The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, May 08, 1974, Image 4

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    i—iiie uany Lolleglan weanesuay, Ala) 6, 1914
ARHS discusses Centrex installation
By JERRY SCHWARTZ
Collegian Staff Writer
It would cost a bundle to make a private call to
Mom from your room, according to Association of
Residence Hall Students research.
At the ARHS meeting last night, ARHS Vice
President Joe Davidson said the installation of a
- Centrex" phone system in residence halls would
cost $750,000.
With such a system, each room would have a
telephone. Davidson said long distance calls could
be made from phones under the "Centrex 7, system.
Davidson said t-,:the $750,000 would pay for
necessary wiring. He said the alternative would be
a party line, with two or four rooms sharing the
•
same line.
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Davidson said the cost of a party line system
would be about $300,000. He-said Bell Telephone was
reluctant to install such a system, fearing invasion
of privacy by people listening in on conversations on
a shared line.
According to Davidson, any change would put the
University out of the telephone business, with
students paying charges directly to the telephone
company. He said students possibly could receive a
rate reduction by appealing to the Public Utilities
Commission or the state-legislature.
The group also heard George Nigro
arts), a spokesman for a Speech 200 c
said his group is collecting signatu
reduction of the legal drinking age.
According to Nigro, the group has coil
signatures thus far, and hopes to co,
Corker
botwge,
FROZEN FOOD FAVORITES
BANQUET MEAT PIES
A&P Vegetables .. 341- $l.OO
I Cream Sandwiches ... 6 for 69 0
Ice Cream 1 2l
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The report and recom
mendations are the product of
the Joint Senate-Adminis-
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before the primaries on May 21. Nigro said the
petitions will be sent to either a state legislator or
Gov. Shapp.
Skip Dominick, East Halls representative, said he
was contacted by Colin Middlefield, a worker for the
United-Farm Workers lettuce boycott, about a
possible endorsement by ARHS of the national
boycott.
Dominick said Middleton told him the boycott
held on campus on May I was not effective, and that
he wished to form "a united student front."
ARHS President Wendy Morris said Middleton
had been invited to several ARHS and area
meetings but had not appeared.
In other action, ARHS voted to accept the
nomination of Pat Corcoran as ARHS secretary for
the coming year.
Governance
By JIM BARR
Collegian Staff Writer
The University Faculty
Senate yesterday voted
unanimously to accept the
final report of a special
governance committee and
act on its recommendations.
trative Committee on Faculty
Participation in University
Governance. The committee
has been working since Jan
uary to find ways to increase
faculty influence in the de
cision-making processes at
all levels of the University.
The report lists 35
recommendations designed to
give the faculty a larger voice
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report accepted
in decisions made by
departments, colleges, cam-,
puses, the administration
and the Board of Trustees.
One set of proposals
recommends that the officers
of the Senate—the past
chairman, chairman, vice
chairman and secretary—be
allowed to attend all meetings
of the Board and its standing
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committees
The faculty at present has
'no formal representation
before the Board, although
the Senate chairman and
several faculty members are
routinely invited.
Another pair of proposals
would set up a faculty
Executive Committee to
advise the president on issues
such as reorganization of the
University, the use of
resources and the budget and
the economic welfare of the
faculty. The Executive
Committee would be made up
of the Senate officers and
three other faculty members.
A third group of recom
mendations calls for rules
and guidelines to be
developed by each depart
ment, college and campus to
insure faculty participation in
all decisions at those levels.
There was no outright
opposition to any of the
committee's recom
mendations. But several
senators complained that the
report does not contain any
guarantee that the ad
ministration and the Board of
Trustees will not arbitrarily
usurp the powers of the
faculty again.
Many faculty members
consider this a major issue. In
1970, the Board unilaterally
decided to reorganize the
Faculty Senate. and the
laculty still is stewing over
this dictatorial exercise of
power.
Stanley H. Rosen, a faculty
senator, asked, "What is to
prevent those who give power
from taking it away again?"
Robert Friedman, chair
man of the committee, said it
was not realistic to expect
assurances from the com
mittee on such an issue. The
real power over the
University is the State
Legislature, he said.
Friedman added. that the
Interior may allow
federal coal mines
WASHINGTON (AP) The Interior Department yesterday
proposed to allow about 10 underground coal mines and 31
strip mines on federal land by the year 2000. But it revealed
that energy conservation could make eight times that much
coal production unnecessary.
The figures were tucked away in a two-volume draft study
which also noted underground coal mining has the highest
disabling-injury rate of any major industry, while strip-mining
ruins its landscape at least as long as the mine is operating.
Interior's study was based on a forecast that coal produc
tion, now around 600 million tons per year, would more than
double to about 1.31 billion tons per year by the year 2000.
On Monday, however, Interior's assistant secretary,
Royston Hughes, urged coal production be more than tripled
by 1985.
Interior's study gave no consideration at all to the role of
federal coal development or its environmental impact in such
a rapid expansion as was urged by Hughes.
The environmental impact statement is subject to public
comment before a final version is published.
Most federal coal is found in some 193,345 square miles of
the Rocky Mountain and Northern Great Plains regions, the
study said.
Reviewing possible alternatives, the Interior Department
said "this report finds no measures available which could
stimulate an equivalent production potential of alternative
energy sources..."
But it described as another possible alternative an all-out
campaign to save energy which "could reduce energy con
sumption by 5.0 quadrillion British Thermal Units a year in
1975, 15.5 QBTU a year in 1980, and 33.4 QBTU per year after
1980."
Interior did not explain what that means in terms of coal
production.
What it means, in fact, is that all-out energy conservation
could save 647.5 million tons of coal a year by 1980 3.6 times
as much coal as Interior's proposed production from federal
land by the year 2000.
Collegian notes
A rally sponsored by the
Committee Against Off-Shore
Drilling will be held 3 p.m.
today in front of Schwab.
Speakers from national COSD
chapters and Teamsters
Union Local 502 will attend.
The Citizens' Advisory Com
mittee to the Centre Regional
Area Transportation Study
will meet 7:30 tonight in
Borough Council chambers at
the State College Municipal
Building. Nominations for of
ficers will be received, and the
Pennsylvania Department of
Transportation will report on
present road problems.
Academic Assembly will
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re.
committee's recom
mendations are designed to
provide a system of checks
and balances for the
University's governing
bodies.
Many of the committee s
recommendations require
action by the president of the
University. and another
senator. William Rabinowitz,
suggested that the Senate
should not act on the report
until it knows how University
President John W. Oswald
felt about the recom
mendations.
Oswald was at the session,
and took the opportunity to
reply. He said he felt the
committee had made a
- carefully considered and
valid set of recom
mendations."
lie was reviewing the
report with great care, but
had not had a chance to
discuss it with his ad
ministrators yet, he said.
In "other action, the Senate
approved the extension of a
special program for veterans.
The program allows veterans
who were dropped from other
schools for unsatisfactory
scholarship before entering
the service to be admitted to
the University as adjunct
students. 4 ,
The Senate also endorsed
the University Council's
recommendations on student
participation in the academic
affairs of the University. The
recommendations are from a
Council report to Oswald,
dated March 8, 1971.
They were brought before
the Senate by the Student
Affairs Committee at the
request of the Graduate
Student Assi:relation.
A study last summer
showed that most of the
report's recommendations
had not been implemented by
the departments and colleges.
meet 7:30 tonight in 351
Willard.
The Penn State Amateur
Radio Club will hold its last
meeting of the term 7:30
tonight in 202 Engineering E.
The Women's Equity Action
League will sponsor a
discussion on the two-career
family 8 tonight at the State
College Women's Club, 902 S.
Allen St. Speakers will be
Helen Meahl, professor of
sociology, and Helen Bare
(graduate—psychology.)
The videotape "Dr. John"
will be shown 1 p.m. today in
Kern lobby.