Page 4 — LION’S EYE — N overber 6, 1980 WANTED: Mature Woman with extremely high standards of living. Must be able to cope with the daily tension of my relationship. If you think you can handle it, call ‘Billy Dee” at 358-2020 between 4 pm and midnight. To Sus: I'll be around. . KMC To Cutie: A real ‘player’. I like your style. See ya next season. Signed, a Side-Line Fan. To Lauara Weber, I'll be here. : : Luke Spencer To the Soccer Team: Thanks for an exciting season. Loved it! — A Ball Girl. CLASSIFIED = To Lori, Your calls always seem to in- terrupt my lunch. Don’t you want me to eat? Keep things go- ing. Hi M. —The C’dinator To Brian and Wanda: Dougherty’s #1 and your per- formance on November 1 was OUTSTANDING. Good Luck! — An ex-Drilly Andy Parke Freelance Photography Weddings, all occasions 696-8813 Charles Roseberry Clean-Cut Lawn Care Lawn Cutting & Tilling Service 706 Sycamore Drive West Chester 431-4164 Free Estimates son may submit. cies (slides) will be accepted. April 17, 1681. until oer exhibition. transit, on exhibit, or in storage. decisions will be final. mailed or delivered to: Delaware County Campus ~ 25 Yearsley Mill Road Media, Pa. 19063 NAME THE LION'S EYE PHOTOGRAPHY 1. The contest is open to amateur photographers only. Entrant must be a student, faculty, or staff member of the Delaware County Campus of the Pennsylvania State University during Fall Term 1980, Winter Term 1980, or Spring Term 1981 to be eligible. 2. All photos submitted must be taken by the person Adie Pro- cessing may be done by any agency. 3. One photo per category is the maximum number of entries one per- 4. Black and white or color prints may be submitted. No transparen- 5. All entries must be postmarked or delivered no later than Friday, 6. All winning photos will remain in the possession of the Lion's Eye Photos not awarded prizes will be returned if a self- addresed : Canin envelope is included with the entries. 8. Every care will be exercised with the entries, but no responsibility will be assumed by the Lion's Eye for loss or damage to the entries while in 9. Photos should not exceed 11’ x14” in size. . 10. Photos should not be matted or dry mounted. 11. All prints must have name, address, phone number, and status (stu- dent, faculty, or staff member) of the photographer in the back. 12. Only the judges may rule on the eligibility of any entry, and thejr Please detach & return the coupon below with photographs, which may be LION'S EYE PHOTOGRAPHY CONTEST Pennsylvania State University CONTEST 7 ADDRESS CITY TELEPHONE STATE ZIP STATUS NO. OF PHOTOS SUBMITTED RETURN ENVELOPE ENCLOSED — YES — ONE COUPON PER PERSON — NO (Circle One) JOSEPH M. ERVIN Plumbing & Heating Heat Pumps Gas Conversions Edgemont — Media 353-6640 MEDIA OFFICE SUPPLY COMPANY COMMERCIAL and SOCIAL STATIONERS 11 — 13 West State Street Media, Pennsylvania 19063 566-6250 Librarian Promoted Joyce S. Rigby, library clerk at the campus since July, 1979, has been named administrative assistant in the Office of Academic Affairs, effective December 1, replacing Jane Sheetz whose retirement is ef- fective November 30. Rigby is a graduate of Penn State, with a major in home economics and a minor in jour- nalism, where she was editor of News and Views, the Home Economics magazine, and a staff writer for The Collegian. She worked for the Warren (PA) Times-Mirror as an editorial assistant and later as a library aide at Media and Springton Lake Junior High Schools and as a library technician at the Media School. She is active in the First United Methodist Church, of Media, and is a board member of the Media- Upper Providence Library. By now, students should have pre-registered for courses they wish to take for Winter Term 1980-81. However, Mr. Eugene Cannon, Financial Of- ficer, wants all to be aware that ‘““Pre-registration is a nomenclature for early course selection.” Students are not registered for classes until they pay tui- tion each term. In addition because bills were mailed Oc- tober 23, 1980 from the Bursar’s Office, payment must be mailed immediately to the Bursar’s: Office. Receipts will be forwarded to students by mail in which they must bring to the Records Office, Room 312-M, to confirm registration. " Registration for Winter Term 1981 begins December 1, at 8:30 a.m. in room 312M in the main building. IMPORTANT! The new network number for the Delaware County Campus is now 361-2011. INFECTIOUS MONONUCLEOSIS PATIENTS If you have mono, or have been diagnosed within the § last two weeks, you are urgently needed for a research program. Earn up to $50 per week. Call Mrs. Roman 922-7810 for more information © D>-0-0 COO Obl Mh gD Gn SB Zn an Sn an at sn en on an ea on tnorTHERST (0) | WOMEN CENTER: ABORTION SERVICES FREE PREGNANCY TESTING ) 4 4 4 4 @ Abortion Procedures ® Options Counseling ® Gynecological Care Immediate Appointment Available : 4 4 4 4 4 4 ¢ 4 4 L CALL: (215) 464-2225 In. N.J. Call Toll Free {800} 523-5350 8600 Roosevelt Boulevard Philadelphia, Pa. HOURS: MON. — FRI. 9-8 SAT. 