The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, April 29, 1976, Image 3

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    Measfes hit campus
5. _ Ritenour Health Center a sneeze, cough or contact Wirag said students with :g
a has suspended visiting with clothing or towels. cold symptoms should , not gi
6 hours indefinitely because The first symptoms necessarily .think they have
Si of what a spokesman called suggest a severe cold with measles. SI
“a •’ little measles runny nose, red, watery <«We’re afraid of a Danic I
I epidemic.” ( eyes and a bad cough. This sitU ation " he sa?d $
§1 Robert Wirag, director of. comes 10 to 14 days after -Evervbodv can come in %
| Health Education at exposure to a person who thinkine go" I
1 Ritenour, said yesterday hasmeasles Wiragsaid measles B But use a little i
g the nine measles patients Four days after the cold commnn _„ nse cove rine $
|ln the dispensary have the starts,!. blotchyed rash your mouth wh en sn eezin| %
& highly contagious, red appears first on the head ■ r . nllffhin£> ..
5 measles (Rubeola) virus, and neck, then on the rest oco b S- SS
6 “We want to protect of the body. The disease is Wirag also said people a
0 - anybody else from coming contagious for four days who already had measles
'0 'into contact with them,” he before the cold begins and or who have been vac
•iji said. , Infected people five days after the rash cinated “have very little to
transmit measles through first appears. be concerned about.” $
PHEAA funds open for summer
Applications for summer ■ $290, which is 80 per cent of
Pennsylvania Higher Summer Term tuition
Education Assistance grants
will be available starting
Monday from the Office of
Student Aid.
' .The maximum grant for a
University student will be
Co-ed dorm discussion
Members of Residential
Life and The Association of
Residence Hall Students met
yesterday to-discuss a co-ed
housing proposal, but would
not allow a Daily Collegian
reporter to attend.
M. Lee Upcraft, director of
Residential Life, said he
considered the meeting to be
.between students and staff
'land he would not conduct the
Students may receive a
grant even if they plan to
attend a PHEAA-approved
institution other than Penn
State.
meeting until the reporter
left.
Rich Cartwright, ARHS
vice president and a member
of the committee, said
yesterday’s meeting was
mainly an organizational one.
“It was very general. We
just didn’t .want anything to
• be misconstrued,” he said.
The purpose of the com
mittee is to determine the
APARTMENTS
for Sept, occupancy
very reasonable:
1 -Bedroom Apartments
for 2 people "
2-Bedroom Apartments
for 3or 4 people .
Completely Furnished
One Block from Campus
Also Homes ,
WAGNER &
GILLILAND
234-8030
Students must be enrolled
full time to be eligible.
According to Joyce Keenan,
financial aid counselor and
coordinator of the PHEAA
grant program for- the
University, 2,000 to' 3,000
University students will get
. “total effect”, of a co-ed
housing program, according
to Cartwright. He said
members are mostly
collecting specific data from
other schools that have such
programs.
The ARHS students are
Cartwright, Tim Kavanaugh,
Chris Tomasch and Dave
Hindman.
Residential Life members
'Opus 1976' dance to open
Orchesis Dance Company Penn State Co-ed Gym
will present “Optis 1976" at nasties Club will meet at 7
8:30 p.m. today through . tonight in the Rec Hall south
Saturday in White Hall Dance gym. Free patches for all
Theater. Matinee at 2:30 p.m. members.
Saturday.
Peter Gould, professor of
geography, will present a
Man-Environment Relations
seminar, “Beyond the Map,”
at 4 p.m. today in S-131
Human Development.
. Carl Keener will present a
slide show on wildflowers and
poisonous plants 'at 7:30
tonight in 5 Ferguson.
PHEAA grants this sum
mer. “Penn State has one
of the larger summer
programs, ’ ’ she said.
A total 16,631 University
students received PHEAA
funds for this academic year.
dosed
are: Upcraft, Phil Grosnick,
assistant director of
residence hall programs;
Tom Eakin, Pollock-
Nittany-Centre coordinator;
Mark Salvatini, assistant
coordinator in Pollock-
Nittany-Centre; Glenn
Burger, assistant coordinator
in South Halls; and Carol
Roy, assistant coordinator in
Pollock-Nittany-Centre.
