Vol. XI, No. 12 Editor-in-chief Harry MacCartney May 1, 1980 Business Manager Janice Allen Faculty Advisor Janet Alwang Opinions expressed in the Lion's Eye are not necessarily the views of the University, Administration, Faculty, or Students. Letters, comments, and editorials are welcome. Write To: THE LION'S EYE Penn State University Delaware County Campus Media, Pa. 19063 (215) 565-3300 ~ REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY CASS Student Advertising, Incorporated 1633 West Central St. ~ Evanston, lllinois 60201 MEMBER OF . National News Bureau Thursday, May 1 : 8:00 am. — SPRING WEEK T-SHIRTS SALE —= Com memorative t-shirts on sale through Friday, May 2. 10:00 a.m. — PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBIT — Film develop- ing-demonstration by Camera Club members adjacent to room 101. food, fun and games on the campus grounds behind the modular buildings. Friday, May 2 = 8:00 a.m. — ACADEMIC DEADLINE — Last day to drop a course (W-grade). 11:00 a.m. — COFFEE HOUSE — Live entertainment and refreshments sponsored by the Keystone Society i in the Student Lounge. 12:00 pm. — A THURBER CARNIVAL — Comedy sket- ches to be presented by the Drama Club in the Student Lounge. 1:00 p.m. — VARIETY SHOW — Several entertainment acts and Derformatioes will be presented | in the Student Lounge: Monday, May 5. 8:00 a.m, — FALL TERM PRE- REGISTRATION — 5th and § 6th term students pre-register for Fall Term class Monday through Thursday, May 8. — Campus Timetable — 12:00 p.m. — SPRING WEEK PICNIC — Live music, free book On . Sa le The Delaware County Campus Yearbook is a capsule of activities and events throughout the school year here. This year's edition includes summaries of campus clubs and organiza- tions and their members, results of athletic teams’ seasons, special events on campus, and much more! The Yearbook is full of memories of the 1979-80 school year at Delco. The Yearbook will continue to be sold until the end of this week. Order yours in the main building or send $2.00 cash, check, or money order to The Yearbook, c/o the Lion’s Eye. REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH @ & COUNSELING CENTER Earls Abortion Services erin personal and orofesyina [ altention In a caring alimgsphere Crozer Chester Medical Center Annex (215) 874-4361 Pregnancy testing available. FAMILY TANNING CENTERS 4112 Edgmont Avenue (Route 352) Brookhaven (Next To McDonalds) - TAN Emme 572-5676 fis ities in our booth equals two hours in the necessary sinexpensive—20 visits 39.95 ~ oTan dll over, wear anything you want in your 1 A N eGift Certificates available—for the ultimate gift *Cool—no perspiration; make-up area available Convenient hours—open fo men ond women Monday thru Friday 10 AM to 9 PM Saturday 10 to 6—Sunday 1210 5 No oppointment own private booth LL we smu aioe propucts — LION'S EYE — Congrats! . The following students were named to the Dean’s List for Winter Term 1980 here at the Delaware County Campus. Bastian, Joseph J. Bendon, William M. Bizal, Michael E. Boras, Peter G.° Brown, Kenneth Bush, Michael F. Caffrey, Donna M. Camerote, Mark A. Carr, Edward J. Cavanaugh, James A. Chestnut, Gregory P. Christenson, Paul D. Cochran, Maryanne Connelly, Robert F. Cock, Robert N. Stories Wanted The Weekly Collegian is seeking story ideas, especially from Commonwealth Campus students, for its. In Edition col- umn, a compilation of humorous ‘‘believe it or not’ ~anecdotes which appears in each issue. ~ The Weekly Collegian is published each Wednesday at University Park. It is intended for readers at Commonwealth Campuses, for glumni, and for friends of the University who do not have access to the Daily Collegian. For subscription informa- tion, or to submit a brief story - to In Edition, ‘write: Mike ~ Sillup, The Weekly Collegian, 126 Carnegie Building, Univer- sity Park, Pa. 16802. ~:~ (Photo by Mary Pat Ford) WHAT'S IN A NAME? Due to a typographical error, we incorrectly listed the Business Office secretary as John MacKnight in our salute to the secretaries in the April 17 issue of the Lion’s Eye. We