<br />
"I hope they're as good as they think they are,"<br />
Paterno said. "They know each other better,<br />
there's some experience there, the leadership's a<br />
little stronger, and all of that gives them more<br />
confidence in themselves."<br />
But not too much confidence, Paterno says.<br />
"If they think they're a real good football<br />
team, they're in for a shock, " Paterno said.<br />
"They're a long way from being a big-league<br />
football team."<br />
So the week off for the Lions will be no<br />
vacation. Getting players back to health is job<br />
No. 1, and until that happens, Paterno is going to<br />
be asking more and more from many different<br />
players in the weeks to come.<br />
Chris Lindsley is senior majoring in journa<br />
lis'm and sports editor for The Daily Collegian.<br />
Lady harriers ready to<br />
take on field at invite<br />
By JIM SAUNDERS<br />
Collegian Sports Writer<br />
Coming off of a very tough loss last<br />
week, the women's cross country<br />
team faces its toughest competition<br />
of the season tomorrow.<br />
The Lady Lions, losers <strong>by</strong> one point<br />
to Michigan in last Saturday's Western<br />
Ontario Invitational, travel to<br />
Rutgers where they will compete<br />
with nine other teams — two of which<br />
are considered among the top four in<br />
the country.<br />
Head Coach Teri Jordan does not<br />
feel defending National Champion<br />
Wisconsin and North Carolina State<br />
should expect a cake walk though.<br />
"We appreciate their ability, but<br />
we won't be intimidated <strong>by</strong> them,"<br />
she said.<br />
Teams from Fordham, Massachusetts,<br />
New Hampshire, Princeton,<br />
Rhode Island, Rutgers, Syracuse and<br />
the University of Pennsylvania will<br />
also compete in the Rutgers Invitational.<br />
This is the first year Wisconsin and<br />
North Carolina State have competed<br />
in the the invitational. Last season's<br />
winner, Villanova, an arch rival of<br />
Penn State, chose not to schedule the<br />
meet in 1985. Penn State finished<br />
second a year ago.<br />
"I'm hoping that we'll be very<br />
competitive and really go after Wisconsin<br />
and North Carlolina State,"<br />
Jordan said.<br />
Junior Holly Loht feels meeting<br />
tough teams early in the season could<br />
be an advantage as the season progresses.<br />
"This meet will help us prepare for<br />
the quality of competition we will<br />
face later in the season," she said.<br />
"And knowing that the competition is<br />
so tough will help everyone get psyched."<br />
Rutgers' course is relatively flat<br />
compared to the others on which<br />
Penn State has run this season. Team<br />
Captain Kathy Kuhn thinks that could<br />
be a factor.<br />
"This is nothing like what we ran<br />
(on at Western Ontario)," Kuhn said.<br />
"Western Ontario's course was covered<br />
with hills and there are hardly<br />
any at Rutgers."<br />
Lady Lions expected to run in the<br />
varsity meet include Kuhn, Loht,<br />
Stacy Prey, Kathy Pitcher, Lisa Ross<br />
and Amy Aston. The squad is so even<br />
that Jordan has yet to select the<br />
seventh runner.<br />
"It's such a challenge to pick just<br />
seven runners when you have 12 or 14<br />
with such equal abilities" Jordan<br />
said.<br />
Kuhn feels the competition for the<br />
seventh spot is tough but friendly.<br />
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ING for-men and women; largest<br />
selection of leather boots. Super<br />
leather jacket selction. Great<br />
Great prices check us out. Hat ta<br />
Boot. 1359 E. College Ave. 237-<br />
8725 ;<br />
CUSTOM BLENDED TOBACCO,<br />
Imported cigarettes, bulk cigarette<br />
tobacco, bulk loose leaf<br />
chew. All at Lazy J's Artifax. Plus<br />
pipes, lighters, incense, tapestries,<br />
buttons, fishnets, candles<br />
and more. 323 E. Calder.<br />
DESKS, DRESSERS, chests, single<br />
beds, sofas, upholstered<br />
chairs, bookcases, coffee/end<br />
tables, lamps. 238-3208/ 364-<br />
9592.<br />
EDDIE'S BICYCLES AND sport<br />
equipment". Inventory reduction<br />
sale!! Close out bicycles & hockey<br />
equipment marked only 10%<br />
above dealer cost. 234-3111<br />
GARAGE SALE SCULPTURE<br />
clarinet baskets furniture<br />
clothes household misc 1125<br />
Smithfield St SC Sat 9-23<br />
GENERAL ADMISSION AND student<br />
tickets to all Penn State<br />
home football games. 862-2315.<br />
IQam-IOpm<br />
IS IT TRUE you can buy jeeps for<br />
$44 through the U.S. Governgment?<br />
Get the facts today! Call<br />
1-312-742-1142 ext.3700.<br />
LYONS KENNELS 328 W. College<br />
Ave. has tropical fish, pet<br />
supplies, small animals, ferrets,<br />
plus grooming, boarding, feed<br />
ạnd lots more!<br />
USED COLOR TELEVISION<br />
Guaranteed will deliver. We service<br />
all models Pat or Boyd 364-<br />
9664<br />
WATERBED- QUEEN, BOOK-<br />
CASE, mirror, baffles, air-collar,<br />
great value, S150 firm, 238-7150.<br />
YARD- RECORD SALE over 3000-<br />
Classical (imports)$5.99, Jazz<br />
and Pop S.50-S5.00. Audio and<br />
electronics. Saturday, October 5,<br />
10pm-4pm, only. Quantity discount,<br />
914 Bayberry Dr.,S.C. (238-<br />
4071)<br />
CLASSICAL RECORDS (MOSTLY<br />
imports) S5.99.' Jazz and pop.<br />
31.99 to S5.99. Quantity discount.<br />
Mel 238-4071.<br />
30 GAL. FISH tank includes light<br />
and stand S110. Call 237-1925 ask<br />
lor Rob.<br />
1980 HONDA HAWK. 6500 mrles,<br />
no rust, runs great, garage kept.<br />
Call 234-3191.<br />
APPALACHIAN OUTDOORS SKI<br />
equipment and Clothing: Fischer,<br />
Atomic, Pre, Head, Salomon.<br />
Dynafit. Lange. Marker. CB<br />
Sports, Obermeyer, Patagonia.<br />
West Coflege Avenue.<br />
COMPUTER TERMINAL RENT-<br />
ALS, low rates, long or short<br />
term at ACORN RENTALS, 232 S.<br />
Allen, 238-6021.<br />
DESPERATELY NEED TICKET<br />
for Alabama game! Call LaRue<br />
237-9075.<br />
ENGLISH DOCTATRATE CANDI-<br />
DATES! Looking for a thesis<br />
topic? Try this: the cause of all<br />
evil is the "no" in "k-no-w". For<br />
specifics, write Stephen Granger,<br />
P.O. Box 4434, St. Thomas.<br />
U.S.V.I. 00801<br />
HAPPILY MARRIED COUPLE,<br />
mid 30's, college graduates,<br />
wants to adopt healthy infant<br />
Will pay expenses, legally permitted.<br />
Offers nurturing, lovinc<br />
home. Reply to P.O. Box 458<br />
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 17108.<br />
NEED A COSTUME or just that LEMONT VILLAGE, QUAINT respecial<br />
effectl one of a kind and stored 3 bdrm house, hardwood<br />
vintage clothing and jewelry, floors, yard, trees, for 1-2 grad<br />
Gently worn, gently priced. The students or professionals. $425<br />
Korner Kloset, 138 W. Bishop St., plus utilities. 237-7070.<br />
Bellefonte. Open M-S, 10-2 and nuik, Dnnim/i mn i/tac-,...h<br />
TTU co»m MOOK<br />
OWN ROOM $140/ mo. 249 South<br />
T ṬH. 6-8 pm. 355-2855<br />
Rugh Fa||/Spr|ng 334.0564. Ca.<br />
NEW STUFF AT Lazy J's Artifax. therlne or leave message.<br />
Fluorescent blacklite fixtures,<br />
PARKING AVAILABLE IN State<br />
chicklet lighters, Porsche, panda<br />
College. Call Associated Reality.<br />
and piano telephones, blue fishnets,<br />
match Incense, bulk ciga-<br />
234-2382.<br />
rette tobacco, plus all the old<br />
favorites. 323 E. Calder.<br />
NEW WINTER APPARELandouterwear<br />
arriving dally. Sweaters,<br />
rug<strong>by</strong> shirts, . chamois shirts,<br />
coats, etc. Check us out! Action<br />
Sports. 237-1685.<br />
ONE BILLION CHINESE can't be<br />
wrong. They eat the best food In<br />
the world and you can have it<br />
delivered to your door. No MSGI<br />
Call China Lion. 237-1991.<br />
PIANO/VOICE LESSONS - experienced,<br />
qualified teacher. Call<br />
Carolyn at 237-6300.<br />
RENT MOVIES AND Players anytime.<br />
Low rates, your choice of<br />
movies. ACORN, 232 S. Allen<br />
238-6021.<br />
SILVER SCISSORS SHAMPOO,<br />
cut, blow dry, and one free tanning<br />
session at Tanfastique. Call<br />
for appointment. 237-6609. 159 S.<br />
Garner.<br />
TELEVISION RENTALS, color<br />
and b&w, long or short term, low<br />
rates. ACORN, 232 S. Allen 238-<br />
6021.<br />
THE CHEESE'SHOP. 234 CALD-<br />
ER Way. Discover a unique world<br />
of imported meats, cheeses,<br />
gourmet coffees, delicious chocolates<br />
and breads.<br />
TUTOR, FRENCH, ENGLISH,<br />
Mythology: Reasonable rates,<br />
flexible hours. Call Michel 237-<br />
0213 or 863-0589.<br />
1981 HONDA CM400E, hardly<br />
used, 4000 miles. Black with<br />
black helmet. Never ride anymore.<br />
New battery. Call Russ<br />
237-8900, 355-5903.<br />
/ 234 E. College Ave. \<br />
\ llhdu Mid-Sim y<br />
Cill lot Appr.<br />
| 2J7-1881<br />
AUDIO REFLEX AMP and turntable<br />
1978. Excellent condition.<br />
$160.00 or best offer. Call Mike<br />
237-0213.<br />
FOR SALE 1967 VW Fastback<br />
Sedan good running condition<br />
some body work best offer 238-<br />
1826<br />
84 TRANS Am, A/C, T-RoofS,<br />
Auto, More. Call 234-2677 after<br />
5:30 pm.<br />
360 HONDA (1974) Excellent condition.<br />
8000 miles, best offer<br />
above $400. Paul Domanico 865-<br />
9508<br />
1980 PLYMOUTH CHAMP 4<br />
SPEED, very good condition,<br />
AM/FM/CASS, runs great, $1950<br />
Neg. 234-7426<br />
GRAD STUDENTS - STUDIO apt.<br />
now available! $340 incl. utilities.<br />
New carpet! In Toftrees! Call<br />
Linda at 238-2550.<br />
ONE BEDROOM APT. available<br />
now at Pepper Mill $395.00 incl.<br />
utilities- very nice, accommodates<br />
two easily. Call Mary 238-<br />
0534.<br />
EFFICIENCY, APT. FURNISHED<br />
(Boalsburg Area) $250 8. utilities.<br />
Now available 466-6743 after<br />
3:30pm<br />
J<br />
DESPERATELY NEED FEMALE<br />
roommate, spring semester, Park<br />
Hill + 406, $153.00/month. Call<br />
Holly 237-8195.<br />
FEMALE NON-SMOKING ROO-<br />
MATE wanted Spring and Summer<br />
1986. Beaver Hill Apt.<br />
Balcony, great view. Call: 238-<br />
1479.<br />
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<br />
Immediately 148.00 per month<br />
University Terrace own bedroom<br />
234-3618<br />
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<br />
for Spring Semester for one-bedroom<br />
Southgate Apartment. Nonsmoker<br />
preferred. Call Sharon<br />
¦<br />
238-0950.<br />
OWN ROOM, BLOCK from campus,<br />
furnished for two. Kitchen,<br />
parking, laundry $160 238-6658<br />
after 5 PM.<br />
ROOMMATE NEEDED TO share<br />
one bedroom apt., close to campus.<br />
Including all utilities. Reasonable<br />
rent. Telephone 238-<br />
6012 after 4:00pm. Furnished.<br />
1 or 2 Females Needed Immediately<br />
for 1 bedroom apt. Ambassador<br />
Bldg. Furnished, nice view<br />
of downtown. $142 & utilites.<br />
Call Claudia 234-2320.<br />
AVAILABLE FALL/ SPRING.<br />
Rooms 2 blocks from campus,<br />
optional meals, TV room, outdoor<br />
pool 238-9034 238-9911<br />
