4-The Daily Collegian Tuesday, September 4, 1973 • i , • , • , Faculty Senate ruling . . PEANUTS College -adviing,*',policy changes _ mipcak. eillFreshmen as well as Senate requirement that an :student's adviser could beta ruling specifies that the upperclassmen may face adivser's signature appear on ,f acu 1 t y member , a adviser must be trained in changes in student advising a student's registration and professional, a graduate or advising by the college. i oplicy this year as colleges course change forms. ,undergraduate student or the When asked if the t ffiritark B_2 4- take advantage of a new While the ruling allows 'student himself (as in the subcommittee had attempted PEANUTS University Faculty Senate each college to place more College of the Liberal Arts to allow students to act as SG - 14001. ruling. responsibility , with the self-advising program). their own advisers, Daubert , 'STARTS IN The ruling, approved Aug: student, subcommittee • Each college may continue said widespread opposition to - 'TWO LJEEk4... - 7, allows each college to set Chairman Thomas E. to use professional or student such. a plan among the, up its own advising plan Daubert noted many colleges advisers as long as a faculty colleges would make its : 1 0 subject t o min imu m probably will continue to adviser is available; to 'all implementation impossible. 't , F- 1 requirements set by the require an adviser 's students requesting one, The He said that, while "in . ma Senate Subcommittee on signature on such forms. college requirements be most cases I don't think there _ ~,•16 ~ •./ Advising. "It's up to the, individual made available .:to each is anything wrong, with it," k _ __ - Th" l . : ~...40.: Ir The ruling stemmed from a colleges," he told the Senate student: , the University ,is legally ariir, subcommittee report stating meeting. - referral information be responsible to parents to see P that advisers are,prOvided to DOONESBURY "It is unfeasible and The minimum available to students for hel undesirable to have a single requirements which must be with individual problems: students. undergraduate advising met by each college's and , He said steps toward self system" for every college. advising program are: - . written lists of all . advising programs could be FEUGVIPLAYERS. WO The report cites factors - a named faculty adviser unfulfilled requrements be initiated only through the T HAVE JUST 1345560 such as variations in the be available to each student: provided to each student - individual college student i AMON6S7" .02/ ARE , : student-faculty ratio from - written information prior to his tenth term. councils. CORES OF THE NEW -RN d 1E.4 4 1/TAYMOKZ - aißo7e four to 50 from department to regarding University and Prior to the ruling, a • E OVER MO .514 4 1 MER. PO department as reasons why a c, NOT A T MEM uniform advising policy is not off YET feasible. ';, Rin author dies 11,, . The: ruling removes the - - i /0: 0 A Mill We fil LONDON (AP) - J.R.R. !'Lord of the Rings" became trilogy, published in 1954-55, "/,''',,,,,,r,,,,,,T..! ••e , /io ii collegian _classified Tolkien, who called himself a ill with a perforated ulcer and his earlier "The Hobbit" '1,,,P1if,/ 11- 0,, , / c "persnickety old academic" while visiting friends. were taken up by young ;,', 1 iti 441) 4.41 f P ' • • - ~ / • ads are but was a literary superstar ' Tolkien was an Oxford don Americans in the 19605,, and 11, ,*/x.7,46 / ./ii, ; 111L7, 4 , mg- - ,to millions of youthful known -to the British Tolkien became one of the q. 4 44 widely read admirers, died Sunday at the academic world as an most popular writers on .. age of 