apologize to Joan MacKnight for the mistake. And, while we're at it, .Conti- nuing Education Office secretary Debi Moran has in- formed us that she doesn’t spell her name: D-e-b-b-i-e, as we did. The Lion’s Eye sineersly i regrets | these errors. SPRING WEEK: T-SHIRTS On Sale Thru Friday, May2 associate degree students. Et Cetera ty, Sorority, - Pitts, Justina D. Ponzo, Deborah A. Quinn, William R. Della Penna, Ronald Di Tullio, Joanne Duke, Matthew D. Giannini, James V. Reed, Allan Hanahan, John F. Richetti, Christopher Harris, Judy Rigle, Lois Heller, Debra A. Hindsley, Joseph M. ‘Hunter, James R. Jackson, Michael E. Lasater, Randall J. Legere, Carolyn C. Marcinkiewicz, Edward Mc Ardle, Eileen C. Mc Donough, Ann M. Miller, Christopher Morris, Jerome B. Murphy, Elizabeth M. Myers, Russell S. Perrotta; Vincent Ruddy, Nancy T. Savastio, John"D. Sinkinson, Edward M. Smith, Fred L. : St. Germain, Dennis A. Stacy, Kathleen A. Stecker, Lori Stratton, Elizabeth Szurkowski, Michael Togle, Nancy F. Valentino, Michael A. = White, Daniel A. Yorden, Amy E. Zwiebel, Ellen J. {Photo Courtesy University Relations) = ON-CAMPUS RECRUITING Kathleen Kopp of Hewlett-Packar, a Fortune 500 company, spoke with Electrical Engineering Technology graduates in the Career Development and Placement Center last month. This is the second year that CDPC has offered on-campus recruiting for sophomore X At University Park is Lion Chosen Roy Scott, a sixth-term liberal arts major, was selected as the new Nittany Lion mascot by a committee including cheerleading advisor Tom Twardzik, University coaches, and athletic. depart- ment officials at University Park last month. Scott, who was a cheerleader last year, decided to try out for the position Fall Term and has been training since then by running, weight lifting, perfor- ming comical stunts, and practicing push ups, which the Lion per- forms after each Penn State score during football games. Scott said he would like to add a lot of gymnastics and more stunts with cheerleaders to the Lion’s routine. —The Daily Collegian Paper Caper Several suspects have been identified in the theft of about 4,100 copies. of The Daily Collegian last month at University Park, the newpaper reported. “We are not making any accusations at this point,”” a University Police Services official said, ‘and we still don’t have a motive for the theft.” Because the papers, which were > stolen from North, East, and Pollock dorm areas, contained the Collegian’s endorsement for the Undergraduate Student Government election held in April, it is believed that the theft was organized for political purposes. Bundles of the newspaper are delivered daily to residence hall at the main campus by the Collegian and the University. 5 Bell of Freedom The bell atop Old Main at the University Park campus will con- tinue to chime everyday from noon to 12:15 p.m. until the hostage situation in Iran is resolved. The bell has been rung at that time daily since December 20, according to a University spokesman. “It is a daily reminder to the people of this area of the plight of the hostages,” the spokesman said. It is nearly six months since the militant Moslum students stormed the U.S. Embasy in Tehran taking 50 Americans hostage : ‘last November 4. Phi Psi 500 The Phi Kappa Psi fraternity at University Park sponsored its twelfth annual Phi Psi 500 Saturday, April 19 in downtown State College. The 1.1 mile long running and drinking race raised about "$26,000 to benefit a Cardio-Pulmonary Laboratory at Centre Com- munity Hospital, according to race chairman Bill Santel. In addi- tion to pledges collected by participants, money was raised through a concession stand, sorority collections, and T-shirt sales, ~ Santel said. The 1, 600 participants — in seven divisions including Fraterni- Independent, Masters, Women, Teams, and “Anything Goes,” judged solely on costume — had to stop at six bars along the route and chug a glass of beer. State College Police estimated a crowd of 25, {000 Q turned out to watch the event.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers