Tight squeeze A SECTION of Calder Alley between Fraser Street and flumes Alley might be the site of alterations pending borough council action. Sidewalks are being considered to provide easier access to newly-erected shops in the area and as a safety measure for pedestrians. State budget sent to S'happ HARRISBURG (AP) An $B7 million budget package narrowly passed the Senate yesterday, ending six months of wrangling over how much the state should spend this year. The 26-23 Senate vote was the minimum needed to pass the bill, which was sent to Gov. Shapp. Four Democrats and 19 of the Senate's 20 Republicans voted against the measure. The other Republican was absent. Opponents complained about the $2,500 increase in legislative expense accounts and the large amount of aid for Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. Legislators in both the House and as U.S. budget clears , Senate WASHINGTON (UPI) The Senate gave final : approval- yesterday to a temporary, federal budget for the current 1976 fiscal year after a blast by its budget chairman at.Pregident Ford for his threat to veto "essential " tax cuts. Besides a $374.9 billion ,ceiling on government spending through June 30, the legislation also sets a revenue floor of $300.8 l4llion built around the six m9.llth extnsion of tax cuts Ford says he cannot accept. This would leave a budget deficit of $74.1 billion some $25 billion less than once feared. Trie measure, in the form of a con current resolution to continue federal programs at roughly last year's level until actual appropriations are com pleted, now goes to the House. It does not require presidential signature. Peace, goodwill By SHERRIE SPANGLER Collegian Staff Writer Christmas break begins ne4 week, but Pat, with no family or friends, will have only an empty apartment to look forwattl to. While most students head for home] the ski slopes and parties, Pat will sit in her room; lonely and depressed. Even those smiling students rushing around town in search of the perfect Christmas present for a friend have problems. According to Albert L. Ingrain, director of the Mental klealth Cente'r in Boucke,, suicide rates go up around the' holidays because people realize how lonely they are. "It , really scares you when you find out how messed up some kids are, although they appear to be well adjusted," one resident assistant lamented. In 'fact, recent studies at several universities showed that about 90 per cent of the students reported having felt deeply discouraged arid unhappy at limes, and more than half had though about committing suicide. The national average for suicide Ifs three in every 10;000 college studetns, according to,lngram. Suicide, is second only to accidents as the cause of death among college studetns. 'Mau i f rice , L. Farber, , social i t psych logist • at the University of Con neric t, calls suicide a disease of hope: "Suic de is usually precipitated by a blow ! that; threatens acceptable life conditions. This blow interacts with a low self-image to proQuce a low level of hope.l' When hope is extinAuished, suicide may occur. , i • Ingram says suicide usually does not• result from one isolated event, but oc- . curs 1 after a long accumulation of depressive incidents. For ez, ample, a poor family' life followed by years of loneliness at school may cguse mild depression, but a sudden drop ,in grades added to these problems, could precipitate suicide. : It's difficult to estimate b:l* many 'AINDERT ' _ i • ; 1( .202 PATTEF.I , . , , 1 - . , , . • . , . . ~ thei daily Senate now get $5,000 for expenses Several lawmakers said their con stituents would oppose a 'legislative pay or expense increase, although all ad mitted they could use the extra money. Sen. Louis Coppersmith, D-Cambria, said increasing expense accounts was not the proper way to increase a lawmaker's compensation. "A more frank way ... a more direct way to deal with inflationary pressures is through a salary increase," he said. The bill, which does' not affect a lawmaker's $15,600 annual salary, allots $2.3 million for the expense account increases and additional staff. State departments and agencies are in Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, 1)-Maine, chairman of the -new Senate Budget Committee, charged that Ford's "high handed attitude" in insisting that any tax cut be coupled with a $395 billion spending celling„ for fiscal 1977 "represents nothing less than an effort by the President to abort the congressional budget process" man dated by law. "He may ignore it, but we dare not unless the country is to sink once more into the quagmire of unrelated