Document 104570

7
Reagan reveals plan to say 'no to drugs
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By SUSANNE M. SCHAFER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON , D.C. — President Reagan,
unveiling his plan to attack drug abuse in
America, ordered the executive branch yesterday to set up mandatory tests for federal
workers in sensitive jobs.
But Reagan's program drew immediate
resistance from the American Civil Liberties
Union and labor organizations representing
federal employees. Rep. Don Edwards, DCalif., chairman of a House civil and constitutional rights panel, maintained that the program violates fundamental individual rights.
During on Oval Office ceremony where he
signed the order and put his name on letters
to Congress accompanying a series of legislative proposals, Reagan said, "This is the
federal government's way of just saying 'no'
to drugs."
Reagan's move came one day after he and
his wife, Nancy, made a nationally televised
broadcast, appealing to people's consciences
and their sense of patriotism, for help in
purging the scourge of drugs in schools and
workplaces.
Secretary of Education William J. Bennett
told reporters he believes most schools can
wipe out drug problems without resorting to
widespread testing of students. His department has found that drug-testing was not
necessary in school systems which have
shown effectiveness in curbing drug abuse,
he said.
With the formal announcement of his anti
drug-abuse plan, including Reagan's endorsement of capital punishment for certain
drug-related offenses, the president joined
members of Congress who have been scrambling to enact new measures of their own.
But beyond the consensus in official Wash-
Military role against smugglers
is 'absurd/ Weinberger says
By NORMAN BLACK
AP Military Writer
WASHINGTON , D.C. — A House-passed
bill ordering the military to seal the nation 's
borders against drug traffickers "is pretty
absurd" and should not be enacted, Defense
Secretary Caspar W.
Weinberger said yesterday.
"This is a nice expression of somefe
thing that we all hope
could h a p p e n , "
Weinberger said in
an interview with
The A s s o c i a t e d
Caspar
Press and other news
Weinberger
services.
"But to put it in mandatory language ordering the president to do it, is I think, not
very useful," he said. "They have ordered the
president to halt all penetrations of the borders of the United States in 45 days. I think it
basically, on the face of it, is pretty absurd, to
be perfectly frank about it."
Weinberger compared the directive in the
House legislation to the effort by the 11th
century monarch, King Canute of England,
"to order the tidese back."
The 69-year-old defense secretary, during a
30-minute interview in his Pentagon office,
said he objected to the House provision both
on legal and practical grounds.
The House, by a 392-16 margin, on Thursday
gave final approval to a bill which, among
other things, would force the president to send
military forces to U.S. borders to stop drug
smuggling, and give them power to make
arrests in instances where traffickers are
under pursuit by authorities.
In the interview yesterday, Weinberger
said, "We have, obviously, the historic separation of military and civilian activities and
we've always in our country, quite properly,
said the military shouldn't engage in domestic law enforcement."
As for the practical side, Weinberger asserted that the House bill would, in essence,
force the Pentagon to create a new law
enforcement agency and strip the Defense
Department of resources needed to ensure the
nation's security.
"Drug smuggling is a criminal enterprise,"
he said. "The (military ) time that would be
diverted into this is enormous.
"You would have to have commanders and
various witnesses testifying in court in thousands of cases, and those things are never
over quickly," Weinberger added. "And
you'd have to have all manner of informants ,
and profiles of likely suspects, and .trained
interrogators —you'd have to construct a
whole new enforcement agency, law enforcement agency."
ington that something must be done about the
drug abuse problem, there were indications
that some suggested solutions face heavy
obstacles:
• Edwards issued a statementsaying Reagan's order "violates three fundamental
rights: the right not to testify against yourself, the right to be treated as innocent until
proven guilty, and the right to be free from
unreasonable governmental intrusions on
privacy." The congressman said he was
confident Reagan's order would be held unconstitutional.
• Leaders of federal employee unions, and
the American Civil Liberties Union , challenged the administration to define "sensitive" jobs.
Said Alan Adler, legislative counsel of the
ACLU : "The president's proposal is a blatant
violation of the rights of American workers to
be free of search and seizure without probable cause."
• House Majority Leader Jim Wright, DTexas, questioned the administration's commitment to putting enough money into the
new anti-drug abuse campaign.
"The president said last night (Sunday)
that you can't just throw money at the problem," Wright said. "That's true. You can't
just throw words at the problem,- either.
You've got to have some money to do it
right."
In San Francisco, however, Senate Democratic Whip Alan Cranston denounced
"America's growing lust for illegal narcotics" and said will support Reagan's plan, if it
is carried out with caution.
Reagan's executive order, requiring mandatory tests for federal workers in sensitive
jobs and voluntary screening for the rest of
the civilian federal workforce, took effect
upon his signature.
"We're getting tough on drugs, and we
mean business," Reagan said as Vice President George Bush looked over his shoulder.
"To those who are thinking of using drugs,
we say: 'Stop.' And to those who are pushing
drugs, we say: 'Beware,' " the president
declared.
Some published reports, however, have put
the number as high as l.l million. The order
affected federal workers in the executive
branch only, however, and does not cover
people employed by Congress and the judiciary.
"That's just impossible to estimate now,"
Wallison said when asked to furnish a number. He pointed out that Reagan's plan calls
for agency heads to establish a testing program for employees in sensitive positions,
but that the extent to which such employees
are tested will be determined by the agency
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President Reagan, with Vice President George Bush standing by, speaks to reporters from the
Oval Office yesterday after he signed an order instructing all federal employees not to use illegal
drugs on or off the Job. He also directed the executive branch to establish mandatory drugtesting programs for federal workers in sensitive positions.
head according to the agency's "mission and
its employee's duties and .. . the danger to
the public health and safety or to national
security."
At a Justice Department news conference,
Attorney General Edwin Meese said that
political appointees, federal employees engaged in law enforcement functions and
workers with access to classified information
will be among those facing federa l drug
testing.
However, Meese repeatedly refused to supply estimates when asked how many federal
employees would wind up taking the test.
Under Reagan's order, the agency heads
were also directed to set up voluntary employee drug testing programs for workers not
covered by the mandatory setup, and were
authorized to test "any applicant" for illegal
drug use.
The agencies must announce their drug
testing program 60 days . in advance but
individual workers won't necessarily be
given further notice before being ordered to
submit to a test.
Overall , the president's legislation and
administrative steps would add nearly $900
million in additional money to combat drug
abuse, bringing the cost of all federal antidrug programs to $3.2 billion.
Winter rites for
qrads canceled
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Collegian Photo / Mike Moss
A Penn State and chambers of commerce survey will determine whether
planes like this one, seen on the tarmac at the University Park Airport,
should be making more flights out of the airport north of campus on treks
through the eastern United States.
Flight debate has University up in air
By PHIL GALEWITZ
Collegian Staff Writer
Charles Hosier, stopping before boarding ar
Allegheny Commuter flight to Pittsburgh yesterday, remarked that going by air to Washington
was easier in the 1960s than it is today.
"We've regressed as far as flight service is
concerned in the Centre Region," the University
vice president for research said.
Penn State and five area chambers of commerce agree with Hosier and say more airline
service out of University Park Airport is needed,
including direct trips to New York.
However, Allegheny Commuter, the only airline flying to and from State College, says service
is fine and that talk of bringing in another airline
or a flight to the Big Apple is unwarranted.
To resolve the dilemma, the University is
financing a survey being distributed to 400 Penn
State academic leaders and about 1,400 business
people in State College, Lewistown, Bellefonte,
Huntingdon and Philipsburg.
"The survey will be an instrument to demon-
strate the need for more airline service to the
eastern United States," said Bill Tucker, president of the State College Area Chamber of
Commerce, during a news conference at the
University Park Airport yesterday.
Rick Swartz, customer service manager of
Allegheny Commuter, said his airline will look at
the results of the survey, but any findings would
not mean an automatic change in service. The
airline would conduct its own market studies
beforealtering flights.
"The biggest problem we've heard is having to
go west to go east," said GeorgeLovette, University associate senior vice president for finance
and operations. Better access to northeastern
states may be handicapped by the limited number of landing sites at major city airports, he
said.
Hosier, on a route to Miami with stops at
Pittsburgh and Atlanta, said he wished he could
take a quicker and more direct flight.
The survey will reflect the real needs of area
commuters, Swartz said. "It won't be a wish
list."
The airport offers 22 daily commercial flights,
including seven nonstop flights to Pittsburgh,
two nonstop flights to Harrisburg and two nonstop flights to Philadelphia. The airport, north of
campus, is owned and operated by the University.
Lack of direct flights and the high cost of
airline travel have been mentioned as problems
with current airline service in Centre County.
However, Swartz said Allegheny's interstate
travel is economical compared with commuter
rates in California.
The survey, which will be analyzed in October,
features 16questions asking travelers about their
destinations and .about which mode of travel they
prefer. Travelers who do not return the surveys
will be counted as satisfied with the status quo,
Tucker said.
More than a year of effort went into developing
the survey, which will give Penn State and
Allegheny an in-depth look at local airline service, Tucker said.
Swartz said: "No problems exist with current
service, but what is questioned is the lack of
services P offered. "
Summer commencement for graduate students will continue because
—
— students who completed their degree
—-—:—; ;—;—;
Graduate students will not walk requirements in the summer would
across the stage to accept their de- have to wait until next s ing to
grees in January because Umversity graduate, Richardson said,
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officials have decided to cancel all
future winter graduate student com- ,Rlchardson said a major considerIon
in
canceling
the
winter
ceremoa
mencement ceremonies.
f
"
However, spring and summer grad- mes was
Tne Price of renting a hall is not
uate commencement exercises will
still be held, said William Richard- ni Sh - Richardson said, but staff time
son, University executive vice presi- is where the costs add up.
The cos.t for maintenance, facilident and provost.
Because of poor student attendance ties, speakers and flowers is about
at previous summer and winter grad- $2,200 for each ceremony, with an
uate student exercises, University additional $2,800 for staff and faculty
officials were considering eliminat- time, Taylor told the GSA Assembly
last week.
ing both ceremonies.
University President Bryce JorGraduate students at last week's
dan, Graduate School Dean Charles meeting said returning for a comHosier, and Richardson made the mencement would be inconvenient
final decision this weekend, said Russ for out-of-state and international stuTaylor, Graduate Student Associa- dents.
tion president.
GSA Vice President Jim Trainer
"It is unusual for most universities said the timing of the decision is bad
to have three graduate student com- because of the number of students
mencements per year," Richardson anticipating a January commencesaid. "I think two a year, considering ment.
^
attendance, should be sufficient."
(graduate-geoHardave
Dhaliwal
Of the 502 graduating graduate
physics)
said
he
was
planning to
students in January 1986, only 130
attended the commencement cere- attend a ceremony this winter.
Dhaliwal said his parents and relamony, Taylor said.
Last week GSA recommended that tives were going to make a special
the University not cancel the winter trip from Florida to see him get his
and summer commencements be- master's degree. "My parents will be
cause graduate students should be disappointed," he said.
Huei Peng (graduate-mechanical
recognized for their accomplishengineering) of Taiwan said the deciments.
The organization also recommend- sion doesn't bother him.
"I came to study for a master's
ed holding joint commencement exerdegree, not for a ceremony," he said.
cises with the undergraduates.
However, Taylor said last night
Students finishing their graduate
that graduate students will not be work in the fall can pick up their
allowed to be part of undergraduate degrees at the end of the semester,
ceremonies.
Richardson said.
By VALERIE BAILEY
Collegian Staff Writer
fyi
Today is the last day students will be able to drop classes without a late
drop entry appearing on their student transcripts.
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The Daily Collegian
Tuesday, Sept. 16, 1986
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Commonwealth campuses:
No matter where they may be , they still are Penn State
By DONNA HIGGINS
Collegian Staff Writer
about 32,000 students, Penn State is
For
football at Beaver Stadium, stickies at
the Diner, long 'drop/add lines and 900
students packing a lecture class in Schwab
Auditorium. However, for the University's
other 25,000 students, Penn State is a
different world.
These students attend Commonwealth
campuses. They, too, are Penn Staters, but
they have different traditions from those at
University Park .
Commonwealth campus students say
classes a're smaller and the atmosphere more
personal. However, they often feel out of
touch with the University. At some campuses
in remote areas, entertainment is hard to
come by and students must create their own
fun.
Dan DiPaolo (senior-biology) has
memories of "ponding" at the Mont Alto
Campus.
"Mont Alto is in the middle of a forest, so
ihere wasn't much in the way of
entertainment. We relied on college
ingenuity," said DiPaolo, who spent his
freshman and sophomore years at the
campus.
He lived in Conklin Hall, which was "kind
of like a fraternity." A pond behind the
residence hall provided popular amusement,
he said.
"Whenever we had a decent-sized group of
guys, we chased down unsuspecting victims
and threw them in the pond. It was sort of an
initiation to Mont Alto. We didn 't get into
trouble. People were good sports about it,"he
said.
Along with a friendly atmosphere, DiPaolo
said attending a Commonwealth campus
enabled him to adapt to college life without
the fast pace of University Park , he said.
"You get to know the people better, so youU
have long-lasting, deep friendships,
something everybody needs. You're away
from home, and having friends makes it
easier to adapt.
"I don't think I've really found anyone up,
here that I'm as close to as the people at Montit
Alto," he said. "I'm very glad I went there."
Commonwealth campuses "provide
students a chance to get into the swing of
things before coming to University Park,"
said Jill Everhart , a member of the Council!
of Commonwealth Student Governments andA
a liaison for the New Kensington Campus.
CCSG, which represents interests of
Commonwealth campuses at University
Park, is working on getting a better
orientation program for transfer students.
"Freshmen have all this orientation and
there's hardly anything for transfer
students," she said.
Claire Thomas (senior-quantitative
business analysis) agreed, saying that
although she was required to arrive the same
day as freshmen, there were few planned
activities to ease the transition.
"We had a first night get-together in the
dorm and that was good. If I were offcampus, I don't see what they do for
transfers,"she said. "It would have helped to
have more organized orientation, at least the
first couple of nights. I came up in January
and I felt kind of forgotten about."
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Thomas spent her first three semesters at
the Delaware County Campus.
Adjustment was easier coming from the
Commonwealth campus because she came
with people she knew, she said.
Thomas said she did not know what to
expect at University Park. "I visited here
right before my senior year of high school, so
I knew it would be big. The Commonwealth
campus was like high school. It didn't seem
like college. My ideas about college came
from visiting my sister and friends at
school."
She said she was worried about academics.
"I heard people say the Park is so much
tougher. I didn't find it harder. My grades
went up," she said.
"The environment was different , but I
didn 't have any major problem adjusting,"
Thomas said, adding that the campus lacked
school spirit and that students didn't feel like
a part of the University.
"(When I got here) I'd say I went to Delco,
and people would say 'Oh, then you've never
been to Penn State before,' " she said.
Ken Brennan (senior-real estate ) , who also
went to Delaware County, said it was "like
glorified high school."
"There was no college atmosphere. It did
not feel like it was a new phase of my
education," he said. However, he said he
thought the classwork was more challenging
than high school.
"I did have more control of what I was
doing. I would study, take tests, go home, go
to my job," he said.
Brennan, who spent two years at the local
campus, said he did not have trouble
adjusting academically to University Park .
However, he said, he does not like differences
he sees in grading practices between the two
campuses.
'At Delco ... it was my
responsibility to be on
time, to get to class, to pay
my bill. Yet that was
buffered by living at home
and getting my meals and
laundry.'
—Dale New,formerly
of Delaware County Campus
"At Delco, you controlled your own
destiny," he said. "How much you studied,
your natural ability and interest combined to
determine your grade."