Jniversity Park Calendar
k m ite Items to be included in this calendar should be sent to the Calendar Editor,
U k p|*|| 29—May 9 Room 312 Old' Maih, by Thursday of the week preceding publication.
Special Events
Thursday, April 29
Gentle Thursday, 10-10, HUB lawn.
Dr. Robert M. Smith, assistant to the Pro
vost, on "Some Observations on Aca
demic and Administrative Program Re
view," 12:30 p.m., lunch 12 noon, HUB
dining room A & B. Sponsored by the
PSU branch American Society for En
gineering Education.
Faculty Women’s Club and Newcomers
Club spring luncheon, reception 11:30
a.m., luncheon 12:30 p.m., HUB ball
room. Speaker, Dr. Norman A. Graebner,
Distinguished Visiting Professor of His
tory, on "Philadelphia and the American
Revolution."
Commons Videotape, noon, Kern lobby.
FSHA 410, A Ukranian Easter Feast, 5:30
p.m., Maple Room. Reservations re
l qulred: 865-7441. •
Llnlversity Theatre, "Unruly Children: A
Pennsylvania Bicentennial Vaudeville,"
/ 8 p.m., Pavilion Theatre;
Pennsylvania Vocal Ensemble, 8:30 p.m.,
Music Bldg, recital hall.
Orchesis Dance Company, "Opus 1976,"
8:30 p.m., White Hall Dance Theatre.
Friday,' April 30
Commonsplace Coffeehouse, 8 p.m., Room
102 Kern.
University Theatre, "Unruly Children: A
Pennsylvania Bicentennial Vaudeville,”
8 p.m., Pavilion Theatre.
.Orchesis Dance Company, “Opus 1976,"
8:30 p.m., White Hall Dance Theatre.
Pennsylvania Vocal Ensemble, 8:30 p.m.,
Music Bldg, recital hall.
Artists Series, Boston Symphony Chamber
Players, 8:30 p.m., Schwab.
Friday-Saturday, April 30-May 1
I Conference on The Dimensions of Black
Studies for Educational institutions In
Pennsylvania, Keller Bldg.
Seminars
Thursday, April 29
Chemistry, 12:45 p.m., Room 333 Whitmore.
David E. Evans, California Institute of
Technology, on "Aspects of Natural Pro
duct' Synthesis."
Gerontology Center, Individual and Family
Studies, Psychology and Sociology De
partments joint colloquium, 2:20 p.m.,
Room 101 Kern. Orville G. Brim Jr.,
president, Foundation for Child Develop
ment, on "Great Tales, Myths and Leg
ends of Personality Change: The Tradi
tion of Human Metamorphosis In the
Western World."
Air Pollution Control, 2:20 p.m., Room 145
Fenske. Frank P. Partee, Ford Motor
Co., Dearborn, Mich., on "Organization of
an Environmental Control Function in a
Large Corporation."
Anthropology, 3:30 p.m., Room 107 So
cial Science. Dr. Ralph Nicholas, Uni
versity of Chicago, on "Smallpox, Mal
aria and the Disease Goddess in Ben
gal."
Meteorology, 4 p.m., Room 26 Mineral Sci-
Lectures
Thursday, April 29
Dr. Ralph W. Nicholas, anthropology and
social sciences, University of .Chicago, on
"The Indian Political Crisis and American
Scholarship," 7:30 p.m., HUB main
"'lounge. Sponsored by the South Asia
Committee, the University Committee on
International Programs, and the Depart
ment. of Anthropology.
Dr. George P. Bonis, visiting professor of
history, on "The Hungarian Estates in
the Hapsburg Monarchy in the 18th Cen
tury," 8 p.m., Room 101 Kern.
Monday-Thursday, May 3-6
Frank C. Whitmore Lectures, Barry M.
■ Trost, professor of chemistry, University
of Wisconsin, Room 333 Whitmore. "New
Approaches to the Design of Molecular
Architecture I. The Framework," May 3,
8 p.m. "Molecular Architecture 11. The
Tools," May 4, 12:45 p.m. "Molecular
Architecture 111. The Finishings," May 5,
12:45 p.m. "Molecular Architecture IV.
