Behrend collegian. (Erie, Pa.) 1971-1988, December 14, 1984, Image 10

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    PAGE 10
SKN Rents House
(cont. from page 1)
three to four people in each. We’d
like to have a total of 25 brothers
live at the house.” The kitchen
Cocated on the second floor) and
the dining room (first floor) are
cleverly connected by a staircase.
A cook will be hired by SKN to
prepare three meals a day for the
brothers. There will be bathrooms
located on the first and second
floors and will be set up similar to
the ones in the residence halls with
several sinks, toilets, and showers
in each.
Payment for the room and
board will be handled in the same
way a residence hall student
would pay for his room and
board. Rent will be paid by each
member at the beginning of each
semester and a separate food bill
will be collected at the same time.
The utilities will be included in the
cost of the room and Fronko
adds, “Bush will charge us one
lump sum for rent which will in
clude all utilities and each member
will pay accordingly. Each room
has a telephone jack and is cable
ready, so the only extra charges
o^® to Me
(Home Worship Hfftfi Mb
OFF CAMPUS WORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES
Bus Transportation Available For 11:00 a.m. Services
Bus Leaves Reed 10:15 a.m. Sundays
MESSIAH LUTHERAN CHURCH ST. JAMES R.C. CHURCH
Eastern and Gray Avenue 2635 Buffalo Road
Wesleyville, Pa. Erie, Pa.
Phone 899-6386 Phone 899-6178
The Rev. Martin Roth, Pastor* The Rev. Robert W. Cohan, Pastor
Sundays 8:15 and 11:00 a.m. Sunday Masses 7:30,9:00
Sunday Church School 9:30 a.m. 10:00,11:00 a.m.
12:15,5:00 p.m.
WESLEYVILLE BAPTIST CHURCH WESLEY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Buffalo Road and Market Street 3306 South Street
Wesleyville, Pa. Wesleyville, Pa.
Phone 899-9243 Phone 899-3302
The Rev. George Schoonmaker, Pastor* The Rev. George Schmidt, Pastor
Sunday 11:00a.m. Sunday 8:15 and 11:00a.m.
Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Evening Fellowship 6:00 p.m.
EAST ERIE ASSEMBLY OF GOD
2653 Saltsman Rd.
Erie, Pa.
Phone 899-5247
The Rev. Cliff Hamilton, Pastor*
Sunday 11:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m.
Christian Education 10 a.m. to 11 a.m.
?ON CAMPUS WORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES
ROMAN CATHOLIC MASS
With The Rev. Ron Toven* (Fr. Ron)
Saturdays, 5:30 p.m.
R.U.B. Student Lounge
PENN STATE-BEHREND CAMPUS MINISTRY
'Participating Campus Ministry Office Clergy
FEATURE
would be a monthly telephone and
cable bill.”
House rules will be set up, en
forced, and listed in the contract
to be signed by each SKN
member. Fronko comments,
“The SKN house will be set up
like a democratic family. SKN
members will get together to set
house rules in a democratic
fashion. Once the rules are
adopted they will be enforced by
officers in a family-like style; a
father to brother type of relation
ship.”
At the beginning of next
semester SKN will be rushing for
pledges to the fraternity and
anyone interested can sign up in
the activities office located in the
Office of Student Affairs. The
pledging period lasts for a full
semester and concludes with
Pledge Awareness Week and the
induction into the fraternity.
“I’m happy to see the progress
SKN has shown since it was form
ed two years ago,” said Fronko.
“The support we’ve been given by
everyone including the ad
ministration has been great and
I’m confident that SKN will con-
THE COLLEGIAN
Ifl .
This house, located at the corner of Shannon and Cooper Roads will be the fall-time residence of Sigm:
Kappa Nu next fall.
tinue to grow long after the cur
rent members and I have left
Behrend.”
s .
r
Ordinarily, if you tell a college
student that “home is where the
heart is,” they would look at you
straight-faced and say, “No,
home is where the food is.”
However, with the Christmas and
Hannukah season approaching,
references made about going
home become more endearing as
finals pass by.
The Christmas and Hannukah
season allows students to express
the desire or need to be with their
families. Home is not just a tangi
ble dwelling. Home means many
different things to each in
dividual. And although it doesn’t
mean the same to everyone, home
is just as important to all of us. Of
course, there are those of us who
have to go back to just a “house”
for Winter Break.
A house is that place that »'s
there when we show up, but no
more than a protection from the
elements. A home, on the other
hand, can be anywhere from a
20-room mansion to a four-room
apartment. It’s not the shape or
size of the dwelling - it’s what’s in
it and what it means.
Home is more than shelter;
Home is memories;
Home is where the family is - no
matter if you are an only child, or
one of many.
Home is where you
grow up.
Home never seems empty, even
when nobody’s home.
Home is comfortable.
Home, no matter how “lived
in,” is always better than a stark,
”7^• '.'J'
ip? ✓•-
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by Lisa Pavadore
Collegian Feature Editor
museum-type building.
Home is many times the one
aspect of your life that never
changes as you change and grow.
The best thing about home is
that it’s always there to welcome
you back no matter how far away
you go, or how long you’re gone.
I feel bad for those who are go
ing back to their “house” for
Winter Break. After four months,
I’m going home.
finally
DECEMBER 14, 19&