In the large courses at University Park,
Brennan said, "(professors ) base your grade
on other people's ability. They compare you
with others, which I personally disagree
with."
The social adjustment was more difficult.
"My girlfriend was home. I went home every
weekend to see her. I spent eight hours per
week traveling. I didn 't want to adjust
(socially).
"I got a lot out of Delco," he continued. "I
matured faster because academically. I was
on my own. At Delco, if you worked .-you got
good grades ; if you didn't, you failed.
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Mont Alto Campus
"Delco was a gradual introduction to a
college atmosphere: You learned
responsibility and gained knowledge of the
University while still living at home."
Dale New (senior-advertising) , who also
attended the Delaware County Campus, said
the biggest disadvantage of a Commonwealth
campus is that students don't feel like a part
of the University.
"There was little to do other than go to
class. There were virtually no social groups.
You didn't really feel part of the University —
you went to classes and went home."
Evenings were spent much the same way
they had been in high school, New said. "I
socialized with old friends, primarily. You
didn 't get to know other students because all
you did was go to class with them — you
didn 't eat with them, live on the f loor with
them or go to events with them.
"On the pro side, (Delco) cost less money
and the classes were small, so you actually
got to talk to the teacher," he said. "There
were no teaching assistants, so all the people
who taught you were professors and they all
spoke English."
New said the courses at Delaware County
and at University Park were of equal caliber ,
although the selection of classes at the Media
campus was limited.
"But for the classes they did have, you got
personal attention. My largest class had 30
people.
"For fun , we had an assassination game
with more than 100 people. We spent much
time socializing in the library and we walked
around the (Granite Run) mall during
lunch," New said.
He did not have trouble adjusting to
University Park, he said, adding that he
thought it would have been more of a shock
coming straight from high school.
The Commonwealth campus was a "more
gradual entrance to full responsibility."
"At Delco... it was my responsibility to be
on time, to get to class, to pay my bill. Yet
that was buffered by living at home and
getting-my meals and laundry."
Bill McDaid (sophomore-astronomy ) said
students in the lone residence hall at the
Schuylkill Campus were especially close.
"You get closer to people in the dorm because
you feel like you're the last vestage of
civilization. The area around us (Schuylkill
Haven) is very clannish.
"Commuter students were very hard to get
to know. They're emotionless and cold. You
need a blow torch to thaw them out. But once
you get on good terms, they'll stick by you
Sorever," said McDaid, who spent his
freshman year at Schuylkill.
"There was one party in the dorm every
night and every weekend people went to
someone's apartment. A lot of people went
home," McDaid said.
"Having the dorm encouraged intradorm
relations. You didn't have to deal with
outsiders. Extradorm relations didn't last."
McDaid said the residence hall housed
about 80 students, 10 percent of the campus'
commuter population.
He said classes were easier at Schuylkill
and the pace was more relaxed. The courses
did not cover as much material as at
University Park, he said.
"You didn't sit in a classroom that was 800
yards across staring at some dot screaming
through a microphone while writing on a
blackboard the size of a postage stamp from
where you're sitting."
He said the atmosphere was more personal
and students got to know their professors.
"When I worked at the mall there I used to
run into them all the time," he said.
However, McDaid said he had a rough time
adjusting to University Park. "Here you can
go the entire semester without talking to
people down the hall. There's more things to
do here, so you're not forced to associate with
dormmates," he said.
Rhonda Gigliotti (junior-advertising ) said
she was "almost petrified" about
transferring from the Beaver Campus to
University Park this year.
"Everybody told me, 'You'll hate the Park.
The classes are huge and you'd better not ask
a question because the professor doesn't have
time to answer.' All I heard about University
Park was negative, but I liked it from the
first hour I was here. I've met more people in
two weeks than I probably will in my life.
"This is such a big place, yet I've run into
orientation leaders and resident assistants
from Beaver , and people from high school,"
she said, adding that she likes the big-campus
environment.
"I really enjoyed Beaver. I don't think I
would have adjusted to University Park as
well" without going there.
Kent Clark (senior-mechanical
engineering) said the biggest adjustment he
faced was getting used to the impersonal
system at University Park.
Clark said that after two years at the
McKeesport Campus, he was used to a more
personal atmosphere in which he could get to
know his teachers and be treated as an
individual.
"You don't get to be friends with your
teachers (at University Park). There are .
more multiple choice tests that zap your
grade, but they have to do it that way because
of the number of students."
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UNIVERSITY PARK
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CAPITAL COLLEGE
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MONT ALTO
olleges share good, bad points of system
responsibilities, so they don't have much social life
on campus," said Brinker, a commuter who came
from Harrisburg Area Community College. She
said many of the commuters are returning adult
they
are
not
part
of
the
UniversiAlthough
ty's Commonwealth campus system, the students.
the Capita] College and Behrend College
"The atmosphere doesn't seem to be as friendly
offer some of the same benefits and have some of (as at Harrisburg Area Community College). At
the same problems.
HACC we were all commuters and we all faced the
The campuses are the only two in the Penn State same problems. Here (residents) don't undersystem, other than University Park, that award stand our problems and we don't understand
four-year undergraduate degrees.
theirs," she said.
The Capital College, formerly the Capitol CamBrinker is president of the Undergraduate Stupus, is for juniors and seniors who transfer from
other Commonwealth campuses or from two-year dent Government at the Capital College. She said
the USG is trying to get commuter students more
community colleges.
involved
in government and other activities.
One problem, with the campus is that some
The campus has 38 undergradua te, 11 masters
students commute while others live in residence
halls, said Jeanette Brinker (senior-American and two doctoral programs, said Thea Hocker,
community relations specialist at the college. This
studies/humanities).
"Interests differ and commuters have other past year, she said, the College conferred about
By DONNA HIGGINS
Collegian Staff Writer
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Mont Alto students enjoy a sunny day outside Conklin Hall, which one student
described as "kind of like a fraternity.
350 undergraduate degrees at each of three commencements.
Students at Behrend College can go all four
years there or can transfer from Commonwealth
campuses or other schools, said Dohn Harshbarger , dean of student affairs at the Behrend. Some
students intend to stay only two years befqre going
to University Park, but end up staying all four
years because they like it so much, he said.
The students who choose Behrend want to attend
Penn State while living in a small-campus environment, he said.
Behrend has about 600 students who are spending all four years, out of a total of 2,400 students.
About 70-75 students a year transfer to Behrend
from another Commonwealth campus, he said.
Behrend offers three associate in science programs, 23 undergraduate programs, and one graduate program , the master of business
administration.
The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Sept. 1G, 1386—3
Market sending mixed signals
Assistant economics Professor Dean D. Croushore agreed with Miles, saying, "When interest
rates rise, so do the payments on stock."
He added that he does not believe the stock
market will act as a future economic indicator in
this case.
Investors last week may have received information that some stocks were going to fall, Croushore
said, and the overall response was to sell .
"I think that we will see a rebound (in stock
market prices) ," Croushore said. "The drop
wasn't that tremendous. It really wasn't that out of
range in percent price."
Another economics professor, Phillip A. Klein,
attributes the drop to "the stock market exhibiting
a case of the jitters. The economy is harder to read
at the moment."
Questions concerning the impact of the new tax
law, the dropping value of the dollar , ra tes of
inflation and unemployment remain unanswered;
the stock market" is responding to this, Klein
added.
"The most common theory is that the drop was
the result of good economic news, which indica ted
By LISA NURNBERGER
Collegian Staff Writer
J
Last week's two-day stock market plunge, possibly the result of disappointment over dormant
interest rates, has some University financial experts and economists concerned that the fall
signals a souring economy.
The declines on Thursday and Friday, totalling
121 points, represented one of the worst descents
the stock market has ever suffered, said James
Miles, University professor of finance.
The Dow Jones industrial average, known as
"the market" to most investors, showed a decline
of about 34.17 points, or 2 percent from the previous day 's 1,792-point total.
Friday's drop followed a previous record plunge
in Thursday 's market of 86.61 points or 4.6 percent
of the industrial total.
The Dow Jones industrial average gauges the 30
top industrial stocks in the country.
Miles said there seems to be a negative correlation between the rising of interest rates, which
affects all economic activity, and the falling of
stock prices.
higher interest rates and stronger inflation ," Klein
said.
"Our foreign trade deficit is blamed by some,"
said Miles, adding that Americans are buying
fewer American goods , which decreases U.S.
business profits.
Computerized trading may have hastened the
fall , said Croushore. Program Trade — a computer program which monitors minute-by-minute
market changes — responded to initial selling in
the morning. As certain stocks in different markets were, being sold, they affected other markets,
Croushore said.
"When this registered in the computer, it automatically responded by selling off the stock ,"
Croushore said.
This week the federal government is expected to
release basic statistics that will give Wall Street a
clearer picture about where the economy stands
on inflation and the direction of interest rates,
according to The New York Times weekend business reports.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, down
an unprecedented 141.03 points last week , rose
yesterday by 8.86 points.
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Students train to deal with aid problems
Mills, coordinator of client services.
"The peer counselor program allows us to expand our work force so
The Office of Financial Aid has we can better serve the large number
started a peer counselor program of students ~ who need our help,"
that will train University students to Evans said.
help others complete the sometimes
Training the students who particidifficult financial aid process.
pate in the work-study program will
"We are making a concentrated take almost a semester and will emeffort to improve our client service phasize four areas , Mills said.
operation ," said Robert Evans, the
"The first part is an overview of the
office's director.
• The program will train students to financial aid system. The counselors
answer questions about financial aid will then receive very specific trainproblems and will enable them to ing from staff members in charge of
work at the receiving desk with the each aid program ," Mills said.
professional office staff , said Ed
"Students will work with the staff
By CHRISTINE METZGER
Collegian Staff Writer
behind the desk" and then "practice
answering questions by participating
in role-play.sessions," Mills said.
Fourteen students began training
Thursday, he said. Once they are
trained , three or four will work at the
same time behind the desk. Each will
be required to work about 15 hours a
week, he said.
"I think it's important for students
to be able to talk to other students
about financial aid problems," said
Crystal Burden , a program student
counselor.
Mills, who is in charge of hiring and
training, said he looked for students
who were outgoing, had good interpersonal skills, and were empathetic
and willing to make a commitment to
the program.
Mills worked as a financial aid peer
counselor as an undergraduate at
Kansas State University.
"We want the program to help us
run a very large office well and still
"The student counselors have fi- be sensitive to each student who
nancial aid also, so we understand the needs our help," he said.
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¦Sil i
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Founded in 1480, this ensemble of 50 men and boys is heard
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The Pennsylvania State Universiry
Student $11, 9, 1
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LAST DAY TO SUBSCRIBE
SEPTEMBER 18!
state/nation/world^^-^
The Daily Collegian
16, 1986
Tuesday,
Tuesday. Sept. 16.
19f
¦
"
Paris bomb:
Fourth terrorist attack in a week kills one and injures 51 in police HQ
ing claims of responsibility for those bombings were issued in the names of two groups
— the Committee of Solidarity for Arab and
PARIS — A bomb exploded yesterday in a Middle East Political Prisoners and the
crowded waiting room at police headquar- Partisans of Rights and Freedom. French
ters, killing one person and injuring 51 news reports say investigators believe they
others less than 24 hours after Premier may be the same group.
Jacques Chirac announced a crackdown on
As part of the crackdown, France will
terrorism.
require visas for the next six months, at
It was the fourth bombing in Paris in a least, from visitors who are citizens of any
week. A total of three persons have been countries except Switzerland and France's
killed and more than 100 the latest explo- 11 fellow members of the European Comsion, which demolished the hall where driv- mon Market.
ers' licenses are issued, happened about
Fear has been growing in Paris since
1:50 p.m. on the ground floor of the police Sept. 1, when the Committee for Solidarity
headquarters building on the Ile .de la Cite, with Arab and Middle East Political Prisondose to Notre Dame Cathedral.
ers issued a statement saying it would
"It was a very violent explosion," one resume a bombing campaign to gain freepolice employee said. "Several persons dom for Georges Ibrahim Abdallah , who
were thrown several yards."
police believe is the leader of a terrorist
Police said two of the wounded were in group called Lebanese Armed Revolutionserious condition .
ary Factions.
After several bombings last winter and
The bomb was planted despite strict security precautions, which are supposed to spring, the committee had declared a truce,
include a search by police of every handbag saying it would give the French government
and briefcase brought into the building.
until the end of summer to free Abdallah ,
In Beirut, a French-speaking telephone who is serving a four-year sentence for
caller took responsibility for the bombing on possession of fake passports.
behalf of a group called the Committee of
On Sept. 5, a detonator connected to a
Solidarity for Arab and Middle East Politi- bomb went off as a commuter train entered
cal Prisoners. That name also was used in the Gare de Lyon station , but failed to set off
claims for last week's bombings.
the explosive.
On Sept. 8 a woman was killed and 18
Yesterday's caller told a Western news
agency: "We will be thankful if you inform people were injured when a bomb exploded
(French President Francois) Mitterrand in the post office at City Hall.
On Friday, 40 people were injured when a
and Chirac that the next operation will be at
bomb went off at lunchtime in a cafeteria on
the Elysee," the presidential palace.
Police said the police headquarters bomb the outskirts of the capital. Sunday's bombappears to have been similar to those used ing, which killed one and injured two, hapin three other attacks since Sept. 8. Conflict- pened along the Champs Elysee.
By CHARLES CAMPBELL
Associated Press Writer
AP Lasemholo
French firefighters carry out one of the people injured in the Paris police headquarters bombing, which killed one and injured 36 yesterday
The Committee of Solidarity with Arab and Middle-East Political Prisoners claimed responsibility for the bomb blast, the fourth this week
First federal impeachment trial in 50 years begins Texas Air
will buy
People
Express
By LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON , D.C. — Beginning the first
impeachment trial in 50 years, House prosecutors asked senators yesterday to remove Harry
E. Claiborne from a federa l judgeship because
he was convicted of cheating on his income
taxes.
But as Claiborne sat under the glare of
television lights, enjoying a temporary respite
from prison, he was portrayed by his lawyer as
the victim of a government vendetta, engineered by a former FBI supervisor who wanted
"Harry Claiborne's head on a silver platter."
Claiborne, the chief U.S. district judge for
Nevada, has become the 13th federal official
impeached by the House in the nation's history.
Convicted of failing to report $106,651 in
income on his 1979 and 1980 income tax returns,
he is serving a two-year sentence at a federal
prison camp in Alabama while receiving his
salary of $78,700 a year.
A panel of 12 senators headed by retiring Sen.
Charles Mathias, R-Md, listened to the evidence in the ornate Senate Caucus Room.
Never before has any portion of an impeachment" case been conducted outside the full
Senate.
After the evidentiary phase is finished, the
panel will turn the trial over to all senators for
further proceedings and a verdict on whether
to remove Claiborne from office. :
In the high-columned room where Sen. Sam
Ervin conducted the Watergate hearings in
1973, Claiborne 's removal was urged by Rep.
Peter W. Rodino Jr., D-N.J., chairman of the
House Judiciary Committee and chief House
prosecutor.
"We simply cannot permit a convicted felon
to sit on the federal bench and make judgments
about others," Rodino said. "A judge must be a
symbol of integrity, and beyond reproach. In
the eyes of our legal system, he is a criminal, a
convicted felon. "
Rodino said that to permit Claiborne to retain
his seat "would seriously undermine the integrity of our court system and the confidence of
Five blacks die in
S. African tribal fued
By LAURINDA KEYS
Associated Press Writer
SOWETO, South Africa — Shanty
dwellers in Soweto said yesterday
that fighting with guns, fire bombs,
knives, spears and staves killed five
blacks in the latest flare-up of a
simmering neighborhood feud.
