page 2 The campus community has the right to know about potential health hazards from radiation. This, in part, is the responsibility of the Capitol Campus Adminis tration. After the TMI accident in March, there was talk about purchasing radiation monitoring equipment in order to prepare the campus in the event of another radiation health hazard occurence. Since then, that’s all that has happened - talk. Radiation is permiating stor age areas on the Island. Conse quently, Met. Ed. will have to act before the end of this month. It is very likely that Med. Ed. will release radiation (into the Sus- letters to editor INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS ASSOCIATION On behalf of the lAA, I extend an additional welcome to the new and returning students of Capitol Campus. The lAA is an organization w\\ose members strive tor international awareness. Var ious activities are planned such as a trip to Washington D.C. on Oct. 6 for the Ameri can Folklife Festival; Interna tional Dinners where various international foods are served; movie festivals; guest speakers; American Colle giate Model United Nations; and the Capitol Campus Mod el United Nations where area high schools attend a three day conference on campus. We also desire to work with all the international stu dents and their organizations. If you have any questions or would like to join, you may leave a letter in the lAA mailbox in the SGA office, W-110, or contact Mike Sopata, 954-A Flickinger St., Meade Heights; or call 944- 1552. Sincerely, Michael V. Sopata President, lAA To All MDETs: This letter especially con cerns itself with the Junior class of Mechanical Engineer ing students. It is important now as a junior to come to grips with some realizations that affect yourself and your career. Aside from academics, developing professionalism is important. There are several c.C. READER OPINION Right to know delayed quehanna River and into the atmosphere) which may cause cancer and other diseases later in peoples lives. Uncertainty plagued the campus during the nuclear acci dent last spring. People here got conflicting reports and vague statements. It is a University’s responsi bility to do everything it its power to inform and protect its community. Purchasing and actively using radiation monitor ing equipment would be a positive step in the direction of the responsibility this university has to its members. Capitol Campus Administra tion must act now! Not even professional engineering soci eties available on campus that attempt to relate the stu dents’ studies with the real world. One often gains re spect for course work when one can relate. This is one big reason a professional associa tion is so important. Another reason one should choose to join is the immed iate benefits. Being a member of a professional organization appeals to employment re cruiters. But whatever reason you feel to be important, one thing is certain; being a mem ber of a professional organiza tion will help your career. It is for this reason that I recom mend that all incoming stu dents check out the clubs on campus and join one. The American Society of Mechanical Engineers is now in its fourth year at Capitol. Our society has sponsored tours to such places as GM, AMF-Harley Davidson, and Bethlehem Steel. We have invited several interesting speakers, including our own engineering staff. Social events have also been includ ed in our past activities. But what ASME has to offer student members can be summed up by saying that all the non-academic exposure to industry gained through ASME will undoubtedly lead to a greater professional a wareness. So don’t lose track of why you’re studying. Keep in touch with the industry. Applications for ASME membership can be obtained in W-262. Several activities have al ready been planned. Watch the bulletin boards for times and places. One final note: regardless of which association you Dr. Jerry South, Dean of Student Affairs, stressed last June that he and others took action to obtain radiation mon itoring equipment directly after the nuclear accident. He contacted Dr. Rodger Grulard, Health Physicist at U. Park, who recommended two Geiger counters and a docimeter. Soutn planned to meet with Dr. Duane Smith during the last week of the term last spring to determine if the budget request would be approved for the equip ment. If the budget proposal was choose to belong to, ASME wishes you luck in gaining all the knowledge and experience that each club has to offer. Martin Wasser Term 10 MDET Winsome After all the negative things written and said about Secur ity, this writer thought it would be a pleasant change to read something nice about the Security Officers. On Thur. Sept. 27, two officers were seen assisting a student open her car, after she locked her keys in it. lets some LOSS: The very next day they tick eted the same person !!!! Oh well, you win some, and you lose some. P.S. Thanks Ted, Charlene, and the Mystery Runner ed lyda baker exec bus man jeff kahl exec ad man david horn assoc ad bob manley s fitter ad man don karamer market research mike daskalokis news ed joan h klein feature ed susan girolomi sports ed tony gladfelter photog ed bob foster proof and copy ed slice coon proof and copy dorene morrow type rose dal ton cartoon joe horvath multi-talented writing “*•" jeff drinnan carol eveschOd char bojalad adrienne 1. zedaker shirley steven brace burns debbie morrow glenn williams robin Conner and the hand dedicated advisor dr. elizabeth winston trying to fulfill their responsibil ity (the obvious delay with the monitoring equipment) and keep ing the campus community in the dark is execrable! People responsible for this Open the doors injustice belong in the Nether World of the Inferno with the Counselors of Fraud and Falsifi ers. Humanity should take prec edence over the bureaucratic and material needs of a University. approved the campus was then to have purchased the monitoring equipment at the beginning of this term -- Fall, 1979. Mike Sheldon, President of SGA, told the C.C. Reader that John Taylor must initiate a bud get proposal in order for U. Park to consider the procuring of the equipment. After repeated visits to the Finance Office, Taylor was not available for comment. Nobody in the Finance office could shed any light on the budget report. They simply didn't recall any such thing. In the SGA meeting last Monday, The Senate voted ( one against, seven-for and two ab stentions), to hold a meeting today at 4:30 p.m., in rm. W-138, for the sole purpose of voting on budget allocations. With this vote, the Senate also declared that today’s meeting be closed to all non-senatorial people. The following editorial is di rected at the fact that the Senate cHoose to dose the doors. As an organization that is dedicated to informing students of campus events, activities and issues; the C.C. Reader finds the SGA’s decision to close its special meeting to non-senatorial people -ethically questionable. It is criminal enough when the National, State, City or Town Governments retreat behind closed doors. But, when this same governmental action oc curs within a University’s stu dent government organizaitoin, one feels the hope slip away. As an organization consisting of students, the C.C. Reader finds the SGA’s action a deliber ate and appalling slap in the face. Somehow, there seems to be no logical or rational connections between the SGA’s continuous and “sincere” concern for the students of this campus and the SGA’s sudden turning away of the non-senatorial students who have the right to know. We hope that the SGA made a hasty descision (perhaps the time was approching 5 p.m.?) and will continue with the fine sup port and representation it has, up until this this time, exhibited for the; and fling the doors wide open. c c reader