FEMALE DORM CONTRACT for<br />
sale. Available now. Call Dee at<br />
238-0263 alter 5 p.m.<br />
GOVERNMENT HOMES FROM<br />
$1 (U Repair). Also delinquent tax<br />
property. Call 1-805-687-6000 Ext.<br />
GH-9568 for information.<br />
•<br />
AN ALUMNUS NEEDS football<br />
tickets to all home and away<br />
games, 237-5204.<br />
ALABAMA: NEED 4 General Admission<br />
tickets. Call Michele<br />
237-74S6.-<br />
ANY RESERVE SEAT tickets to<br />
WVU vs. PSU game. Call 238-<br />
9034,'238-9911.<br />
DESPERATELY NEED ALABAMA<br />
tickets. Call Slice 237-9752.<br />
DESPERATLEY NEED ALABAMA<br />
TICKETS! TWO student and two<br />
general admission. Will pay top<br />
$. Call 237-1813 evenings pleasel<br />
GENERAL ADMISSION OR any<br />
other type of tickets to any Penn<br />
State football game. Help! Call<br />
Steve at 862-4177.<br />
I NEED 4 GENERAL ADMISSION<br />
W.V.U. tickets for my brother and<br />
friends. Call Nancy 238-4190.<br />
NEED 3 GENERAL admission<br />
tickets for Notre Dame for my<br />
family. Please call Amy 234-5246.<br />
ROOM IN COLLECTIVE house;<br />
alternative environment preferable,<br />
call after five 466-6063<br />
STUNNING CO EDS TO shop at<br />
Mr. Charfes. two fwenty-e/ght<br />
east college avenue, open mon.-<br />
sat. 9:30am-8:30pm, sun. 11am-<br />
4pm.<br />
WANTED DESPERATELY TWO<br />
General Admission tickets to<br />
West Virginia game. Call Katie<br />
234-1508.<br />
WANTED TO BUY: bamboo shades<br />
4',5',6'; beaded curtain and<br />
bongo drums. Call 238-7587.<br />
WANTED: 5 GENERAL Admission<br />
Tickets for Alabama. Will<br />
take two or three together. Call<br />
237-7734.<br />
ASSISTANT MANAGERS IMME-<br />
DIATE openings with C.C. Peppers.<br />
Minimum 1 year<br />
supervisory experience. Apply in<br />
person, 110 Sowers Street, M-F,<br />
9-4,<br />
BABYSITTER NEEDED: MON-<br />
DAY -Thursday, 25 hours a week.<br />
References required. Must have<br />
own transportation call 234-4910<br />
evenings.<br />
DELIVERY PEOPLE NEEDED.<br />
Full and part time. Good pay plus<br />
5% commission. Inquire at Marla's<br />
Pizza, 418 Clay Lane 238-3112<br />
DRIVERS WANTED: Domino's<br />
Pizza Is now hiring part-time delivery<br />
people. Apply In person to<br />
either Domino's Pizza location.<br />
ENTREPENEUR TYPE PARTNER<br />
with good ideas and determination<br />
to make them succeed.<br />
Dave 237-2385.<br />
FOOD AND BEVERAGE personnel,<br />
chefs, kitchen supervisors.<br />
Experienced and entry level<br />
seeking change and opport'jr.!;,-<br />
with a major hotel chain with full<br />
service S&B facilities. Send resume<br />
stating experience, references,<br />
career plans and salary<br />
requirements to: Personnel<br />
Dept., P.O. Box 678, State College,<br />
Pa. 16804<br />
GOVERNMENT JOBS $16,040-<br />
$59,230/year. Now hiring. Call<br />
805-687-6000 ext R-9568 for current<br />
federal list.<br />
NEEDED: SPEED READING teacher,<br />
Speech backround pre^<br />
(erred, college degree necessary<br />
to teach occasional classes in<br />
State College. Call 238-1423<br />
weekdays, 11 a.m. - 5 p.m.<br />
OUTSIDE SALES/CAMPUS rep.<br />
for local travel agency. Travel<br />
benefits, commislons, valuable<br />
experience. Reply 2620B Clyde<br />
Ave. State College 16801.<br />
PARTTIME SALES. EVENINGS<br />
and weekends apply In person.<br />
Sofa and chair. 2615 E. College<br />
Ave.<br />
PASTEUP AND MARKUP person<br />
to work part time in PleasantGap.<br />
Weekdays 10 ¦ 6. 359-2918.<br />
RESIDENTIAL PROGRAM<br />
WORKERS. Local social service<br />
agency is currently hiring full<br />
and part-time workers to work<br />
with mentally handicapped youth<br />
and adults. Experience helpful,<br />
but not necessary. Starting salary<br />
$4.41 per hour. A good way to<br />
gain practical experience and<br />
develop personal relationships.<br />
Call 238-3225 to set up an Interview.<br />
SALES REPS WANTED: Earn<br />
$200-400 for one week's work<br />
selling a product at PSU and<br />
State College area. (A portion of<br />
proceeds go to local charities.)<br />
Product is easy to sell! Earn 40%<br />
of sales. Requirements: must be<br />
willing to make this your main<br />
non-academic commitment for<br />
one week to ten days. Must make<br />
your own application to Borough<br />
Half for Vendor's ffcense (cost<br />
$15). More information call Carol<br />
Sue on Saturday, October 5, 9<br />
am-5 pm at (215) 243-4688.<br />
A d><br />
T<br />
*<br />
*<br />
Hiaew<br />
TOP PAY FOR drivers. Must have FOUND CALCULATOR IN<br />
own car. Apply In person at Pe- Schwab. Call to identify. Laura<br />
dro's. 131 S."Garner. 238-8680<br />
ScnwaD<br />
• FOUND LADIES WATCH,<br />
HHH^Tj^TnTC^i^HH<br />
10/4 Creative Services<br />
7:45 PM<br />
10/5 Traditional Services<br />
^<br />
9:30 AM IMF<br />
MOVIE AND PIZZA NIGHT A<br />
8:00 PM — at Hillel HB3T<br />
Cost: $1.50<br />
^^<br />
Hillei*J<br />
Auditorium, Fri Sept. 27,<br />
Eisenhower<br />
HH^^^ LU^^^ Mad ^^ H c ' a,m a( 101 Audito-<br />
¦^¦^¦f^^*^^^^^ 1 rium to describe It.<br />
ABC TYPING: all kinds. Affordable,<br />
accurate, available. I.B.M.<br />
typewriter, rush service. Campus<br />
delivery. 238-1933; 23-1-4507.<br />
A COMPLETE TYRING and word<br />
processing service one block<br />
from canpus 8-5 flying fingers<br />
237-2905 '<br />
A-1 TYPIST. CHEAP, fast, reliable,<br />
accurate. IBM typewriter.<br />
Campus pickup and delivery.<br />
359-2146.<br />
FAST, PROFESSIONAL TYPING<br />
and word processing. All kinds.<br />
Campus delivery-rush jobs possible.<br />
Debbie 359-3068.<br />
FAST TYPING AND word processing,<br />
English, Russian, German.<br />
Campus delivery. Call Anne<br />
237-2324.<br />
IBM CORRECTING SELECTRICS<br />
for rent. Unlimited Rent-alls, 140<br />
North Alherton Street 238-3037.<br />
IF YOU NEED... typing or word<br />
FOUND MAN'S TAN jacket at<br />
Biology 222 review. Contact HUB<br />
desk to identify.<br />
FOUND: MEN'S SILVER watch,<br />
September 20, on IM Field. Call<br />
Brian, 862-2280 to identify.<br />
FOUND: MONEY IN mall <strong>by</strong> Wllard.<br />
To claim, write D. Andrews,<br />
2 McElwain, U.P 16802. Give<br />
amount, type of bills, and return<br />
address.<br />
MULTIPLE KEY CHAIN. 'I am a<br />
kissable kid.' Black enamel<br />
Hershey bud label. To claim 237-<br />
5508.<br />
DIVER'S WATCH MODEL Omega<br />
Seamaster 200. Personal value.<br />
Reward given. Please call 865-<br />
1110 or 238-7331.<br />
processing and you need it fast, LOST: BROW N MEN'S wallet In<br />
you need us. Mailboxes Etc. 311 or near Forum 9/30. Please call<br />
S. Allen 237-2552.<br />
862-0417.<br />
LOST: MEN'S GOLD wedding<br />
band, inscribed. Call 237-5593.<br />
Reward.<br />
"Found" notices are published<br />
for three days at no<br />
charge. This policy does not apply<br />
to "found" notices for "PSU"<br />
keys.<br />
If you find a "PSU" key or a key<br />
ring with a "PSU" key on It,<br />
please deliver the item to Police<br />
Services, Grange Building. The<br />
Department of University Safety<br />
has established a system to<br />
quickly Identify and notify the<br />
person who lost the "PSU" key.<br />
FOUND: BASEBALL GLOVE on<br />
I.M. fields Sunday night. Call 862-<br />
INSURANCE FOR YOUR auto,<br />
motorcycle, home, personal<br />
belongings,hospitalization. For<br />
professional, courteous service.<br />
238-6633.<br />
SOMETHING YOU WANT to talk<br />
about? PARTNERS is available 5-<br />
11 pm, M-F. Call 238-6739 or<br />
come <strong>by</strong> 256 E. College. We'l<br />
listen!<br />
3794 to identify.<br />
•*•• • • **<br />
FOUND: BIFOCA LS IN metallic<br />
*<br />
frame, found outside along the )f<br />
mall. Claim at Collegian. jf<br />
FOUND BLACK MALE Cat at *"<br />
University Terrace, call 238-8750 T<br />
IfciL<br />
AMLI<br />
HflPPV 21"SH€RRI1<br />
Finally Legal!!<br />
Love, Carol<br />
V<br />
* SkAj L V \ * PSU MEN *<br />
X BEWARE J<br />
*- Cami's 19 and in her<br />
*<br />
J<br />
PRIME!<br />
J<br />
Love, Cess, Herb, Swags!<br />
*<br />
••••••••••••••<br />
FACTORY OUTLET<br />
FALL SPECIAL<br />
AT THE FAMILY CLOTHESLINE<br />
• MENS AND $6.80 ¦ $20.40<br />
WOMENS SWEATERS<br />
(Famous Makers, Rag Wool, Ski, Shetlands, Cotton, Values To $55.00)<br />
$7.99<br />
• HOODED<br />
SWEATSHIRTS<br />
• CREW NECK<br />
SWEATSHIRTS<br />
• SWEATPANTS<br />
e<br />
TELEVISION, STEREO REPAIRS.<br />
Fast, expert service on most<br />
brands, video recorders too.<br />
ACORN, 232 S. Allen, 238-6021.<br />
NEED HELP WITH writing? Tutoring<br />
<strong>by</strong> former PSU composition<br />
teacher. Call 234-2634. Leave.<br />
message.<br />
BODY AND SOUL State Collego's<br />
authentic soul and blues<br />
band seeks bookings. Call collect<br />
1-632-7388.<br />
FORMALS, WEDDINGS, REUN-<br />
IONS, Independent Mobile Disc-<br />
Jockey. Larry Moore. 234-0691.<br />
ILLUSIONS SONIC SERVICES<br />
DJ's, Dances, Semiformals,& any<br />
and all parties. Full light show<br />
and sound system. Specializing<br />
In modern dance music. Call<br />
Elvln at 234-8479.<br />
PHANTOM VIDEO OR DJ entertainment.<br />
Complete with excellent<br />
light show. Available for any<br />
occasion. 234-0211.<br />
PARK HILL APARTMENTS-1 bedroom<br />
apis., furnished or unfurnished;<br />
all utilities included.<br />
Available now. For more info call<br />
The Apt. Store 234-6860<br />
ROOMMATE REFERRAL SERV-<br />
ICE. We can find you a compatible<br />
roommate. Phone 814-466-<br />
6839. Hours 9:00 a.m. • 9:00 p.m.<br />
SUNDAY WORSHIP<br />
10:00 a.m. -<br />
Eisenhower Chapel<br />
5:30 p.m<br />
SHORT TERM LEASES available<br />
on selected apartments. Stop In<br />
for a free apartment review. The<br />
Apartment Store 444 E. College<br />
234-6860.<br />
SPACIOUS 1&2 BEDROOM APTS<br />
5 mins. from campus. Call Kap-<br />
Ian Ventures 237-1564.<br />
WE ARE THE Centre region experts<br />
In helping you find the right<br />
condominium. We have the facts<br />
to help you. Call Associated<br />
Realty, 234-2382.<br />
11:45 a.m. -<br />
Grace Lutheran<br />
Church<br />
(corner of Beaver & Garner)<br />
(Pullover or Zipper)<br />
$5.99<br />
$6.99<br />
(Drawstring or Elastic Waist)<br />
P.S.U. PRINTED T- $3.79<br />
SHIRTS<br />
HURRY IN SOON - MUCH MORE<br />
237-1946<br />
Women's Health Services..<br />
For The Help<br />
You Need<br />
• Abortion Services<br />
• Free Pregnancy Tests<br />
• Confidential Counseling.<br />
• Gyn Check-Ups<br />
107 6th St. .Downtown Pfh.<br />
loll Free: 1-800-383-4636<br />
L * l<br />
J<br />
- Eisenhower Chapel<br />
Sponsored <strong>by</strong>:<br />
The University Lutheran Parish<br />
112 Eisenhower Chapel 865-0033<br />
a In
Dodgers rejoice over<br />
dvsion championship maJor league baseba<br />
I I ABar*ni/%au t r>a/MIC<br />
"<br />
AMERICAN LEAGUE<br />
By KEN PETERS<br />
Dodgers clinched the division title<br />
East Division<br />
wu pct GB<br />
