Page 4 November 29, 1984 The Capitol Times Campus Forum Sunday closing halts research It's Sunday afternoon after the all-too-short Thanksgiv ing break and there are only two weeks left until all of those research projects are due. So, as a campus resident, why not come back early enough to do some last-minute research before writing those papers? After getting the already compiled notes together, it's time for the long journey to the library. However, when you get there, you are in for a big surprise. The library is closed! Yes, you're saying, but the library was open on Friday. That's right, the day that most campus residents were spen ding time hours away from Capitol Campus, they could have been working on their research papers. Instead, everyone who figured that the work in the library can be done on Sun day after returning was in for a big surprise. Upon further investigation of the situation, it was discovered that the computer center in the Olmsted Building was operating on its normal Sunday evening schedule. If a service that serves a limited group of people can be open, why can't the library at least open in the evening? The dorms did not even open until Sunday afternoon, so many of the resident students were forced to stay away until then. The problem is not that the library was open on Friday; at least the commuting students had the opportunity to do research. But, is the library that badly understaffed that no student workers were available to work that one Sunday evening? Hypothetically, if you had a paper due on Monday mor ning at 8 a.m. and needed the date of a magazine article from the library, breaking and entering would have been the only way to get the information. The mighty institution known as Penn State, once again, has shown its might. Yet, this time it could prove to be a bad reflection on the grade of one of your papers. -Don Strausburger Capitol Times Published by students of Penn State's Capitol Campus, Middletown, Pa. 17057 The Capitol Times welcomes letters from readers. Letters intended for publica tion must be signed by the author and in dicate his/her club or organizational af filiation, if any. The Capitol Times reserves the right to edit or reject letters at its discretion. Letters published do not necessarily reflect the views of this newspaper or its staff. Tony Perry Editor-in-chief Neil Myers Co-Editor Jeffrey Shatzer Production Mgr. Jeffrey Keck Business Mgr. James Ferguson.... Advertising Mgr. Mike Dudek Graphic Artist Beverly Halbrook Sales Rep. Don Strausburger Sr. Reporter/ Reviews Editor Catherine Madigan Briefs Editor Janice Shatzer Composer Lisa Mauss Photographer Bob Price Rob Saylor Photographer Kathleen Heraghty Production Assistant Thursday, Nov. 29, 1984 Vol. 19, No. 6 Contributing Staff Annette Childs Mark Edquid Beth Horne Fran Hultzapple Michelle Lackey Joseph L. Michalsky Ken Stiggers Angelo Vecchio Adviser Mark S. Guralnick Photographer Printed at the Press and Journal, Mid dletown. Text disks processed Jednota Printery, Middletown. Nuclear debate deserves attention To the Editor It was interesting to see the response of the SGA here on campus to HACC's recent deci sion to attempt a stockpiling of cyanide pills on campus. Cer tainly this had some shock value and is not a preventative response to nuclear war, but it does show some effort to rise above apathy. The student government here at Capitol, in their recent state ment published in The Capitol Times, suggests that they might hold a forum on the issue of the nuclear arms race. First of all, it was unfortunate that such a forum could not have been held prior to the elections since the degree of nuclear proliferation will increase or decrease accor ding to the candidate chosen. (Letter was submitted before election day -- Ed.) Drunk drivers: a brother's anguish Dear Capitol Campus Penn Stater:. You don't realize it but you loving, happy adult who had so came mighty close to having a willingly helped with the soccer few of your front teeth loosen- team fund raising and the band ed the other day. You were . parent functions. laughing at the time, so you And yes, your Penn State didn't notice anything threaten- classmate misses him too. After ing but it was there. all, he was a pretty neat guy, You were in the library and even for a little brother -- on all you were laghing with friends those sports teams and so well and telling them about how liked by his classmates. So you'd been arrested -- for the when you were busy laughing second time -- for drunk driv- and telling your friends about ing. Ha! Ha! It was a big joke. that second DUI arrest -- well, But you see the fellow stu- it was all he could do to clench dent who overheard you