They reported being attacked by a
mob firing guns yesterday. The residents, who refused to be identified,
said three blacks were killed over the
weekend in the sprawling black township of 1.5 million, and two more
yesterday, but that was not confirmed. In other developments:
e A work and school stayaway was
reported in black townships in the
industrial area south of Johannesburg . It was in the Vaal triangle that
violence broke out two years ago in a
dispute over rent payments and
spread across the country.
• In Sharpeville black township, 31
miles south of Soweto, residents said
soldiers fired tear gas at 800 people
marching to the municipal offices to
protest eviction of rent boycotters.
- The Star newspaper reported without attribution that four people were
said to have been shot by police of
Lekoa Town Council, which administers some of the townships in the Vaal
triangle where Sharpeville is located.
• A spokesman for General Motors said yesterday the company
agreed to pay full wages for employees in Port Elizabeth who have been
detained without charge under the
state of emergency. Half the wages
will be paid to the worker's family
while he is in detention and the balance upon his release.
' The government has acknowledged
holding at least 9,600 people under
emergency detention .
By unofficial count, more than 300
people, mostly blacks, have died in
violence since a state of emergency
was decreed nationwide on June 12 to
curb unrest arising from apartheid.
More than 2,100 people have died in
two years of unrest, most of them
blacks. About half died in -clashes
with security forces, and the rest in
black-against-black violence, mostly
in factional fighting, tribal clashes
and the killing of blacks suspected of
cooperating with the white government.
Apartheid, by law and custom, establishes a racially segregated society in which the 24 million blacks have
no vote in national affairs. The 5
million whites control the economy
and maintain separate districts,
schools and health services.
In Soweto, residents of a squatter
camp area next to the Mzimhlope
hostel for migrant workers in the
Meadowlands neighborhood said they
•mmlro yesterday
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awoke
morning in
to iV\a
the
sounds of gunfire and stones breaking
windows.
,
One witness said hostel workers
fought on the side of the shanty dwellers and fired guns across the fields
toward the permanent neighborhood,
Zone 1.
The government's Bureau for Information said three people were
killed Sunday night when Zulus from
the hostel attacked a house in Zone 1,
where militant youths called "comrades" were meeting. The bureau
said the house was set afire, three
men were killed, and 11 people were
injured in the shooting.
Most of the friction between blacks
in the area stems from divergent
views on opposing apartheid.
Meadowlands residents said skirmishes and street battles had been
going on for two months.
The bureau said tear gas was fired
in Sharpeville to disperse stonethrowers after six cars were damaged. It reported no shooting or injuries although residents said one man
died after he was shot and old women
were trampled by the crowd fleeing
the tear gas.
A spokesman for Vaal Transport
Corp. bus company said it halted
service to Sharpeville and Boipatong
because of unrest there.
^
the public in our system of justice.
But defense attorney Oscar Goodman of Las
Vegas said any mistakes on Claiborne 's tax
returns were made by preparers, "those persons who were assisting him."
The real story behind the conviction , he
asserted, was an attempt'by the FBI and
federal prosecutors to strike back at Claiborne,
for the many times he publicly lashed out at
their work and their competence.
Federal agents broke into Claiborne's house
to illegally seize evidence, opened his mail and
persuaded another convicted tax evader to
testify against him after prosecutors "romanced him in Rio de Janiero," the defense
lawyer argued.
The witness against Claiborne received a
reduced jail term and much of his tax liability
was wiped out as a result of the testimony,
Goodman said.
The defense lawyer singled out Joseph Yablonsky, the former-head of the FBI office in Las
Vegas, for special criticism.
"We're prepared to prove Joseph Yablonsky
was out to get Harry Claiborne's head on a
silver platter," Goodman said.
The opening prosecution witness, Las Vegas
accountant Joseph C. Wright , testified he was
Claiborne's accountant for three decades until
the judge stopped using him in early 1981.
As Claiborne sat with his hand resting on his
chin, Wright recounted how the defendant
initially told him he received $45,371 in 1979
income from legal fees, paid by clients the
judge represented as a private attorney. The
fees came in after Claiborne's appointment to
the bench by President Carter in 1978.
Until the spring of 1980, Wright said, the fees
reported on Claiborne's tax returns were based
on bank deposits made by the judge. But during
that year, he testified, Claiborne told him the
deposit-based figure initially submitted was
wrong — and stated his fee income as $22,332.
According to the House prosecutors, Claiborne actually received $41,073 in legal fees in
1970 — close to the figure he originally reported.
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AP Laserpholo
Philippine President Corazon Aquino turns after greeting California Governor George Deukmejian , center, and,his
wife, Gloria, left , to wave to supporters gathered to welcome her to San Francisco International Airport yesterday.
Aquino stopped in San Francisco briefly before continuing on to Washington.
A quino arrives in U.S
By STEVE BREWER
Associated Press Writer
SAN FRANCISCO — Philippine President Corazon
Aquino arrived in the United States yesterday, welcomed by hundreds of cheering supporters as she
began a nine-day visit to seek support for her factionridden government.
Aquino was greeted by Gov. George Deukmejian,
U.S. Sen. Alan Cranston and about 600 cheering,
singing backers as she reached San Francisco on a
regularly scheduled Philippine Airline flight. She
planned to take Air Force Two to Washington, D.C.
Security was tight, as authorities used metal detectors and police dogs to screen the crowd, which
chanted "Cory ! Cory!" and filled the air with yellow
balloons.
After Deukmejian introduced her, she recalled a
visit she and her husband, Benigno, who was assassi-.
nated Aug. 13, 1983, made while en route to Dallas for
his heart surgery in 198Q.
When they stepped off the plane in San Francisco,
she said, her husband "immediately revived.
revived The color
came back into his cheeks.That's the effect of freedom
on anybody who's been denied it too long."
She said the diplomatic and economic reasons for her
visit .were important, but, "the overriding reason I am
here is because I wanted to see my friends."
As a Navy band blared, Aquino walked to the crowd,
many clad in her trademark yellow, to shake hands
under the watchful eyes of Secret Service agents.
Aquino, who will meet President Reagan and address a joint session of Congress this week, praised the
"vigor of America" that has helped maintain a democracy in the United States.
"We Filipinos are not so fortunate yet to have the
progress to keep our democracy going forever, but we
are starting," she said.
Military leaders pledged to keep her nation "stable
and safe" in her absence.
Her visit includes meetings with officials of the
International Monetary Fund and the World Bank to
try to obtain more lenient terms on repaying the
Philippines' $26 billion foreign debt.
By JAMES F. PELTZ
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK — People Express
Inc., trapped in a cash squeeze after
enormous growth as a pioneer of lowfare air travel, said yesterday that .it
had agreed to be acquired by Texas
Air Corp. for $125 million in securities.
The purchase would establish
Houston-based Texas Air as the nation's biggest airline operator. The
company already owns Continental
Airlines and New York Air and is in
the process of buying Eastern Airlines.
For People Express, based in Newark, N.J., the proposed merger represents a "bittersweet" end to its
independence, said founder and
chairman Donald C. Burr.
"We couldn't continue separately,
independently ," Burr told a news
conference held jointly with Texas
Air Chairman Frank Lorenzo. "We
would have liked to. But you've got to
have more financial resources to be
competitive."
It was the second time this year
that Texas Air had offered to buy
People Express; a $235.8 million offer
made in July was rejected.
The takeover would be a reunion
for the two executives. Burr worked
for Lorenzo at Texas International
Airlines, Texas Air's predecessor, in
the late 1970s before leaving to start
People Express in 1981.
Lorenzo and Burr indicated that
while People Express initially would
become a wholly owned Texas Air
unit People at some point likely would
lose its identity and merge into one of
Texas Air's other airlines.
But the executives.also emphasized
that both companies remained committed to keeping down costs so they
could keep fares low and still build
profitability.
Texas Air also agreed to buy the
assets of Frontier Airlines, a People
Express unit that recently was shut
down and put into bankruptcy-court
reorganization, for $176 million in
cash, notes and Frontier debt to be
assumed.
The assets of Denver-based Frontier would be operated by Continental, which itself recently emerged
from bankruptcy reorganization.
Continental also would hire most of
Frontier's 4,700 laid-off workers if
certain conditions were met, including approval by most o£ Frontier's
unions.
Under its agreement to buy People
Express, Texas Air would buy each of
People's 26.3 million common shares
outstanding for $2.25 worth of Texas
Air common stock and $2.50 of Texas
Air preferred stock.
Wall Street applauded Texas Air's
move. The company's common stock
rose $2.12V£ a share to $28 on the
American Stock Exchange, while
People Express' stock slipped.
1
The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Sept. 16, 1986—5
Blood drive kicks
into gear today
The State College chapter of the
American Red Cross hopes to collect 600 units of blood today and
tomorrow during the first campus
blood drive of the semester.
Connie Schroeder, campus coor:
dinator for Johnstown regional
blood services, said a critical
blood shortage exists in the Johnstown region, which includes State
College.
The drive will last from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. in the HUB Ballroom,
Anyone who is in good health,
weighs at least 110 pounds and is
between 17 and 69 years old can
give blood, she said.
The shortage occurred because
the demand for blood from hospitals increased, while donations
decreased because many students
went home for the summer, Schroeder said.
"A critical shortage in type O
(negative and positive ) still exists
but all types are always needed,"
she said.
The whole process takes about
an hour and the actual donation
time lasts from six to 10 minutes,
Schroeder said. Less than a pint ofblood is taken and the body re-
¦^^^^ ¦^¦¦^^^^ ¦^¦^¦i
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places the blood within hours , she
added.
One benefit of giving blood is
that students receive a "miniphysical," which includes taking
the donor's temperature, blood
pressure, pulse, blood iron content
and medical history, Schroeder
said. Refreshments are provided
for donors after they give blood,
While some people have signed
up in advance to donate blood ,
"walk-ins are welcome,"she said,
Schroeder said this drive is one
of the two largest blood drives on
campus. Students who give blood
now will also be eligible to give
blood during an upcoming blood
drive in mid-November.
To ease the blood shortage, last
week the Red Cross held an emergency drive in its office at 121'/.. E .
Beaver Ave.
— by Maria Quid
collegian notes
• Circle K will meet at 7 tonight in
• The University Readers will
hold auditions at 7 tonight in 222 323-324 HUB.
Sparks.
• The Undergraduate Student
„
„.
„.
.„ m„-f
Senate will meet at 7
will
meet Government
^• Gamma Sj gma Sigma ..,
l0n,gnt ,n ZZ5 HUBl
at 6:30 tonight in 367 Willard.
• The Penn State Sailing Club will
• The Penn State Math Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in 321 Boucke.
meet at 7:30 tonight in 102 McAllister.
• The East Asian Studies Society
• The Food Science Club will meet will meet at 7:35 tonight in 162 Wilat 6:30 tonight in 117 Borland Lab.
lard.
police log
• A blue 1984 Subaru worth $5,000
was reported missing from the lawn
of Pi Lambda Phi , 321 Fraternity
Row, sometime this weekend by owner Jacqueline Cohen, 836 E. College
Ave., the State College Bureau of
Police Services said.
said. The bicycle was last seen in a
foyer of Scrafin's residence, police
said.
• Credit cards and $200 were reported missing Friday from a purse
owned by Karen Gramm of Lewistown. Gramm discovered the items
• A Mercury Capri was over- missing while she was making a
turned in front of 356 E. Fairmount purchase at the Nittany Mall, State
Ave. sometime early Sunday morn- College police said.
ing, State College police said. No
damage estimate was available, po• A $100 tape deck was reported
lice said.
missing from a car parked at Phi
Delta Theta fra ternity, 240 N. Bur• A $400 red Schwinn bicycle was rowes Road, sometime between 3 a.m
reported missing by Joan Scrafin, 209 and 9 a.m. Sunday, State College
— by Gordon Zerntch
E. Prospect Ave., State College police police said.
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and
The College of Health, Physical
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THE PENN STATE
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Thank the following people
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A JUNIOR CELEBRATION
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Richard A. Boileau 69q
Professor and Director of Physical Fitness
Researc h Lab,
University of Illinois
on campus September 16-18
The Alumni Fellows program, sponsored by the Penn
State Alumni Association, brings prominent alumni
back to campus to meet with students
Bill Adams
Susan Alexander
Lee Asbell
Athletic Department
ATT Communications
Judi Avener
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Blue Band
Penny Carlson
Ned Deihl
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and MOST OF ALL THE CLASS OF '88 . . .
It's people like you that make it happen
for Penn State!
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ODimons
The Daily Collegian
Tuesday, Sept. 16, 1986
S£*
Spy Wars vs. Star Wars
Americans find a Soviet spy infiltrating
U.S. secrets and they arrest him. The Soviet
Union retaliates by arresting a journalist on
what American politicians are calling
trumped-up spy charges. It is a standoff
between the two world powers. One life in
exchange for another.
Normally this scenario would make a
great book or screenplay, but in this case,
the story is not fiction — it's basically a
petty game of sour grapes.
The standoff continues as Gennadiy Zakharov, a Soviet United Nations employee,
and Nicholas Daniloff , a U.S. News and
World Rep ort correspondent , are used as
bargaining chips for each other's release.
Relations between the United States and
the Soviet Union are already strained, partly due to President Reagan 's refusal this
summer to abide by SALT II any longer and
his insistence that the United States will not
negotiate on the further development of
Star Wars.
And the longer these kinds of spy-swapping games go on, with countries nabbing
each other's people just to "get even," the
less likely it is that the two superpowers will
meet for a summit later this year.
Friday, in what Secretary of State George
Schultz called an interim step, Zakharov
and Daniloff were released from prison and
put into the custody of their embassies.
. While this was a step in the right direc-
the
daily
Collegia
Tuesday, Sept. 16, 1986
©1986 Collegian Inc.
Anita C. Huslin
Editor
William G. Landis Jr.
Business Manager
The Daily Collegian s editorial opinion is determined by its Board of
Opinion, with the editor holding
final responsibility. Opinions expressed on the editorial pages are
not necessarily those of The Daily
Collegian, Collegian Inc. or The
Pennsylvania State University.
Please
Write
tion, the countries have now reached another stalemate. The two accused spies must
stay in the countries that arrested them
until further arrangements are made for
their release.
There are already hints that the United
States will forgo the summit unless this
incident is resolved quickly and to our
liking. Several members of Congress, including Sen. Joseph A. Biden Jr., D-Del.,
have urged President Reagan to bow out.
And Reagan has already vowed that the
United States would not "deal" for Daniloff's release.
Granted, both countries see a need to
track down foreign spies. After all, the CIA
and KGB have to do something to keep them
busy. But when these somewhat petty spy
wars get in the way of a summit — where
crucial, long-term issues such as nuclear
armament are discussed — the game has
gone too far.
Neither country wants to be the first to
give in, the first to quit. Each wants to be
the victor in an incident in which the lives of
two men are being used as pawns.
But neither country seems to be thinking
much about the more important consequences — the future of the summit. Alas, it
appears a meeting of the world superpowers will be sacrificed.in the name of pride.
That will be one loss, though, from which
the United States — and perhaps the entire
world — may never recover.
Collegian Inc., publishers of The
Daily Collegian and related publications,is a separate corporate institution from Penn State.
About the Collegian: TJie Dally Collegian
and The Weekly Collegian are published
by Collegian Inc., an Independent, nonprofit corporation with a board of directors composed of students, faculty and
professionals. Students of The Pennsylvania State University write and edit both
papers and solicit advertising material
for them.