The Blueprint," May 6, 4 p.m.
Tuesday, May 4
Ernest C. Pollard Lecture, 4 p.m., Room 101
Althouse. Peter B. Moore, molecular bio
physics and biochemistry, Yale Univer
sity, on "Mapping the Locations of Pro
teins in the Ribosome by Thermal Neu
tron Scattering.” '
Wednesday, May 5 ■
Dotterer Lecture, 8 p.m., HUB assembly
room. Dr. Hans-Georg Gadamer, Univer
sity of Heidelberg emeritus, on "Hermen-
French Club will meet at
7:30 tonight in 124 Sparks to
nominate officers for next
year.
Thomas Thwaites will
discuss hiking in Penn
sylvania at the Penn State
Forestry Society meeting at
7:30 tonight in 301
Agricultural Administration
Building.
Returning Women Students
will meet at 7 tonight in the
Paul Robeson Cultural Center
conference room. Husbands
and children invited. There
will be a discussion for the
adults and a film for the
children.
Dance Interest Group has
been cancelled tonight.
Those interested in
becoming student advisers
for the College of Business
Administration will meet at 7
tonight in 201 Business
FTC to contest
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Federal Trade Commission
investigators, claiming
consumers are overcharged
millions of dollars a year for
breakfast cereals, yesterday
asked a judge to break up the
country’s four biggest cereal
Saturday, May 1
Breazeale Nuclear Reactor Facility Open
House, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Transportation
available every half hour from the park
ing lot behind the Mechanical Engineer
ing Bldg.
Penn State Model Railroad Club Equipment
Aucton, 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Rooms 320, 214
HUB.
Antique aircraft fly-in, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Uni
versity Airport. Sponsored, by Aerospace
Engineering department.
Orchesls Dance Company, "Opus 1976,"
2:30 and 8:30 p.m., White Hall Dance
Theatre.
Sports: Men's track, vs. Michigan, men's
golf, Nlttany Lion Invitational. Women's
lacrosse, vs. Mlllersvitle, 1 p.m.
Dinner Theatre, 6:30 p.m., Rooms 102, 112
• Kern. “Cole Porter Review."
University Theatre, "Unruly Children: A
Pennsylvania Bicentennial Vaudeville,”
8 p.m., Pavilion Theatre.
Sunday, May 2
Chapel Service, 11 a.m., Elsenhower
Chapel. Dr. Rosemary R. Ruether, his
torical theology, Howard University.
Black Christian Fellowship worship service,
11:15 a.m., Elsenhower Chapel. Pastor
Gerald G. Loyd, the Jerry Loyd Ensemble.
Sports: Men’s baseball, vs. Mansfield, 1
p.m. Men's golf, Nittany Lion Invita
, tlonal.
Shavers Creek Nature Center, Early Morn
ing Bird Walk, 7 a.m.; Ecology Walk, 3
p.m., Mineral Industries Bldg., Stone
Valley.
Katherine Kello, piano, 3:30 p.m., Music
Bldg, recital hall.
Sports: Women's tennis, vs. Princeton, 2
p.m. Women's lacrosse, vs. East Strouds
burg, 3 p.m.
University Theatre, "Unruly Children: A
Pennsylvania Bicentennial Vaudeville,"
8 p.m., Pavilion Theatre.
Penn State Thespians, "South Pacific,"
8:30 p.m., Schwab.
Friday, May 7
Ann Robinson, French horn, 8:30 p.m., Mus- "Travel Fair,” 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Kern.
Dinner Theatre, 6:30 p.m„ Rooms 102, 112
Kern. "Cole Porter Review.”
Monday, May 3
Haircut and Styling, demonstration, 12
• noon, Room 101 Kern.
ences. Dr. John Miller, NOAA, Silver
Springs, Md., on "Global Monitoring for
Climate Change.”
Mathematics, 4 p.m., Room 103 McAllis
ter. Harold Stark, MIT, oh "Recent Pro
gress in Number Theory.”
Agronomy, 4 p.m., Room 111 Tyson. Ho
Jin Lee on "Determination of Physiologi
cal Maturity in Oats.”
Astronomy, 4 p.m., Room 445 Davey. Laura
K. Hutton, University of Maryland, on
“Very Long Baseline Interferometry of
Radio Sources.”
Ceramic Science, 11 a.m., Room 301 Min
eral Industries. Dr. L. Austin on "Theory
of Grinding Operations."
Monday, May 3
Organic Chemistry, 8 p.m., Room 333 Whit
more. Robert Lazarus on “The Second
ary Isotope Effect: Mechanistic Applica
tions."
Tuesday, May 4
Analytical Chemistry, 12:45 p.m., Room 445
Davey. Steven Prescott on "Chemical
lonization Mass Spectrometry of Beta-
eutics: Between the Critical Rationalism
of Popper and the Critique of the Ide
ologies of Habermas." Sponsored by the
Department of Philosophy.
Films
Friday, April 30
Four films on Japan, sponsored by the Jap
anese Speaking Society, 7:30-9:30 p.m.,
HUB assembly room.
Wednesday, May 5
Free Shakespeare film, “Henry V” (Olivier),
6:30 p.m., Room 101 Chambers.
Artists Series film, “Singln' in the Rain,"
8:30 p.m., University Auditorium.
Friday, May 7
Student Film Organization, films produced
by film majors, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., HUB
assembly room.
Saturday-Sunday, May 8-9
Student films, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., HUB assemb
ly room.
Hillel Foundation film, "I Love You Rosa,"
Saturday, 9 p.m.; Sunday, 7 p.m., HUB
assembly room.
University schedule
Monday, May 3
Start preregistration for fail term.
First day for signing summer term NDSL,
BEOG and University long term loans,
Room 108 Shields.
Wednesday, May 9
Late drop deadline.
Last day for signing spring term NDSL,
BEOG and University long term loans,
Room 108 Shields.
Administration.
A videotape, “The Agony of
Independence: Angola, South
Africa,” will be shown at noon
today in Kern lobby.
Penn State University
Professional’s Association
will meet noon today in 101
Kern.
Collegian notes
Orville Brim will present a
behavioral science
colloquium on “Great Tales,
Myths and Legends of Per
sonality Change: The
Tradition of Human
Metamorphosis in the
Western World” at 2:30 p.m.
today in 101 Kern.
Gyorgy Bonis, as part of the
history lecture series, will
speak on “The Hungarian
Estates in the Hapsburg
Monarchy in the 18th Cen
tury" at 8 tonight in 101 Kern.
makers.
Lawyers for the companies
Kellogg, General Foods,
General Mills and Quaker
Oats said the charges were
“absolutely absurd.”
The complaint, first filed
lc Bldg, recital hall.
Tuesday, May 4
Symposium on "Think Small for 2076,"
9:20 a.m. throughout day, Room 301
HUB. Sponsored by the Science, Tech
nology and Society Program.
Gallery Talk, William Hull and William Dav
is on "Framing Original Art Works," 10:30
a.m., Museum of Art.
University Theatre, "Unruly Children: A
Pennsylvania Bicentennial Vaudeville," 8
p.m., Pavilion Theatre.
Wednesday, May 5
"Travel Fair," exhibits, workshops, re
sources for summer travel, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.,
Kern.
Sports: Men's tennis, vs. Lehigh, 3 p.m.
102nd John Henry Frizzell All-University
Speech Contest, finals, 7 p.m., Room 121
Sparks.
Penn State Thespians, “South Pacific," 8:30
p.m., Schwab.
University Theatre, "Unruly Children: A
' Pennsylvania Bicentennial Vaudeville,"
8 p.m., Pavilion Theatre.
Israeli Independence Day Celebration, 7
p.m., Hillel Foundation. Ruthl Navon, Is
raeli singer, and David Krivoshi, Israeli
pianist. Refreshments and folk dancing.
Penn State Brass Chorale, 8:30 p.m., Music
Bldg, recital hall.
Thursday, May 6
"Travel Fair," 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Kern.
Commons Videotape, noon, Kern lobby.
diketonates."
Solid Waste, 2:20 p.m., Room 140 Fenske.
L. J. Mlnnlck, I. U. Conversion Systems
Corp., Philadelphia, on "Fly Ash Utili
zation.”
