page 4- The Behrend College Beacon. Thursday, September 3, 1998 The Behrend College Beacon published weekly by the students of Penn State Erie, The Behrend College News Editor Will Jordan Photography Editor Andrea Zaino Business Manager Jaime Davis Advisors Robert Speel Jim O'Loughlin Postal !,formation: The Beacon is published weekly by the students of Penn State Erie, The Behrend College; First Floor, The J. Elmer Reed Union Building, Station Road, Erie, PA 16563. The Beacon can be reached by calling (814) 898-6488 or (814) 898-6019 (FAX). ISSN 1071- QIRR Behrend's fiftieth anniversary celebration a success Behrend's fiftieth anniversary cel ebration was a very well thought out event. It managed to include almost every part of the university, past and present. It provided activities for stu dents, which not unexpectedly, were not as well attended as they could have been. However, there was a good turnout for the bands on Friday night, and most students seemed to have en joyed themselves. Behrend also thanked its friends and benefactors on Saturday night with a dinner and speaker. This event did include a few students and was quite successful. Housing and Food turned out a meal that we didn't think it capable of, and Bruno's looked well for the occasion. Each participant in that celebration received a copy of "Behrend Remembered" by Ben Lane and also were able to taste the Be- The Behrend Review H A call for Clinton's resignation On January 26, 1998, President Bill Clinton publicly stated: "I did not have sexual relations with that woman, Miss Lewinsky." Then nearly six months later on August 17th, the President stated in a nationally televised address: "I did have a relationship with Miss Lewinsky that was not appropriate." Thus implying that he had had a sexual relationship with Monica Lewinsky and that he had told a direct lie to the American people to cover himself. Now the issue of whether or not Bill Clinton had a sexual relationship with Monica Lewinsky is insignificant. However, what is significant is that he may have lied about it under oath, and he lied about it to the American people. A little over thirty-six hours after Clinton's address the United States attacked terrorist targets in Afghanistan and the Sudan, in what was said to be a response to the recent bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. And not soon thereafter several reporters and politicians alike were questioning whether the timing for the attack was orchestrated in advance to divert attention away from the President's sexual misconduct. Thus the so-called "Wag the Dog" scenario taken from a motion picture of the same name about a fictional U.S. President who starts a war with Albania to divert attention away from his own sex scandal. U.S. Senator Dan Coats, a Republican from Indiana, stated in his response to the attack, "that once a President loses credibility with the Congress, as this President has, through months of lies and deceit and manipulations and deceptions, stonewalling, it raises into doubt everything he does and maybe everything he doesn't do and doesn't say." Now under normal circumstances remarks similar to that Editor in Chief Anne Rajorte Managing Editor Ayodele Jones Associate Editor Mark Greenbank ' • Features Editor Jon Stubbs Layout Editor Mike Perkins Advertising Managers Erin Edinger Carey Smith Letter Policy: The Beacon encourages letters io the editor. Letters should include the address, phone number, semester standing and major of the writer. Writers can mail their letters to bihrcoll24aol.com. Letters must be received no later than spm Tuesday for inclusion in that week'c iccite hrend Berry ice cream. It is to be ex pected that the benefactors of a col-, lege are to be treated well when they visit, and they certainly received an , enjoyable evening in return tar their continued interest m Behrend. Finally on Sunday, faculty, staff and students all had the opportunity to hear Michael Peschlois speak. Michael Beschloss has been on the news quite frequently, recently com menting on Clinton's presidency, and Behrend was fortunate to have such a speaker present fo(their anniversary. Behrend's fiftieth anniversary is a time to look back on how far Behrend has come in the 'filty short years it has been in existence. If it weren't for the generosity of the Behrends, thousands of students would not have had the opportunity to attend such a unique school. of Senator Coats could toe, dismissed as partisan rhdtoric. However the circumstances are not normal. The president has admitted on national television that he "mislead people." So the question is, can we still trust President Clinton? No! Unforttinately no, we as American citizens can no longer trust in what our Presiderir "does" or "says," "doesn't. do"Or "doesn't say." We know he has lied to us once. Has he lied to us before or will he lie to us again? There is an old saying that once someone d o e sr something once, it is much easier to do it a second, third or fourth time. However, President Clinton is indicted by special Prosecutor Ken Star on charges of perjury, he should not be impeached by Congress. Under Article 11, Section 4 of the U.S. Constitution: "The President, yico'PregiOnt and civil officers of the United States shall be removed froth Office , on Impeachment for , ConviCtiOn of, Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors." However I don't feel that lying in a civil suit, that was later dismissed, exactly qualifies as "high Crimes and Misdemeanors." If the President were to be impeaCbed on these charges, it would set 'a dangerous reiriTh Overenrollment causing crowded campus Walk into Bruno's at about noon an any given weekday and you will find possibly one of the most crowded spots in Northwest Pennsylvania. Is it because of the delicious food? Prob ably not. The low prices? At ninety nine cents for a bagel, surely not. Sim ply, it is because there is no other choice. On-campus students can go to Dobbins, but for commuters, Bruno's is the only place to get something to eat on campus. The reason for the extreme over crowding is the ever increasing enroll ment at Behrend. While the rising stu dent population is beneficial in some ways, many students are starting to feel a little crowded. Parking is so tight that Polio!. and Safety ran out of parking passes before the second day of classes endod. Students are more RLES TESTRA precedent in which it would be easier for Congress to impeach future Presidents on trumped up charges, solely because they happen to disagree with their policies. The only honorable thing Bill Clinton can do to restore some remnants of his credibility is to resign from the office of the Presidency. By doing that he would prove himself a bigger man than he has thus far demonstrated