February 4,1971 THINGS TO DO This peek’s Student Union Board activities will begin on Thursday, February 4, at 8:00 p.m. at die Warner Theatre with the live appearance of Pat Paulsen arid his Look at the Seventies. Along with Pat, the rock group Alive ’n Kickin’ will be featured. Tickets are on sale now at the RUB desk. Scott Huntington heads the list of local talent who will perform at the Coffee House on Saturday, February 6, in the dining hall. Admission is free with activity card and 25 cents without.- The February 7 Sunday Night at the Movies will feature the award winning film The Lion in Winter. Lion stars Peter O’Toole as Henry 11, King of England, and Katherine Hepburn as Eleanor of Aquitaine, his queen in a royal romance set against the tur bulent England of the 12th Centry. Showtime will be 7:00 p.m. and 9:30 p .m. and admission is 50 cents and $l.OO. 'Sill* •JOBS by W.T. Eberlin CUB Staff Writer I hope people don’t construe Monday Morning’s incident as reflecting the attitudes of the entire student body. I’ll finally bow down and admit that the Erie weather is getting to me. For those of you who didn’t recognize me, or question me, no, my mommy didn’t make me c have off my beard. To Phil Hood. ..BLEEP To the guys in my EG class. . .no,, I’m not .getting married this Sunday. Quit. spreading rumors, please? Wouldn’t a 7:15 - 8:30 breakfast make a lot more sense than the present time? Don't go shopping with a woman. Peace BULLetin Bored A group of students, faculty, and staff members met on February 2 to organize a campus committee on Human Sexuality. Tim Muzzio was elected as chairman. The committee is already planning to offer a non-credit, coed lecture-discussion series on Topics in Human Sexuality. The series will be offered during Spring Term. “Topics” is closely patterned after the program which has enrolled over 5000 students at Yale, Mt. Holyoke, and several other New England Colleges. Several more students are m'eeded to help plan and publicize the course. If you are interested in joining this committee, contact Tim Muzzio, Crystal Angevine, Terry Loftus, Mike Marsh, or Miss Carroll. The second class of the Draft Counselling course will take place this Sunday, February 7, in the Seminar Room,from 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. The course is open to all, even if you did not attend the first class. If you ordered a handbook, you can pick it up at the class. The Behrend Bookstore would like to express its appreciation of the quick action taken by students (John Miller, Jeff Selman, Pete Kwiatek, Jim Raffetto, John Venturella, Karen Maker, Tom Bruner) when the store ceiling caved-in due to water leakage Sunday night. A special thanks to Behrend’s student marshalls Karen Maker and Tom Bruner who directed salvage and clean-up operations on authority of Sgt. Charles D. Skidmore, Pinkerton’s, Inc. THE STORE THAT ROCKS WITH GOOD MUSIC EQUIPMEHT MACE PfllSig ELECTRONICS 2631 WEST BTH Student Affairs Active Committee What is the Student Affairs Committee? What does it do? Does anybody care: Should anybody? When the first two questions are answered, the last two should answer themselves. The Student Affairs Committee may well be one of the most misunderstood organizations in the Penn State system. This is due mainly to the lack of in formation surrounding the committee. At the Behrend Campus, the membership of the Committee is three faculty, three students, and the Dean of Student Affairs. The three faculty members are appointed by the Director, and one serves as Chairman of the Committee. They are Mr. Tucker (chair man), Mr. Monahan (who has been named secretary of the committee), and Mr. Lauffer. The three students are Dave Carr (ex-officio due to his office as SGA President), Rich Schwartz (elected as _ the representative from SGA), and Doug Brower (elected at large as the student body representative). Dean Lane is ex-officio, non-voting due to his role as Dean of Student Affairs. ' These members meet an average of once every two weeks, and are to concern themselves with the broad area of “student THENITTANYCUB life” on campus, particularly with “matters having to do with student welfare,' student ac tivities, student conduct, and student morale.” In addition to these general functions, the Committee has certain specific responsibilities. One would concern “implementing Senate policies and relating Senate policies to the requirements of the local area.” This would in clude such items as Rule Z-13, governing residence hall visitation. Another specific function would be related to the handling of disciplinary cases: (1) as a court of original jurisdiction when chosen by the student; and (2) as an appeals body of decisions from the student court. Appeals from disciplinary cases arising from the Student Affairs Committee shall be referred to the University Senate Committee on Appeals. Also, the Committee shall “lend, whatever assistance and advice the Dean of Student Affairs, may require in the in terest of making accurate and equitable judgments on how student aid funds are to be assigned.” Last term, the Committee has met twice, once formally and once informally. Included for its consideration may be such topics as visitation, suggestions as to fahulty advisor selection by student organizations, and a re evaluation of the committee’s . functions and responsibilities. In the guidelines it states, “The Committee may recommend to the Director that additional responsibiiities.be assigned to it, or the Director may assign it additional duties and respon sibilities as he sees fit.” Dean Lane has labeled the Committee an “intermediary step” to the Office of Student Affairs and the Director. The misunderstanding arises from the committee’s name and its faulty association with the Office of Student Affairs. The function and the importance of the Committee will be greatly en chanced when this is realized. EDWARD PARK’S SfeontAwean K-MART PLAZA (East) Downtown, 702 State West Erie Plasa CLIP AND SAVE LOW COST, SAFE, LEGAL j ABORTION i IN NEW YORK SCHEDULED IMMEDIATELY j J (212)490-3600 ] I PROFESSIONAL SCHEDULING SERVICE. Inc.l | 545 Fifth Ave. t New York City 10017 i I There is a fee for our service. g ESP Explored The bronze skinned, gaily dressed gypsy woman slowly seats herself in front of a prophetic crystal ball, waves her hands through the air and begins to chant the incantations which will bring visions of future events into her ball for interpretation. This scene is an old, romantic, though not very realistic one according to Mr. Jack London, famed expert on psychic phenomena. Mr. London will appear in the RUB Lecture Hall on Tuesday, Februrary 9 at 8:00 p.m. to ex plore the ESP scene, the problems of differentiating between the true psychic and the abundant fraudulent one, and the popularity and possibilities of the world of astrology. Psychic vision, telephthy, clairvoyancy, black and white magic, and woman’s intuition are a few of his favorite ESP topics. Mr. London has appeared on the Johnny Carson, Mike Douglas, and Merv Griffin shows, The Today Show, and has authored numerous magazine articles and a book entitled In stant Astrology. Residence Procedures It is expected that each student be aware that the success of this program demands responsible behavior on the part of the in dividual student. 1. Guests must be escorted when in non-public areas of the residence hall. 2. An escort is defined to mean a person residing in the hall that the gup"‘ is visiting. A guest is defined '« be a member of the opposite sex of the respective residence hall. 3. An escort may escort no more than two guests at any one time. 4. All guests will enter through the public area of each dorm. 5. The guests will sign the sign-in sheet located on the bulletin board before he she enters a residence section. 6. The escort and guest (s) shall go directly to the room which they wish to visit. They shall keep the door open while visiting. 7. It shall be the duty of the hosbhostess to be.responsible for the conduct of his her guest (s). 8. A guest may not use the lavatory facilities of a residence section. 9. The guest will sign out when he • she leaves the residence sections. 10. The main lobby of each residence hall shall be considered a non-public area after the regular closing time of each residence hall. 11. Guests must participate in fire drills. g&dir STRAND r ,' i* sr -«H 2«2) On the evening of his per formance, Mr. London will open a locked, sealed wooden box which contains his prediction of an event of local, national, or in ternational import. This box was mailed to Behrend on January 25, and will be on display in the library until February 9. Admission to Jack London’s lecture-demonstration is free with activity card, 50 cents without, and $l.OO for general public. Note... Classes for the Winter Term 1971 will end with the seventh period class on Wednesday. March 17, 1971. Final examinations will commence the following morning at 8:00 a.m. and will be held on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday (morning only on Saturday), March 18, 19, and 20, for all professors who elect to utilize the University Calendar. The arrival date for the Spring Term will be on Tuesday, March 30, 1971 with advising to be held on Wednesday and Thursday for all students. Registration will be completed in Erie Hall on Thursday for fourth term students or higher and on Friday for all Freshmen. A complete alphabetical schedule of times will be available later in the term. Classes for the Spring Term will begin at 8:00 a.m. on Monday, April 5,1971. Drop - add Period for Spring Term will extend until 5:00 p.m. on Friday, April 23, 1971 for dropping a course. The classes will ter minate on Saturday, June 12,1971 with final examinations being held Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, June 14, 15, and 16. for all professors electing to use the calendar. lifesavers; Cliff's Notes have been life- . savers' for millions of students I by helping them understand dif- I ficult literature assignments Be * prepared. Get the ones you need | now and u£e them as you study | Nearly 200 titles... | always available at your dealer's. | _/V /N>^v f Lincoln, Nebraska 68501 Page Three