AP Sports Writer Wednesday night when San Diego Toronto 9a 59 .624 -<br />
beat the second-place Cincinnati New York 9« 63 .599 *<br />
LOS ANGELES — For the 1985 Reds to assure Los Angeles the Da(ra re<br />
a! 7S<br />
"<br />
f 2 ? \*<br />
Los Angeles Dodgers, it's mission crown. |^J m °<br />
£ £ 2w «<br />
accomplished. "This is the sweetest one," said Milwaukee ee 89 .433 30<br />
"This year, we were on a mis- Lasorda, who's guided the Dodg- Cleveland 59 100 .371 *o<br />
sion," said Dodger outfielder Mike ers to five division titles in the past<br />
WM|<br />
Marshall. "We had goals and we<br />
0<br />
nine years. Call(omla „ „ .557 -<br />
really wanted something. I didn't "I can't find enough words to Kansas city as 70 .557 -<br />
enjoy last winter after finishing describe what a job these players Chicago 82 76 .519 a<br />
fourth. have done ... They're the great- °f ,and . J?" } !?£<br />
"It's a feeling of knowing you est," Lasorda said in the Dodgers' sea7t?e 73 is « «<br />
belong on top, and we wanted to champagne-drenched clubhouse Texas 61 97 JSS 27<br />
prove people wrong. There was after they'd iced the cake with a 9-<br />
never a doubt in my mind." 3 victory over Atlanta. Wednesday's aunt*<br />
The Dodgers, a disappointing 79- "It's fantastic," said Orel Detroit 4, Toronto 2<br />
83 in 1984, came back with a fury Hershiser, who won his 11th con- Cleveland 12, Seattle 2<br />
this year to take their third Na- secutive game with Wednesday Bos,on al Balllmore ' PPd - raln<br />
tional League West title in five night's victory over the Braves to olZwexw 3 °'k °<br />
years. gO to 19-3. Kansas City 4, California 0<br />
They did it after they had trailed "We wanted to win this game Minnesota 3, Chicago 1<br />
the defending NL champion San regardless of what happened in<br />
Diego Padres <strong>by</strong> six games in late San Diego," said Hershiser, who Boslon a, ^ZlTit') G ' m "<br />
June, and some already had writ- limited the Braves to four hits and . Toronto at Detroit ,
axis<br />
Friday, Oct. 4, 1985<br />
Mayhew s work is a much heralded reflection of the American landscape<br />
By SARAMMA METHRATTA<br />
Collegian Arts Writer<br />
There are some people who glance<br />
at a painting and wonder what all<br />
the fuss is about. There are others<br />
who gaze dreamily at the same<br />
painting, nodding, smiling, perhaps<br />
wishing that they could enter this<br />
world of ideal color and form. And<br />
then there are those who have not<br />
only entered this world, but created<br />
it, filling in shades of beauty and<br />
possibility with a potpourri of pigments<br />
and brushes.<br />
Professor of art Richard Mayhew<br />
exemplifies the contemporary artist.<br />
The fact that he is a Black artist<br />
who has contributed substantially to<br />
the art world made him a natural<br />
choice for Bucknell University's<br />
Since the Harlem Renaissance. . .<br />
program. Excited <strong>by</strong> this proposal<br />
to exclusively showcase Black artists<br />
from the Harlem Renaissance<br />
to the present, Mayhew convinced<br />
the show's coordinators to include<br />
Penn State in their four-city tour.<br />
The show, then, will be presented at<br />
the University through November<br />
17, with Mayhew joining a panel<br />
discussion titled Afro-American Art<br />
and the Contemporary Scene. The<br />
discussion is part of this weekend's<br />
symposium and will take place tomorrow<br />
afternoon from 3:15 to 4:45<br />
at the Paul Robeson Cultural Center.<br />
No stranger to recognition, Mayhew<br />
has collected enough honors<br />
and awards during his career to<br />
make even the strictest nonaesthete<br />
take notice. For his landscape oil<br />
paintings, Mayhew was named Academician<br />
of the National Academy<br />
of Design in New York, an honor<br />
dubbed the "Academy Award" of<br />
painting <strong>by</strong> artists. Mayhew also<br />
received the Academy's Grumbacher<br />
Gold Medal and Merit Award, as<br />
well as awards from the Ford Foundation<br />
and the National Institute of<br />
Arts and Letters. Not one to idle<br />
away the hours between awards,<br />
either, he has been involved in solo<br />
and group exhibitions with such<br />
institutions as California's Young<br />
Gallery and New York's Queens<br />
Museum and Grand Central Galleries.<br />
This past year, Mayhew took a<br />
sabbatical leave to study and paint<br />
in the Western Ucited States, travelling<br />
through Mexico, Arizona and<br />
California. He described the experience<br />
as a lesson in "creative internalization."<br />
Rather than propping<br />
up an easel in the desert or making<br />
only preliminary sketches of the<br />
landscape, Mayhew merely sat on<br />
hillsides in these arid states and<br />
looked. He then embarked on a<br />
California retreat, funded <strong>by</strong> the<br />
Djerassi Foundation, and painted<br />
what he had seen — not <strong>by</strong> remembering<br />
the experience, but <strong>by</strong> reliving<br />
it.<br />
"There was this kind of spiritual<br />
encounter that I felt when I painted,"<br />
he said. "I was actually back in<br />
the desert again, looking. I got so<br />
caught up in the fluid joy of creativity<br />
that, when I saw the finished<br />
works, I didn't know where they<br />
came from." But come they did.<br />
Mayhew's desert sabbatical proved<br />
to be one of the most artistically<br />
prolific periods of his life: He finished<br />
20 paintings in 3 months.<br />
Mayhew's work in the Western<br />
United States was his latest attempt<br />
to capture the American landscape<br />
<strong>by</strong> region, a project that has spanned<br />
the past 20 years and is just now<br />
nearing completion. He is intrigued<br />
<strong>by</strong> the challenge of painting this<br />
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terrain that differs so dramatically<br />
from coast to coast. "If there is<br />
always that freshness, that daring<br />
in the work itself," he said, "you<br />
won't grow stale as an artist. With<br />
the American landscape, you're<br />
continuously coming into contact<br />
with new color, new lighting, new<br />
space, new inspiration." For example,<br />
'*in the deserts where I was this<br />
past summer, a misty haze hangs in<br />
the air; the greens are a grayishviolet<br />
green, and there's orange<br />
dirt, purple sand, pinks everywhere.<br />
It gets to the point where you realize<br />
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that the more you paint the American<br />
landscape, the more you see it,<br />
and the more you see it, the more<br />
you realize you haven't gotten it<br />
yet."<br />
Born and raised in Long Island,<br />
NY, Mayhew did get an early introduction<br />
to the creative consciousness.<br />
"New York is the art market,"<br />
he said, "so it attracts the best<br />
artists. I learned how to creatively<br />
survive — not just financially, but<br />
aesthetically. If an artist can<br />
achieve that, his life will be one of<br />
ecstasy. Of course, an artist must be<br />
enough of a business person to be<br />
able to support his painting, and this<br />
involves knowing how to network —<br />
exhibiting in national and group<br />
shows. This is the way peop le get to<br />
know you, get to know your work.<br />
Some people find the business of art<br />
retarding, but for me it was stimulating."<br />
More stimulating from a creative<br />
viewpoint was Mayhew's acquaintance<br />
with the Hudson Valley painters,<br />
a group of artists who came to<br />
Long Island every summer to paint<br />
the sand dunes and bay area. "As a<br />
teenager, I used to go fishing in the<br />
bay all the time," he said, "just so I<br />
could watch them work. Finally<br />
they looked at me and said, 'Let's<br />
see you paint something,' and I<br />
did." So impressed with Mayhew<br />
was medical illustrator and landscape<br />
painter James Wilson that he<br />
took on the 14-year-old boy as an<br />
apprentice.<br />
Practicing his art diligently<br />
throughout his teens, Mayhew had<br />
become a virtuoso of form <strong>by</strong> the<br />
time he was 20. "I could draw and<br />
paint upside down and backwards.<br />
But it wasn't part of my own creative<br />
process. I had to learn to be<br />
myself, and that took some searching<br />
and growing."<br />
In pursuit of that elusive element<br />
of self , Mayhew went to study at<br />
Columbia University, and later at<br />
the Arts Students League and the<br />
Brooklyn Museum Art School in<br />
New York. Academia provided<br />
Mayhew with constant stimulation:<br />
He studied with such acclaimed<br />
artists as Edwin Dickinson, Hans<br />
Hoffman, Max Beckman and Rubin<br />
Tarn. Mayhew further stoked the<br />
creative fires with the help of<br />
fellowships and grants: He spent<br />
four years wending his way about<br />
Europe, contemplating Renaissance<br />
art and the contemporary art<br />
scene.<br />
When not busy studying or painting,<br />
Mayhew explored other outlets<br />
for his creative force. He went from<br />
a stint as a mime dancer to one as a<br />
professional jazz singer to an off-<br />
Broadway actor. However diverse<br />
these modes of expression, Mayhew<br />
said, each contributed to his painting<br />
style. "Mime is all about the<br />
illusion in gesture," he said, "and<br />
dance about gesture and space. So<br />
these qualities seeped into my painting.<br />
When I was singing, I did a<br />
series of paintings based on music'<br />
Mayhew's style today is best described<br />
as neo-American Impressionism.<br />
He expresses the joy of life<br />
in such a lyrical manner that the<br />
New York Times recently called<br />
him "the painting poet." On canvas,<br />
Mayhew evokes a sensitive, romantic<br />
warmth <strong>by</strong> using all soft edges,<br />
no hard silhouettes. He melts one<br />
image into the next with nuances of<br />
color so that the subject becomes<br />
elusive. "I use a lot of colors and a<br />
lot of warm and cool tones," he said.<br />
"Warm comes to the eye first, and<br />
cool is receding. So if you make<br />
them very close in intensity, the eye<br />
takes a while to see them, and you<br />
get a very subtle pulse." To achieve<br />
the desired effect, Mayhew favors a<br />
scumbling-glazing technique, which<br />
entails dragging paint across the<br />
canvas with a brush and palette<br />
knife.<br />
Once he has completed a painting,<br />
Mayhew's interest in it wanes to<br />
near oblivion. "When I put the brush<br />
down," he said, "it's like an actor<br />
walking off the stage — he can hear<br />
the applause, but that joyful essence<br />
is gone. The moment of creativity is<br />
the only moment of truth." .<br />
Concert will help hungry<br />
Starvation in America is the<br />
subject of an upcoming benefit<br />