The Daily Collegian Is published Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday during the summer,and Monday, Tuesday,
Wednesday, Thursday and Friday during
the semester, It is distributed on the
University Park campus. The Weekly
Collegian is mailed to Commonwealth
campus students.
The Daily Collegian welcomes letters from students, faculty, staff and
area residents concerning issues and
topics of interest to the Collegian 's
readership.
With the Fall Semester well under
way, many important issues confront
the University community.
Authors must present letters to the
editor (no more than 1 '/j pages,
double-spaced) or forums (up to
three typed pages, double-spaced) to
the Collegian in 126 Carnegie Building
during office hours, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30
p.m.
Students' letters should include the
semester and major of each writer.
Letters from alumni should include
the author's major and year of graduation.
The opinion editor reserves the
right to edit letters for length and to
reject letters if they are libelous or do
not conform to standards of good
taste.
'W RPIBK1D GORBACHEV/ HANDS? ME AN EMN/ELOPE WHICH I
THOUGHT VUAS AS) ISK/lTATiOM"TC> THE SUMMIT... *
reader opinion
Espionage
striving for. How dare you step on streets what a handgun can do. Anyanother 's dreams because they don't one who says they are not afraid of a
loaded magnum in the hands of a
"Daniloff is a spy," the Soviets say, conform to your ideals.
Daniel B. Weston nervous criminal is and idiot or a liar.
"But we'll trade for our man that you
senior-clcctrical engineering
caught yesterday."
A blender and junk jewelrey are not
With this constant barrage
worth someone's life. Society should
Of international espionage,
not require people to senselessly
Are we living a novel by John Le
make victims of themselves.
Carre
Robert H. Crouthamcl
David M. Silverman
senior-labor studies
I must take exception to the porState College resident trayal of Marcia Sparling — the
"Michigan woman" — as some type
of heroine, for her heroism was predicated on stupidity , not guts.
It was her extreme good fortune to
The Federal Office of Civil Rights
encounter three young college stuI would like to offer a rebuttal to dents and not hard-core criminals, is at it again. That's right, the goverCarolyn Sorisio's column on Sept. 15. who account for approximately 90 nment agency which decreed that
I'm not one of those people who sit percent of all burglaries committed Penn State must accept black enrollanxiously in front of the tube every in this country .
ment quotas has notified the UniverSeptember to put in their vote for the
Has she encounterd three career sity that the ability to get pregnant
most beautiful woman on stage.
criminals, she very probably would constitutes, in effect, "discriminaI am . the type of person, though, have been gang-raped , severly beat- tion" against woman.
who is tired of listening to you whiny en and quite possibly killed.
This latest edict disallows separate
little feminists who think that every
As a past counselor at a high-secu- charges for maternity benifits on
woman is a feminist "battling" rity juvenile treatment center that University-sponsored Blue Crossagainst "man" kind.
specialized in hard-core delinquent Blue Shield health insurance with the
I agree when you say that feminism criminals, I know wherefor I speak. ludicrous result that thousands of
has done a great deal to forward a
My concern is that , faced with a single students are now forced to
woman's position in society but are similar situation, someone who has absorb the added cost of carrying
you so sure that every woman wants read Megan O'Matz's column in The maternity benifits which they do not
what the feminist wants? I don't think Daily Collegian on Sept. 10 might need. Will Big Brother's endless purso. Although I'm not worldly, I have actually duplicate Sparling's lunatic suit of "equality at all costs" ever
cease?
talked to many women for whom course of action.
The good news is that, in this case,
these feminist ideas are a bit too
If I would chance upon a burglary
much.
you
can fight back. Call the Ritenour
in progress at my home, I would
If a beauty pageant is what some block the driveway with my car, take Health Center for information on the
women want to participate in, then let down the license number of the get- Penn State "Accident and Sickness
Insurance Plan " or call the local
them. Maybe you wish to write for away car and call the police.
your money ; why can't they perform
I'm 6 feet 4 inches' tall and weigh office of the underwriter directly.
Why aren't you getting this imporfor theirs? Fame, fortune, travel and 235 pounds and I do not consider
a year of luxury is what they are myself a coward. But I've seen on the tant information from your student
Stupidity
Miss America
Close to home
leaders and campus organizations
instead of from a letter to the editor?
It seems that they are more interested in trying to embarass Regan or
in denouncing South Africa 's laws for
regulating race relations. Maybe
they should be more concerned with
matters close to home.
John R. Nordell Jr.
graduate-history
Sanctions
Traffic lights corrupt my manhood.
What is life, if not spontaneity? Never
mind the fact that I don't own a car
and rarely speak above a quiet
whine; I feel the weight of these and
other injunctions no less than "circuiteers" and loud people.
Why can't society leave a blood
thirsty brigand in peace? AH I know
is what everybody else demands. The;
hell with it! As long as I'm going to be
self conscious, I might as well think
about my own wishes. For starters, I
resolve to hum Duran Duran, AT
WILL. No apologies!
And if , as a result, I am impaled
upon society's sword of sanctions, I
am certain I will have earned my last
request to be launched in a flaming
Volkeswagen amongst my most fundamental human treasures (my
Walkman , Hibachi , etc.). It's better
to burn out than to show up late for
class.
David P. Crowther
junior-American studies
Totalitarianism:
Solutions to our problems lie within ourselves,not in bureaucratic snares in Washington
''Are you a liberal, conservative or apolitical animal?" I asked myself recently. I'm
definitely a politica l, argumentative animal, but liberal or conservative doesn't
describe me. I bet those terms don't describe many others either.
Let's start with the misconceptions regarding the term "liberal." In the 19th
century, a liberal was a person who thought
individual liberty was most important. To
these liberals, big government was bad.
Government's only purpose was to protect
individuals from the aggression of others.
In the 20th century, the term "liberal"
mutated to include every egomaniacal Ted
Kennedy who thinks government is the
solution to any problem. "Throw taxpayer's
money at a problem and it'll go away, " is
the liberal's creed today.
Taxation is robbery. Maybe you never
thought of it that way because taxes are so
commonplace. People argue that we live in
a democracy and our representatives are
approved by a majority of the voters.
However, not even 50 percent of eligible
taxpaying voters vote. Some of this is due to
apathy, but a large part of this silent majority is dissatisfied with the choice of candidates. Winning candidates seldom receive
more than 60 percent of the vote, so this
means only about 30 percent of taxpaying
Jf y m J *
voters favor the winning candidate, hardly
a mandate for taxation.
Recently in upstate New York, a man
refused all government services and
stopped paying his taxes. Sure enough, men
with guns came onto his property, beat him
up and put him in jail. It was all "legal."
Every taxpayer should receive an itemized bill at the end of the year telling him
how the government spent his income tax.
"Well, Mr. Jones, the Navy spent your $2,000 on a coffee pot and a hammer. It only
took you a few weeks to earn that money
anyway."
A lot of people would be surprised to find
out what the government is into. Let's
investigate the sex lives of honey bees;
there are government grants to do it. Let's
send a man to the moon. Let's help build
irrigation ditches in Togo. Do you or I want
this? If I do, I'll spend my own money to do
it and leave yours alone.
Unfortunately, a lot of good ideas such as
welfare programs get screwed up by the
government. I'm a good guy ; I want to help
the poor, but federal welfare ' programs
don't cut it. Contrary to popular belief ,
welfare grants are pitifully small.
The largest part of all welfare budgets
maintain the paperwork and staff that administers the programs. If I want to be
charitable, I don't want my charity financing some Washington bureaucrat's new inground pool.
When the bureaucratic octopus of the
federal government isn't busy handing out
your money to special interest groups, it
likes to play Big Brother, regulating your
personal life. "You can drink yourself to
death, but only if you're over 21. You can
put smoke into your lungs, but only if you're
over 16. But for Christ's sake, no marijuana!"
Lawmakers waste millions of dollars
each year enforcing our nation's narcotic
laws. Now President Reagan is embarking
on a national crusade to inspect our urine
and he wants to watch us fill our sample
jars.
Let's face facts. Life is exciting at times,
but for many people it can get pretty mun-
dane. As Aldous Huxley wrote in The Doors
of Perception , the soul yearns^for some type
of transcendence or momentary escape, but
the only legal chemical escapes in the West
are alcohol and nicotine.
Many people fail to realize it is virtually
impossible to regulate someone's personal
life. People will do what they want. What do
narcotic laws accomplish? They increase
the price of drugs. They encourage criminal
elements to enter the drug trade. Worse yet,
many of the drugs on the black market are
contaminated or in lethal doses.
Narcotic laws are partly responsible for
the many heroin overdoses each year.
There certainly would be far fewer overdoses if Johnson & Johnson was able to
legally market heroin.
Let's not finish without attacking the selfappointed consciences of America — Ed
Meese and Jerry Falwell. Meese's commission on pornography just finished wasting
thousands of dollars to determine what we
can and can 't look at.
I don't buy pornography, but I shouldn't
be able to stop you from buying it. If you
don't want to watch what's on TV, turn it
off. Many people argue for censorship in
order to protect their children. Where the
hell are the parents of these pornographystarved children?
It is a parent s job, not mine, to monitor
what a child views. These people are passing off their parental responsibilities to all
of us through censorship.
I am proud to live in the United States, but
we are heading down the road to totalitarianism. Sadly, the world's most productive
industrial state has become the largest
welfare state, headed toward the same
insipidness that plagues such bureaucratic
behemoths as Britain, Sweden and the Soviet Union.
What can we do to stop this goose-step
march to totalitarianism? We need a revival of the American family. The solutions to
our problems lie within ourselves and our
neighbors, not with some bureaucratic
snare in Washington.
The temptation is strong to take our
problems to lawmakers who can quickly
pass a quick-fix law. It certainly is easier to
bribe a 100 lawmakers than to convince
your neighbors that your concerns merit
consideration. But just think of the consequence staring us in the face — the loss of
our freedom.
Brian Metricfe is a sophomore majoring in
history and a columnist for The Daily Collegian. His column appears every other Tuesday .
The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Sept. 1G . 1986—7
opinions
New wave laws:
In a country far away, noise ordinances, open-container laws and tailga ting restrictions rule the land
Police Log
• A university student has been jailed for
growing what police call an illegal substance. The "Big Boy" tomatoeswereconfiscated yesterday morning after the police
received an anonymous phone tip. Growing
these plants has been outlawed for fear
students would try to re-create scenes from
Attack of the Killer Tomatoes. The tomatoes are being held by police pending investigation.
• A university student has been drawn and
quartered for allowing his dog to relieve
itself more than three times in the same
area in less than an hour. The "poop patrol"
was right on top of this potentially dangerous situation. This is the second such occurence this month.
Don't check the name of your newspaper.
This is The Daily Collegian. What you have
just read are accounts that might be found
in a school newspaper in tfte Soviet Union;
accounts of totally off the wall laws enforced a little too severely. If they bear any
resemblance to laws flying around State
College these days, you're right.
The "new wave" laws that have hit State
College recently fall into three categories —
traffic tickets, nutcrackers and unbelievable.
To receive a traffic ticket the prerequisite, in most cases, is to be involved with
an automobile somehow. But wait — this is
State College where men are men , women
look like men and "citation" is Clifford
Yorks middle name.
The best example of this has to dowith an
extension of the open container policy. My
friend (I'm omitting the names to protect
the embarassed) received a citation for
walking down the street with an empty
container. No kidding. I know what you're
saying. He's either not 21, he drank the beer
in front of the cop or they're ex-lovers. None
of the above.
The only mistake he made was leaving a
party with a cup in his hands. Whoops!
Maybe it's because I come from Philadelphia — where they 're happy if that con-
What did he do? Drunk driving accident?
No tailgating! Come on. Isn't tailgating
an American tradition like baseball and hot Rape? Murder? No — the posession of a
dogs? Actually, I think they've lifted this fake identification card . For the sake of
law and you're allowed to tailgate provided comparison , let us look at Pennsylvania 's
that you're over 45 and you have a note from drunk driving law. For a first-time offendyou're mother. Imagine —what would you er, the fine is $250, a one month suspension
do before a football game if you didn't have of a driving license and a six-month nona tailgate? Imagine what it would be like to reporting probation. Driving school must
remember the game afterwards. Scary, also be attended.
I think the current drunk driving laws are
huh?
Another nutcracker is the noise ordi- good because enforcement is needed. I'm
nance. They say they can gauge the noise not promoting the use of these cards, but
level of your party or various other events I'm saying let the punishment fit the crime.
using a decibel meter. You see, this decibel Take away the kids tinker toys or something gives them leverage. They can say thing.
Well , I know all of this talk is going to
you were not only disturbing the neighbors,
drive
all of you freshmen right out of Penn
but you exceeded the 55db limit. What's a
decibel? I think " it's like the Richter scale, State. In fact , that's my plan. But really,
but it would be worth the citation if you were University Park is a lot of fun and basically
a great place to live. The benefits that can
able to measure on that scale.
be gained from here far outweigh all negHere, what you're getting is a $50 ticket ative aspects.
from a cop who probably shoots his mouth
I wouldn't trade anything for the years I
off louder than any party I could ever throw. spent here, but laws should be enforced less
Finally, I would like to cite just one stringently so we can all breathe a bit easier
example of an "unbelievable" law —be- and have some fun. Maybe we'll even learn
cause unbelievable usually can't be topped. a little something.
A freind of mine had to go to court about five
times. He received a fine in excess of $400.
Tom Kronberger is a senior majoring in
His driver's license was suspended for one journalism- and a columnist f o r The Daily
year and he is currently on a year proba- Collegian. His column appears every other
Tuesday.
tion.
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kitchen window — but a $25 fine for walking
your cup seems a bit tough.
How about this cruising ordinance.
You're not allowedto drive around the block
between Beaver and College avenues more
than three times in less than an hour. That's
what those signs posted along those streets
mean.
The penalty for violating this ordinance is
$25 for the first offense and $50 for each
subsequent offense. (If you get caught more
than once, you know that thay're out to get
you). I have some advice for you — don't get
lost in downtown with an empty container in
your car.
I also know two girls who received fines
for riding their bikes at night without a
headlight. Is there no God? Now I know
there must be a law against this, but to
actually ticket someone for it just blows my
mind.
What's worse is when you're riding your
bike and get up just enough speed to get
over that mountain, you see those flashing
red lights. And you begin to laugh because
you think the slob who just cut you out is
going to get a ticket. Oh well.
The next category of "new wave" laws I
call "nutcrackers" because —well , you
figure it out.
CHINA
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Mon.-Sat.
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237-0327
309 E. Beaver Ave.
State College
25" NEC
• uie dellwar, 1 roie or 1 dozen
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stitch
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long Stam Rose
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.to
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Daily - Weekly - Monthly
e doorc from P«nn Stat* Sub Shop
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State College
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237-1916
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458 E. Beaver Ave.
State College
SOUTH HILLS
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522 E. College Ave.
Suite 2. Second Floor
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State College
IBM
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Balloons delivered
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Barcrolt Building—
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J
across from South Halls *
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FURNITURE
EXCHANGE
! this section
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Property Management Depi
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202 South Allen Street
237-3655
• leather purses and wallets
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Phone: 238-8423
1
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CWfflard)
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Slate College
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237-1111
^ffS J*
STATE COLLEGE'S
ONLY
AUTHENTIC HOBBY
STORE
I THREE DOLLARS !
| On The Purchase Of An
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J Automotive Battery At The J
Willard Outlet
j
King
Printing
• Models And Model
Building Accessories
• Radio Control Cars And
Planes And Accessories
740 Sout h Athcrton Street • state College
OFFSET PRINTING .QUICK PRINTING
and now .