budgets, runaway spending, inflatidn and recession," Muskie said. , He called the tax cdtsl"essential" to responsible budget-writing but said Congress cannot accede to Ford's demands to set a 1977 budget ceiling now because it will not even receive his budget proposals and supporting figures K til next spring. suicide attempts are made. Some ex perts say far every successful suicide there are five attempts; others say ten. Ingram said most attempts are actual calls for help or attention., Penn State averages only one or two uicides a.year, although depression is d a serious, widespread problem, he 4aid. I The major depressive factors among Students are interpersonal relationships, 4rades, jobs and money. Freshmen often have problems adjust ing to school and being away from home Ingram said. Tom, an! RA who has worked in East Halls, which houses cnainly freshmen: Nittany Halls, which lieouses mainly upperclassmen; and ntre Halls, said, I"X:repression is verywhere. Some freshmen can't make the adjustment easily. 'Many seniors nan't get an interview, let alone a job. And the opposite sex is a pervasive prob lem." Occasional depressian is normal, but when the feeling lasts several days and becomes a nagging obsession, Ingram said the student shoul seek help. Dorm residents can turn to heir RA. Anyone can call the OASIS h 10 center at 234-. 0323 or stop in at the nice, on BeaVer Avenue and 'Garner tieet, to discuss their problems with til understanding volunteer. And the Mental Health Center in Boucke offers tha services of six psychologists, two psy c hiatrists and five graduate assistants. -. RAs take Counselor io".1 198, a three credit course that tea es dealing with people and how to *ck up clues to prollems that an' trained listener might miss. They leive special training .in handling sui 'dal students. For example, they learn tif a student r tssessi gives away a prized 'on he may be contemplating; sui de. RAs also are alert-to withdrawal by students. U there is an immediate dang of suicide, they seek professional help. Torn said, "Student male RAs as much as up things mainly by liv line for $32 million; the counties, $2B million; lodal Bicentennial programs, $lO million, and housing and redevelopmlnt, $5 million.. Allegheny; County gets $9.6 million; Philadelphia, $8.9 million, and all other counties $9.3 million:` The money is for child welfare, food stamps, county cowls and environmental programs. rlt's just loaded too much for Pitts burgh and I Philadelphia," said Sen. Rol3ert , Jubelirer, a Republican from Blair County: (!ordinarily, the budget bill must be passed in June before the start of the fiscal year July 1. A4' There is do exception in the. Budget for eleptiori-year • politics , Muskie said. The budget resolution, binding on Congress under the new budget law, forbids consideration of any legislation that would lOwer revenues beyond the authorized floor or hike spending beyond the ceiling. • Besides the levels set through June, it also sets a spending ceiling of $101.7 billion and a revenue floor of $B6 billion for the June -September "transition period" to the new fiscal year system beginning Oct. 1. The three-month deficit would be $15.7 billion. For the entire 15-month period from July 1, 19751 through • Sept. 30, 1976, therefore the resolution calls for a spending ceiling of $476.6 billion with a revenue floor of .$386.8 billion for a relulting deficit of $89.8 billion. • . . and suicide not by them coming to discuss their problems with me." Pam, another RA, said girls come to her with a wide variety of questions. There is a constant flow of girls in and out of her room. OASIS haS about 55-volunteers about -50 are itudents who are eager to soothe a Worried or depressed person. OASISICo-chairperson Ed Crumb said, "Most people are reluctant to open up at flist be 'u se` they don't know us, they don't thi . k we can really help them, or they thi their problem is insignificant. But we lee. every call as a serious cry for help: I , "To get people •to talk, we use em pathy. Nye try to reflect their feelings so they know we are listening to them," he said. Calls to OASIS are moreTrequent after mid-terms, Olen Crumb said, "Students have just gotten over a really stressful time, and they r feel kind of empty." • Crumb estimated Plat OASIS receives an average Of two ,ealls a day and han dles about one serious• suicide threat a month. OASIS volunteers receive 24 hours of training over an eight-week period. They learn methods of crisis intervention and how to' deal with a suicidal person, - who 'Crumb described as "helpless, hopeless, rejected, withdrawn." "One of.thtrnosi