: gl ii 1 } i i 2 > A Jd Jos a: OE a a " ic a a a 3 dn Lion's Eye November 8, 1979 Dane 8 Campus Observer Continued From Page 2 tasies, some are true. But they depend upon the best of luck and the dullest of props. Dishonesty is not recommend- ed. If you steal an answer sheet you may develope ulcers deciding if it's the one to be us- ed for your section. If you use crib notes or borrow answers from friends during a test you may be sunk by the vindic- tiveness of more honest students seated around you. Friday, November 9 9:00 a.m., Monday, November 12 Tuesday, November 13 Campus Timetable— 11:00 a.m., 2:00 p.m. - FAST FRIDAY FLICKS -Powers of Ten to be shown in the Student Lounge. 8:00 a.m. - LAST DAY OF FALL TERM CLASSES - Fall term 1979 ends, last day to withdraw. Then if you hire a stand-in and get caught you may have your dishonesty haunt you if some- day you wish to announce your presidential candidacy. Besides, you would need a twin to pull off a stand-in at Delaware County Campus, our classes just aren't large enough to make it feasible. Cramming is the only answer. Crack open those textbooks and read until your eyes are bloodshot, recite your notes aloud until they fall off your tongue in a mesmerized chant. Go out only for fresh coffee grounds and take your phone off the hook, unless you expect a call back from Dataline. Remember, if it. wasn’t for cramming medieval students wouldn't have kicked off the Renaissance. Not only are our own personal futures at stake, but also that of the western world. The solving of run-away inflation and the energy crisis will surely be due to somebody's cramming. So take heart and do not forget that anonymous motto first sighted scrawled on a student lounge wall at Kalamazoo College, Mich.: “We cram for the sake of Man!" —John Kimport 8:00 a.m. - FALL TERM FINAL EXAMS - Tuesday through Records Office, room 312-M. any agency. : with the entries. 25 Yearsley Mill Road Media, Pa. 19063 NAME Announcing... i i i Win a GRAND PRIZE PACKAGE or : ~ FIRST PRIZE in one of two | § A 9. Photos should not exceed 11" Friday, November 16. Final exam schedules are available in the categories: 3. One person pit catagory is the maximum number of entrees one person may submit. 4. Black and white or color prints ny be submitted. No transparencies (slides) will be accepted. 5. All entries must be postmarked or delivered no later than Friday, February 29, 1980. 6. All winning photos become the sole property of the Lion's Eye. 7 Photos not awarded prizes will be returned if a self-addressed stamped envelope is included 8. Every care will be exercised with the entries, but no yepsonsibility will be assumed by the Lion's Eye for loss or damage to the entries while in transit, on exhibit, or in storage. x 14" in size. 10. Photos should not be matted or dry mounted. 11. All prints must have name, address, phone number, and status (student, faculty. or staff member) of the photographer on the back. 12. Only the judges may rule on the eligibility of any entry, and their decision will be final. Please detach & return the coupon below with photographs, which may be mailed or delivered to: LION'S EYE PHOTOGRAPHY CONTEST Pennsylvania State University DelawareCounty Campus SOLUTION TO QUIZ 8 1 6 3.285 7 +t. 9 3 2 The LION'S EVE _ The LION'S EYE — Photography Contest Color Prints/Black and White Prints y The contest is open to amateur photegraphors ble. Entrant prust be a student, ay or staff member of the Delaware County Campus of the Pennsylvania State University during Fall Term 1979, Winter Term 1980, or Spring Term 1980 to be eligible. : 2. All photos subd must be taken by the person baie Processing r may be dinie vj ADDRESS CITY STATE ZIP TELEPHONE STATUS NO. OF PHOTOS SUBMITTED RETURNED ENVELOPE ENCLOSED — YES NO (JS NN EE Emm ONE COUPON PER PERSON — iil [iil Guus SON S00 SN DNS Et Cetera In The Nation... Guilty Two-timers Do women feel more guilty than men when they cheat on their mates? Yes, according to a report in Time magazine on a Penn State study. The survey, however, found that women get more emotional satisfaction out of the affair. Of 205 men and women - all recently separated or divorced - surveyed by Sociviogist Graham Spanier, more than a third said they had cheated during marriage (38% males, 37% females). But a much higher percentage of the straying women said they found their