81. authority on Norse legend and U.S. college campuses. The author of the trilogy Early English. But his Rings "The Lord of the Rings" is , . . , •• a fantasy about the battle . between good and evil, for i _ - which Tolkien invented a : 0.8 , world populated by a people d Travel to The Train Station he named hobbits struggling against Sauron, lord of the magic rings, , 1 for lunch or dinner . . ~ To escape the adulation of I , his admirers, Tolkien fled 1 from Oxford in 1959 and 1 moved wife to a A COMPLETE LUNCHEON MENU ' countryhideout After her death last year, he returned INCLUDING ' -to Oxford as an honorary , - . . DAILY SPECIALS ' . resident. BEING SERVED FROM j" - - ********** ****** ic Welcome Freshmen ' ,„„*. . . , . . 1 1 :30 A.M. Relax & visit AT - DINNERS SERVED FROM 4:30 P.M.* . . " Penn States _House of Fun " CAMPUS CASINO . 320 E. College Ave. - 1 TN TaillV ITATIIIII - . . . _,„ Serving you with the area's latest electronic l'a. . old *games, pins, guns, an d new amide pieces, * 'J unction College dt Garner . . foosboll, sir hockey, pool tables and friendly * (A Herlochar Enterprii.) . atmosphere. AT • ' . • **************' ** . . . - . 74 - 13ESi PIZZA YOU EVER TASTED! •- C Little - - . ..., • 4 , 4 :„... . _ I 1 r' )- . SAVE ssss It . Z.. I A ' • • . ii . 4./. . %.# BY USING COUPONS. .----5 " • Eat in : ... . 237 14 81 • ' --, :- n i• .-:::::,-. • • Carry out . . DELIVERY SERVICE STATE C O LLEGE E • Delivery 11 128 E. COLLEGE AVE. .....1/•_ . :".„,„„.„11111111 THIS COUPON GOOD FOR 111111111n1111111111; ''' ': rlllllll 11111111111 THIS COUPON GOOD FOR lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIRI III"' e V N"` , 111111111I1111111111 THIS COUPON GOOD FOR lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIn -- i._ , ~- 65c OFF , i I 75c OFF . _-. 50c OFF -;- g . a , = ON THE P U R CHASE OF 2f; g Aro & .. ill ON THE hIRCHASE OF .1- 7- . aet .._,.• = -...- Or . is. , Sportsman . - s- ANY MEDIUM 7..- - _- ( ."-tii ANY ,SPORTSMAN Ilg . 'cup j Supreme or .---- = c'°4"(IIIIP OR LARGER \ dA •• • PIZZA : 11 \dA 'Special , m i \ ' = . viil4 one OR MORE mew - = ---, - 5 ----a PIZZA -N• -m-- === = 1- 1 II - ' 237-1481 g g 1' 237-1481 237-1481 g ... . gff ... . , - --" I_-_-_- - ;•.-7 --1 . .=, Little CaesatiPizza Tmat s s Little CoesaiPbaa That 9 1 5 Little Caesars:Pizza Treat --r , ... : . , - : 4r , 111 , . 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Pi= Treat : 93 ' 1 Little Caesad Pizza Treat t i: Little Caesars:Nu Treat ' - -- ,30mumput cm ccup cr. PER P12.'•5. tnlllllllll e,,. 11111111111111111101i1 ONE COUPON PER PIZZA 111111111111111111111...\' tf... 1111111 , 111 1 11111111111 ONE COUP ON PER PIZZA II 1111111111111111.,N .1 - I' "•'IPIIIII.IIII I 1111 THIS COUPON GOOD FOR •llllllllllllllliilj " .vittlIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIII:THIS COUPON GOOD FOR lllllllllllllllllllllln 1.111111111111111111111 THIS COUPON GOOD FOR 111F11111111111111111F"-1 t • - -g: et ~ . , ...- , a .- .41 I:F4 - FREE = 2--i 65c one on the =-: ::,.- a 0 pu ase of 3 '€-. • 1.--. , . FREE I E I ONE QUART OF PEPS( '-- ; eg, ' -. . LARG _ .:, -: _La e f p . - i - - - = . ._ TWO QUARTS OF PEPSI gi , ir.,___-• , -. with the purchase of any -...-. ,-a.-t- GOURMET , t. f" - - - 77 4. - E 'Nip . 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E. 1,11/1 ,OFF .=--; on the purchase of a -- ff ; t-.-1.-- . :-_--) al WV purchase of a ' dk F F .p c , LARGE, , .._ 5 i i z. a r: "MAU 1 2 - . , = :-. futEci . =i! - - ( ', II ,• , A L I I et ~. ,: ~.., = .., ±..•( . p b A . T., &NE OR MORE ITEMS '--t- 1... cIA e". ' ' " I "' Has '' 9 i -9 ‘. diAli s Nt.'s hrou‘s . On loos And r_- - -_ E sCi A E atzztt- ',- -, I ..:....