Capitol times. (Middletown, Pa.) 1982-2013, October 25, 1993, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    8 /FEATUIZESOctober 25,TAL TINM
1993
lIii':1!" . :',1
1 1. ) r )/ i Pi'.tj.01' ., 11N 1 I'il . ..:::11.,.il! . :...ii
......:,..„........:.,.::...,,H„.........,:.'..,....•.„,.,:.......„•.......-....•'.....:::.....:„'...'-....„....„-.....-.......
Monday, October 25
All Star Softball Game at 9:00 p.m
Tuesday, October 26
International Affairs Association will be
collecting donations for earthquake relief
India in the Main Lobby of the Olmsted
BLDG.
Trent Arterberry, mime, will appear in the
BCAC at 12:05 p.m.
There will be an SGA meeting at 12:30 p.m
in E-202.
Wednesday, October 27
Dr. Jerome Brightman, President of the Global
Marketing Institute, will be lecturing on,
"The Learning Organization and the People's
Republic of China," at 7 p.m., in the Olmsted
BLDG Auditorium.
Thursday, October 28
There will be a Humanities Open Forum in
the Gallery Lounge from 12:30 - 2 p.m.
Career Services Information meeting, room
E-244, 12:15 - 1:30 p.m.
Flu Vaccinations will be available to all
facutly, students, and employees of PSH.
There will be a $lO charge. The shots will be
given between 4 - 6 p.m. in W-102. For
more information, call Marylou Martz at
6015
A Symposium, "The Controversial Nude," will
be held in response to James Bostick's photo
exhibit in the Gallery Lounge from 6 - 9:30
p m.
CALLING ALL ACTORS, WRITERS, STAGE HANDS, AND PROP HELP!
---...."--
Auditions for "A Quartet of One Act Plays" to be performed in the Theatre
will be held:
f(...1\ (;3 i THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, FROM 4 P.M. TO 6' P.M.
MONDAY NOVEMBER 1 FROM 4 P.M. TO 6P. M.
1 $
IN
I THE THEATR4
No experience is necessary! Please join this exciting event!
CAPITALITE
IS SEEKING STAFF INTERESTED IN
THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS:
further information can be obtained
in the Student Activities Office
Room 212, Olmsted Bldg.
BE A MEMBER OF THE
CAPITALITE STAFF.
IT's FUN, REWARDING AND AN
EXCELLENT EXPERIENCE!
(YEARBOOK)
PHOTOGRAGHY
ADVERTISING
CREATIVE WRITING
LAYOUT
Thursday, October 28
WPSH will be holding a costume party in the
Dining Commons from 9:00 to midnight.
Friday, October 29
The preschool and pre-kindergarten classes
from the Child Care Center will be "trick or
treating" in the Olmsted BLDG from
9:45 - 10:45 a.m.
Professor Alex Aswad will be lecturing on,
"Manufacturing of Prefabricated Structures,"
in W-207 from 4 - 5:00 p.m.
Wednesday, November 3
Ludmilla Kuznetsova, assistant principal and
school teacher in St. Petersburg, Russia, will
be speaking about events in her homeland in
the BCAC at noon.
Thursday, November 4
Sample ethnic foods of Zambia at a
presentation by Uma Nadarajan from 12:00
1:00p.m. in the Gallery Lounge.
Friday, November 5
"Application of Micro Controllers in Data
Acquisition & Process Control," a lecture by
Prof. Hossein Heydari will be held in W-207
from 4 - 5:00 p.m.
Saturday, November 6
Fall International Dinner presented by
International Affairs Association at . 7:00 p.m.
in the Student Center of the CUB. Haliwa
Saponi, Native American Dance Group, will be
providing entertainment. Bring your
favorite international dish.
948-
MONDAY, OCTOBER 25 THRU DECEMBER 3
GRADUATE AND UNDERGRADUATE
sCHE,DU ~.„...„: E„ R . „...F-....0R UNDERGRA D UATES
MAJOR
28 -
80 Credits Completed
Ind sin. _ll 1993
27 or less
Information Systems, Management, Marketing I Oct n M Nov 3 W
Finance, Professional Accountancy I Oct 26 T Nov 4 Th
American Studies, Communications, General Humanities,
Humanities/Business, Literature, Secondary Education/English Oct 27 W Nov 5 F
Applied Behavioral Science, General Social Science,
Psychology, Secondary Education Social Studies, Sociology,
Elementary Education, Criminal Justice, Public Policy Oct 28 Th Nov 8 M
Environmental Engineering Technology, Structural Design and
Construction Engineering Technology Oct 29 F Nov 9 T
Energy Technology, Mechanical Engineering Technology I Nov 1 M Nov 10 W
Computer Engineering Technology, Computer Science,
Electrical Engineering Technology, Mathematical Science I Nov 2 T Nov 11 Th
MONDAY THRU THURSDAY 8 a.m. to 7 p.m.
FRIDAYS 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Spawn
of best
COMICS, from page 6
Superman is loved not only
because he protects the innocent,
but because he provides an example
of what is best in people. He shows
that society can rise above the
troubles that plague our world.
When Superman died last year, the
country mourned.
It was not until my friend in the
Army re-introduced me to comics
again that I realized what I was
missing. The quality of writing in
the comic books is better than ever,
and there are more than 600 titles to
choose from.
The style of certain comics are as
varied as the names of some of their
heroes. To help those who would
like to start reading comics but
don't know how to separate the best
from the mediocre, here's a list of
my ten favorite titles and the
companies that publish them:
Spawn (Image)
Perhaps the most popular title on
the market today, Spawn walks the
earth as a soldier from Hell while
fighting to regain his humanity.
Incredible Hulk (Marvel)
No longer big, green, and stupid,
the Hulk is now big, green, and
intelligent. Writer Peter David and
artist Gary Frank bring us his
exploits as the Hulk fights for
human rights around the world and
tries to keep his wife happy.
John Byrne's Next Men (Dark
Horse)
Veteran artist and writer John
Byrne has brought a new twist to
the superhero formula by creating
realistic characters without funny
costumes or strange powers.
The Sandman (DC/Vertigo)
It's not really a superhero, but a
master of dreams. This is one of the
must-have comics and definitely
one where strong writing is
emphasized. The series may be
coming to close soon, so buy a
copy while you still can.
Adventures of Superman (DC)
The Man of Steel lives again. The
quality of any Superman comic has
always been the best in art and in
writing. He is living proof you
cannot keep a good hero down. The
new television show is great too.
HOURS OF REGISTRATION
BEGINS
heads list
COMICS
Magnus: Robot Fighter (Valiant)
The Gold Key comics character
of the 1960 s has been revived for
the high-tech 90s. Magnus lives in
the year 4002 and protects the
people of NorthAm from
malevolent robots while fighting
not to transform into one.
Batman (DC)
Perhaps one of the best known
heroes, the Dark Knight of Gotham
City has been portrayed in more,
ways and through more media
vehicles than any other superhero.
He fights gangsters, the
supernatural, and sometimes, his
very sanity. Batman is dark,
brooding, and wholly believable.
Uncanny X-Men (Marvel)
Even better than the cartoon on
Saturday mornings, they fight for
the rights of their kind in a hostile
world. When they laugh or cry, so
do we, which is what brings so
many readers back month after
month.
Cerebus the Aardvark
(Aardvark/Vanaheim)
This is the most successful
independent comic made. Creator
David Sim's aardvark, trapped in a
world of humans, has been an
emperor, a warrior, and even
became the Pope once. It's made for
people who like satire and inner
meaning.
Spectacular Spiderman (Marvel)
Not to be confused with the seven
or eight other Spiderman.titles, this
is the best one. Drawn monthly by
Sal Buscema, spiderman is still one
of the most virtuous superheroes.
FRATS! SORORITIES!
STUDENT GROUPS!
Raise as Much as You
Want In One Week!
$100...5600...51500!
Market Applications for the
hottest credit card ever
NEW GM MASTERCARD.
Users earn BIG DISCOUNTS
on GM CARS! Qualify for FREE
T-SHIRT & '94 GMC JIMMY.
Call 1-800-950-1039, ext. 75.