adventures very satisfactory (57% to the males’ 34%). The women paid the price for being satisfied; they reported almost twice as much guilt as men. Spanier says that might prove one of two things: either women express their sexual needs better, or ‘they may tend to label rela- tionships with greater intensity.” Identity Crisis (CH) - As if the nation’s eallcges don’t have enough problems already, a couple of them are suffering identity crises as well. Officials of the former Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (VPI&SU) thought they were simplifying things when they decided, with the help of a public relations firm, to become officially known as Virginia Tech. “We had been confused with just about every institute in the state,” said one. But the new name created a furor among the faculty who com- plained that they hadn’t been consulted on the change and the “Virginia Tech’’ projected a technical or athletic image. The facul- ty senate passed a strongly worded resolution asking that the name change be dropped. The Virginia Tech (or VPI&SU if you will) student newspaper also got into the act, promoting a ‘Name That University’ contest to come up with some better ideas. Meanwhile, students at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, who had always thought they were ‘Tar Heels," now discover they are really “Tarheels.” A picky UNC English professor used historical arguments to convince the campus bookstore that T-shirts and other merchan- dise should bear the one-word designation. The student newspaper, the Daily Tar Heel, has no immediate. plans to become the Daily Tarhell, however. 8 Class of ‘80 Stats For every ten pupils in 5th grade in fall, 1968, 7.5 graduated from high school in 1976, 4.7 entered college in fall, 1976, and 2.4 are likely to earn bachelor’s degrees in 1980. Those retention figures come from the National Center for Educational Statistics book ‘Digest of Educational Statistics, 1979." Pay to Park Campus parking officials at the University of Colorado-Denver were surprised to receive a $150 check from a student who said he wanted to pay for “all the times I've parked without paying.’ He said that after talking with a “Christian friend’ about it he felt remorse about cheating the university by using old parking ticket stubs. ; In The Area... Slippery When Wet Autumn leaves can be beautiful on trees but deadly on the highway, according to R.D. Hanshaw, Keystone AAA safety direc- tor. ‘Fallen leaves are abundant this time of year and can be as slippery as ice. That's why it's important motorists drive slower and leave greater following distances when traveling on a street covered with wet leaves,’ Hanshaw commented. He said that after a rain, the road surface dries quickly due to sunlight and wind but leaves retain the moisture for longer periods. : Alternative Research Citizens United for Animal Rights (CUAR) is joining forces with animal rights groups across the country in an effort to secure passage of HR 4805, the Research Modernization Act. This bill would provide for 30-50% of the federal money now used on animal research to be channeled instead into developing non-animal alter- natives. HR 4805 would also 1) stop the duplication of many ex- periments, 2) call for the use of alternatives where they already ex- ist, 3) provide for the training of researchers in the use of alter: natives, and 4) require the dissemination of information on alter-. natives to the scientific community. Besides work on the legislation, CUAR is also involved in for: ming the public of the use of animals in the testing of cosmetics; and are working to end this abuse. Volunteers are needed and welcome. If you are interested, call (215) 848-6109. Keeping Warm Fireplace owners wanting to cut fuel costs this winter can look to the Cooperative Extension Service of the Pennsylvania State University for help. Free instructions for making man-made logs rolled from newspapers are available from your county extension. Materials for making home-made logs include an old broomstick, curtain rod or round garden stake, a stack of old newspapers and water. To make the logs flame in different colors, chemicals are ad- ded to the water. In Delaware County, write Toal Building, Second _ and Orange Sts., Media, PA 19063, or phone (215) LO6:0142.. ..
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers