The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, September 14, 1973, Image 4

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    I—The Daily Collegian Friday. September 14, 1973
Art course.s offered to Children
The Department of Art
Education is offering nine
courses in children and
teenage art during fall term.
Registration for these classes
may be made by calling 865-
6570.
. ,
The Forestry Wives Club A meeting for freshman
and new students interested The New Kairos Program,
00 in varsity baseball will be sponsored by • United
IUM held 5:15 p.m. Monday in 267 Ministries at Penn State, will
r Rec Hall.begin 6:30 p.m. Sunday at the
1
Wesley Foundation.
Dance Theatre will be held Gamma Pi Epsilon,
will meet 8 p.m. Monday. 7:30 p.m. Monday in 119 Arts women's pre-medical society,
Contact Roberta Grace, 237-
6825.
Returning Student Women
Deadline for adding courses will meet 7:30 p.m. Monday in Services will, be held at
USG Sponsored
Student Accident
and Sickness InsuranCe
written by
•
Guarantee Trust Life
Insurance Company
represented by
Higham, Neilson, Wh#ridge & Reid, Inc.
King of Prussia, Penna. 19406
Brochure and applications available from
USG Office, 203 HUB
Ritenour Health Center
Mountainvie'w Hospital
SONY
NO BALONEY.
Only Sony's Trinitron system has one gun
with one big lens for a better-focused, sharper picture
Come in and check it out.
na: see here, magnified inside the circle
(_,)ia Tnnitror!picture tube
'Die (I,Jr, needs only one lens, so there's room for a
t :‘ • o, €
E-eryor.€ t , ise -even:the new In-line'
- fit in three lenses, so they
ha VF *.: toz z'r',iller
Iv is a h:g lens such a good
Aria ens has corre
spondingiy oig central portion
And the-center !s the most dis-
tc rtion-trr: , :: par
So you Jet oetter-fdcuseci
sharper picture
No baloney
You get a brighter plc
ti_re Thar': because of something
else only Tnnitrori has an Aperture
It lets the electron beams hit the
screen In unbroken stripes not in isolated
dots, or ovals
That way more electrons get to the scr ;
brighter picture
From Sony No baloney
How about reilability 7
Sony uses all-solid-state for all their m 9
their more expensive ones
Come in and check out theTrinitron
Then you'll know we're not giving you any !I
is Sept. 19 and for dropping
courses is Oct. 1. Dates for
filing pass-fail grades or for
repeat courses are Sept. 27
and 28 and Oct. 1.
Pre-registration deadline
for the Winter Term is Oct. 1.
Auditions for the Jazz
Building
rorn Sony
101 Kern. Prospective
members are welcome.
The Pattee Library
Reference will sponsor
faculty library orientation 3
p.m. Friday in 105 East
Patee.
will meet 7:30 p.m. Sunday in
McElwain piano Lounge.
een And you get a
dels Not just
icture yourself
200 E. COLLEGE AVE. 238-1001
Hillel Bp.m. Friday. A talk by
Rabbi Chaim Shertz will
follow at 9 p.m.
The Friends of ' India
Association will meet
Sattirday in 26 Mineral
Sciences.
USG Gay Line will be
opernting Fall Term 7 to 11
p.m.; on Tuesday, Friday and
Sunday. Call 863-0296 for
i:nformation: on
homosexuality and HOPS.
The Student Advisory
Board to University Health
Services is looking for student
members to. represent the
University community This
board will provide student
input,into Ritenour. For more
•information, call Dr. Wirag at
863-0461.
Winter
fuel
shortage
feared
WASHINGTON (AP)
White House adviser, John
Love conceded Thursday that
the nation may face
temporary •heating-fuel
shortages this , winter. But he
gave ;no indication that the
Nixon administration will
requite allocation as a
solution.
Love, director of the White
House Energy Policy Office,
told a Senate subcommittee
that the administration is
seeking to stimulate the
apamemiimate
seekip ;A
: STUD
UNIVE
A(:A
G mulct iii
Ilea'
ORIENT
TU
7:30 p.
, THE DOG 15
A 5
THE
KEGARDEP A 5
FRIEND
OF MAN..
OONESBURY
supply of fuel oil, but that
allocation is still under
consideration.