concert, the second Rock Against<br />
Hunger. Three local bands will<br />
perform at 8 p.m. tomorrow night<br />
in the HUB Ballroom. Admission<br />
is $2 to this concert sponsored <strong>by</strong><br />
the College Democrats, with all<br />
proceeds going to the Oxfam<br />
America relief group.<br />
The Weathermen, a high school<br />
band, will open the show. Band<br />
members Nathan Calhoun, guitar<br />
and vocals, Jim Hollis, bass, and<br />
Jesse Mills, drums, play Velvet<br />
Underground and '60s punk influenced<br />
originals.<br />
With Glenn Sadin on guitar, Jeff<br />
Edmunds on bass and Doug Edmunds<br />
on drums, The Seen will<br />
play an entirely new set of original<br />
neo-psychedelic/folk/dance tunes.<br />
Public Service will close the<br />
show with their upbeat "ska"<br />
dance rhythms. The five-member<br />
band includes Tim Wilson, lead<br />
vocals, Chris Manos, guitar and<br />
vocals, John Patriarca , drums<br />
and vocals, John DiTieri, saxophone<br />
and Jeff Banks, bass.<br />
The first Rock Against Hunger<br />
benefit, held April 22, raised $500<br />
for African hunger relief , said Sue<br />
Weinstein of the College Democrats.<br />
Both The Weathermen and<br />
Public Service played at that concert,<br />
along with Sadin and Doug<br />
Edmunds and the now-defunct Gators.<br />
It is likely that more of these<br />
performances will be held,<br />
Weinstein said, adding, "We'd like<br />
to have Rock Against Hunger every<br />
semester."<br />
—<strong>by</strong> Natalie Nichols<br />
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(Left to right) Bass guitarist Jeff Edmunds, drummer Doug Edmunds, and lead guitarist Glenn Sadin are The Seen's<br />
personnel. The band will appear at Rock Against Hunger tomorrow evening.<br />
r<br />
fm<br />
Billboard lists<br />
week's top<br />
pop singles<br />
By The Associated Press<br />
HOT SINGLES<br />
l."Oh Sheila" Ready for the World<br />
(MCA)<br />
2. "Money For Nothing" Dire<br />
Straits (Warner Bros.)<br />
3."Take On Me" A-Ha (Warner<br />
Bros.)<br />
4."Saving All My Love For You"<br />
Whitney Houston (Arista )<br />
5."Part-Time Lover" Stevie Wonder<br />
(Tamla)<br />
6."Lonely 01' Night" John Cougar<br />
Mellencamp (Riva )<br />
7."Dancing in the Street" Mick<br />
Jagger & David Bowie (EMI-America)<br />
8."Cherish" Kool & The Gang (De-<br />
Lite)<br />
Bands update: Most like the local scene but many want to branch out<br />
Editor's note: The/ollowing is the<br />
firs t in an occasional series of articles<br />
updating the activates of local<br />
bands..<br />
By NATALIE NICHOLS<br />
Collegian Arts Writer<br />
The Seen<br />
One of State College's-most innovative<br />
young bands, The Seen has<br />
returned from a disappointing trip<br />
to Europe to concentrate on songwriting<br />
and recording.<br />
The foremost question in any Seen<br />
fan's mind is, "What happened in<br />
Europe?" The band members had<br />
%<br />
plans to tour in areas of France and<br />
Germany, but the members were<br />
hardly ever on the continent at the<br />
same time! Glenn Sadin, the<br />
group's guitarist, explained that disorganization<br />
was the band's main<br />
problem.<br />
Jeff Edmunds, The Seen's bassist,<br />
lived in France for about six months<br />
before Sadin arrived early this summer<br />
with Doug Edmunds, the<br />
band's drummer and Jeff's brother.<br />
Jeff told the other members he was<br />
unhappy with the atmosphere in<br />
France because he felt the French<br />
didn't go out to hear live music very<br />
often and have terrible musical<br />
tastes. Because of this, Jeff felt that<br />
The Seen didn't stand a chance in<br />
Collegian Pile Photo<br />
Lead singer R.T. (Rodney Thompson) and guitarist Paul Young of the<br />
Earthtones perform at the 19th annual Central Pennsylvania Festival of the<br />
Arts. The band will appear at a University anti-apartheid benefit next Saturday<br />
night.<br />
France and went home.<br />
Glenn and Doug decided to stay in<br />
Europe for a while. They travelled<br />
to Germany wpere they stayed with<br />
friends and spent most of their time<br />
writing and practicing new songs.<br />
Their friends finally convinced the<br />
two to play once at a local bar,<br />
where they were well-received.<br />
Meanwhile, back in the United<br />
States, Jeff was also writing a lot of<br />
new material. When they finally got<br />
back together, they used this "collective<br />
burst of energy," as Sadin<br />
called it, to put together an entire<br />
new complement of songs that they<br />
will play in their upcoming performance<br />
at 8 p.m. tomorrow night in<br />
the HUB Ballroom.<br />
Given their local success, which<br />
includes brisk sales of their short<br />
tape, In The Groove, the next step<br />
for The Seen is an album. The members<br />
are recording a demo tape in<br />
hopes that a small record company<br />
will take interest in them, Sadin<br />
said. If not, they will release the<br />
material themselves on cassette.<br />
The Seen members plan to send<br />
copies of this new material to college<br />
radio stations around the country,<br />
generate some airplay and get<br />
feedback from the DJs. "We feel<br />
that college radio is where it's at<br />
today," Sadin said. The album<br />
should be released in a year, and if<br />
all goes as planned, the Seen will<br />
start touring the country soon after.<br />
The band's latest recording venture<br />
is the inclusion of its version of<br />
the classic, "Hey, Joe" on a German<br />
compilation album.<br />
Sadin wanted to update everyone<br />
on lhe condition of the long-awaited<br />
Seen single: Keep waiting. Due to<br />
quality problems with the record's<br />
pressing, it has not been released.<br />
There is no debut date set for the<br />
record, which contains the originals<br />
"Stopping On Go" and "When I Was<br />
Young."<br />
Finally, The Seen expressed its<br />
gratitude: "We appreciate WPSU<br />
playing our recordings as much as<br />
they do and we're very appreciative<br />
of the support from our friends,<br />
known and unknown, in State College,"<br />
Sadin said.<br />
Public Service<br />
State College's liveliest band has<br />
also been concentrating on songwriting,<br />
said John Patriarca, the<br />
band's drummer. They played all<br />
original material for the first time<br />
at the 19th annual Central Pennsylvania<br />
Festival of the Arts and got a<br />
great audience response. People<br />
stood in the middle of a downpour to<br />
cheer the band on, Patriarca said.<br />
"Every time we play, more people<br />
come to see us."<br />
The band members are recording<br />
a demo tape that they will send to<br />
various record companies. They<br />
have been encouraged <strong>by</strong> MCA to<br />
send material and hope to get a<br />
recording contract with a label<br />
soon.<br />
Until something comes through<br />
for it, Public Service will play "a gig<br />
or two" locally, Patriarca noted.<br />
However, he added "We really don't<br />
want to play in the bars." Along<br />
with the Rock Against Hunger benefit<br />
Saturday night, the band will<br />
play at an Anti-Apartheid rally on<br />
Oct. 11 on campus.<br />
The Weathermen<br />
The Weathermen, probably the<br />
youngest band in State College (the<br />
members are all about 15 years<br />
old), are now playing all original<br />
material after playing all covers at<br />
the first Rock Against Hunger last<br />
April.<br />
A relatively new band, The<br />
Weathermen made a fast change<br />
from playing songs of 1960's bands<br />
such as The Monkees and The Who<br />
to featuring their own music, which<br />
is influenced <strong>by</strong> the Velvet Underground<br />
and '60s punk bands such as<br />
the Standells, the group's lead singer<br />
Nathan Calhoun said.<br />
Calhoun, who also plays guitar in<br />
the band; said that the group, which<br />
includes Jesse Mills on drums and<br />
Jim Hollis on bass, has been together<br />
for about a year, although Mills<br />
just recently joined.<br />
Although The Weathermen perform<br />
mostly at local parties, the<br />
band did play the Arts Festival this<br />
summer. Their next gig is the second<br />
Rock Against Hunger concert<br />
tomorrow night.<br />
The members of The Weathermen<br />
have no future plans yet. "We just<br />
want to have some fun with this,"<br />
Calhoun said.<br />
Earthtones<br />
Unlike Public Service, which<br />
plays a mixture of upbeat ska and<br />
reggae tunes mixed with funk and<br />
soul, the Earthtones perform a<br />
purer form of the folk music that<br />
originated in Jamaica, which the<br />
band calls "crucial" reggae.<br />
With Paul Young on guitar, Bill<br />
Wood on bass, Rodney Thompson ,<br />
better known as R.T., on vocals,<br />
Terry Griffith on keyboards and<br />
Wallace George on drums, the<br />
Earthtones play cover songs of such<br />
important reggae artists as Bob<br />
Marley, Garland Jeffreys, UB40,<br />
Black Uhuru and Bunny Wailer,<br />
among others.<br />
"The songs we pick are a wide<br />
variety of different kinds of songs,<br />
everything from dance hall<br />
rhythms, which are just a really<br />
happy kind of thing, to really biting,<br />
socio-political songs, all in a roots<br />
kind of vein," Young said.<br />
The Earthtones have performed<br />
in some interesting places, but the<br />
most unique experience has to be<br />
their recent concert at Huntingdon<br />
Prison — a maximum security institution<br />
where several members of<br />
MOVE, the politically radical Philadelphia<br />
group that created much<br />
controversy earlier this year, are<br />
imprisoned. The guards would not<br />
allow dancing, Young said, and instructed<br />
the band members not to<br />
encourage it. Despite this drawback,<br />
Young felt that the inmates<br />
enjoyed the show.<br />
Ordinarily, of course, the band<br />
likes its audience to dance up a<br />
storm. "We want people to dance, it<br />
makes the biggest difference in the<br />
world," Young said.<br />
The Earthtones get people rocking<br />
regularly at the Scorpion on<br />
Wednesday nights, and are scheduled<br />
to play at an Anti-Apartheid<br />
rally next Saturday on campus.<br />
They played at the Arts Festival this<br />
summer, as well as the Phyrst and<br />
the Brewery. More recently the<br />
band held two outside concerts at<br />
the Kern Building and had a gig at<br />
Theta Chi fraternity.<br />
All these different engagements<br />
are evidence of the Earthtones' universal<br />
appeal. Everyone from<br />
Deadheads to fra ternity members<br />
enjoy listening to the band's music.<br />
Young said the Earthtones' small<br />
complement of fans is growing. "We<br />
have a lot of regulars," he claimed,<br />
mostly when the band plays weekend<br />
gigs.