striking warnings of impending s :aide is a depressed person Suddenly sa ~ ng, 'Nell, I think Ilm okay now.' This ... ,• • bids probably just • decided ,4,!" - "*% - . - , will solve his problems," 4. ~!, , : : icti . Among •' seeking help atIOASIS;" depression ~ anifests itself in loneliness, . i o frustration, nfusion, withdrawal and a low desire t ednununicate, Cnimbsaid_ . "They're jus down." - While OA S IS will try to help anyone, the Mental Ilealthtenter deals only with students. Director Ingram said in lerpersonalyinships— roommates ; lovers, . etc - and acaderniq and financial. probleur are probably the comecan t to 43! females. p ic k , 0 wi th the guys, Calder Alley under study By PHIL STOREY Collegian Staff Writer Trucks bottle-neck traffic while unloading, cars creep along, bicycles wobble cautiously on a zig-zag course and pedestrians stay as close to the walls as possible. The scene on Calder Alley is a congested one. Borough and regional officials are now studying a proposal which will make the going easier at least for the pedestrians. If the proposal . gains the approval of State College Borough Council, raised sidewalks will be installed along the north side of Calder Alley from Humes Alley to Fraser Street. Ron Short, director of the Centre Regional Planning Commission, ad mitted that no serious accidents in the alley have been reported. But besides giving walkers a safer feeling, the six-foot-wide sidewalks would encourage business development along the alley, Short said. More pedestrians have been using Calder Alley as a pathway as several mall shops have sprung up along the alley in recent years. "Borough council is actively en couraging businesses on Calder Alley," Short said. . Short sees Calder Alley "developing Leaders argue spending eiling Ford, Congress in for tax fight WASHINUTON (UPI) President Ford and Cfmgressional leaders failed to reach a compromise yesterday in their battle over ; I Nhether to attach a spending Felling to an extension of this year's tax cuts, and both sides prepared for a veto battle. "We were unable to agree on anything," !said Senate Finance Com- Mittee chairman Russell Long, 11-La., one of fowl senators who met for two pours with Ford in an attempt to strike a icompromis. Long said. F'urd i At tick, position that any tax cut must be accompanied by a dollar-for-dollar cut in projected fiscal 1977 federal spending, while Democrats stuck to their position that they cannot put a ceiling on a budget they have not yet seen. Budget Director James T. Lynn, who sat• in on the meeting, agreed there was no progress and quoted Ford as telling the senators, "We'll just have to let the system work." Asked if this meant Ford was resigned to a veto, Limn said, "The most that can be said is i that ... there was no com promise ai7ived at" and no further meetings were scheduled. Lynn said there now was "no doubt" that Ford would veto the bill that most common causes of depression among students seeking the center's help. "Getting depressed is not a weakness to be ashamed, of," ,Ingram said. "If students would only come to us we would help them cope with the depression and look for the factors that caused it." For example, if a student is depressed because ofipoor grades, Ingram said he would try to discover why the student _ was doing badly and would refer him to an academic counselor. If, the student were severely depressed, Ingram said he would set up a series of interviews with him. -"At what !point does a student need help? According to Ingram, "When you 'feel- you need help, then you need it. But remember that occasional brief periods of depression a are normal." Countless{ studies have been done to determine, the characteristics of suicidal-prcine personalities, but the results are conflicting and inconclusive. Many experts reportthat student suicide and depression rates' are higher among students with no religious beliefs, with high gradeS and who live in apartments rather than in dorms. Other experts disagree. Flowever,i there is general concenstip that poor interpersonal relationship and an in , competitive atmospheee oftentargo hand-in-hand with suicid s a e l er lestures among college students, said ProfasOr J. Eugene Knott of Rhode Island College. Infgam said a long-range solution might be making the education ex perience as personal as possible making students feel as if they belonged. "But," he said, "I don't know bow to do it. Smallerasseri cost more money." CrUmb o ffered some general advice to students Whii. 'feel the weight of depression: t"lkiift ' Withdraw. Talk to someone, shone a roommate, an RA, the cleaning-lady. -Oet involved. Know someone cares." ' 3 COPIES Ten cents per copy Friday, December 12,1975 Vol. 78, No. 88 29 pages University P Published by Students of The Penney like an underground Atlanta" the shopping and entertainment center of the Georgia capital. The whole proposal seems almost too good to be true. But there are some kinks in the play. Adding a sidewalk will significantly narrow Calder Alley, in some places from 15 to nine feet. Large trucks parked in the alley unloading supplies to the back doors of businesses fronting on College Avenue would render parts of the alley impassable to anything larger than a Volkswagon. Short does not view this as a probleni but as a virtue of the proposal. He said that many people are using th alley as a shortcut across town, instead of using College or Beaver Avenue. The trucks, he said, would tend to force catt drivers to choose an avenue instead of Calder Alley, giving more room in the alley'to bicyclists. One . section in the alley, from Alle Street to Humes Alley, would be t narrow for emergency vehicles to through if a truck was parked there. Short said tbis problem could be solved it unloading were prohibited arthis sect tion. But State,college Police Chief Elwood Williams cautioned that trucks 'ress will send him next week. It is I ted , to contain a six-month ex n of 1975's recession-fighting tax thai preventing withholding tax froM rising in January. • Con= ex . • tens", cuts, rat • • 1 . . "I bade just one small request, that it he v p ttoes it he do it in a hurry so some people don't have to miss y their Christi. mas I holidays," Long said. Ford was noncommittal ;on Long's request according to Sen. Edmund D-Maine, chairman of the Senate Budget Committee. • Milskie.! said - the only compromis For was willjtig td make Oaring the mee ing was to. say he was willing to acc t a higher budget ceiling than the $395 billion he has proposed,' but only if Congress trimmed the tax cut to cover the ldss in revenue. Long's Senate Finance Committee apprived a bill Wednesday that Would Lowe- Treasury revenues by $6.4 billion compared to what would be xeceived if no bill was passed. Ford'A proposal calls fora $2B billion tax cut matched by an equa? trimming of the federal budget, or no net Treasury loss. Tvo Republicans also attended the meeting, Sen. Carl Curtis, R-Neb., ranking GOP member of the Finance Comtnittee, and Sen. Henry Bellmon, R- lent night k, Pennsylvania nia State University delivering to businesses along the Allen- Humes stretch of the alley would start unloading on College Avenue to cut down the distance from trucks to stores. This would add to the congestion on the avenue, he said. Williams added that the rest of the trucks might start- unloading on College Avenue "by natural instinct" because the truck divers would not want their trucks boxed-in by other trucks unloading on the newly narrowed alley. "A lot of dialogue has to take place before anything is decided," Williams said. That dialogue is taking place. The Centre Regional Planning Commission referred a study of the proposal to Borough Manager Carl Fairbanks who in turn referred it to the borough staff and the State College Planning and Traffic Commissions. Meanwhile, Ron Short and his staff are working on getting the bugs out of the proposal. Fairbanks said the proposal probably would npt be voted on by council until after January. "We're in the first stage iden tification of the problems," Fairbanks said. "The second stage is figuring out ways.to overcome the problems." Okla. Curtis is a staunch supporter of Ford's position, but Bellmon apparently sided with the Democrats. "The time for this will be next May," Bellmon said. "He's asking us in my opinion to violate the budget act we passed last year and in this way kill the whole process. And I don't believe it's in the long-range best interest of this country to move in that direction." A large number of Republicans have • deserted Ford, particularly in the Senate, and it appears now that there are more than enough votes Ns override a veto in *the Senate and probably a suf ficient amount in.the House. Long said following the meeting, "We understand one another better than we did, but we're not in agreement. The differ nce between the Senate and the President remains about where it was." Weather Did you know that State College is one of the cloudiest spots in the nation? Skies will remaip overcast and damp at least through tomorrow, with a period of snow or sleet possible early today. High 34 Cloudy tonight and tomorrow with rain arriving by Saturday morning Low tonight 30. High Saturday near 40.