in the last several months and possibly save this nation the strain of a long and drawn out impeachment hearing. However a man who would cheat on his wife with a girl only a few years older than his daughter, then lie about it under oath, lie about it to his family, and lie about it to the American people probably does not have the personal conviction to voluntarily give up the most powerful office in the world. Test rake is a political science major. The Behrend Review will appear ev ery 3 weeks in The Beacon. Editorial and more often having to park in the options. Students wait in 15 minute lot next to the Police and Safety build- lines for a sub because they have to. ing, which is quite a walk for those in Students are willing to be herded like cattle through the various lines in How is the administration expecting to handle two more residence halls without expanding the dining hall? the suites and apartments. However, nowhere is the crunch felt more than in the dining halls. Dobbins has a line that wraps its way around the salad bar during dinner hours. Bruno's barely has enough tables to accom modate all of the students and those lines are getting longer and longer. It is simply not pleasant to he in Dobbins or Bruno's during lunch or dinner time, but there are few other Why is college tuition rising? By Denis Horgan The Hartford Courant Those "Night of the Living Dead" types you see Boris Karloffing around are not actually people who have been paying too much attention to the news, (Whatever happened to the "Dog Days of August"? The Good Old Days.) No, the zombies are mostly stunned people who have just written their college tuition checks. You could think, out of a sense of solidarity, that when the kids finish up college you'd fling yourself down the cellar steps a few times as autumn approaches just to bring back the ex quisite sensation of paying college tuition Consider For the price of a year at a private college you can buy a top of the line, spiffy Toyota Camry without having to haggle over the pinstriping. The car will last a decade, but with college, you get to do it again 12 short months later. Like those cute Beetles that are back on the streets? They're not cheap but you could get two of them for nine months at one of the more pricey Dobbins because there is nowhere else to eat. Construction is already underway on a new residence hall, and yet an other one is planned after that. How ever, there has been no talk of a new dining hall. How is the administration expecting to handle two more resi dence halls without expanding the dining hall? The problem has already grown out of control. There are twelve c ;.-• - Q •,`? • schools You can go all the way around the world in high style, no hostels or steer age travel, for a single semester's college cost. You could spend a month on safari and have enough left over to buy a small elephant with what it costs to buy off the extortionists at good old Big Bucks U. For what you pay for the young scholar's educational keep for a mea sly month, you could fly the entire family to Paris and back or buy a whole living room's worth of furni ture. Nice furniture. Send the brilliant young heir to the state school and you'll only be paying the equiva lent of a family's food budget for half his university sentence. A week of college time at one of the grander emporiums will cost what a pin stripe lawyer pays for a serious suit at Brooks Brothers or for a Waterford crystal setting for 10. A day of Boola Boola stands for what a snazzy meal costs at the very best restau rant, four stars, where they put out more than one fork; and while you can only eat so many meals, the meter ticks re lentlessly on the college calendar. An hour of university lectures will set you back what you'd pay for an NFL game, if you could get even a cheap seat. Turning it around, the average po liceman or fireman could work from one end of the year to the next and barely take home enough to send a child to party away his or her time for a college year -- a year with more vacation gaps in it than there is in a 5-year-old's smile. If the police officer has the audacity to eat or live under a hundred new first year students this year, which is a definite increase from last year. If the school keeps growing at this rate, this problem will also keep growing. This problem has been brought up in the past and solutions have been suggested. For example, it was sug gested that Dobbins be open extended hours, the way Bruno's is. This may help to alleviate the problem some what, but it will not change the hours that most students prefer to eat their meals. Bringing an additional four hundred people on this campus surely calls for a reevaluation of the dining situation. For now, students just have to fight the crowds. Rajotte is editor in chief of The Bea con. One Flew Over the Albatross' Nest will appear every 3 weeks. roof during this time, there isn't enough left to feed the even hungrier college machine without loans. Maybe you can afford to pay $6O-an hour for each class, but most folks can't. While most of us wonder where all that money will ever come from, there are some others who wonder where it all goes. Provisions to the Higher Education Act poke around in the Congress which would compel the colleges and universities to explain in some detail why costs have risen like mercury in the Sahara, even while the rest of the economy is almost under control. Good luck While even the Defense Depart ment -- yes, even the Defense Depart ment -- has to strive for economies and explain a lot to cranky taxpayers, colleges and universities get away with the old sleight of hand wherein we are never able to find out under which shell the pea might be. Where everyone else has to tighten the belt, college costs rise at merely double everyone else's rate. Why? Because people will pay for it. All that malarkey they teach in those col leges about supply and demand does not seem to apply to those colleges. We have long been advised that the skinnying up of the college-age popu lation from the depleted Boomers would create a buyers' market favor ing the student and his poor parents. Right. It is actually worse than before for the saps in the middle, those caught between the wealthy who don't care what it costs and the worthy poor who are helped along with aid unavailable to the rest. (In fact, there should be some consideration allowing the middle class to declare future poverty since the thump of tuition will wreck the savings of all but a Vanderbilt.) Beyond a bit of theatrical cluck clucking, the colleges don't care. They'll charge whatever they want and anyone troubled by the illogic can pay extra for an answer -- which somehow never comes anyway. There's an education in that some place.