The Daily Collegian Friday, Oct. 4, 1985—1!<br />
Friction hopes that video will its launch career<br />
By PAT GRANDJEAN<br />
Collegian Arts Writer<br />
I' m sorry about your love affair that's just gone sour<br />
I' m sorry 'bout your musical chairs.<br />
I' m sorry that your life is not a bed of roses<br />
But no one ever said life was fair.<br />
— Friction, "Musical Chairs"<br />
Well... life's been pretty good to Friction of late. It<br />
may once have been known as the "Band Least Likely to<br />
be Invited for a Return Engagement" at vany State<br />
College bars (due to the outright emotional and destructive<br />
tendencies of certain members of the audience rather<br />
than any weaknesses or politics on the group's part), but<br />
you can catch this quartet in one of its periodic local<br />
performances tonight at the Brewery.<br />
Drummer John Whiteman reported that he and the<br />
other members of the band — vocalist Craig Matthews,<br />
bassist Jon Mertz, and new guitarist Jim Gross — are just<br />
about finished recording a new album that they hope to<br />
release at the end of the year. Heartened <strong>by</strong> the positive<br />
reception given their all-original E.P. Dancing Now (it<br />
charted at 93 in the college radio-oriented Gavin Report) ,<br />
they're taking more chances this time around.<br />
"We've always tried to mix our influences — Talking<br />
Heads, the Clash, funk, jazz, rockabilly — to come up with<br />
something unique," Whiteman said. "We'll take a rhythm<br />
you'd think would go into a rap song, say, and mix it with<br />
more rock-oriented rhythms. We try to keep a strong<br />
dance groove above all." The upcoming record features<br />
some experimentation with horn sections and five-piece<br />
percussion. Part of the credit for the band's greater<br />
eclecticism is due to Gross, who Whiteman praised for<br />
"being able to do anything right off. He's very flexible,<br />
adventurous." His guitar playing reminds Whiteman of<br />
avant-gardists Adrian Belew and Robert Fripp.<br />
Friction's lyrics deal with a variety of fruitful topics,<br />
Friction<br />
including love, social affairs and politics. Despite — or<br />
perhaps because of — the fact that the band's primary<br />
goal for their songs is to reflect real life, it has been<br />
regarded as something of a radical punk outfit <strong>by</strong> some<br />
members of its audience. Hardcore enthusiasts made up<br />
the bulk of the group's initial following in their home base<br />
of Harrisburg. "They wore Mohawks and everything,"<br />
Whiteman said. "They didn't consider us a punk band<br />
musically — they liked our attitude. I talked to one of<br />
them, who told me 'You guys aren't one of us, but you're<br />
the closest we can find around here.' "<br />
Finding compatible audiences and places to play can<br />
sometimes be an uphill battle. Although the Metron is<br />
Friction's main venue, the quartet has found its opportunities<br />
for local exposure limited <strong>by</strong> the fact that so few<br />
club owners hire bands specializing in original material.<br />
Despite the owners' reticence, Whiteman is gratified that<br />
the group packed the Phyrst in the midst of a snowstorm<br />
at its last State College appearance. "We always attract<br />
an audience that appreciates music for its own sake,<br />
rather than looking to hear what's familiar," he noted.<br />
The band members feel it's time to expand their scope<br />
of performance and find more of a following. They've<br />
already opened for the Members, Mari Wilson, and Dez<br />
Dickerson (principal guitarist on Prince's 1999.) A northeastern<br />
college tour is on their agenda , as is a possible<br />
relocation to New York — or, better still, Baltimore, Md.<br />
They've created a video that they plan to submit to MTV's<br />
Basement Tapes competition as well as smaller television<br />
stations in the Harrisburg area and clubs in New York<br />
and Canada. Hopefully, the new album will prove successful<br />
as an entree to a major label recording contract.<br />
Were Friction to become a major success, Whiteman<br />
knows what kind of band he'd like it to be. "I really<br />
admire Talking Heads," he said. "I like the way they<br />
keep the band going, even though they all do other<br />
projects too. That way, they always have new ideas for<br />
when they come back to the band. I hope we can be that<br />
way, too."<br />
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France Cinema<br />
112 Kern<br />
Oct. 5 7<br />
$2 00 7 &9 pm<br />
V A Young Mens Shop<br />
EXCLUSIVE! 100 in stock.<br />
Water resistant and a 3 year<br />
battery. For him & her - $42<br />
wm<br />
w<br />
Somewhere,<br />
somehow,<br />
someone's<br />
going to pay.<br />
P.S. A great selection<br />
of paisley prints have<br />
just arrived<br />
%<br />
m<br />
**><br />
V/ fQ RM -V AN0"£S J<br />
STATE COLLEGE- CALDER SO. II<br />
Shop daily 10 to 5:30-Thurs. to 8:30<br />
ALTOONA. ON 11th AVE.<br />
%.<br />
Writ e a letter<br />
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RAE DAWN CHONG *? JAMES HORNER i£& JOSEPH LOEB III - MATTHEW WEISMAN """,: STEVEN E WSOUZA<br />
"i JOSEPH LOEB III & MATTHEW WEISMAN «STEVEN E. DESOUZA *°¥JOEL SILVER **°f MARK L LESTER<br />
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20<br />
The Daily Collegian<br />
Friday, Oct. 4, 1985<br />
films<br />
On Campus<br />
Private Benjamin Blondie<br />
Goes to Boot Camp. Goldie<br />
Hawn stars as a spoiled rich<br />
girl whose husband drops deac<br />
on their wedding night. She<br />
decides to join the Army as a<br />
way of "getting away from it<br />
all." Of course, neither she nor<br />
the Army gets what they<br />
bargained for. Hilarious<br />
adventures ensue. Tonight and<br />
tomorrow night, 7, 9 and 11,<br />
Sunday night, 7 and 9, 102<br />
Forum. Presented <strong>by</strong> the<br />
International Cultures Interest<br />
House.<br />
Return Of the Jedi The final<br />
chapter of the Star Wars trilogy.<br />
All kinds of surprises, including<br />
Darth Vader's true identity and<br />
the real relationship between<br />
Luke and Leia. More ghost<br />
appearances <strong>by</strong> Alec Guiness.<br />
This one isn't as good as Star<br />
Wars but better than The<br />
Empire Strikes Back. Tonight<br />
and Sunday night, 7 and 9:15,<br />
112 Kern; Tonight, 11:30,<br />
tomorrow night, 7, 9:15 and<br />
11:30, 112 Chambers.<br />
Presented <strong>by</strong> the Graduate<br />
Student Association.<br />
Apocalypse Now Vartin<br />
Sheen, Marlon Brando, Dennis<br />
Hopper, Harrison Ford and<br />
Frederick Forsythe star in<br />
Francis Ford Coppola's<br />
adaptation of Joseph Conrad's<br />
Heart Of Darkness. Set in the<br />
jungles of Southeast Asia<br />
during the Vietnam War, this<br />
film explores the evil side of<br />
the human psyche. Tonight and<br />
Sunday night, 7:30 and 10,<br />
Saturday night, 9:30, 101<br />
Chambers. Sponsored <strong>by</strong> the<br />
GSA.<br />
The Terminator Arnold<br />
Schwarzenegger stars as an<br />
evil assassin from, the future..<br />
who is sent to the 20th century<br />
to kill a woman and erase her<br />
influence on history. Tonight<br />
and Sunday night, 7:30 and<br />
9:30, 112 Chambers; Saturday<br />
night, 7:30 and midnight, 101<br />
Chambers. Sponsored <strong>by</strong> the<br />
GSA.<br />
Ghostbusters A new campus<br />
movie at last! A professor of<br />
parapsychology and friends<br />
take advantage of a surge in<br />
metaphysical activity in New<br />
York <strong>by</strong> starting a ghost<br />
removal service. When an<br />
ancient spirit tries to take over<br />
the city, there's only one place<br />
to call! Lots of seriously funny<br />
stuff here, especially in the<br />
ghostbusters' encounters with<br />
supernatural pests. Starring<br />
Bill Murray, Harold Ramis and<br />
Dan Aykroyd. Tonight and<br />
Saturday night, 7, 9 and 11,<br />
Sunday night, 7 and 9, 119<br />
Osmond. Presented <strong>by</strong> the<br />
Student Union Board.<br />
Starman Jeff Bridges stars<br />
as an alien who comes to Earth<br />
to study human behavior in the<br />
guise of Karen Allen's<br />
deceased husband. He enlists<br />
her assistance when trying to<br />
return to his heme planet. An<br />
adult E.T.?? Tonight, tomorrow<br />
night and Sunday night, 8 and<br />
10, HUB Assembly Room.<br />
Presented <strong>by</strong> the Student<br />
Union Board.<br />
Psycho I The sequel. Tony<br />
Perkins returns to the house on<br />
the hill and reopens the Bates<br />
Motel. He spends most of the<br />
movie trying to convince<br />
people that he's sane, but is<br />
he? Horror ensues. Tonight and<br />
tomorrow night, 7, 9 and 11,<br />
Sunday night, 7 and 9, 108<br />
Forum. Presented <strong>by</strong> the Penn<br />
State Movie Co-op.<br />
The Enforcer Clint Eastwood<br />
plays Dirty Harry again. This<br />
time Harry has to'succumb to<br />
working with a female partner,<br />
Cagney and Lacey's Tyne Daly,<br />
as they track down a terrorist<br />
group in San Francisco.<br />
Tonight and tomorrow night, 7,<br />
9 and 11, Sunday night, 7 and 9,<br />
111 Forum. Presented <strong>by</strong> the<br />
Penn State Movie Co-op.<br />
Confidentially Yours<br />
Truffaut's hommage to<br />
American black comedy. Fanny<br />
Ardant stars as a secretary who<br />
turns amateur detective to<br />
clear her boss of murder<br />
charges. Saturday night, 7 and<br />
9, 112 Kern. Presented <strong>by</strong><br />
France Cinema.<br />
Up-N-Coming Marilyn<br />
Chambers stars. Rated X.<br />
Tonight and tomorrow night, 7<br />
9 and 11,Sunday night, 7 and 9<br />
105 Forum. Presented <strong>by</strong> the<br />
Penn State Movie Co-op.<br />
Downtown<br />
Agnes of God Jane Fonda<br />
plays a lawyer defending a<br />
Arnold Schwarzenegger stars in Commando, now playing downtown<br />
young nun (Meg Tilly) on trial<br />
for killing a ba<strong>by</strong> which she<br />
claims she doesn't remember<br />
conceiving or giving birth to.<br />
Anne Bancroft plays the<br />
mother superior. Shows nightly<br />
at 7:45 and 9:45; Saturday and<br />
Sunday at 1:45, 3:45, 5:45, 7:45<br />
and 9:45 p.m. The Cinemas.<br />
Back to the Future Yes, it's<br />
still here! Michael J. Fox of<br />
Family Ties plays a thoroughly<br />
engaging adolescent who<br />
travels back in time and meets<br />
his parents as teenagers. His<br />
intrusion into the past creates<br />
many problems that could<br />
affect his future — his mother<br />
thinks he's a "dreamboat" and<br />
falls for him instead of his dad,<br />
who's the total dork of the high<br />
school. Watching Fox get out<br />
of this mess is a lot of fun. One<br />
of the summer's most popular<br />
hits, it's a must to see. Shows<br />
nightly at 8 and 10; Saturday<br />
and Sunday at 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10<br />
p.m. The Cinemas.<br />
Prizzi's Honor In this black<br />
comedy, Jack Nicholson and<br />
Kathleen Turner turn in fine<br />
performances, each playing<br />
hitmen involved in the criminal<br />
underground. The romance that<br />
develops between the two<br />
creates a conflict when each is<br />
ordered to kill the other. Which<br />
will prove more important —<br />
their love for each other or their<br />
heritage? Shows nightly at 7:30<br />
and 9:45; Saturday and Sunday<br />
at 2:15, 4:45, 7:30 and 9:45 p.m.<br />
The Flick.<br />
Maxie Glenn Close plays Jan<br />
a dull housewife whose body<br />
becomes habitually occupied<br />
<strong>by</strong> the spirit of a dead flapper<br />
named Maxie (Ruth Gordon).<br />
Under Maxie's control, Jan's<br />
schizophrenic behavior<br />
confuses and startles her<br />
husband (Mandy Patinkin) and<br />
her peers as she turns into a<br />
boozing, over-sexed<br />
loudmouth. The film's comic<br />
premise, based on the mix-up<br />
of incongruous identities,<br />
sounds promising, but Peter<br />
Travers of People magazine<br />
says: "Maxie is a disaster — a<br />
brew of curdled chockablock<br />
with cutsey dialogue and<br />
career-crushing<br />
performances." Shows nightly<br />
