Page Four Preregistration Schedule PREREGISTRATION FOR SUMMER TERM AT BEHREND Students planning to attend daytime courses at Behrend during the summer should see their advisor during the two-week preregistration period, May 6-17. All that is required is a No. 2 card, completed and signed by the advisor, which is to be brought by the student to Sum mer registration. Registration for Summer courses will be Wed nesday, June 5, from 6-9 p.m. in the Reed Union Building (2nd floor). PREREGISTRATION FOR FAIL TERM AT BEHREND We ask that all students give particular attention to the ex planation of preregistration which is given in the chart below. Advising will begin Monday, Student Group See Advisor 7th Term and Above (As of Fall Term) Associate Degree (2-Bus, LAS, EET, MET) May 6,7,8 (M, Tu,W) College of Engineering May 6,7, 8 (M. Tu, W) College of Science May 6,7, 8 (M, Tu, W) - College of Earth & Min. Sc. May 6,7, 8 (M, Tu, W) Division of Undergraduate Studies College of Agriculture May 7,8, College of Business Admin. May 7,8, College of Education May 7,8, An Other Colleges Adjuncts Bloodmobile Needs Donors On Friday, May 17, the Bloodmobile from the Erie County Blood Bank will be soliciting donors on the Behrend Campus. The mobile unit will be stationed in the Reed Building parking lot and donors can come (without appointment) between the hours of 11:00 and 3:00. The need for blood is crucial: between five and six million pints are used annually in the United States and human donors are the only source of this life-giving substance. Fear and apathy seem to be the main reasons that stop people from giving blood (but let's not forget stupidity too) yet donating blood is a relatively simple procedure. The major requirements are that you be at least 18 years of age and have not taken any type of medication in the previous 24 hours (this meaning anything from a birth control pill to an aspirin). The entice procedure lasts no more than 45 minutes; most of which is spent completing preliminary information and medical history forms. The apparent apathy of Behrend students can be disproved only if concerned people volunteer to help. Blood is the food of life, and too many TERMPAPER AND THESIS RESEARCH FROM $2.50/ pg.- Monday-Friday 10:30.6 Saturday 11-4 Data Type and Research Servicei 2 Sylvan street, Rutherford N.J. 07070 (201) 933-6117 Patti's Pizza 1922 E. 38th St. 864-0715 FREE DELIVERY on Campus with a Minimum Purchase of $7.00 May 6. All students returning to Behrend in the Fall should meet with their advisor according to the schedule below. The materials prepared with the advisor should be brought to the Preregistration Station (old maintenance bkulding) on the assigned date (see chart) and turned in for processing. On the validation dates given, the student may pick up a copy of his schedule and indicate acceptance of the schedule by signing for it. This "validates" the schedule; if the student does not sign, the course cards being held for him will be returned for reassignment to someone else. The Preregistration Station will be open from 9:30 a.m. to 12 noon and from 1 p.m. - 3:30 p.m. Late preregistration will be accepted May 6, 7,8 (M,Tu,W) May 7,8,9 (Tu, W,Th) 9 (Tu, W, Th) 9 (Tu, W, Th) 9 (Tu, W, Th) MayB,9, 10 (W, Th, F ) All Adjuncts meet for advising Common Hour (3rd period) Tuesday, May 14, in Room 8, Nick Building. people, worldwide, are starving.- man class and JRC with assistance of Dr. Simmons and This bloodmobile visit is being Miss Sargent in planning and sponsored by CWENS, the Fresh- organizing. Talented Dance Troupe To Give Special Show THE KUJAWIAKI DANCERS will appear in the Harborcreek High School Auditorium on Saturday evening, May 11, 1974, at Bp.m. under the auspices of the Harborcreek Association for Music. This talented musical troupe is a dedicated group of young students devoted to entertain through the dance and music of their ancestral homeland, Poland. The students are from Alliance College in Cambridge Springs, Pa. This special performance at Harborcreek comes after the Kujawiaka have returned directly from appearances in Buffalo, Toronto and Chicago. The musical ensemble will have appeal to everyone who enjoys the dash, the color and ex citement of East European folk dance and songs. The KUJAWIAKI are dif ferent. . . they are fun. .. they Visit The Store That Rocks With Good Music Gear Superex Pioneer Pickering AR Teal Superscope Dual Technics Marantz Koss Yamaha Lafayette Memorex Panasonic Memco Sansui Mclntosh BSR Fisher Sony Shure Sanyo • Garraro JBL Philips ERIE'S LEADING INDUSTRIAL SiN i E n MA CE a lt Three Stores Open Evenings, Electronics To Serve You Sells More. . SUE OF- • 2631 W. Bth Because they MACE Electrimies. kw. • Liberty Plaza care more. • Meadville Mall at the Station and processed as received. All students, whether or not they have preregistered or validated a schedule. must attend registration before going to classes Fall Term. PREREGISTRATION FOR FALL TERM AT UNIVERSITY PARK Students who have been ap proved for change of assignment to University Park for Fall Term should obtain a preregistration form from the Academic Affairs Office (Administration Building) and complete it with their advisor during the two-week pre registration period, May 6-17. The form should be turned in to the Academic Affairs Office by Friday, May 17, at 5 pip. Preregister May 9 (Th ) May 9 (Th ) May 9 (Th ) May 9 (Th ) May 9 (Th ) May 10 (F) May 10 (F) May 10 (F) May 10 (F) May 13 (M) May 14 (Tu) appeal to everyone, young and old. Tickets may be purchased at the door the evening of the per formance, Saturday, May 11. Adults are $2.50 and admission for students and senior citizens is $l.OO. You are all welcome to attend. Get a Job this summer that means something. Win justice for America's farmworkers. United Farm Workers of Anierica (AFL-CIO) P.O. Box 62 Keene, Ca. 93531 c c - 71.4 Joe cis al so hiLel64 A Behrend Collegian Validate May 13, 14 (M, Tu) May 13, 14 (M, Tu) May 13, 14 (M, Tu) May 13, 14 (M, Tu) May 13, 14 (M, Tu) May 13, 14 (M, Tu) May 13, 14 (M, Tu) May 13,14 (M, Tu) May 13, 14 (M, Tu) May 16,17 (Th, F) May 16, 17 (Th, F) Students to Know When To Expect Financial Aid Rep. David S. Hayes (R-sth District, Western Erie Crawford) said today that since Governor Shapp has signed Senate Bill 573, PSU Tuition Hike Again Harrisburg (AP)-Another round of tuition increases from Penn State University students was projected Thursday by university president John W. Oswald. He told the House Appropriations Committee that for the 1974-75 school year, the university is planning to raise annual tuition $6O for students at University Park and $3O for students of Branch Campuses throughout the state. The boosts would raise total tuition for Pennsyvlania residents to $960 at University Park and $915 on Commonwealth Cam puses. Out-of-state students would pay $2,160 at University Park and $2,130 elsewhere. Temple and Pitt, the two other large state-related universities, plan to keep their general resident tuitions _at $1,050 and $l,OOO, respectively. The hikes at Penn State would be the seventh round in as many years. The legislature gave Penn State $87.1 million for the current fiscal year, which ends June 30. Governor Shapp has recom mended a $6.9 million boost for fiscal 1974-75 but Oswald told the House committee that it needs $3 million more than Shapp's proposal. May 9, 1974 now Act 50 of 1974, "thousands of higher education students will no longer be in doubt about what aid they will receive in the way of grants from the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency." Hayes said the Bill, which passed the House last week and had his full support, "requires the PHEAA to notify grant ap plicants by May Ist of each year as to what they will receive in aid from the State for the following semester. "No longer will these students and the school they attend-have to worry about State assistance just because a budget has not been passed. "This bill mandates that the State must appropriate at least as much money _ for grants to needy students as it did for the current fiscal year. This means that for the next fiscal year beginning July 1, 1974 there will automatically be over $64 million available for those grants. "Therefore", he added. "The State can easily notify students as to what they will receive for the coming school year well in ad vance of the new term." The Erie Lawmaker noted that in the past when the State had not passed a budget by the time school began in the fall, "both the students and the school were in a quandry as to how much would be available for the student. "In some cases the school billed the students and then had to make a refund once the money was ap propreated. "Now," Hayes added, "the school will know it will receive a specific amount of money for each student given a State grant. The student will know in May how much money he will need from other sources to meet his total school costs."