lost his his fists until the knuckles turn little brother to a drunk driver. ed white and walk away. He was only 15 when the drunk So you drink. If that's how driver hit him as he stood on a you handle the stresses of being bridge, flipped him into the a college student, that's your river, and left him to die. Your business. But if drink and then fellow student knows what it's drive, That's Everybody's like to be in the family of a Business. drunk driver's victim. His mom You have never, as one near got so much older overnight,it by PSU graduate did, held your Indian leader mourned To the Editor, been thrown into bloody tur moil. The foolishness of the fanatic mind is apparent when one sees the situation created in India by the death of Mrs. Gan dhi; a few more dead Sikhs, a few dead Hindus and the clam ping of a curfew throughout most of the nation. If this was the intention of the killers, much can be said about their motives. The recent murder of Indira Gandhi is a sad incident. Tragic as it is for India, it also sends a message to the rest of the world. No, we're not speaking of the economic effects or the political ramifications. We're talking about the violent act itself. This killing is symbolic of the pathological spread of violence by extremists and fanatics. Ter rorists, hiding behind the skirt of religion or any other cause, have no place in any country in the world. Again and again, we have paid dearly for their senseless murders. This time, India has lost a very capable and seasoned leader and has Letters to the Editor: Second of all, such an educa tional endeavor was tried by outside interests approximately a year and a half ago. The Nuclear Freeze group came to Capitol to talk to students about the issue of nuclear war, and only a small handful of students turned out. Certainly the population which turned out for that was less than that which [had been] anticipated for such events as a Buns and Legs Contest or a Toga Party. They get more advertisement than the issue of nuclear war. Perhaps HACC's response was dramatic and negative, but so are the issues. The SGA points out that the "very idea of suicide stands in direct op position to generally accepted western traditions of morali ty." It is truly unfortunate that mutual destruction does not; it seems to fit nicely with both western and eastern morality. seemed, and she was so quiet and remote; no longer the fun- More than anger, we feel a pity toward these extremists because they don't realize how much harm they've caused to Hindus and Sikhs alike and how much farther they are from their goals. That can be changed, not by making small statements, but by drawing attention to the issue and making efforts to arouse public consciousness. If the SGA hopes to do this it must first impress on students the imminent reality of nuclear war, before the bombs fall, and before people would rather commit suicide than live with the pains of worldwide destruc tion and individual emotional and physical trauma. The SGA must help get students in terested in wanting to attend forums on these issues. That has to be the first step. Maybe it takes some kind of crisis or shock to get people talking. Perhaps that is what HACC accomplished. big sister's hand while she came out of anesthesia from the fourth kidney operation. That was after the doctors decided they could no longer save it following the collision when the drunk driver in a pickup hit her head on, on her side of the road. If someone jostles the ankle with the six permanent steel pins in it, or the other leg where the three knee operations in cluded a ligament transplant, then all of the doctors' careful work can be undone in a se cond. And thee's no way those legs can be repaired again to keep her walking. So they're making a big deal out of drunk driving. So what! Those crashes always happen to someone else. That's what John Heim thought, until his drink ing companion and driver ran into a concrete wall and killed himself. John? Why John's about your age, but he'll live out the rest of his life in a nur sing home with a bunch of old folks across the Susquehanna River, unable to feed himself or control his body functions. Actually, statistics show that one out of every two of us around right now will have our lives permanently effected by a drunk driver in the next 15 - 20 years -- and those effects are never for the better. Your chances are just about even right now -- 50/50 That unless folks start to change their attitude about driving drunk -- You could be the Vic tim of a drunk driver pretty soon. Now wouldn't that be funny! A Penn State Capitol Campus Graduate Anand Bhatt Ghan Desai Patricia Kishpaugh, Graduate Student, Education