at 8 and 10; Saturday and<br />
Sunday at 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 p.m<br />
The Garden.<br />
Commando Will Arnold<br />
Schwarzenegger's newest<br />
movie give him a chance to flex<br />
some brains instead of some<br />
brawn? Your guess is as good<br />
as anyone's, though judging<br />
from the TV ads, the chances<br />
look slim. Shows nightly at 8<br />
and 10; Saturday and Sunday at<br />
2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 p.m. The<br />
Movies.<br />
Kiss of the Spiderwoman A<br />
deep, thoughtful look at the<br />
friendship which develops<br />
between two very different<br />
prisoners — a romantic gay and<br />
a tough revolutionary — while<br />
they share a jail cell. Starring<br />
William Hurt, Raul Julia and<br />
Sonia Braga. Shows nightly at<br />
7:30 and 9:45; Saturday arid<br />
Sunday at 2:15, 4:45, 7:30 and<br />
9:45 p.m. The Screening Room<br />
Jagged Edge In this serious<br />
drama, Glenn Close plays a<br />
lawyer who is terrorized,<br />
supposedly for defending a<br />
man (Jeff Bridges) accused of<br />
murdering his wife. Shows<br />
nightly at 8 and 10; Saturday<br />
and Sunday at 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10<br />
p.m. The State.<br />
Invasion U.S.A. Yet another<br />
addition to the long line of<br />
Chuck Norris films. Cool stuff<br />
for you karate fans but for the<br />
rest of us... well.... Shows<br />
nightly at 7:45 and 9:45;<br />
Saturday and Sunday at 1:45,<br />
3:45, 5:45 7:45 and 9:45.<br />
Return of the Living Dead<br />
They couldn't, they wouldn't<br />
stay away! Shows nightly at<br />
7:15 and 9:15. Rowland.<br />
midweek films<br />
Confidentially Yours<br />
Truffaut's hommage to<br />
American black comedy, the<br />
second time around. Monday<br />
night, 7 and 9, 112 Kern.<br />
Presented <strong>by</strong> France Cinema<br />
sounds<br />
Allen Room Steven Palmer<br />
plays tonight anj tomorrow<br />
night.<br />
Autoport Jim Langton<br />
performs through this<br />
weekend.<br />
Brewery Friction performs<br />
danceable pop, infused with a<br />
bit of reggae tonight. Tomorrow<br />
night The Screaming Ducks do<br />
their thing.<br />
Brickhouse Random Draw<br />
plays from 7 to 10 p.m.,<br />
preceded and followed <strong>by</strong> John<br />
Cunningham.<br />
Cafe 210 West Jazz it up with<br />
Arthur Goldstein 8k Friends<br />
tonight at 10. Cartoon has<br />
another reunion Saturday.<br />
Coffee Grinder Rick Jones<br />
entertains this weekend.<br />
Jawbone Larry McCandless<br />
is on guitar and vocals<br />
Saturday at 9:30 p.m. with an<br />
open mike in between sets.<br />
Admission-is free for this<br />
coffeehouse, sponsored <strong>by</strong> the<br />
University Lutheran Parish.<br />
Le Papillon Spend another<br />
relaxing weekend with Tommy<br />
Wareham.<br />
Muckee Duck (Sheraton) Dan<br />
Burian strums his stuff this<br />
weekend.<br />
Phyrst Tonight Randy<br />
Hughes kicks off happy hours;<br />
Space Goop invades at 10:30<br />
p.m. The Phyrst Phamly has<br />
some phun Saturday eve.<br />
Pub(Holiday Inn) Glen<br />
Paladino is back for another<br />
weekend.<br />
Rathskeller Chris Mincer<br />
solos through tonight's happy<br />
hours, while Hadi Blues proves<br />
good for what ails you later on.<br />
Tomorrow, light up your<br />
evening with Ken Volz.<br />
Saloon Larry Moore spins the<br />
tunes tonight. The Doctor casts<br />
his spell on Sunday.<br />
Scorpion The Avengers get<br />
even all weekend long.<br />
Shandygaff Gran Stan spins<br />
oldies and al! your requests<br />
Friday and Saturday night.<br />
Sly Fox (Sheraton) Pentagon<br />
takes shape tonight and<br />
tomorrow night.<br />
galleries<br />
Chambers Donald Furst<br />
explores interior spaces and<br />
their inherent psychology in<br />
the print exhibit Outside In.<br />
Portrait intaglios <strong>by</strong> D.F.<br />
Bushman are also on display.<br />
HUB Galleries Rachel<br />
Schipper's Fiber Art exhibit is<br />
currently at the Browsing<br />
Gallery. Schipper uses old kite<br />
string, used clothing, turkey<br />
and peacock feathers in her<br />
weaving.<br />
PICTUREsque, an exhibit<br />
featuring photographs <strong>by</strong><br />
University students Carolyn<br />
Carlyle and Dennis O'Connor is<br />
in the Art Alley Gallery. Small<br />
World, a ceramics exhibit<br />
emphasizing miniature pottery<br />
<strong>by</strong> Mary Hosterman, is in the<br />
glass cases.<br />
Design Analogs: Painting,<br />
Music, Literature, Football <strong>by</strong><br />
Don Leon, is running in the<br />
HUB Gallery. This display<br />
highlights first year<br />
architecture students<br />
exploration of order, mass,<br />
space and movement.<br />
The Art Alley and the<br />
Browsing Gallery are open from<br />
8 a.m. to midnight every day.<br />
Kern<br />
A display <strong>by</strong> Visual<br />
Individualists United, featuring<br />
artists from all over the United<br />
States and Europe in a multimedia<br />
show, is currently on<br />
display. Gallery hours are 8 a.m.<br />
to 11 p.m. Monday through<br />
Saturday, and noon to 11 p.m.<br />
on Sunday.<br />
Museum of Art Selected<br />
American Paintings: 1785-1945<br />
from the Museum 's Collection<br />
is currently on exhibit.<br />
The major presentation for<br />
fall semester, Since The<br />
Harlem Renaissance: 50 Years<br />
of Afro-American Art, is on the<br />
third floor gallery. Sixty-two<br />
pieces of art from various<br />
media are displayed, including<br />
works <strong>by</strong> well-known artists<br />
Romare Bearden, Elizabeth<br />
Catlett and University<br />
professor of art Richard<br />
Mayhew. A symposium<br />
featuring artists in the exhibit<br />
will be held Friday and<br />
Saturday at the Paul Robeson<br />
Cultural Center. c or more<br />
information contact Kathryn<br />
McClintock at 865-7672.<br />
Museum of Art hours: 10 a.m.<br />
to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday through<br />
Friday, 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.<br />
Saturday and noon to 4 p.m.<br />
Sunday.<br />
Pattee Grandes Oeuvres,<br />
Grandes Causes opens today in<br />
the East Corridor Gallery.<br />
Organized <strong>by</strong> Kathryn<br />
Grossman, associate professor<br />
of French and the Institute for<br />
the Arts and Humanistic<br />
Studies, the display consists of<br />
Karen Allen and Jeff Bridges are featured In Starman, which comes to campus this weekend. Directed <strong>by</strong> John Carpenter,<br />
the movie is about an extraterrestrial (Bridges) who comes to earth to study human behavior.<br />
a series of limited-edition<br />
posters celebrating the Victor<br />
Hugo Centenary.<br />
The Lending Services Gallery<br />
is featuring an exhibit of<br />
paintings <strong>by</strong> Doris Rohrbaugh<br />
of Alexandria. Her work is a<br />
study of color relationships.<br />
West Pattee Lob<strong>by</strong> now<br />
boasts an Undergraduate<br />
Gallery featuring artwork <strong>by</strong><br />
undergraduate students in<br />
University art classes.<br />
Paul Robeson Cultural<br />
Center The Artist Portrait<br />
Series consists of photographs<br />
of participants in the Since the<br />
Harlem Renaissance art<br />
exhibition. A display of<br />
literature, art and other<br />
memorabilia from the Harlem<br />
Renaissance is included.<br />
Zoller Faculty members from<br />
the University, the branch<br />
campuses and emeritus faculty<br />
are featured in the School of<br />
Visual Arts Faculty Exhibition.<br />
etc.<br />
Cloud Nine The University<br />
Resident Theatre Company's<br />
production of Caryl Churchill's<br />
comedy begins at 8 p.m.<br />
tonight in the Pavilion Theatre,<br />
with performances on Oct. 5, 8-<br />
12 and 15-19. For tickets,<br />
contact the URTC at 865-1884.<br />
Bob Carlin A clawhammer<br />
banjo expert and performer of a<br />
mixture of song styles<br />
(including swing, early country<br />
music and Appalachian<br />
ballads), Carlin appears at 8<br />
p.m. tonight in Lock Haven<br />
College's Ross Library.<br />
Rock Against Hunger The<br />
Seen, The Weathermen and.<br />
Public Service will be featured<br />
in this benefit concert<br />
sponsored <strong>by</strong> College<br />
Democrats, to be held at 8 p.m.<br />
tomorrow in the HUB ballroom.<br />
Proceeds from the event will go<br />
to American Hunger Relief.<br />
Magician Richard<br />
Benninghoff Exhibiting his<br />
"pure and unique" sleight-ofhand<br />
in the State College area<br />
every weekend. Catch him at<br />
the Village Irin Restaurant at 6<br />
p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays;<br />
and at Le Papillon for Sunday<br />
brunches.<br />
The Count Basie Orchestra<br />
Directed <strong>by</strong> nine-year Basie<br />
veteran Thad Jones, the 50-<br />
year-old ensemble will perform<br />
at 8 p.m. tomorrow in<br />
Eisenhower Auditorium.<br />
Sponsored <strong>by</strong> the Artist Series,<br />
Center for the Performing Arts<br />
in cooperation with the<br />
University's Harlem<br />
Renaissance Symposium.<br />
Tickets are now on sale at the<br />
Eisenhower box office, open<br />
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays.<br />
Ecotour: Hawk Mountain<br />
Nature lovers of all<br />
descriptions may take part in<br />
this guided van trip to Hawk<br />
Mountain Sanctuary, where<br />
thousands of birds of prey<br />
congregate. The North and<br />
South Lookouts serve as an<br />
attraction for northern birds<br />
during their emigration South<br />
for the winter. Participants in<br />
the excursion are advised to<br />
bring sturdy walking shoes,<br />
warm clothes and food and<br />
drink as well as binoculars and<br />
field guides. Prepare to spend<br />
from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. on<br />
Wednesday for this advenfure,<br />
sponsored <strong>by</strong> the Shaver's<br />
Creek Environmental Center.<br />
To preregister, call 863-2000.<br />
The Penn State Concert<br />
Choir Directed <strong>by</strong> D. Douglas<br />
Miller, this 70-member strong<br />
ensemble performs at 12:10<br />
p.m. on Thursday at<br />
Eisenhower Chapel as part of<br />
the University's Bach's Lunch<br />
Concerts series. Works <strong>by</strong><br />
Anton Bruckner will also be<br />
featured.<br />
Grateful Dead Meadowlands<br />
Concert Stef Correy of the<br />
URTC box office reports that<br />
Ticketron will not be handling<br />
tickets for this upcoming Dead<br />
performance. Therefore, it will<br />
not be possible to obtain<br />
tickets on campus this<br />
weekend.
The Daily Collegian Friday, Oct. 4, 1985—21<br />
—"THE<br />
SCORPIO<br />
TAVERN<br />
Presents A<br />
SATISFIER<br />
Fri., 10:30 pm<br />
Below The Scorpion<br />
232 W. Calder Way<br />
GHOSTBUSTERS<br />
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115 OSMOND<br />
7-9-11 Friday & Saturday<br />
7-9 Sunday $2<br />
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N.Y. DAILY NEWS<br />
99<br />
OAKLAND TRIBUNE<br />
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KABC-TV<br />
cufttftlfiie &Wi&<br />
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or mature awteflfctts only<br />
Vi&MhS? «' *<br />
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HUB Assembly Room<br />
8 & 10 Friday, Saturday, Sunday<br />
$2<br />
STUDENT UNION BOARD<br />
**<br />
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^^^^ j^ n6H j ljlji237-7657<br />
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AGNES OF GOD ra<br />
NIGHTLY: 7:45, 9:45<br />
SAT., SUN.: 1:45, 3:45, 5:45, 7:45, 9:45<br />
SAT., SUN.: $2.00 Before 6:00 p.m.<br />
U<br />
108 FORUM<br />
FRI, SAT 7, 9<br />
SUN 7,9<br />
11<br />
BACK TO THE FUTURE PO<br />
NIGHTLY: 8:00, 10:00<br />
SAT., SUN.: 2:00, 4:00, 6:00, 8:00, 10:00<br />
SAT., SUN.: All Seats $2.00 Before 6:00 p.m<br />
129 S. Athrton 237.2112<br />
PRIZZI'S HONOR R<br />
NIGHTLY: 7:30, 9:45<br />
SAT., SUN.: 2:15, 4:45, 7:30, 9:45<br />
SAT., SUN.: All Seats $2.00 Before 6:00 p.m.<br />
^^^^^^^^^^^5^11*2 237^01^^^^^^^^^<br />
MAXIE ro<br />
NIGHTLY: 8:00, 10:00<br />
SAT., SUN.: 2:00, 4:00, 6:00, 8:00, 10:00<br />
SAT., SUN.: All Seats J2.00 Before 6:00 p.m.<br />
407 E. B#ovw 237.0003<br />
COMMANDO R<br />
NIGHTLY: 8:00, 10:00<br />
SAT., SUN.: 2:00, 4:00, 6:00, 8:00, 10:00<br />
SAT., SUN.: All Seats $2.00 Before 6:00 p.m<br />
127 S. Frotf 23S-6O0S ¦<br />
KISS OF THE SPIDER WOMAN R<br />
NIGHTLY: 7:30,9:45<br />
SAT., SUN.: 2:15, 4:45, 7:30, 9:45<br />
SAT., SUN.: All Seats $2.00 Before 6:00 p.m.<br />
Three of the year's best performances make 'Agnes soar<br />
a movie that pulsates with dramatic urgency<br />
— William Wolf. GANNETT NEWS SERVICE<br />
"There are 3 Oscar nominees in this one picture<br />
— Leonard Maltin. ENTERTAINMENTTONIKHT<br />
Performances are stunning. Deeply moving,<br />
intelligently directed."<br />
¦J*flrrj t>ons. SNEAK PRE\lEWS. I.NDEPEXOEXTN«'\»'«RKNro.S<br />
Tlie stars sparkle...all three are riveting<br />
with dramatic intensity."<br />
Riw Reed. NEW YORK POM<br />
'SB* **<br />
V,<br />
Extraordinary cast. Extraordinary film<br />
Agnes of God' gets a 10!"<br />
22<br />
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Can Franklin. KCBS IV<br />
yi<br />
I'he screen fills<br />
y^fe»Jj .k-' fc^fe^y.<br />
JAGGED EDGE R<br />
NIGHTLY: 8:00, 10:00 .<br />
SAT., SUN.: 2:00, 4:00, 6:00, 8:00, 10:00<br />
SAT., SUN.: All Seats $2.00 Before 6:00 p.m<br />
INVASION U.S.A. R<br />
NIGHTLY: 7:45, 9:45<br />
SAT., SUN.: 1:45, 3:45, 5:45, 7:45, 9:45<br />
SAT., SUN.: All Seats $2.00 Before 6:00 p.m<br />
RETURN OF THE LIVING DEAD «<br />
NIGHTLY: 7:15, 9:15<br />
111 FORUM<br />
THE PENN STATE MOVIE CO-OP<br />
I<br />
FRI, SAT 7,9,11<br />
SUN 7,9<br />
CAREFUL to<br />
crush all<br />
smokes dead out<br />
mmBtmxmm<br />
am ^^^ "W^S^BSH?^^ JfM<br />
l-' iTn . I<br />
a<br />
Nightly: 7:45, 9:45<br />
Sat. & Sun.: 1:45,3:45,5:45,7:45 9:45<br />
<<br />
^<br />
I<br />
-v.<br />
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•^iMfl<br />
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•TTT'<br />
The Navy<br />
/ Marine Corps Drill Society<br />
presents<br />
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9fc !<br />
^*»4<br />
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VA<br />
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NEIL DIAMOND LAURENCE OLIVIER<br />
r^M<br />
Fri., Sat.. Sun 7:30 & 1.0:00 121 Sparks $2<br />
0288<br />
FRI<br />
SAT 7, 9,11 X<br />
105FORUM<br />
X^%.<br />
$2 SUN 7. 9
comics<br />
B<br />
eic.<br />
22<br />
The Daily Collegian<br />
Friday, Oct. 4, 1985<br />
peanuts<br />
far side<br />
I'VE MEARP THAT YOUR<br />
APVLCE ISN'T ANY GOOP.<br />
tHE DOCTOR<br />
I5 [1E1<br />
J U \ tff<br />
j GU&fy*^<br />
TMEY SAY IT'S JUST<br />
I POP PSYCHOLOGY:.'.<br />
50 I HAVE TO ASK<br />
YOU S0METUIN6...<br />
/O- H-<br />
^r~<br />
D<br />
©<br />
UIHAT KINP OF PROBLEMS<br />
CAN YOU SOLVE WITH<br />
?0? 9SVCU010W ?<br />
WTir^<br />
POP PROBLEMS<br />
TMf DOCTOR ( ' / l«';'/<br />
1<br />
bloom county<br />
LONeOfiNP SHNeRlNG...<br />
Trie FAM6P ASTROtfOMeR<br />
K5eP5 A MIPNI6HT<br />
VIGIL FOR .-^ mcoMT.:C^.<br />
^<br />
..SCANNING The VAST, SAVAGe<br />
Reams OFTHB COSMIC VOIP,<br />
HIS MINI? WANPeRS 10 The<br />
FAiWA5nC... 1U The UNFATHONlme...<br />
COVLP neee STARING<br />
INTO we veRYFf tce OF..OF<br />
Gop Hm$ecf /£ ? '\<br />
C -*-<br />
N0...I CBRTAlNPf<br />
PO NOT THINK<br />
THAT CARL SAGAN W0I/LP<br />
HAVBHANPLePTHnT<br />
6ITVATI0N WITH M0R6<br />
_ Poise...<br />
I 1<br />
^<br />
¦ ¦*&<br />
/0-4-<br />
/<br />
//<br />
yy//<br />
/ 'Alt.<br />
I<br />
I<br />
i<br />
%¦<br />
%<br />
//a<br />
Here comes another big one, Roy, and<br />
here—we—goooooowheeeeeeeooo!"<br />
• CUT AND SAVE • CUT AND SAVE • CUT AND SAVE • CUT AND SAVE •<br />
C0<br />
PEACE CORPS<br />
Did you know Penn State has a permanent tPEACE CORPS Office?<br />
CALL: Barb Porter 863-0249<br />
434 Agricultural Admin. Bldg<br />
?*%<br />
BUILD A BETTER PLACE TO LIVE<br />
If you are concerned with building a better place for people to live attend one<br />
informational meeting to pick up your application to become a Resident<br />
Assistant. Applications will only be given at these meetings.<br />
October 6 in the Robeson Cultural Center Auditorium,<br />
October 7 in the HUB Ballroom, and<br />
October 8 in 102 Chambers.<br />
All from 6:30-8:00 p.m.<br />
Minimum Qualif ications:- a grade point average of at least 2.25,<br />
• a minimum of 24 credits earned at time of application ,<br />
• one semester of living in a residence hall (or other comparable<br />
«
doonesbury<br />
..AND I WINK I SPEAK<br />
FORALLMYFEUW^. :- AMEN!<br />
MlTTEE MEMBERS IN SAY- \<br />
I ING WE MUST PO SOME- * ,<br />
THINGABOUT<br />
THEDEFICW.<br />
4*<br />
17^/<br />
fi^O^<br />
< ><br />
/0-4<br />
/WKS. MVENPORT .SINCECDNGRESS<br />
SEEMS UNWILLING TO FURTHER.<br />
REDUCBSPENPING , HCWLV YOU<br />
PROPOSE 70 ACT ON THE ^>~^<br />
DEFICIT?<br />
ss<br />
ad<br />
DR. RUTH answers<br />
600 questions<br />
A<br />
uJA<br />
WM<br />
you never found<br />
the nerve to<br />
ask your motherl<br />
»• JSZ><br />
M^, su9©3<br />
GATC OT<br />
GOOD SEX<br />
YbSTA?<br />
A board game for<br />
2 to 4 couples . .. $24.95<br />
iwrcswi<br />
Coming in October...<br />
PENGUINS<br />
FOR SALE<br />
U^/O V^l 1 I<br />
on all Penguin Books*<br />
"Penn State tBooKstore<br />
on campus<br />
Owned and Operated <strong>by</strong> the Pennsylvania State University<br />
Celebrating 50 Penguin Years<br />
•(Textbooks Not Included)<br />
October 1 - 15 , 1985<br />
The<br />
TWELVE-WEEK BAH<br />
is a no-frills bar<br />
has only beer , like it or not<br />
has great Monday Night Football<br />
doesn't have MTV<br />
has professional wrestling<br />
has potentially great quarters, whales tails, Mexican<br />
etc. tables<br />
has the best prices for bottled imports in town eg.<br />
Molson Golden<br />
75 c /bottle<br />
Grizzly<br />
75 c /bottle<br />
Labatt's (blue & red) 75 c /bottle<br />
Lowenbrau<br />
75 c /bottle<br />
Champale . 75 c /bottle<br />
Heineken<br />
s 1.00/bottle<br />
Heineken Dark<br />
s 1.00/bottle<br />
Moosehead<br />
s 1.00/bottle<br />
Amstel Light<br />
s 1.00/bottle<br />
White Mountain Cooler ... s 1.00/bottle<br />
Bud Ponies<br />
50 c /bottle<br />
- 14 oz. drafts 50 c all the time<br />
We know we resemble a garage sale, but we have<br />
the best prices on imports anywhere. Take<br />
advantage of it while you can!!<br />
- Open at 7 p.m. nightly.<br />
BT EXERCISING LEADERSHIP FOR A<br />
CHANGE! IM SURE Eimmi/PrlERE<br />
IS FINALLY WILLING TDAPMITTHE<br />
PARTY'S OVER ANP THAT ^^<br />
ITS VMS<br />
TO RAISE<br />
^A<br />
"Donee your pouts off ot the Saloon!"<br />
This Weekend<br />
Friday...<br />
Get fried with DJ Larry Moore<br />
Free Fries 4-7 pm<br />
& Dancing ' $1.75 pitchers<br />
Saturday...<br />
Funk with the Witchdoctor<br />
Sunday...<br />
Dance your pants off with the Doctor<br />
Featuring $1.50 Dlackouts<br />
Find out for yourself why we're . J©jpfc<br />
State College's Hottest Dor! f 4<br />
The Saloon<br />
THE<br />
101 Heistor Street 0 234404$<br />
KS3<br />
«i<br />
UiliiS.<br />
7SWJI<br />
mm<br />
u?<br />
^L- -- " ;*J1f al "/<br />
i J<br />
,h« w *J ¦> "sJ»a fa •¦il l<br />
• * * • * *. '"I'isl^i&n* i -il<br />
>. ^iiS^r!<br />
y&fe««/9Hw i<br />
-.1<br />
Hlte :<br />
^m&Mskzte<br />
128 W. CotUo* 237-7866<br />
k<br />
1 . 1 •. 1 I **&/ J. -I a "' .<br />
J M kl T^ sfc !C%^C| /UDIUOJ>l / UDIUOJM/UDIUDJM /LpiUOJX<br />
v» «<br />
v^"<br />
*»<br />
D 3<br />
m \<br />
j<br />
/",?3<br />
V:<br />
SI*"* '<br />
*'. "— ***. /<br />
'5E<br />
mn JCTpf<br />
i* .-i %*i. r&<br />
%& W?<br />
m<br />
OCTOBER DIAMOND SALE<br />
If it's a diamond - it's on sale<br />
Now!<br />
Save<br />
20% to 40%<br />
Accounts Invited<br />
kranich/<br />
216 E. College Avenue Our 81st Year 234-4481<br />
Open Thursday & Friday Nights till 8:30 p.m.<br />
hVkft kfonich/kronich/kfonlchVkrQnic<br />
WHOOSH<br />
I<br />
.^><br />
.«-.<br />
.^<br />
.><br />
.»-v<br />
.-»<br />
/$<br />
Crossword<br />
(answers in Monday s classi(ieds)<br />
Across<br />
1 Mast<br />
6 Wealth<br />
12 Parts of bees' heads<br />
13 Unfold<br />
14 Refugee<br />
16 Framework<br />
17 Uncle: Scottish<br />
18 Arranger<br />
20 Office holders<br />
22 Clear<br />
23 Corded fabric<br />
25 Sword<br />
27 Confronted<br />
29 Ringing syllable<br />
30 Bone<br />
31 However<br />
33 Cabuya<br />
35 Pinch<br />
37 Sponge<br />
39 Nervous disease<br />
40 Stumpers<br />
43 Summer: French<br />
45 Pineapple<br />
46 Genus of sea lions<br />
48 Repartee<br />
50 Fallacy<br />
51 Crushes underfoot<br />
52 Agency<br />
©1985 Domino s Pizza. Inc<br />
B<br />
rS<br />
D1985 Domino's Pizza, Inc. ' ,w ^ "• "iiiwi iun<br />
our drivers carry less than $20<br />
Down<br />
1 Opposed to aweather<br />
2 Government official<br />
3 Levant<br />
4 Tatter<br />
5 Entertainer Peter<br />
6 Business getter<br />
7 Withdraws<br />
8 Bowsprit<br />
9 Senior<br />
10 State of being scorched<br />
11 Sink<br />
15 Blunder<br />
19 Cloudy<br />
21 Convulsive cry<br />
24 Chum<br />
25 Thousands of years<br />
26 Flan<br />
28 Small bird<br />
32 Likewise<br />
34 Spanish mackerel<br />
36 Chatter<br />
38 Favoring<br />
41 Celebes ox<br />
42 Hopbine, for one<br />
44 Lugs<br />
45 Science<br />
47 Land measure<br />
49 Eliot<br />
WEEKEND<br />
SPECIALS<br />
from<br />
DOMINO'S<br />
PIZZA ®<br />
1 free six-pack of Pepsi with any<br />
large 2 item or more pizza<br />
one coupon per pizza<br />
Expires 10/4/85<br />
North: 237-1414 South: 234-5655<br />
1104 N. Atherton 421 -it. i i Rear i&ui E. i_. Beaver uv-a»^i Ave n»v,<br />
limited delivery area<br />
offer good only at participating locations<br />
customer pays applicable sales tax<br />
read Collegian sports!<br />
"D"<br />
Buy any large, 1-item pizza<br />
and 4 Pepsis for $7.50<br />
one coupon per pizza<br />
Expires 10/4/85<br />
North: 237-1414 South: 234-5655<br />
®1104 N. Atherton 421 Rear E. Beaver Ave<br />
©1985 Domino's Pizza, Inc.<br />
our drivers carry less than $20<br />
limited delivery area<br />
offer good only at participating locations<br />
customer pays applicable sales tax<br />
s 2.00 off any large<br />
3-item pizza<br />
one coupon per pizza<br />
Expires 10/4/85<br />
« North: 237-1414 South: 234-5655<br />
,4)1985 Domino's pizza, inc.1104 N. Atherton 421 Rear E. Beaver Ave<br />
our drivers carry less than $20<br />
-J 1985 Domino's Pizza, Inc<br />
'E<br />
limited delivery area<br />
offer good only at participating locations<br />
customer pays applicable sales tax<br />
Buy any 12'<br />
and 2 Pepsis<br />
"A"<br />
1-item pizza<br />
for only s 5.00<br />
Good only 11AM-3PM<br />
one coupon per pizza<br />
Expires 10/4/85<br />
North: 237-1414 South: 234-5655<br />
1104 N. Atherton 421 Rear E. Beaver Ave<br />
our drivers carry less than $20 limited delivery area<br />
offer good only at participating locations<br />
customer pays applicable sales tax<br />
"G"
24—The Daily Collegian Friday, Oct. 4, 1985<br />
Power cut<br />
will affect<br />
east campus<br />
Electricity will be turned off in<br />
several buildings on the east side ol<br />
campus for two one-hour periods nexl<br />
week while an old power line is removed,<br />
the director of maintenance<br />
and operations said.<br />
George Schimmel said, "We're<br />
turning the power off so we car<br />
disconnect an overhead line that is nc<br />
longer used."<br />
The electrical interruptions are<br />
scheduled from noon to 1 p.m. Monday<br />
and Thursday.<br />
The power outage will affect a<br />
number of lab and research buildings,<br />
utility plants and traffic signals<br />
on the east side of campus as well as<br />
Graduate Circle, Schimmel said.<br />
People affected <strong>by</strong> the interruption<br />
have been notified, Schimmel said.<br />
"All the people involved have to<br />
agree to the times," he said. "This is<br />
not something we can casually go oul<br />
and do without notifying anybody."<br />
Among the buildings affected are<br />
the Meats Lab, the Waste Water<br />
Treatment Plant, the Porter Road<br />
Sewage Pumping Station, the Forestry<br />
Research Lab and the Academic<br />
Activities Bqilding. The traffic signal<br />
at University Drive and Hastings<br />
Road will also be affected.<br />
—<strong>by</strong> Gregg Bortz<br />
Specter will<br />
host forum<br />
in Kern Building<br />
Students will have the opportunity<br />
to discuss issues ranging from Pennsylvania's<br />
economic problems to<br />
world peace during a public forum<br />
Monday sponsored <strong>by</strong> U.S. Sen. Arlen<br />
Specter.<br />
Specter, R-Pa, will meet at 2 p.m.<br />
in the Kern Graduate Center Auditorium<br />
and will address any topic of<br />
concern to his constituents.<br />
"As your United States Senator, my<br />
greatest priority is keeping abreast of<br />
your needs and concerns — knowing<br />
your feelings about the issues that<br />
most immediately represent you in<br />
our nation's capitol," Specter said in<br />
a press release, —<strong>by</strong> Jeanette Krebs<br />
Vietnam vets found I'Wipeout<br />
By DIANE 0. DIPIERO<br />
homecoming difficult<br />
Collegian Arts Writer<br />
By JILL GRAHAM<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
Vietnam veterans experienced<br />
more problems adjusting to civilian<br />
life than soldiers who fought in World<br />
War II or the Korean War because of<br />
differences in the wars and in the<br />
veterans' homecomings, said a former<br />
Vietnam soldier who specializes<br />
in treating the problems of Vietnam<br />
veterans.<br />
Jed Pendorf, head of the Readjustment<br />
Counseling for Vietnam Veterans<br />
in Centre County, spoke to an<br />
audience last night about his work in<br />
treating Vietnam Delayed Stress Syndrome<br />
in an informal workshop sponsored<br />
<strong>by</strong> the Office of Student<br />
Activities.<br />
Statistics show many Vietnam veterans<br />
have serious problems adjusting<br />
to normal life in society, Pendorf<br />
said, adding that more Vietnam veterans<br />
have committed suicide to date<br />
than were actually killed in the war.<br />
Between 30 and 40 percent of all<br />
people in jail today are Vietnam<br />
veterans and of those that were married,<br />
38 percent were divorced within<br />
six months of returning home, he<br />
said. Veterans also have alarmingly<br />
high rates of alcoholism, drug addiction<br />
and unemployment.<br />
Pendorf said many of these problems<br />
are characteristics of Vietnam<br />
Delayed Stress Syndrome, or postraumatic<br />
stress disorder. The disorder<br />
results from traumatic<br />
experiences such as combat that are<br />
outside the normal range of human<br />
experience, and involves ongoing<br />
chronic anxiety and feelings of anger,<br />
depression, alienation and repression,<br />
he said.<br />
The main cause of this problem,<br />
Pendorf said, wt>s differences between<br />
Vietnam and previous wars.<br />
Because of changes in draft laws,<br />
the soldiers were younger than ever<br />
before — the average age was about<br />
19, he said. At that age, people's<br />
personality and identity are just beginning<br />
to crystalize and they are illequipped<br />
to deal with the high levels<br />
of stress associated with combat.<br />
Once in Vietnam, they fought a<br />
highly controversial war for a purpose<br />
they knew very little about.<br />
They were fighting an "invisible enemy"<br />
because of the increased use of<br />
guerrilla warfare. Pendorf said this<br />
put the men under constant anxiety<br />
and stress.<br />
In other wars, Pendorf said, men<br />
stayed with the same group of soldiers<br />
throughout training and com<br />
bat, but Vietnam was a very mobile<br />
war because of increased aircraft<br />
technology. Soldiers were often split<br />
up and flown to fight in different<br />
areas almost daily, resulting in very<br />
low morale, he said.<br />
During World War II, it usually<br />
took the soldiers between 30 and 50<br />
days to get home <strong>by</strong> steamer ship.<br />
This time provided a needed period of<br />
transition for the men to get close and<br />
diffuse their feelings.<br />
In Vietnam, Pendorf said, the jet<br />
made it possible for a soldier to be<br />
home in 16 hours.<br />
"So 48 hours after a soldier was in<br />
an ambush, he could be back home<br />
eating dinner with Mom and Dad,"<br />
Pendorf said.<br />
When the veterans came home,<br />
Pendorf said, they faced a country<br />
that was strongly divided over the<br />
war. Previously, veterans were celebrated<br />
war heroes, but people now<br />
saw the veteran as either a killer or a<br />
loser.<br />
Veterans also had to deal with the<br />
negative publicity from the press.<br />
"This was the first war Americans<br />
could watch while eating supper,"<br />
Pendorf said.<br />
Although delayed stress syndrome<br />
is very far-reaching and complex,<br />
Pendorf said it can be treated. Pendorf<br />
said he experienced all the<br />
symptoms of the disorder.<br />
Pendorf said he believes group<br />
discussions where veterans talk to<br />
veterans is the best treatment of the<br />
disorder because the men trust each<br />
Dther and are more willing to confide<br />
in each other.<br />
He said the high incidence of officers<br />
being killed <strong>by</strong> their own troops<br />
shows that these men would not be<br />
very responsive to an authority figure<br />
in therapy.<br />
He also stressed that the therapy<br />
takes time, adding that one of his<br />
patients has been in his discussion<br />
group for two years.<br />
The cause might not have been as<br />
important as that of Live-Aid or<br />
Farm-Aid, yet supporters filled the<br />
Scorpion last Tuesday night. They<br />
were there to raise money for an<br />
unofficial pasttime that in their opinion<br />
had been seriously wronged last<br />
year.<br />
That pastime is the West College<br />
Wipeout, an annual concert organized<br />
<strong>by</strong> students residing on the west side<br />
of State College — a territory that<br />
stretches west from Atherton and<br />
north from Beaver Avenue to the<br />
White Golf Course. Every year the<br />
neighbors who, whether <strong>by</strong> common<br />
soil or common interest treat each<br />
other more like blood relatives chip in<br />
for beer and bands and have a "big<br />
block party," as fellow resident Sequoia<br />
described it.<br />
Sequoia said that last spring at the<br />
11th Annual West College Wipeout,<br />
some people didn't pay until the bash<br />
was underway. Police officers who<br />
had been monitoring the scene assumed<br />
that the group was selling beer<br />
without a license. Now, another popular<br />
story says that the public was<br />
being charged for entertainment and<br />
refreshments, but that is unimportant<br />
here. The bottom line is that the<br />
West College gang was slapped with<br />
TA training gets bad grade<br />
By W.T. HOLLAND<br />
Collegian Staff Writer<br />
benefit' held at bar<br />
fines and court fees totaling $400.<br />
Thus the reason for Tuesday's benefit:<br />
All proceeds went toward defraying<br />
the cost of the legal<br />
entanglements.<br />
And so the devotees flocked to the<br />
Scorpion. They wore tie-dyed shirts<br />
and faded blue jeans. Bandanas were<br />
awkwardly tied around the long<br />
straight hair of men and women.<br />
They danced to every song; their<br />
style was a mindless (and spineless)<br />
combination of those of Jerry Lee<br />
Lewis, Mick Jagger and REM's Michael<br />
Stipe. Heads, arms and hips<br />
moved determinedly to the music.<br />
Certainly the girl sitting next to me at<br />
the bar had to be treated for whiplash<br />
the next'morning.<br />
To outsiders it seemed kind of funny.<br />
A young man sporting a Mack<br />
truck hat took in the scene: "It's a<br />
regular multi-mania show," he sai-<br />
1"It's like a bunch of '60's drop-<br />
DUts," another guy at the bar<br />
remarked. Some people just didn't<br />
know what to make of these self-proclaimed<br />
artsy individuals. But it<br />
didn't matter. Once the entertainment<br />
started, all the people were<br />
united as lovers of music.<br />
The evening's success was due in<br />
part to the high-powered bands that<br />
performed.. Some people who had<br />
lever been to the West College Wipeout<br />
had come to hear Space Goop<br />
The problem is not with teacher<br />
assistants, but with TA training, said<br />
the president of the Graduate Student<br />
Association in his report on TAs training<br />
to the University Student Executive'Council<br />
last night.<br />
Brian DelBuono said GSA is currently<br />
working with the Undergraduate<br />
Student Government's division<br />
of Academic Assembly to look into<br />
the structure and quality of instruction<br />
received <strong>by</strong> teaching assistants<br />
The two groups are proposing the<br />
formation of a student committee<br />
which will attempt to develop a standard<br />
, well-structured program of teacher<br />
assistance training and to<br />
"redirect the University into the financial<br />
aspects of the issue," Del<br />
Buono said.<br />
In 1981, the University Faculty Senate<br />
passed legislation requiring TAs<br />
to receive training in classroom, laboratory<br />
and recitation instruction.<br />
In Spring Semester of 1984, GSA<br />
issued a survey to TAs to investigated<br />
the status of teacher assistance training.<br />
DelBuono said the survey, which<br />
received a 38 percent response rate,<br />
found that among graduate teaching<br />
assistants about 72 percent of University<br />
graduate TAs reported they were<br />
unaware of a program to prepare<br />
them in teacher training.<br />
In additon 65 percent said their<br />
department offers a course (the 602<br />
Supervised Experience in College<br />
Teaching) but only a third of them<br />
EXPERIENCED<br />
or the Screaming Ducks. Everyone<br />
was enthralled with the sounds of<br />
Random Draw. As psychedelic lights<br />
flashed behind the band, the audience<br />
obliviously danced away.<br />
The highlight of the evening,<br />
though, came at the very beginning.<br />
Fliers laying on the bar told of a new<br />
area band: Queen Bee and the Hornet<br />
Band. Why bring an inexperienced<br />
band to a fund-raising performance?<br />
Though this was the group's first gig<br />
in a bar and in front of an audience, it<br />
did an outstanding job. The crowd<br />
immediately picked up on the band's<br />
spicy jazz sound; they had fallen in<br />
love with lead singer Tonya Brown's<br />
sultry voice when she was only halfway<br />
through "House of the Rising<br />
Sun." Queen Bee set the stage for an<br />
evening of non-stop enjoyment.<br />
Sequoia said that the benefit<br />
cleared $500. The residents' dream is<br />
to become a campus-affiliated organization;<br />
then, they could advertise<br />
their parties on campus billboards<br />
and draw even bigger crowds at their<br />
shindigs. Yes, a 12th Annual West<br />
College Wipeout is almost guaranteed<br />
for the spring of '86. Sequoia said that<br />
if they have to, they'll make an exodus<br />
to the top of a mountain as they<br />
did last year. And though they'd<br />
rather it didn't happen again, they'd<br />
be ready for another benefit concert<br />
next fall.<br />
reported they were required <strong>by</strong> their<br />
department to take it. Of those, 84<br />
percent said the teacher training<br />
allowed them to meet their needs as<br />
graduate teaching assistants.<br />
Del Buono added that at the time,<br />
the University Instructional Development<br />
Program was not publicized<br />
enough. The UID provides instructional<br />
assistance for TAs and professors<br />
who desire or are asked to improve<br />
their teaching procedures.<br />
In other USEC action, co-Chairman<br />
of the University's alcohol task force,<br />
M. Lee Upcraft reported that the<br />
deadline for student feedback will be<br />
extended for two weeks until Oct. 24<br />
in order to give task force members<br />
time to prepare a workable policy<br />
before University President Bryce<br />
Jordan.<br />
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