=, t: I= ti __E• ....:-..:...:::, Green Pepper --= 1= ':-:-= c - :•-• -e , '-.-. :_- I ' • 237-1481 -'' = l' • : .----_ 1.. - i 1' 237-1481 ••• .' . .1 lg. 237-1481 , 1 -- t: t' - • •- ,--: . .• t•-. 1. . fl I I Little Caton' Phut Trent 9 :' 11 Little Caesars' Pizza Treat ti! --t - - Little Caesars: Brut Treat E.-. : -. - i . .-; ' r." 7 al IT' .IP !IMP ONE COUP ON PER PIZZA 11111111111111111111,,.Rc . '.?-,..'11111111111F11111111 ONE COUP ON! PER PIZZA lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII..s'iI L.lllllllllllllllllllllO ONE-COUP ON PER PIZZA 111111111111111111111..4 MY STUPID FOOT'S • (K.- p I THOUGHT I HAD ALREADY LEARNED MIN - THING THERE 14.)A5 TO KNOW I C Postal rates increased WASHINGTON (AP ) The Postal Service won permission Friday to Increase the mail rates for . the nation's newspapers and magazines within the next two weeks. The Cost of Living Council ruled that the increases are :exempt from Phase 4 price controls. The increases affected second. third and fourth class mail. which primarily includes newspapers, magazines, pamphlets, books and records. There will be no change in the rates for first class and air mail letters and packages. A Postal Service spokesman said the rates will take effect Sept. 9 for items postmarked after 12:01 a.m. local time. The Cost of Living Council also announced it would not challenge the new wage agreements between the Postal Service and nearly 700.000 postal workers. Wage agreements for about 608.000 non supervisory personnel were negotiated by four unions to be effective July 26. This raised wages, averaging about $lO.OOO a year. by about $l.OOO a year. The council said benefits over the two-year period of the contract "taken together constitute a settlement within stabilization standards.': The postal rate increases is the second of five annual increments recommended last •••••••, f Armenara P 1 FEET SHOULDN'T FALL ASLEEP.. l i , 1 „....„„.... 15 IT P0551131t MET) LEARN,E THERE 15 70 KI HARDLY $l,, 4.. y ei-sa _ - ts a !-- .' 1 . nay. GS/A A NUMBER MAO PEAK/L, SPEAK ME SEAL ON )1202 PIAYSOOKS ?URN 7r) FASE ONE AND READ SILENTLY __ i hi 'alp KNUPP OPTICAL UfIUSLk ....„. „ .......,yicAm-.1 t 5,,,-.4 . . . , . aza (behind McDonal4s) 237-1382 FEET SHOULD •STAY AWAKE IN CASE YOU HAVETO GO SOME PLACE IN A WWI 1 4 11 4 saw ROW COME I ALLOPWS 6ET CAUGHT IN 'THe MIDDLE f 4 ' " • = • "11 1 / 5 Pl.4Y9Clat /5 DEGIC4769 TO BART year by a postal rate commission. Magazine publishers have said they will be disastrous for some publications. The new rates, set out in a complicated Postal Service schedule. vary according to weight and destination as well as the class at mail. But a spokesman listed some* examples. For a typical second-class weekly publication mailed within the same county. such as a small-town newspaper. the mailing cost will Increase from six-tenths to seven tenths of a cent for each copy. The rate for nationally distributed publications of non-profit organizations. such as the AFL-CIO newspaper. will rise from three-fourths to nine-tenths of a cent per copy. The - second-class - rate a typical commercial publication such as Time and Newsweek magazines. will go up from 2.8 to 3.4 cents a copy. Third-class bulk mail rates for the booklets often distributed by nonprofit organizations wilt increase from eight cents to nine cents a pound. And fourth-class rates commonly applied to books and records go up from 14 cents to 16 cents for the first pound and from seven cents to eight cents for each additional pound. dresses distinct \ ' .•:\•-;. I lir , , N * f. %to: i1L13%