C.C. reader. ([Middletown, Pa.]) 1973-1982, February 21, 1974, Image 4

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    Recreation
Recreation/Athletics Buildings room
is open Monday thru l- from
8 a.m. to 10 p.m. and 1 'uin.
from 2 p.m. to 10 p.m iu. , our
convenience.
There is a Weight Room which
provides weights, barbells, jump
ropes and a universal gym for
keeping physically fit.
Also, the Fitness Room is
equipped with rowing machines,
wrestling wheel, stall bars, chinning
bar, mini gym, and chest pulley
weights. There is a ping pong table
set up in the Fitness Room -- so,
challenge your partner -- stop by and
enjoy a fast game of ping pong. You
may also want to spend some time
using the shoulder wheel or the wrist
wheel.
The Mat Room may be used for
your own free exercise time. Shower
rooms are available for your
convenience.
The Equipment Room stores
various items which are available to
you for check out upon presentation
of your ID card. Items include:
tennis racquets and balls; softball
bats and balls; footballs; volley balls;
basket balls; golf clubs; bicycles;
medicine balls; Everything is for use
by male and female
no discrimination between the sexes.
Come on out girls and do your thing
tool!
** * *
SLIMNASTICS
Classes are held every Tuesday
evening, beginning at 7:30 in the Mat
Room, Rec/Ath. Bldg. This program
is available to all campus personnel
and there is no registration fee.
Foul Balls
Brotherhood
SOCCER CLUB Meat City
The Soccer Club will hold a Crimson Tide
meeting Thursday, February 21 at p at p atro |
4:30 p.m. in the Recreation / Boeshore's Spacemen
Athletics Building. PLEASE PLAN Group Therapy
TO ATTEND ! This is a very _
„ . .. Space Cowboys
important meeting. K
Little Rascals
MARTIAL ARTS Fac-Staff
Are now being held every Monday EX G I's
and Thursday evenings Horn 7.30 ‘‘
p.m. to 9 p.m. in the Rec/Ath. Bldg. ....
Six members of the Capitol Feb. 8& 9. I hose attending were:
Campus Bowling League attended the RON SCHEIB, MURRAY SHARP,
Association of College Union MIKE ZAYAKOSKY, PAUL
Tournament, Region 4, College Park, HEINTZMAN, JOHN YEE and JIM
Maryland with Mr. Reuben M. HERBST. Following are the results
Smitley on Friday and Saturday, of the bowling tournament:
Total for all 3 events for individuals
Murray Sharp
Mike Zayakosky
Paul Heintzman
John Yee
Jim Herbst
Ron Scheib
BOWLING RESULTS - Wednesday Feb. 13, 74
1. Keglers
2. No Names
3. "IT"!
4. New Names
5. Kozaks
Remainders
XGl's
NADS
Leftovers
ITE
Spoilers
Dinkledorfs
1. No Names (3) ■ NADS (1)
2. New Names (4) - "IT"! (0)
3. Remainders (2 1/2) ■ XGI'S ( 1 1/2)
4. Kozaks (1) • ITE (3)
5. Keglers (3) - Leftovers (1)
6. Dinkledorfs ■ Spoilers
500 CLUB (MEN)
J. Pruzinsky ( No Names) 506
M. Sharp (No Names ) 536
F Golembeski (NADS) 536
B. Nyszczot (New Names) 534
R. Szczvrowski (XGI'S) 527
J. Herbst (Keglers) 530
MEN'S INDIVIDUALS
H.A. Jim Herbst 185
H.S. Mike Vitale 557
H.G. Brent Cohen 234
Make - up week MUST be made up no later than the Eighth Week
February 21, 1974
Athletics
The Baseball club will meet on
Wednesday, February 27 at 2:00
p.m. in the Recreation / Athletics
Building. Everyone interested in
joining the baseball team should be
present at this time. Also, the club
fee is $5.00 will be payable at this
meeting.
JUDO CLUB
Meets every Wednesday afternoon
at 1 p.m. in the Rec/Ath. Bldg.
WEDS. FEB. 13:
Crimson Tide - 40
Brotherhood - 34
Foul Balls - 28
Space Cowboys - 12
THURS. FEB. 14
Fac-Staff - 32
P.S.E.A. - 25
Rat Patrol - 39
Little Rascals - 21
Meat City - 41
Boeshore's Spacemen - 37
EX G.l.'s - 62
P.S.E.A. - 58
Group therapy - 34
Fac-Staff - 27
Meat City - 27
Easy Rollers - 26
TEAM STANDINGS TO DATE
Easy Rollers
BOWLING
Team Doubles Indiv
499
479
529
567
544
508
549
501
525
570
High Individual Games
John Yee
Jim Herbst
LOST PERCENTAGE
12 1/2
12 1/2
13
14
15
200 CLUB
J. Pruzinsky 202
B. Nyszczot 212
WOMEN'S INDIVIDUALS
H.A. Barb Keeler 129
H.S. Trudy Drake 480
H.G. Phyllis Mashman 160
BASEBALL CLUB
IM Basketball
7 0
7 1
6 2
5 2
4 2
4 3
4 4
3 5
3 5
3 5
2 6
1 7
490 = 1497
462 = 1490
444 = 1474
443= 1535
530 = 1644
214
212, 200
C.C. Reader
our greatest energy
from Pagfi 1
acceptance will come but there
are signs that it will occur in the
late 1970’5. For already some
firms are building apartments
with solar systems for recycling
sewage and water and a few
schools are employing solar
energy.
Reprinted, with permission,
from The Washington Post.
National Engineers Week
By Sarah Booth Conroy
Some engineers have said for
years that if you could insulate
your house well enough, you
could heat it with the BTUs
generated by the children
running up and down the stairs.
The National Bureau of
Standards Center for Building
Technology in Gaithersburg,
Maryland, hasn’t tried to
document this maxim, but it has
run a series of tests on a 1,200
square-foot, four-bedroom house
to document all the other old
tried-and-true cliches.
The NBS research
documented what everybody
who cares has known all along:
proper insulation and weather
stripping can save up to 55
percent on heating costs.
However, testing in the NBS
environmental chamber made
the facts seem so strong. Dr.
James Hill, the Center for
Building Technology’s
mechanical engineer, who
conducted the tests was inspired
to spend Thanksgiving Day
beefing up insulation in his own
attic to six inches. The tests also
helped settle a long-standing
argument among experts: Does
it save fuel to set back the
thermostat when you go to bed
at night, or does the extra heat
needed in the morning negate
the saving?
According to Dr. Hill, the
tests showed that in an
uninsulated house, the largest
percentage of heat loss is
through the roof, walls and what
NBS calls “infiltration,” but
which most people would think
of as drafts. When a house is
properly insulated, infiltration
becomes the biggest factor i n
residual heat loss.
Dr. Roberts said windows are
READER CLASSIFIEDS
For Sale
FOR SALE: One Dunlop Gold
Seal 560-14 White-wall tires. Also tail
light lenses for Pre 1970 MGB. RCA
two speed Portable Tape Recorder
for $2O. See A. Frame at 825 B
Nelson Ave.
Expert auto repairs. All makes and
models, foreign and domestic. Expert
motorcycle repairs, also. All work
guaranteed. Contact Ed at 8468
Kirtland Ave. in the Heights, or call
944-0532, reasonable prices.
Capitol Campus Chess Club meets
Wednesday noons in the
Gallery/Lounge. Everyone: Faculty,
staff, students are invited to learn to
play. Play to Learn.
12' x 70' mobile home - three bed
- can be had by taking over payments
- $102.00 a month. No furniture.
Must be removed from the premises.
Call 534-2046 after 4:00 p.m.
Wanted
WANTED: Believers in Satanism
''Serious'' - no fakes. Contact Carl
944-1556. Witches need not answer.
resource
a major factor with large glass
areas accounting for 20 to 30
percent of the energy load
because single pane glass
transmits heat (summer and
winter) at five to ten times the
rate of well-insulated walls.
“The way in which a building
is oriented can have a major
effect on cooling requirements,”
Roberts also said. “Considering a
long narrow building with
windows over 50 percent of its
area, placement with concern for
solar heating can reduce the
cooling load by 30 percent...
Even as simple a thing as using
trees for shade can reduce
energy requirements by a
significant degree.”
Dr. Roberts said his test
house results showed that not
only should the basic shell be
well insulated, but the hot water
system water pipes and air
conditioning ducts as well.
“Reducing the heat transmission
of present buildings by 10
percent and of all new buildings
by 50 percent could save up to
$lOO billion in fuel costs over
the next 20 vears.
Lights and appliances use a
great deal of energy, Dr. Roberts
also noted. “Studies made by
NBS and others show that for
the same size house with the
same appliances, the energy
consumption of one could be
twice that of the other because
of the way lights and applicances
are used and in the way doors,
windows and heating and
cooling equipment are operaed.”
Reprinted from the
Washington Post.
** * *
National Engineers Week
University Park, Dec. -- The
“energy crisis” is helping
engineering graduates to receive
more and higher paying jobs,
says Dr. Nunzio J. Palladino,
dean of the College of
Engineering at The Pennsylvania
State University.
“Engineering skills are vital if
we are to find a way out of the
maze of problems which has
been created by the energy
shortage,” he says.
And this helps to explain why
job offers for engineering
graduates are skyrocketing.
A survey by the College
HEADS WANTED - If you are
interested in meeting with other
beings from the same planet or just
want to rap, come to the Head Shop
meeting at the Middle Earth every
Monday night at 7:30.
Students for Student Security
Force - Male or Female - Must be
over 18 (no Problem) and have
driver's license (Pa. preferred). Apply
with Peg O'Hara in Placement
Building or call 787-7734. Operation
starts this Spring Term.
Services
TV repairs, will make
house calls, guarentee service, very
reasonable. Call John at 944*3078 or
925 B Flickenger.
Rug shampooers for rent - special
discounts to Penn State student:, VV 'th
IDI Call 944-4262 ask for Tom.
Personals
Nice to have you back. Thanks.
page four
Placement Council shows that
employment offers for males
with a bachelor’s degree in
engineering jumped by 83
percent during 1972-73, while
women received 94 percent
more offers than in 1971-72.
Despite the larger number of
graduates in 1972-73 who
wanted jobs, reports John
Alden, executive secretary of the
Engineering Manpower
Commission of the Engineers’
Joint Council, the recruiting
competition was stronger and
there were more than enough
job openings for engineering
graduates seeking employment.
Also, further demand by
employers resulted in a wider
range of choice for the most
sought-after graduates, Alden
says.
Women in engineering seem
to be doing quite well, according
to surveys, and the College
Placement Council reports that
the average salary offer for
women, $936 per month, was
slightly higher than for men,
$929 per month, in competition
areas such as engineering, but
was lower than men’s in other
areas.
“Not only is there more
acceptance of women as
engineers today, but there has
also been a change in women,
themselves ,” says Dean
Palladino. “There’re becoming
less timid about entering what
has for a long time been
considered a man’s profession.”
** * •
Remember When
How is the gas in Rhode Island
and who said that you are not much
of a Valentine?
Don't forget to buy another can
of whipped cream - wrong?
Two women looking for peace of
mind - contact Lisa and Charlie in
W-104.
Welcome back - friend,
Bold hair cut looks just fine.
C.C. Reader people are crazy!
Two days is such a long time and I
still did not get any sleep.
Just how can I tell you?
Wanted a burnt cookie from C.M.
Wanted one female-must cook,
sew, clean, and appreciate a warm
bed. Call third floor Church. Ask for
room 302.
Lost* and Found
Check it out in 114,