9-4 POW WW WW WN WY WWW era WY A 0 Be gh gn an A Gh. Sh Alt on dn SN An AN an gn an 40 SD AD gn gn an mn Da SD Sh Gh Sn GB Gh Ch Gh Sh gh ci cn ang BE A A A I a . OPO POOP COOP O09 $9,562,685, Et Cetera . i At University Park. . . . .The Association of Residence Hall Students is surveying students at the main campus this month to determine what their attitudes are toward coed housing. ARHS will present a coed hous- ing proposal to University President John W. Oswald by the end of the term. Coed housing does exist in interest houses at the main campus (where students enrolled in a particular college are housed together) and at some Commonwealth Campuses. . .Student advising, courses taught by graduate assistants, class size, and the ineffectiveness of student government are the most negative factors in a University student’s life, according to the results of interviews and questionnaires given to 300 seniors Spring Term. The Daily Collegian reported that 81 percent of the graduating seniors polled rated their academic preparation as good to excellent, and if they had the opportunity to do it over again, 82 percent would enroll at Penn State. The results of the survey are the first completed part of a two-part study conducted on the class of 1980, the newspaper said. The other part of the survey studied attitutdes of the students after their freshman year. Other results of the survey found that 76 percent of the students rated their dorm experience as excellent to good because it facilitated social relationships. The chief complaint of residence hall living was its lack of privacy and overcrowding, _...The total dollar value of private gifts to the University has decreased by more than $700,000 in 1980, compared to the same period in 1979, according to the Daily Collegian. From July 1, 1978, to June 30, 1979, the University Office of Gifts and En- dowments received $10;302,772 worth of gifts from private sources. From July 1, 1979, to June 30, 1980, the total decreased to still the second-highest total in the University’s history. However, the number of gifts increased from 42,458 to 44,081 during the same period. . . .Carly Simon cancelled a soldout concert scheduled for Sun- day, Oct. 12 in Rec Hall at University Park, after she collapsed from extreme exhaustion during a show in Pittsburgh one week earlier. The scheduled eight-stop, three-week tour would have been Simon'’s first major tour in eight years. It was undertaken to pro- mote her latest album, “Come Upstairs,” which includes the cur- rent hit single, ‘‘Jesse.”” The wife of singer-songwriter James Taylor, Simon has been stressed with recent marital problems and her son’s kidney surgery. : ; ...Over 11,000 persons who were students at University Park during Spring Term 1978 are plaintiffs in a class action suit filed against the University. The lawsuit claims that a refund of a por- tion of the Housing and Food Service charges for the Spring Term of 1978 should be paid to all students who entered into dorm con- tracts for that term because there were five fewer days of housing and food service provided. On February 23, 1978, the University announced a change i in the University calendar for Spring Term 1978 at the main campus. The University’s residence halls were closed from March 5, 1978 through March 11, 1978 through March 11, 1978. The dates for the final examination period were changed from May 18-22 to May 21-24. The amounts claimed range from $29.56 to $34.56 per per- son, or about $350,000 total, depending upon the amount each per- son paid for the Housing and Food Service contract for the term. The University denies that a refund if due. University officials contend that the sum of $8.40 was credited to each class member’s general deposit account in May of 1978, and this amount represented the proper refund, if a refund was due. -““I think any fair-minded person would think that if we get 6 per- cent less service, we should get a 6 percent refund,” said Edward D. Joseph, one of two recent alumni who won certification for the class action suit. On Campus. . . RANGER CLUB NEWS — During the past four weeks our Rangers have crossed raging torrents, using only a rope bridge, flown high above the crowds in Army helicopters and challenged gravity by rappeling off a sixty foot cliff, not once but twice. If you think there should be more to college than going to classes, maybe you should be a Ranger, too. . . .Registration for Winter Term 1981 will begin Monday, December 1, 1980. Students with last names beginning with “A” and ‘‘B’’ will register at 8:30-9:00 a.m. All others will register after- wards until 3:45 p.m. Registration takes place on the third floor of the main building. rhee REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH (CI) & COUNSELING HEALTH GE) Early Abortion Services offering personal and rote [ attention In a caring atmosphere Crozer Chester Medical Center Annex (215) 874-4361 : Pregnancy testing available.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers