PENNSTATE Harri 'volume 41,, No 12 Keynote speaker urges unity Model United Nations delegates respond with resolutions By Cathie McCormick Capital Times Editor In Chief Delegates to the 29th annual Model United Nations sat expec tantly in the PSH Capital Union Building Thursday night. These high school students from 23 area school districts had accept ed the role of civilian leaders to their adopted country and were prepared to change the world. Seated on the dais behind the podium were the administra tors, faculty and students of Penn State Harrisburg responsi- Related story on page 6 and 7 King's Dream lives By Jenny Poust Capital Times Staff Writer On Feb. 13, three members of Key Arts Productions entertained and educated members of the com munity with a multi media performance of "King's Dream" in the Olmsted auditorium. "King's Dream" is a presentation on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and the civil rights movement of the Full-color centerfold of Model U.N. activities page 6 and 7 the CAPITAL TIMES ble for the daunting logistics of organizing an event of interna tional proportions. The guest roster included leaders from around the world and military consultants from the Army War College in Carlisle. Dr. Khalipha M. Bility, associate professor of public health and a South African native, opened the event with a sobering update on the world wide AIDS epidemic. He urged the delegates to take a global view of a problem which is often seen differently in various parts of the world. Continued on Page 4 (1 At) . Patterson, Marylin Brewington and Gary Giles. Continued on Page 2 Keynote speaker Dr. Khalipha M. Bility heads the University Office of International Programs and did post doctoral research at the Yale University School of Medicine. Dr. Jaster addresses audience at Irish play page 3 The Studeni Voit•e of Penn State Harri.chur,l,; Two car stereos stolen Chief Stoehr suggests additional alertness in parking lots By Barbara Gertzen Capital Times Assistant News Editor The reality of any universi ty is that both positive and neg ative aspects of the local com munity infiltrate the campus environment. According to Kevin Stoehr, director of safety and police services at Penn State Harrisburg, break-ins to two cars parked in the rear lot of the Olmsted building in recent weeks are part of a pattern of "Rita And Her Pita" poem page 12 Mondd\ February 9. 100? vehicular break-ins that have occurred in the area around PSH since the beginning of the year. Stoehr reports that the first break-in on the PSH campus occurred on Jan. 29 when a $2OO stereo/CD player was stolen from a car parked in the Olmsted lot. Even though the car owner had removed the stereo's detach able faceplate, the vandal took the rest of the unit from the car. On Feb. 6, a stereo/CD player valued at $350, along with speakers worth $2OO, were removed from another car in the lot. Both incidents happened dur- Continued on Page 2
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