He thus disagreed with a
growing number of
congressmen who are calling
for mandatory allocation
before winter.
Sen. Henry M. Jackson,
D-Wash., the most persistent
advocate of mandatory
allocation, wrote President
Nixon that the nation faces
"serious power shortages and
blackouts in major
metropolitan areas this
winter if action is not
immediately taken to assist
electrical utilities in securing
essential fuel supplies."
At a news conference,
Jackson released letters from
Mayor Tom Bradley of Los
Angeles and from the
chairman, of Consolidated
Edison, the nation's largest
electric utility, urging
mandatory allocation.
Bradley said a fuel
shortage is threatening the
city's fire and police
operations.
C' 5, pry C 4 AP A A - re. we ,r ,, ts 40,7
THIS PARTICULAR BREED
GENERALLYQUITE GENTLE AND
T 1415 PARTICULAR cO6 15 60T14
GENTLE AND INTEU.IGENT...
Chairman Charles F. Luce
of Consolidated Edison said
the New York City area faces
the_ threat of power
disruptions or sharply
increased prices for power if
utilities turn to foreign
suppliers for the oil needed to
fire electric generators.
"Home-heating-oil prices
will inevitably rise to new
highs unless Congress enacts
legislation establishing
mandatory fuel allocations,"
Luce wrote.
The Senate twice has
passed Jackson's bill
requiring the President to
implement mandatory
allocation. Under that bill,
which is pending in the House,
the President would direct the
pricing and distribution of the
nation's entire supply of oil
and petroleum products to
ensure that public-service
needs are met and that each
section of the nation gets a
share of fuel.
already has
to require
Nixon
authority
allocation.
HELP LINE of the STUDENT ASSISTANCE CENTER
(Fornierl the lielp (:vnter)
8 a.m. to 5 p.m. M-F 116 01(1 Main 863-0306
4 p.m. to 12 midnight M-F 102 A Boucke 863-0306
12 noon to 8 p.m. Sat & Sun 102 A Boucke 863-0306
Information, Referral & Peer Counseling Service
The Help Line ix an organization of trained students anti staff 111th the sole purpose of en lug the Penn
State rumnrtutitc. esperially.students. a pla« , to turn for information. tub find lILLP in tit,
the big and little problems u/ unit ersits lile. 11 e hat p the ansners to sa, het ens this bothers as lion to
drop-add or u•ltere to bornti«l movie screen. N e're prepared to II Li I' a its real , rises. also. so I oil
us with jinance. set. housing. trarel or troubles.
e hope you will get into the habit of calling us first aide problems aria,- information. R e :an sal a v n r
the time and trouble of making calls. digging through ratillogueA. :I:rectories. or rulebooks. or racking
‘out - brain fara name or program: setre sure elists somewhere. Financed hs the 1 nit ersits. ne are a
centralized. organized. proftwdonal and paraprolesAional g roup of people a ith a real desire to rod the
person feeling the effects of the huge multirersits. 's tu dents man o ne ph one s, gum, its rr
unique peer-counseling function.
'ALTHOUGH HE DOES NAVE
Hl5 FAULTS...,
Dining hall dress
revised for workers
Dining hall dress regulations for student employes are
changing to provide a uniform suitable for the type of work
done rather than on the basis of sex.
According to Director of Food Services, Robert Proffitt,
uniforms now are assigned by job. People in the dish room and
at the pot sink wear bib aprons, checkers and replenishers
wear jackets, and those working behind the food counter wear
dresses and jackets as available. All uniforms may be worn
over street clothing.
Profitt said wearing unifiirms over street clothes "will
eliminate the complaints students had about all the time
previously involved in changing into uniforms."
He said, because of the large inventory of dresses, they
must be used up before jackets can be provided for all student
employes who want them. Only uniforms were purchased this
summer. The total phase out of dresses may take a year
Proffitt said.
Under the previous dress regulations, men wore jackets or
-bib aprons over their street clothing, and women wore dress
uniforms.
According to AWS President Doreen Robotti, the results of
AWS efforts to change the dress code have been very
rewarding. She said Proffitt Was very cooperative in bringing
about the change.
SUCH AS FLIRTING WITH THE
GIRL IN THE FRONT ROW!!!
W
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