.
.
• Model Railroad Sales
And Service
• Military Models And
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High Speed. High Quality
XEROX COPIESI
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•
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at Layout Facilities •Labels
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223 S. Allen St.
(Next to Centre Hardware)
CENTER
• Parcel Service—UPS
• TELEX
THE GOLDEN COMB
FOR SALE...
A Full Service
Beauty Salon
T, Th , F 9-6 W , Sat 9-2
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206 S. Allen St.
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357 Calder Way
234-2670
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1207 S. Atherfon St.
238-0568
Studio £
444 €. College five.
Void 5/31/87
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6
RESERVATIONS AND
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TIME TO MAKE PLANS
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234 E. College Ave
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Serving The Penn State
University Community with
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'> '215 West College Avenue",
State College,-Pennsylvania 16801
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State College, Pa. 16801
(814) 238-1423
K31 .
' An exp erienced Travel
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• Conveniently located
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COMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICES
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Why? BeCauS«...wa guarante* the lo»est
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sports
JL
___ ^_
10
The Daily Collegian
Tuesday, Sept. 16, 1986
Tu<
Elway leads Broncos past Pittsburgh
By ALAN ROBINSON
AP Sports Writer
PITTSBURGH - John Elway
threw three touchdown passes as the
Denver Broncos held off a fourthquarter Pittsburgh rally to defeat the
Steelers 21-10 last night.
Pittsburgh's dormant offense, held
without a touchdown for eight consecutive quarters dating back to last
season, broke through for Rich Erenberg's seven-yard scoring run with
9:54 remaining as the Steelers closed
to within four points.
But Steelers reserve running back
David Hughes fumbled on a thirdand-one play at the Broncos' 35 on
Pittsburgh's next possession. On the
'<£
*
Steelers' next possession, Malone
\e
was intercepted by Tony Lilly.
Denver1 then drove 31 yards for the
clinching touchdown on a 13-yard
pass from Elway to running back
Sammy Winder with 1:53 to play. It
was the third consecutive victory in
,t
Pittsburgh for the Broncos, who had
an apparent 80-yard touchdown pass
from running back Gerald Willhite to
Steve Watson midway through the t
final quarter ruled an illegal forward \
pass.
The Broncos, 5-3-1 in Pittsburgh ,
cSHHsJ
are the only NFL team that holds an
edge over the Steelers in Three Rivers Stadium. The last time the Steelers opened the season 0-2 was 1981.
Watson got behind Steelers cornerback Harvey Clayton to catch a
21-yard scoring pass from Elway with
8:01 remaining in the second period,
giving the 2-0 Broncos a 7-0 halftime
lead.
, After Gary Anderson's 42-yard,
third-period field goal gave the Steelers their first ' points of the season,
Elway quickly went back to work.
A
' i&''
Picking on Steelers' cornerbacks
Clayton and rookie Chris Sheffield,
Elway threw 17 yards to Mark Jackson and 18 to Watson before faking a
handoff to Winder on a third-and-one
play from the Steelers' 34.
<Wtf . *£ ,
i .s YrJl*:%J!^i%&N^.W*'
As Winder dived over the line of
•f •
scrimmage, distracting the Steelers'
defense, Steve Sewell — a running
back converted to wide receiver only
last week — easily beat Clayton on a
34-yard pass play that gave Denver a
14-3 lead.
Elway finished 21-for-39 for 243
yards.
Steelers quarterback Mark Malone
suffered through a miserable first
•**
half , completing only six of 22 passes
for 58 yards.
Malone, frequently booed by a
**# «
Steelers' home opener crowd, threw
eight consecutive incompletions at
AP Userphoto
one point in the first half and finished
22 of 48 for 216 yards.
Pittsburgh quarterback Mark Malone Is sacked by Denver's Simon Fletcher in the first quarter of last night's game. The Broncos beat the Steelers, 21-10.
it
I -£$|
I
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U.'
Montana's status
still uncertain
after operation
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Joe
Montana underwent back surgery yesterday, with the verdict
still unknown whether the San
Francisco 49ers quarterback will
be able to continue playing football.
"He did undergo surgery, and
he is resting comfortably," said
St. Mary's Hospital spokeswoman Bobbi Fischer, who refused
to give any details of the operation.
It was reported, however, that
the surgery involved cutting
away a portion of the damaged
disc that extended out from the
spine, without the necessity of
fusing the vertebrae.
"Simply put, the surgery went
smoothly, and Joe is restingcomfortably. He is doing well," 49ers
spokeswoman Shelley Wollman
said. "In layman's terms, the
problem was a spinal canal that
was smaller than normal. Therefore, they had to clear it out so
that the pressure on the nerves
would be lessened.
"With his injury at Tampa Bay,
Joe had more damage than normal due to the displaced disc in
the small spinal canal. Besides
doing the widening of the canal,
the operation also included a disc
removal. The surgery should reduce the chance of future problems," Ms. Wollman said.
On Sunday, team physician Dr.
Michael Cunningham said of the
$1 million-a-year player, "There
is a chance he won't play football
again. I think there is a general
consensus that Joe will play
again, but there is also the risk
that even if the surgery is successful, it won't relieve that
pain."
Montana, 30, has a history of
back pain. The problem was aggravated during the first game of
the season, while throwing a pass
in the 49ers' 31-7 victory.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Washington Redskins running back
Kelvin Bryant underwent arthroscopic surgery on two
stretched ligaments in his left
knee last night and will be out for
at least six weeks, team officials
said.
Bryant, a former standout in
the USFL who immediately became a key contributor to the
Redskins, injured the knee in
Washington's 10-6 victory over
the Los Angeles Raiders Sunday.
Booters prepare to face Rutgers in New Jersey
Missed opportunities
frustrate soccer team
By STAGEY JACOBSON
Collegian Sports Writer
Now that the soccer team has got its act
together, it is going on the road to face the
Scarlet Knights of Rutgers at the Stadium Complex in New Jersey at 7:30 tonight.
Since the soccer team suffered a 0-1 loss to
Akron last Friday night, is it right to say that it
has got its act together?
In this case, it is.
"I have no complaints with the way the team
played from the start of the game to the finish,"
Head Coach Walter Bahr said. "We played as
well as we could have played but we just didn't
score a goal. I'm going to stick with the same
starting lineup from that game."
The Akron game was dominated offensively by
the Lions, who had a total of 16 shots on goal and
a strong defensive stance.
By MARK S. McWHIRTER
Collegian Sports Writer
It' s the same way in every sport.
In golf , the ball stops about an
inch short of the cup. In football,
the ball hits the upright and deflects wide. In hockey, the puck
'dings' off both posts behind the
goalie, then flutters back out into
the crease. And in soccer, the shot
either hits the crossbar, flys a few
feet wide, or the ball dribbles
toward the empty net and an opponent makes a last-second kick
save.
'I thought last week's game
was the best game we've had
so far... Their one goal
happened when they
capitalized on one of our
mistakes.'
— Jay Ruby, forward
"I thought last week's game was the best game
we've had so far," forward Jay Ruby said. "We
definitely had scoring chances that we didn't
finish up on. Their one goal happened when they
capitalized on one of our mistakes."
So despite the loss, the team has a positive
attitude going into tonight's game which should
prove challenging for a number of factors.
First is the competition. Rutgers has a 3-1
season record (the Lions are currently 2-1-1)
surrendering its only game to Army at Army's
home turf. The Scarlet Knights have several
returning lettermen including three starting forwards who are noted for exceptional speed.
"We were very intersested in getting these
players to play for Penn State but they chose
Rutgers," Bahr said.
The second factor is the field itself. The game
will be played on astroturf , which creates a
totally different type of game than the traditional
grass field.
"Astroturf is faster paced and it is sometimes
difficult to judge the way the ball will bounce or
adjust your footing," Ruby said.
Collegian Photo / Dan Oloskl
pe nn State midfielder Troy Snyder maneuvers past a Gannon player in a game last week at Jeffrey Field
Tonight the Lions travel to Rutgers to take on the Scarlet Knights,
ontimistic about the team 's chances at victory.
The third
may effect the game optimistic
third element which mav
"I played against a lot of the Rutgers players
will be the rivalry between the teams. The
rrivalry
ivalry arises from the fact that both teams will in high school and club soccer and I think if we
be competing for one of two bids alloted to the keep playing the way we played last week we can
Mid-Atlantic Conference for the NCAA tourna- come away with a win," Pascarella said.
Bahr has made a few adjustments in his lineup
ment.. Other
ment
other teams competing for a bid in that
since the start of the season. In the two most
_____________^__
^____^__
e*»»e**ee*»***e»***B»**»e**ee*e*»e»»ee*e»e*e»se
significant changes, Pascarella replaced Bert
Eckelmeyer in the goalie position and freshman
'. . .|think if W6 keep playing
Ted Gillen replaced Simon Eccles at the left
#h Wav We P,ayea
nlawri '3SI
la<st uupuk
WC6K
tne
fullback position.
W6 C3n Come away With 3
State -College native Rich Schmidt was shifted
from left fullback to the right side and Gillen
Win.'
filled in the hole.
— John Pascarella , goaltender
"Ted is a better ballhandler than Simon,"Bahr
___^^_
said.
,^_^_^^__^__^______
¦»»»»¦»»*»»»*
»»»»¦»»¦»»¦•»¦»»»»»»>»»»»«¦»*»»»¦
»» "Simon is a better defender but right now
we need a little more offensive help in the
conference include Fairleigh Dickinson and Phil- defense."
Eckelmeyer, a sophomore, has been having
adelphia Textile,
John Pascarella , a New Jersey native who will trouble judging the angle of the ball especially
start in goal tonight, is extremely excited and under the lights at .night.
Countless episodes like that are
what keep sports fans coming
back game after game.
Last Friday, fans witnessed the
soccer team pepper the Akrpn
goalie with shots on goal all night
long. But of the 16 shots the Lions
took, not a one touched the net
cord at the back of the goal. The
Zips took only six shots and scored
once.
Junior midfielder and team
leader Troy Snyder said the Lions
had opportunities but they just
couldn't manage to convert one
into a goal.
"We had our opportunities —
what can I say," Snyder said. "It's
sad when the coach of the other
team comes up to you after the
game and says 'you should have
won.' "
'We should have won' is the kind
of attitude any team can take
about a contest they have just lost.
However this game, above of all
others, was one where that
statement would hold some water.
Akron's only goal resulted from
a great shot. The Zips' Roderick
Scott used a Lion defender to
shield goalie John Pascarella,
took a step back and fired, bending
the ball around the defender and
past the keeper. On what was
probably the best demonstration
of individual skill on the Akron
squad , the Zips won the game.
Improved passing among front
line players allowed the Lions to
control the ball in the corners,
which resulted in several good
crossing passes. Needless to say,
none of the passes were drilled
home.
There were several instances
where Snyder, Rich Schmidt or
Niall Harrison sent a 'silver platter' pass into the box, only to
watch the ball fly over the net off
of Jan Skorpen's or Jim Bernlohr's head. There was a lot of
traffic in front of the Akron goal
but Zip netminder David Zupko
managed to keep the ball out of the
net.
Freshman Ted Gillen also
played well. Head Coach Walter
Bahr gave Gillen a chance in the
game against Shippensburg and
went with him again Friday night.
Gillen, who is listed as a forward,
assisted Dave Zartman and
Schmidt at a fullback position.
Gillen said the Lions put the ball
into the right spot, but they were
turned away on each try.
"We looked to get it up front but
each time we did, we were
stifled ," Gillen said.
Gillen also mentioned his confidence in the team's ball handling
skills.
"We moved the ball very well
(Saturday night) but its just a
matter of putting it in the net," he
added.
Snyder attributed the team's
scoring drought to several factors,
including the loss of Thomas
Greeve, last year's leading scorer,
who is academically ineligible this
season.
"It was a big thing that we lost
Greeve, it really hurt," Snyder
said. "Now we have to pick it up
from there and I think we can do
it, its just a matter of time."
mssm
The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Sept. 16, 1086—11
Ryan disappointed with overtime loss to Chicago
By RALPH BERNSTEIN
AP Sports Writer
¦
-
:
PHILADELPHIA — Philadelphia
r
. nlns r<nn«l, Buddy
R
cmrFlvl 31
scoffed
at
Eagles
Coach Rurlrlv Ryan
the suggestion that his 17-point underdogs earned a moral victory Sunday
in losing 13-10 to the Chicago Bears in
overtime.
"In pro football , there is no such
thing," Rya n sajd. "Players get paid
to win. And I get paid to win as a
coach."
Ryan said the narrow loss to the
Bears was just as disturbing as the
41-14 loss to the Washington Redskins
a week ago.
"We were really disappointed that
we were unable to get the win," said
Ryan , who was overcome by emotion
Sunday after the loss.
"The win would have done an awful
lot for our program in making them
(the players) believe that what we're
trying to tell them is true. That they
are a good football team.
"Some of them believe it , but I
don 't think all of them do. And when
you believe it, you can make it happen.
"So, it would have been great to
have a win against the world champions. We then could say we can beat
anybody if you can beat the champions. But we lost."
Ryan said he saw improvement in
the Eagles since the Washington
game.
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errors,"
errors,
" he said. "But we made
some, and one cost us a touchdown
'«ffi " '
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that we gave them," Ryan said , ref,,
„
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Ron Jaworski.
Ryan said he planned two changes
in his starting lineup for Sunday 's
,
¦¦ ¦
home opener against the Denver Mkj ||
»*./ -- '
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Broncos. He said Mike Haddix would
W
start at fullback instead of Mike ^^
T^&.
Waters and Kenny Jackson will re- sfl£/
gain his starting job from Phil Smith
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at wide receiver.
W
He said he wasn't sure about left j i£
tackle; free agent Joe Conwell suf- { 1
fered a broken toe.
. ^
M
Ryan admitted to perhaps making < j tfl
a mistake in the final 1:14 of the TB
game, when Jaworski was shaken up ; •' * fl
and had to leave. The Eagles went to > J^fl
Matt Cavanaugh, who had two passes ^Hl
intercepted .
"It probably was my fault.
m£
Jaworski was down and so was Mike
Singletary (Bears linebacker).
Ryan said assistant coach Ted
Plum told him Cavanaugh was ready
to roll.
"Plum said he liked the look in his
»3
(Cavanaugh's) eye. . . . I should of
gone to (Randall) Cunningham."
Cunningham played against Wash- j
ington and was in Sunday's game. v
AP Laserphoto
Cavanaugh, who has been bothered
by sore ribs, saw his first action of the Eag |
es Coach Buddy Ryan talks with Jim McMahon prior to last Sunday's game
season.
mm ®mbsm&
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2165 S. Atherton St.
State College - Next to Hills
Open Mon-Fri 7:30-6
Sat 8-5
238-5505
... •
12—The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Sept. 16, 1986
Howser may return to
Royals dugout in '86
Despite early setbacks,
QSU remains optimistic
By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ohio State
is off to its worst start since Grover Cleveland was in the White
House and many Buckeye followers are worried.
But Buckeye coach Earle Bruce
is not one of them.
The last time Ohio State lost its
first two games was 1894, when the
Buckeyes fell to Akron 12-6 and
Wittenberg 6-0.
So far in this, Ohio State's 97th
season of intercollegiate football,
the Buckeyes have shown a similar lack of firepower in dropping a
16-10 decision to 'Alabama in the
Chase Kickoff Classic and a 40-7
humiliation against Washington
last Saturday in Seattle.
The pressure is on, not only on
the team but also the eight-year
coach of the Buckeyes.
"I've been traveling through the
alleys and staying away from everyone," Bruce said with a laugh
yesterday at his weekly news conference. He joked that he has
started checking the underca rriage of his car for bombs prior to
starting out in the morning.
Not since 1911 has a Buckeye
team had a slower start offensively. That was the team managed a
pair of opening victories on a total
of nine points.
The natives are restless, as are
members of the largest alumni
organization in the country. Ohio
State started the 1986 season with
a .705 winning percentage. Buckeye fans are not accustomed to
losing.
"Who has played Alabama and
Washington back to back?" Bruce
asked rhetorically. "Who has?
I have said all along that those
were two great football teams and
this was as tough a start as Ohio
State has ever faced. "
But Bruce hasn't blamed the two
defeats strictly on the schedule.
For one, he pointed to inexperience which has led to numerous
mistakes. Ohio State starts three
seniors on each side of the ball ,
although the Buckeyes returned 14
of a possible 22 starters.
Ohio State did not lose a fumble
through the first eight weeks of the
last season. Through eight quarters this year, the Buckeyes have
fumbled eight times and have lost
the ball four times.
AP Laserphoto
Ohio,State put the heat on Alabama quarterback Mike Shula during the
Kickoff Classic,but the 0-2 Buckeyes have not been able to keep the fire
burning for long.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP ) — Kansas City Royals Manager Dick Howser, who is battling a malignant brain
tumor, has faith that he'll be in Florida for spring training and will be
managing the team April 6, 1987 when
the Royals face the Chicago White
Sox in their season opener.
"I know it's a day-to-day situation,
but I'm optimistic. I have a lot of faith
in the Lord," Howser said in an
interview published in yesterday's
Kansas City Times. "The medical
team here is fantastic. I'm starting to
gain weight."
Howser managed the American
League to a victory in the All-Star
game July 15, and two days later,
doctors diagnosed his brain tumor.
One week after the All-Star win,
surgeons removed part of a cancerous tumor from the left frontal lobe of
his brain.
Howser, who has received thousands of cards and well wishes from
fans across the United States, plus
Japan and Europe, took radiation
treatments twice a day for five
weeks. Now he awaits doctor's orders
for the next step in treatment.
"I'm not going to say it's been
easy," said Howser, who except for
hair and weight loss, appears much
as he did before the operation. "I've
had days when I've been depressed.
But right now, I feel great. My plans
are to manage the Royals in 1987."
The Royals front office will be
ready for him.
"We're not looking for a manager,"
Royals General Manager John
Schuerholz said. "We have one. Dick
Howser is the manager of this ballclub. Dick Howser will be the manager of this ballclub. And Dick
Howser will remain the manager of
this ballclub."
Howser met with Royals President
Joe Burke and Schuerholz for an hour
last Thursday to discuss player personnel. When the season ends, Howser will sit in on the evaluation
meeting at which changes and trades
are weighed.
"His goal and our goal is for him to
come back," Schuerholz said. "He's
looking forward to managing again,
and we're looking forward to having
him. As long as he feels up to it, we
want him to manage the club. That's
it. That's the bottom line."
It has been nearly two months since
Howser last occupied his office. Royals coach Mike Ferraro has been
interim manager for the team, which
won the 1985 World Series, but has
been virtually eliminated from the
American League West Division race
this year.
A week after his surgery July 22,
Howser walked into Royals Stadium
to greet front-office personnel.
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FORTY YEARS OF SAiss Nto S€Rvnce i** fctwe cou.e*e
•MOUNTAIN BIKES •RACING BIKES «BMX
$25 to $250 OFF!
Top Quality 1986 Bikes & Accessories - No thing Held Back !
1
m
Larges t Selection In Central Pa. At Super Sale Prices !
Cy cle Clothing!
Bicy cle Packs!
a
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Locks & Cables!
Water Bottles !
Car Carriers!
Bicy cle Tools !
Exercise Bikes!
All Accessories!
4 *4
EVERYTHING IS ON SALE FROM SEPT 13-20
THE BICYCLE SHOP
441 w. colleffe Ave., Slale College, PA 16801
OSQ
2?
a^a
<814)-238-9422, open from 9:30-5:30 Monday-Salurday
o^ornCxiQ
DEO
a
a
The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Sept. IB, 1986—13
major league baseball
Boston
New York
Toronto
Detroit
Cleveland
Milwaukee
Baltimore
AMERICAN LEAGUE
. East Division
w L Pet GB
86 57 601
77 66 538 9
77 66 538 9
76 68 528 10Vi
72 71 503 14
68 74 479 17'/!
68 75 476 18
California
Texas
Kansas City
Oakland
Chicago
Seattle
Minnesota
W
81
73
68
67
63
63
61
New York
PHILLIES
St. Louis
Montreal
Chicago
PIRATES
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W
L Pet GB
93 49 .655 —
74 68 .521 19
71 71 .500 22
70 70 .500 22
60 82 .423 33
58 83 .411 34Vz
West
L
60
70
75
77
79
81
81
West
W
L
81 62
74 69
Houston
Cincinnati
San Francisco
73
71
Division
Pet GB
.574 —
.510
9
.476 14
.465 15tf>
.444 18te
.438 19V2
.430 20Va
Division
Pet GB
.566 —
.517
7
.507
8V2
Streak
Lost 2
Won 2
Lost 1
Won 5
Won 3
Won- 1
Lost 3
Home
43-24
36-35
39-34
46-28
40-34
36-35
35-35
Away
43-33
41-31
38-32
30-40
32-37
32-39
33-40
L10 Streak
7-3 Lost 1
4-6 Lost 1
7-3 Won 2
5-5 Lost 3
5-5 Won 1
5-5 Lost 2
4-6 Won 1
Home
42-27
44-27
42-33
41-30
36-38
37-33
36-34
Away
39-33
29-43
26-42
26-47
27-4 1
26-48
25-47
L10
7-3
6-4
3-7
6-4
6-4
4-6
2-8
L10
5-5
5-5
5-5
6-4
5-5
5-5
Streak
Lost 3
Won 3
Won 1
Lost 1
Lost 2
Won 2
Home
47-24
43-28
37-34
32-34
36-35
29-45
Away
46-25
31-40
34-37
38-36
24-47
29-38
L10 Streak
5-5 Lost 2
6-4 Won 3
7-3 Won 1
Home
44-27
36-32
42-33
Away
37-35
38-37
31-38
Los Angeles
San Diego
Atlanta
68 75
67 77
65 77
.476
.465
.458
13
14Vz
15V2
Hayes chosen Player of the Week
5-5 Lost 3 44-32 24-43
4-6 Won 2 40-33 27-44
3-7 Lost 1 34-33 31-44
NEW YORK (AP) — Von Hayes of the Philadelphia Phillies, who
was 12-for-24 with five doubles, two homers and 10 runs scored , was
named the National League's Player of the Week for the third time
this season, the NL announced yesterday.
The outfielder-first baseman, who is among the top five in batting
(.315), runs batted in (85) , slugging percentage (.485) , on-base
percentage (.384), hits (168) , game-winning RBI (12) and leads the
league in runs (93 ) and doubles (42), previously won Player of the
Week honors for May 12-18 and Aug. 25-31.
During this past week the 28-year-old southpaw slugger also
drove in five runs, two of them game winners.
Phillies teammate Mike Schmidt, who hit .417 with four homers
and 12 RBI, also was considered for the award along with Los
Angeles Dodgers second baseman Steve Sax, Pittsburgh Pirates
third baseman Jim Morrison and pitcher Bob Patterson and
Chicago Cubs first baseman Leon Durham.
Kansas City at California, 10 35 p.m.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Saturday's Games
Texas 14, Minnesota 1
Detroit 7,Baltimore 2
Cleveland 8, Oakland 6
New York 11, Boston 6
California 3,Chicago 2, 15 innings
Kansas City 5,Seattle 4
Toronto 7,Milwaukee 1
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Saturday's Games
Cincinnati 3, Los Angeles 0
Atlanta 4,San Francisco 1
PHILLIES 6,New York 5
PIRATES 5,Chicago 2
Montreal 5, St. Louis 1
San Diego 4,Houston 3
Sunday's Games
New York 11, Boston 5
Detroit 7, Baltimore 0
Cleveland 5,Oakland 2
Minnesota 7,Texas 6
Chicago 3, California 1
Kansas City 10, Seattle 3
Milwaukee 5,Toronto 0
Sunday's Games
PHILLIES 6,New York 0
PIRATES 9,Chicago 2
St. Louis 10, Montreal 2
Cincinnati 4, Los Angeles 3
San Francisco 7,Atlanta 6
San Diego 3,Houston 2
Last Night's Games
California at Chicago
Baltimore at New York
Minnesota at Cleveland
Toronto at Milwaukee
Texas at Oakland Only games scheduled
Who's at fault?
Last Night' s Games
Chicago at Montreal
PIRATES at PHILLIES
New York at St. Louis
Only games scheduled
Today's Games
Chicago at Montreal, 7:35 p.m.
PIRATES at PHILLIES, 7:35 p.m.
Houston at Cincinnati, 7:35 p.m.
Los Angeles at Atlanta,7:40 p.m.
New York at St. Louis, 8:35 p.m.
San Francisco at San Diego, 10:05
Today's Games
Texas at Oakland ,3:15 p.m.
Milwaukee at Boston,2,5:35 p.m.
Baltimore at New York, 7:30 p.m.
Chicago Seattle,7:35 p.m.
Minnesota at Cleveland,7:35 p.m.
Detroit at Toronto ,7:35 p.m.
RIVERHEAD, N.Y. (AP) — Jury selection began yesterday in
the case of a photographer who filed a $2 million suit and then was
countersued by tennis star Martina Navratilova after an altercation at the 1982 U.S Open.
Arthur M. Seitz, 43, of Fort Lauderale, Fla., claimed Navratilova
injured his shoulder, elbow and hand when she took away his
camera and exposed his film. The incident occurred after Navratilova lost to Pam Shriver in the quarterfinals at the National Tennis
Center in New York .
Navratilova filed a $3.5 million countersuit, claiming she was
assaulted by the photographer. She said in the suit that she suffered
"fear, extreme anxiety and mental and psychological anguish."
Attempts over the last few days to settle the suit out of court
failed, attorneys for both sides said.
"It appears we are going to trial ," Marvin Mitchelson , attorney
for Seitz, said.
P m.
COllCGIflN ClftSSIFI€D ADS
Collegian Inc. reserves the
right to release the names of
Individuals who place advertising In The Daily Collegian, Collegian Magazine and The Weekly
Collegian
The decision on whether to
release this information shall be
made by the management of
Collegian Inc.
The purpose of this policy is
to discourage the placement of
advertising that may be cruel or
unnecessarily embarrassing to
Individuals or organizations.
ALPINE CAR STEREO. Auto-reverse, AM-FM, 3 years old. No
mechanical problems $90. Call
Kunlo 237-3609.
BARGAINS! MATTRESSES $10
dressers, beds, desks, bookcases,dinettes,sofas,loveseats,
coffee/end tables, bunks, lamps,
upholstered chairs, more l Golden Leaf-7 miles east of S.C.
Routes 322. Mon, Tues, Thurs
evenings 6:30-8:30. Sat. 10-2. Delivery.
GENERAL ADMISSION, DATE
and student tickets to all Penn
State home football games.
Trades possible. Call 862-2315,
10 a.m.-10 p.m. only.
FOOTBALL TICKETS FOR THE
PENN State — East Carolina
game,Sept. 27!h at Beaver Stadium. Great seats available. 8622315,10 a.m.-10 p.m. only.
PENTHOUSE 85 DIFFERENT Issues, $50.00. Fine books, HO
Locus, cars. Room 3 212 South
Allen.
PLANT SALE. BENEFITS Cystic
Fibrosis. Plants 25e to $20. 225
West Clinton Ave. Phone 2380137
INSURANCE FOR YOUR auto,
motorcycle, home, personal belongings, . hospitalization. For
professional, courteous service, ATTRACTIVE BRICK 3-BEDcall 238-6633.
ROOM Duplex. Walking distance
NEED A STUDY BREAK? Wash from campus , schools, shopyour car at University Drive Car ping. No pets please. $425, 238Wash. Do-it-yourself bays open 1067.
24 hours or use our automatics! ROOMS FALL SEMESTER In Fra8 to 6 dally. Located off of Univer- ternity close to campus. Room
sity Drive behind Burger King.
board. Meals and social $1350
PSU COMPATIBLE TERMINALS. 238-9965
Rent terminals compatible with SMALL ONE BEDROOM camperPSU Mainframe , R/NET, LIAS. sized mobile home; in small
ACORN,232 S. Allen,238-6021.
court on E. College Ave; 1 mile to
RENT 3 MOVIES, PLAYER, 3 campus. No pets. Leased until
days,only $19.95. Over 800 titles! June or August. $200 per month
plus electric. 234-3901.
ACORN,232 S. Allen, 238-6021.
SCHOLARSHIPS/GRANTS FOR
college are available. Millions go
unclaimed yearly. For details call
1-800-USA-1221,Ext. 0627.
TELEVISION RENTALS, COLOR
or B & W ,long or short term,low
rates. ACORN, 232 S. Allen, 2386021. " '
STUDENTS: HAS SOMEONE
YOU loved died? Interested In
understanding your feelings?
For Information contact The
Counseling Service 101 Cedar
Bldg. 863-0048.
USED FURNITURE SALE. Desks,
chests, sofas, beds, dinettes,
lamps, end tables, coffee tables
and more. We deliver. Furniture
Exchange. 522 East College Ave.
238-1181.
FOR SALE: 1981 228 Camaro,305
engine 4 speed,AM-FM cassette,
T-top, 19,000 miles. Excellent
condition. Daytime 234-3431. After 5:00 364-9854. Ask for Chip.
'
$7500.00.
77 TOYOTA COROLLA, Blue,
two door automatic , air conditioning, Insp., thru 5/87. $850best offer. 238-7471.
1979 VW SCIROCCO, 4 speed,
PUBLIC SALE SATURDAY Sept. casette/radlo, 65,000 miles, ex20 10a.m.-3p.m. at Boal Mansion cellent condition. Make an offer ,
Rt. 322 Boalsburg. Special Art 238-3625.
Alliance benifit. Antiques, art,
novelties.
RALEIGH RACER MEN'S ten
speed, excellent condition, paid
$450.00, asking $100.00, must
sell. 234-4506 Tony.
SANYO SPEAKERS MADE In
USA 2x40 Model SS200. Very
good condition. $100.00. Call
238-4585.
DISCOUNT NEW AND used furniture. Guaranteed lowest prices
on new and used furniture. Located Just across from South
Halls at 522 East College Ave.
We deliver. Check our prices.
Furniture Exchange open 9-8
Monday • Friday, 9-5 Saturday.
238-1181
GORGEOUS LARGE 2-BEDROOM apt. Block from campus.
Great-kitchen, balcony, parking.
Available Oct. 1. 863-1963, 2387074.
GRADS AND PROFESSIONALS
two bedroom unfurnished apartment. Call 237-5658 after 6 p.m.
SUBLET LARGE FURNISHED efficiency available 10/01/86
$320'mo plus utilities. Three
blocks from campus,call Claude
237-5865 or 865-5641 for details.
ONE MONTH FREE RENT WITH
an eleven-month lease on onebedroom apartments. Available
immediately. Located on Stratford Drive. Make your choice at
THE APARTMENT STORE. 2346860.
ONE MONTH FREE RENT WITH
an eleven-month lease on selected two-bedroom apartments.
Available immediately. For details call THE APARTMENT
STORE 234-6860.
REDUCED RATES ON one-bedroom apartments. Close to campus and pr i c e d under
$300/month. This and other
choices are yours at THE APARTMENT STORE. 234-6860.
SPACIOUS 2-BEDROOM APARTMENTS located close to downtown in a quiet setting for grads
and professionals only with a
ARE YOU PREGNANT? Worried?
limited number of 9-month
Uncertain? Free pregnancy testCall THE
ing. Confidential services leases available.
APARTMENT STORE for details.
CRCPC,234-7340
234-6860.
BALLOON BOUQUETS delivered
by our Balloon Baboon or other
singing, costumed delivery characters for that special person.
TRULY YOURS, 250 East Beaver
Ave. 238-4619.
72-RITZCRAFT, 12x70 2-BEDROOM mobile home. Appliances.
Must move. $4700.359-3303 after
3:30 or weekends.
1986 KAWASAKI NINJA 600R,
Vance and Hlnes exhaust , tank
bag, no squids! 3200$ 234-4185.
1983 CAMERO GREY, blue pinstripe. 31,000 miles. 4 speed,4 cyl.
A.C. tape deck. Good condition.
5-50 available 238-7037.
100 VACUUM CLEANERS starting at $9.95. Swopes 1247 E.
College Ave. S.C. 238-6677
COMPUTER TERMINAL RENTALS connect with the PSU mainframe from your dorm or
apartment. Call South Hills Computers Inc. 234-1262.
EXOTIC MALE DANCERS. More
than a strip-a-gram. PG, R and X
shows. 231-2327.
GAY/LESBIAN SWITCHBOARD
Support, information, referrals
networking. 6-9 p.m. nightly. 237
1950.
ALUMNUS NEEDS FOOTBALL
tickets for home and away
¦
¦
games, season or individual
games, call 814-237-5204.
4 SIDELINE FOOTBALL tickets.
Syracuse game. Need not be
together. 359-3303 after 3:30 or
weekends.
NON-SMOKING SERIOUS student will enjoy qulel study environment. Private room, private
bath. 30 feet from campus. 2371029.
ROOM FOR RENT-Lemont 116
SMALL 3 BEDROOM home on Boalsburg Rd. Prefer quite, sincere
student. Phone 238Fairwool Lane. $425 plus utilities. Call Associated Realty 234- 0750.$30.00/week.
2382.
REDUCED RATES ON one-bedroom apartments. Close to camp u s and p r i c e d u n d e r
$300/montH. This ' "arid other
choices are yours at THE APARTMENT STORE. 234-6860. '
%<£.
Z&fl
•WW
•
OHS1
1/3 TWO BEDRM apt on South
Frasler St. $145 per month. Call HELP NEEDED: MCDONALD'S
Kevin 234-5823.
restaurant , day shift , apply at
Hill's Plaza and Nittany Mall.
<TheJipartn \etit
5*oiS
has a
INTERESTED IN EXTRA income?
We have a pleasant ]ob. Day or
evening hours available talking
to residents by phone-handling
advance tickets for a local benefit show. Call 234-2008.
LOOKING FOR A Job for Fall and
Spring semesters? Looking for a
of work In the area of
[of 1 & 2 Bedroom Apis. I variety
Corporate and Foundation Relations? The Office of University
Development has openings for
both undergraduate and gradIwith 9 mo. Leases and 1 uate work-study aides. You must
be available to work between 1030 hours/week from September
to May 1987. For more information call Brenda at 865-6580 or
Stop
in
for
So,
1 stop by the Development Office
I
at 113 Old Main.
.
MESSENGER/EXPEDITER
15-20 hours per week.
(Saturday by Appointment) NEEDED
Details call David at 234-1610,
444 E. College Ave., Suite 210
Happy Valley Promotions.
234-6860
QUIET, NONSMOKING FEMALE
roommate. To share 1/2 large,
nice, 3-bdrm apartment. Country
setting, fireplace, balconey. W/D
hookup. $225 446-6981.
ROOMMATE NEEDED AT Beaver
Hill September rent paid. 183/mo.
utilities included. Call Anytime
231-8360.
¦
air
oft
5 BEDROOM HOME suitable for
students $160 per person plus
utilities, walking distance to
campus. Call Associated Realty
234-2382.
3 BEDROOM DUPLEX close to
town. Available immediately. For
Information contact The Apartment Store. 234-6860.
A COMPLETE WORD proc- ¦HHP
!
V
r
J
9
§S
H
H
esslng, typing, and rush service ^H|^Kl^(Vi H^^^^ |B
¦(Laser & IBM
¦printers). ¦
^
¦
¦
i
One ^
block ¦
ATTENTION INTELLIGENT from campus. 8-5 Mon.-Frl 10-5 CAMERA , PHOTO EQUIPMENT
repa |ri developing, and enlargeMALE seeks female who is un- Sat. Flying Fingers 237-2905.
derstanding warm hearted and is AN EFFICIENT, DEPENDABLE ment services. PENN PHOTO
willing to overlook outside ap- typing and word processing serv- SUPPLY. College and Fraser.
pearance. Also who enjoys jog- Ice of all kinds. Campus delivery. 234-4900.
PI ACCCC.
I/MITTIM/
rnn
ging, tennis, and all kinds of Debbie 359-3068.
CLASSES:
KNITTING.
^
CRO
music. Mail to Calder Square PO
CHETING, Drawn thread, KnitBox 11091, State College, PA
ting machine. A Stitch in
16805.
Time.237-0327.
HEY CHRIS G. What Is your
ESPANOL: NEED HELP in SpanHappy Valley clocsn t
purpose in life? Love the Keedish? Get tutored by experienced
have In be in the middle
ers B. C. & V.
teacher. Call 234-7075 after 6:00
%
r
a
of nowhere. Read the
pm.
INTERESTED IN BEING a liltle
Colleejan ami briny the
sister? Then come out to Trianour
HORSE
BOARDING
ON
the
bus
Your norse weitare
worm
gle's Little Sister Rush Mixer and ¦^^¦
route.
route.
Your horse's
world here.
s
welfare
is
our
I
new.
¦
¦
¦
¦
¦
¦
¦
¦
f
n B
f
j
n
FIRST
Indoor
rings
concern.
check us out. It's Sept. 17 Wed.
FIRSTriding
concern. Indoor and out- '
H^^^MUtli lliyMBiBi
8PM at Triangle Fraternity,
226
¦¦¦¦¦¦
^
¦¦¦
^
l¦
i^
H
I door riding rings and - when
East Beaver Ave. ALL majors
onto paspossible
ssll>|e -• daily turnout
,
welcome! Refreshments served. AAAHl D.J. PHANTOM proles- P°
ture
u a
all
included.
c
0^»
Lessons»' aval
avail'sional
dlscj
ockey
services
fea^"
il{5
l
If questions call Nancy 237-0567.
h^ 237-1562,
238-7781.
¦ ¦
turing the area's largest light able.
-^a.-.^==LONELY WHITE MALE,22. Doing show. Superior sound system
'
^ ""
"^
NEED
ED TO TALK? Call partners,
partners, trT^
long term in Nevada prison. incorporatlngxompact .disc and NE
' - ~
238-6739.
8-6739. We 're trained peer
peer
Please write Eddie "S".
,~ Number" music by request. D.J. Phantom 23
The
1
—P
counselors
iors who will listen and
?— - *
21101. PO Box 607, Carson City, uses only professional equip- counse
hetp
help.. Free
Free,confidential,
JF ¦
Nevada, 89701.
. mentl! 717-749-5559 or 234-0581. —r^——--——z
¦ caring.
—
P^AUA
TELEVISION , STEREO
STEREO REPAIRS.
REPAIRS
^
^¦
^
^
T TELEVISION,
SUNDAY NIGHT'S CALLER, call ABOUT
.o ^,,-r ...w„,r>.-o -ru.. ,
^
HAYRIDES. THE classic
„, affordable
al|
E
affordab ,e service on all
again and give me a few hints. fall activity. We provide food, Expert
£ A^ f el
o
ranrjSi VCR
brands,
VCR'S
s ltoo.
oa AC
ACORN,
ORN, 232
¦
(9
1
JEff at University GATEWAY.
bonfires, apple cider, and trans- s
Allen ¦ 238-6342.
238-6342¦
H ^^ *
S. Allen,
'
'
portation. Call Nittany Mountain —
H
j
Trail Rides 234-1300.
¦
NATIONAL COLLEGE MARKETING company seeks Individual or
campus group to work part time
assisting students in applying
for credit cards. Flexible hours,
excellent $, full training. Meet
students and have FUN. Call
Angela at 1-215-567-2100.
PARTTIME STUDENT WORK;
flexible morning hours; apply in
person; sofa and chair. 2615 East
College.
ra
"
i
A D.J. FOR $22/hr. Sound and
lighting systems. Top 40 and
Funk. References. The best for
less. Call D.J. Douger 862-1372. ,
D.J. LARRY MOORE Connoisseur recorded music. Wedding
expert formals 234-0691.
MIDNIGHT MOTION DJ'S the
seduction of sight and sound. '
Call 237-3306 or 237-4164
Marrjfgry nWr'H
i m
, ^^ Tiii ^
^
ft
l
-^r
'
:
f fli ^Mlk I
i
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/ j £ &m
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f
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^"If ""^
It 's P e r s o n a l . . . i n
.SUPERB— NOT SIMPLY sensationall Why pay Larry for more . the Collenan Classifieds!
t
.
J
phantoms!! Get the best for less;
Call 862-1060.
the
daily
MARCH
OF Dimes
"Found" notices are published for three days at no
charge. This policy does not apply to "found" notices for "PSU"
keys.
If you find a "PSU" key or a key
ring with a "PSU" key on It,
please deliver the item to Police
Services, Grange Building. The
Department of University Safety
has established a system to
quickly Identify and notify .the
person who lost the "PSU" key.
PART —TIME WAITRESS
NEEDED. People without cars CHRYSLER CAR KEYS on Atherneed not apply. Please call 238- ton across from Hills Plaza. Call
234-7256 to claim.
8843..
SALES REPRESENTATIVE- FOUND A BACKPACK in Bouke
Market Imprinted sportswear Building. Call 238-6029 to identiAVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY: products to university market- fy
TWO bedrooms. Need two peo- place, intensive training pro- FOUND: BLACK CITADEL bike
ple, must know eachother. $150 gram,flexible hours, hourly wage lock by Pollock Field on 9/8. Call
plus bonus. Contact David at 862-5601 to claim.
plus utilities. 355-7764.
Happy Valley Promotions. Call
FOUND: MAN'S CLASS ring on
234-1610.
campus. Call Goose at 237-8231
SINGERS WANTED , GRACE Lu- to identify.
theran Choir. Rehearse Thursday
7:15PM.
Sing Sunday 10:30 serv- FOUND PACKAGE ON corner of
SPRING SUBLET: SPACIOUS 2Park and McKee. On September
bdr apt for 2 people, $345Jmo. ice. All voices welcome, men 12. Call to Identify 238-1139.
Three blocks from campus, call especially needed. 238-2478.
238-3262.
SKI INSTRUCTORS PART TIME/ FOUND- PET BIRD, please call
_^
full time no experience nec- 237-8512 after 5 p.m.
essary but should be IntermeLARGE PET RABBIT, vicinity of
diate or advanced skiler with the
East Nittany Avenue on Sept. 3.
desire to work with people. AtCall Greg 237-9964.
tend organizational meeting SepGENERAL ADMISSION TICKETS tember 21st at Tussey or send ONE PAIR OF glasses left In 139
to Rutgers,Cincinnati,Maryland, letter of interest to; Instructor Sparks Building. 865-2547.
or any other Penn State football Tussey Mountain Ski Area, 1121
game,Home or Away. Call Dawn, Earlystown Rd. Boalsburg, Pa.
862-0404.
16827.
SENIOR SEASON T ICKET WORK STUDY STUDENT. Duties
wanted. Will pay top dollar. Call include typing, filing, mailings,
Chris 862-2218.
and general office work. Call865- STUDENT HELPER PROOF
READING, typing, free copy, ma
STUDENT SEASON FOOTBALL 7685.
TICKET(S). F/S,Junior,or Senior. YOUNG MEN'S SHOP has need nlla envelope,$1 per page. PSU
Will pay $$. Call 862-6778,noon - for maintenance person Monday graduate of distinction LA. 1986,
9 p.m.
through Saturday mornings 9-12. Call Steve 364-9170 local 9-9.
Campus pick-up and delivery.
WANTED: PENN STATE football Call Lynn Wed., Sept. 17,10 a.m.TYPING .TYPESETTING; SEE the
tickets. 2 or 4 reserved seats to 12 noon 238-8029.
Type Wrights' Star Maker. 237any game. Help my family see 3000 GOVERNMENT JOBS list
their first PSU game ever! Please $16,040-$59,230/yr. Now hiring 9588. 140 W. Nittany, 10a.m.6p.m.
call 862-3048.
Call (805)687-6000 Ext. R-9568
1 ,-»,-» •?
non
'J <£«3 / -i
o
ll
l
I
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ai^
|
COLLEGE
AVE.
1
Classified Information
Mail-In Form
f^nBlArf
ion
IrUlieyidll
• Policy
Ads must be prepaid
Changes cannot be made after the first insertion
Cash relunds will only be given lor ads cancelled by 1 p.m. the day before the llrst insertion. Only credit
vouchers will be given after this time.
The Dally Collegian will only be responsible for one day's incorrect Insertion. Please come to room 126
Carnegie Building immediately if there is an error in your ad.
The Dally Collegian will not knowingly cause to be printed or published any notice or advertisement relating
to employment or membership indicating any preference,limitation,specification or descriminatlon based
upon race,color,sexual orientation,religious creed,ancestry, age,sex ,national orgin or non-job related
handicap or disability.
• Prepaid Order Form Ads
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested.
We must receive the ad the morning before publication.
No PERSONAL ads accepted by mail.
• Deadlines
classified — 1 p.m. one business day before publication
cancellation — 1 p.m. one business day before publication
renewal — no later than 1 p.m. the last day the ad is to appear in the paper.
Classified Mail Order Form
Name
.
Phone #
Address
(phone number published only if Included below)
Please print your ad one word per box
ALL ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW COLLEGIAN POLICY
Make checks payable to:
Collegian inc.
126 Carnegie Building
Date ad begins
Total days in paper
Amount paid
Classification
University Park, PA 16802
NUMBER OF DAYS
• OF WORDS
1-15
DAY 1
DAY 2
DAY 3
DAY 4
DAY S
2.35
4.30
5.80
6.95
8.10
1.15
1.50
loNSECUTWE DAY
16-20
3.00
5.30
7.15
8.65
10.15
21-25
3.65
6.30
8.50
10.35
12.20
1.85
26.-30
4.30
7.30
9.85
12.05
14.25
2.20
4.95
8.30
11.20
13.75
16.30
2.55
31-35
apartments
attention
audio
automotive
for rent
for sale
Classifications
found (free)
help wanted
houses
lost
parties
rides/riders
rooms
roommates
sublet
typing
wanted
wanted to rent
comics. etc.
14
The Daily Collegian
Tuesday, Sept. 16, 1986
far side
peanuts
YOU'RE MY AGENT ?
IWAS - EXPECTING
SOMEONE SORT OF TALLER
a y **
CS^t
YOU GOT ME A JOB?
THAT'S WONDERFUL !
..
\iS?S^
*_ <!*.
'C-4
A PERSONAL APPEARANCE
MUM? U)OL0!» _ rv_
^OPENING CEREMONIES
ATTHEOLYMPIC GAMES
©
IN LOS ANGELES "
KJC < ,
U/ //
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t'/
9~IS
bloom county
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WELcoW
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DEFIB
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1
Large Pepperoni For Only I
I
$6.99
I
I
I
I
Dr. Charlie Clemens
Coupon valid Sept. 16 thru Sept 18.
18, 1
986
1986
i
I
^H^pi^
pays and Take Out Only
S.C. Bora, Campus
sales
Customer
applicable
tax
You can run, Thomas, but you can't hide
Former Vietnam f ighter pilot and Medical Doctor
working with ref ugees in El Salvador will sp eak on
WAR IN EL SALVADOR
112 Kern
8 p.m.
Wednesday , September 17
ALL ARE WELCOME
5 30 Pot Luck
I
611 E. Hamilton
Sponsored by Friends of Latin America
R286
AK¥ • AK¥ •AKT •AKT •AK*F •AKT •AKT •AK¥ •AKT •AKT •AK¥ •
Kappa Psi
Alpha
Professional Business r raternity
FOR
PHYSICAL EDUCATION CREDIT
ALL ABILITY LEVELS
— First-Time Beginner Through Expert —
The Physical Education Basic Instruction Program once again offers DOWNHILL
SKIING at the local Tussey Mountain Ski \Area.Students should reference page.91 of
the Spring Semester Schedule of Classes for pre-registration details. Class sizes are
limited. This is a fee course.
PLEASE NOTE: DOWNHILL SKIING classes are held on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
Saturday, and Sunday, as noted in the Schedule. However,the Sunday sections appear as
"APPT".If you desire to have your class on Sunday, refer to page 91 of the Schedule —
Schedule number 212644 is for the 11:00 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. Sunday class,and Schedule
number 212653 is for the 1:30 P.M. to 4:00 P.M. Sunday Class.
All Full-time Business Sufdeitts fWelcome t
2nd thru 6th semeHtel drily
HUB
Caller
Sept
Wed.
7 00 p m
. 17
,
professional dress pleasef
AK¥ •AK¥ •AK¥ •AIOP •AK¥ •AK¥ •AK¥ •AK¥ •AK*F •AK«P •AK¥
HEY KOOL KATS GOT THE FINANCIAL BLUES?
WE GOT GOOD NEWS. NOW YOU CAN
EARN
DOWNHILL SKIING
$99 $30 PER WEEK
IN ONLY 3-4 HOURS
DONATING PLASMA
AH students who register for DOWNHILL SKIING must pick up a DOWNHILL SKIING
INFORMATION SHEET at Room 105 White Building before the end of Fall Semester — This
contains important information regarding cost and first meeting time and place.
Take advantage of this opportunity to learn to ski,or further develop your present skills I
— and earn Physical Education credit at the same time. '
MANAGEMENT CLUB
ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING
NEW DONORS EARN
15.00
LJM»S
237-5761
SERA-TEC BIOLOGICALS
120 S. ALLEN ST. (REAR)
COI
OR VOUR
OAV.
..
7:00 P.M
CALL
f lmlm
8-7:00 MON THRU THURS
8-5:00 FRI.
TONIGHT
On Your 1st
Donation
(with this ad)
75 WILLARD BUILDING
coupon exDIres 9/17/B6)
lt«».
^**************
********
************
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WITH THE Collegian ARTS
SECTION
****^** ************************
5:
******* :M<*************** =t*»»* t **
doonesbury
fF THERE ARBNO
fTHAS FINALLY COME
//£ /W5 BESEECH5PMB
TOANTOmSS.THELORPGOP
EXPLORNOUNCEA PATROBERTSON
HAS PERSONALLYASKEP ATORYCANPlMCY,A CRU5APEUUIJH
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OF G
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M0RBHAN6NAILSANP
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HAVEJOYFULNOUS
^
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BEATSANEN- 600HAS
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SELF-SERVE
• Abortion Services
• Free Pregnancy Tests
• Confidential Counseling
• Gyn Check-Ups
TYPING
107 6th St.«Dnratevn Fib.
Xoll Tret: 1-800-S83-4636
kinko's
225 E. Beaver Ave/
238-2679
11 Legal action
17 Tsung-Dao
prize winner
, Nobel
19 Delves
20 Element
21 Obispo
23 Rounded roof
24 French river
27 Difficulty
30 Cringe
32 Beverage
33 Nine-day devotion
36 Moslem scholars
37 Deserve
39 Vibrate
41 Glower
43 Govenor
44 Summer: French
45 Started
47 Fury
48 African eye worm
49 Give details
50 Pianist Peter
51 Affiliated
52 Capacity
J-0154
¦**
ondP**
DoM
OlM
ion-
t
rtvenfc
iwd*
v>
pifljK^
*
i
1st Meeting
*
Welcome to our circle of fri endship
.
Tues. Sept., 16
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
^
7:30 PM
£
*
102 McAllister
Presentation on
APPLIED RESEARCH LAB
(ARL)
BY PROFESSOR GENE WAYNE
^
*
*
*
*
*
^
* * * * * * * * * * * * * ** * *
1/^ditL TOi©®OT
^»
4
EVERY
TU ESDAY
AT
CALL IN ORDER
ms masm
238-8055
For Express Service
OPEN:
MON-FRI
7AM-6PM
SUN-.7-2
3Cb
130 W
College Ave
PRESENT THIS COUPON TO THE
CASHIER ON ANY TUESDAY AND GET
*
19 Early auto coat
22 Run-down
25 At home
26 Lunar or solar
28_ Daw n goddess
29 One-horse carriage
31 Mongol dynasty
34 Myself
35 Play a guitar
38 Whale
40 Designer Cassini
• 0KFI • RUSH • OKU • RUSH • ©KIT • RUSH •
*
Michelle Black Sandy Miller
t
7 Specifies
8 Winged
9 Glass-maker 's rod
10 Dissolve
* *PENN
* * *STATE
* * * *MATH
* * * *CLUB
** * *J
The Sisters of Alpha Gamma Delta
proudly announce their newest initates
*
4 Sense
5 Owned
6 Actor Walter
43 Many
46 Sinister
Sept. 16 & 17
8 PM
Any questions?? Call 238-4663
*
1
3 Pane
13 Ormer
14 String or shell
42 Fiction heroine
305 HUB
*
ATM*
2 Caucho
i - * ^ ^ ^ ~r * * ^m ^a m ^r ^ ^*
^m m r .
224 W. College Ave.
237-1317
fflOlb
<ze/M££Jk^
©Kn
• n • RUSH
5 Wicker basket
16 Yellow ochre
Invites you to
RUSH
Our service sorority
For The Help
You Need
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(answers in Wednesday's classifieds)
12 Potpourri
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Leiikemia*
Ifsnolonger
a death sentence
When you were young, no form of cancer terri fied your parents
more than leukemia did.
Just fifteen years ago. a child with leukemia could expec t to
live only months, lii.it. thanks to research, things have changed.
Children who once lived months are now living years. Many ol
them are growing up. Some are already adults, living normal lives.
Did you ever wonder what the America n Cancer Society did
with the money you gave us? Well, some of it went to leukemia
research. And, if we had more we could do more. Give to the
American Cancel- Socictv.
6 FREE BAGELS
w/purchase of 1 doz., any kind
Good any Tuesday
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POUR IT ON!
Taps jsJH-ERE
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* Release
Valves™
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Ten brands p " I
of Beer on
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Corner of College & Sowers
Behind CC Peppers-Downtown
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
DELIVERS ®
Fast, Free Delivery™
North: 237-1414
1104 N. Atherton
South: 234-5655
421 Rear E. Beaver
Hours:
11:00am-2:00am Sun.-Thurs.
1V.00am-3:OOam Fri. and Sat
Our drivers carry less
than $20.00.
Limited delivery area.
16—The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Sept. 16, 1986
Porn film
biggest
$ maker
Penn State Cinemas' director
said the organization does not
want to eliminate pornographic
movies from campus because
they raise a lot of money for the
Association of Residence Hall
Students.
Jeff Mercy last night gave
ARHS an update on the group's
financia l status.
The pornographic film Debbie
Does Dallas was the top moneymaker this past weekend, earning $1,400, he said.
To Live and Die in L.A. grossed
$700 and Young blood $750.
Last weekend was the first
time the group sold refreshments, such as soda and popcorn ,
during the movies, Mercy said.
The fall schedule has not yet
been approved , but two types of
season passes are being considered, Mercy said.
One pass would cost $8 to $10
and the other would cost between
$15 and $20, depending on the
number of movies the student
expects to see, he said. Residence
hall area presidents will decide
this week what types of passes
should be offered.
— by Megan McKissick
Dry rush awaits 2nd vote
By VICTORIA PETTIES
Collegian Staff Writer
The Interfraternity Council last
night unanimously approved an
amendment to its .bylaws making a
one-week dry rush mandatory for all
University fraternities.
However, in order for the proposal
to become an official amendment, it
must meet 50 percent plus one vote
approval of council members at two
separate IFC meetings. Members
will vote on the proposal again
Sept. 29.
IFC President Pat Conway said dry
rush will probably not affect the
number of people interested in fraternities, as seen with this fall's voluntary one-week dry rush.
"Fraternity houses actually have
had an increase this fall in the number of rushees. Several houses have
had more rushees come out this year
than in the last several years," Conway said.
The dry rush proposal was first
recommended by the IFC Alcohol
Policy Research Committee. The
committee of 10, composed mostly of
fraternity presidents, was appointed
by Conway earlier this fall to study
and recommend changes in the IFC
bylaws to the council.
The proposal states that University
fraternities wiH 'not be allowed to
serve alcohol during the week extending from the University freshman
arrival date to the last day of the IFCsponsored open house.
Fraternities will not be allowed to
sponsor a rush event on the same day
•
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or night as a non-rush event, such as a
party, where alcohol is served during
the week of IFC rush. A rush schedule
of events will be required from every
fraternity.
IFC defines a rush as "any social
function where there is a rush list at
the door or no guest list of any kind."
Steve Haas, president of Alpha Tau
Omega fraternity, said his fraternity
is required by its national chapter to
sponsor year-round dry rushes.
"Complete dry rushes have not
hurt membership in my fraternity.
We had about 200 guys come out. Now
we have a pledge class of about 30
guys," Haas said.
John Lundy, chairman of IFC chapter programs, said several seminars
on liability will be held the week of
Oct. 27-31.
PunnStateSubShuns
TURK6V TUCSDRV
$1 off on 18" Turkey Sub
Offer eipires 9/16/86
Offer "only good luth coupon
DAILY SPECIALS —|
?
?
Zoning change could limit builders
An.amendment to the zoning ordinance definition of the word "building" would ensure at least 25 feet of
open space between each separate
structure in ' future group-housing
projects , Planning Commission
Chairman Roger Downs said last
night.
Downs told the State College Municipal Council that a loophole in the
definition allows a series of structures connected by a non-functional
roof — as opposed to functional covered walkways or porches — to be
considered a single building.
As a single building, the structure
is not subject to the section of the
zoning ordinance requiring at least 25
feet of space between individual
buildings in a group-housing project,
Downs said.
State College builder Ralph Way
told council the amendment would
limit creativity. The current definition , Way said, "lets architects and
developers use their imaginations to
do something a little bit better. "
Dennis Elpern, regional planning
director, said variances would proba-
Attention Senior Women
bly be allowed for unique designs or
lot shapes.
Council also decided unanimously
to endorse the Main Street Manager
program proposal of the Downtown
Business Association.
If the prpposal is approved by the
state, it would provide partial funding
over three years for the hiring of a
manager to coordinate downtown
promotions and the recruitment of
new DBA members. The remaining
funding would be provided by the
DBA.
by James A. Stewart
PizzaTT & The BREWERY
In the Colleges of Engineering Science,
and €arth and Mineral Sciences
Budweiser Bash
Week
Monday, Sept. 15-Monday, Sept. 22
f
+
A
35C Bud or Bud Light drafts all week
Bud door prizes nightly 9pm-lam
?
?
?
?
proudly team up to bring you
Unlimited
Deadline for the Society or Women engineers
1986-1987 Resume Book is
October 17th
THE GINGERBREAD MAN
presents
?I
Wednesday Night
?
10c Wing Special Sunday & Monday
9pm-lam
f or ONL Y 54
Don't Miss
Budweiser Bash Week at the
Gingerbread man!
Tuesday, Sept. 16 from 6-8 p.m.
Eight different brands of draft beer
ISO Heister St.
and ten different frzzsTT toppings
0198
Dance to the Music of
"Extended Play "
PIZZA & BEER
A pplications available 303 Hammond Bldg.
F00 is $2.00
R Great UUay to Have Vour Resume Sent to a
Large Technical Company
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237-0361 , 11a.m.-2 p.m.
f
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^
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Y
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^????????????< *
EDUCATION ABROAD PROGRAMS
is still accepting applications
for
FREE 16 01
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§ Pepsi®, Mountain Dew®, or Diet Pepsi®
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¦
with the purchase of your favorite
14" or 18" Bubba's Sub
237-7314
Expires 9/18/86
Open: 11 AM for Lunch
Till
2 AM at Night
FRI.-SAT. TIII 3 AM
FLENSBURG, WEST GERMANY
SPRING SEMESTER 1987
1
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5
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Study German intensively ia Germany
Deadline for app lication: September 30
Contact:
Education Abroad Programs
222 Boucke Building
¦
¦
Customer pays applicable sales tax
• not valid with any other coupon on same 5
¦
menu item
814-865-7681
PPIIP^
Education Abroad
f f l m m m'i¦- >>- ^^^ss ^^EtKStm
1987-88 Study A broad Programs
ACADEMIC YEAR. FALL SEMESTER.AND SPRING SEMESTERPROGRAMS
3ffi3£f%f^
Architecture (Florence,
Spring
Darmstadt, Petworth)
Lima, PERU
Spring
Manchester, ENGLAND
Yr/Spring
Athens, GREECE
Spring
Marburg, W. GERMANY
Year
Cairo, EGYPT
Yr/Spring
Nairobi, KENYA
Year
Canberra, AUSTRALIA
Spr/Year
Fa/Spring
Chichester, ENGLAND
Fa/Spring
Nice, FRANCE
Cologne, W. GERMANY
Spring
Osaka, JAPAN
Yr/Fall
Exeter, ENGLAND
Spring •
Rome, ITALY
Yr/Fa/Spr
Flensburg, W. GERMANY
Spring
Salamanca. SPAIN
Spring
Kiel, W. GERMANY
Yr/Spring
Sao Paulo, BRAZIL
Year
Kwaluseni, SWAZILAND
Year
Strasbourg FRANCE
Year
Leeds, ENGLAND
Yr/Fa/Spr
Taipei, TAIWAN
Fall
Leningrad, USSR
Yr/Fa/Spring
Tel A viv. ISRAEL
Yr/Fa/Spr
DEADLINES: Fall Semester and Year-long applications
Spring Semester applications:
October 15, 1986
• March 1.1987
For Further Inform ation and Applications, Contact
OFFICE OF EDUCA TION ABROAD PROGRAMS
222 BOUCKE BUILDING
UNIVERSITY PARK, PA 16802
TELEPHONE: (814) 865-7681
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SAHARA CLUB
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MICHAEL S CLOTHING CO
FRHSeR ST. & CRLD(ER UUHV
238-4050
OP€N DRILV UNTIL 5-30, THURSDRV St FRIDRV UNTIL 8:30
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