Astronomy and Physics joint colloquium,
3:50 p.m., Room 119 Osmond. William
K. Rose, astronomy, University of Mary
land, on "Theory of Pulsers and Com
pact X-Ray Sources."
Civil Engineering and Engineering Mech
anics, 4 p.m., Room 232 Hammond. Dr.
W. F. Chen, Lehigh University, on "Con
stitutive Relations for Concrete.”
Inorganic Chemistry, 8 p.m., Room 333
Whitmore. Dr. F. Urbach, Case Western
Reserve University.
Entomology, 4 p.m., Room 204 Patterson.
Arthur A. Hower, PSU associate profes
sor of entomology, on "Insect Pest and
Parasite Management In Alfalfa."
Thursday, May 6
Chemistry, 12:45 p.m., Room 333 Whit
more. Earl Mutterties, Cornell University,
on "New Organometallic Chemistry."
Air Pollution Control, 2:20 p.m., Room 145
Meeting
Monday, May 3
College of Health, Physical Education and
Recreation faculty meeting, 7 p.m., Room
109 White.
Exhibits
Museum of Art: Portraits USA: 1776-1976.
Zoller Gallery; Graduate Show, opening
May 1.
Kern Gallery: W. C. Handy Jazz Exhibit,
until April 30. Tom McKinney, Paintings,
until April 30. African Jewelry and
Bronze Castings, until April 30. Bruce
Johnson, Watercolors, opening May 1.
Ist Annual Graduate Sculpture Invitation
al, opening May 8.
HUB Gallery; Recent Works by Stuart
Frost.
HUB Main Lounge; Suiting Everyone
(Smithsonian Traveling Exhibition Ser
vice).
Pattee Library: Main Lobby An Exhibit
from the Entomology Department by
David Shetlar. East Corridor Gallery
Drawings and Prints, Allan Larkin. Lend
ing Services Lobby Drawings and
Paintings, Bill Diaz. Drawings, Neil Fea
ther, opening May 4.
Chambers Gallery: Undergraduate Student
Exhibition, all media.
The Daily Collegian Thursday, April 29,1976
Circolo Italiano will hold a
conversation hour at ''7: 3o
tonight in 348 North
Burrowes.
“Americana,” the fifth
annual concert of the Penn
sylvania Vocal Ensemble,
will be performed at 8:30 p.m.
today and tomorrow in the
Music Building recital hall.
Guy Pilato will speak on
suicide and depression at 7:30
tonight in Irvin Hall lounge.
Phi Mu Alpha Music
Fraternity will meet at 9:30
tonight in 110 Music Building.
West Halls Spanish Club
will have a demonstration on
how to make a pinata at 8
tonight in Thompson lounge.
Pi Lambda Theta will meet
7:30 tonight in 13 Sparks.
Alice Bee Kasakoff of the
Department of Anthropology
at South Carolina University
will speak on “Spatial
Location . and Social
Organization: An Analysis of
Tikopian Patterns” at 3:30
cereal monopoly
four years ago, contends the
four companies engaged for
more than 30 years in a “tacit
conspiracy” to' restrict
competition and keep prices
higher than they otherwise
would have been.
The trial is expected to last
p.m. today in 107 Social
Science Building.
Ralph Nicholas, professor
of anthropology at the
University of Chicago, will
speak on “Smallpox, Malaria
and the Disease Goddess in
Gengal,” at 3:30 p.m. today in
107 Social Science Building.
He will also speak on India
at 7:30 tonight in the HUB
main lounge.
Food Service and Housing
Administration 410 will
present “A Ukranian Easter
Dinner” at 5:30 p.m. today in
the Maple Room of Human
Development. For reser
vations call 865-7441.
Laura K. Hutton, research
assistant at the Radio
Astronomy Branch of God
dard Space Flight Center will
speak on ‘‘Very Long
Baseline Interferometry
(VLBI) of Radio Sources” at
4 p.m. today in 445 Davey
Laboratory.
Women’s Resource Center
will hold career discussions at
8 tonight in 108 W. Beaver
Ave.
most of the summer. The law
judge, Harry R. Hinkes, will
issue a decision which the
full commission may accept,
reject or modify. The com
panies could appeal any
ruling of the full FTC to the
courts.
Sports: Men's lacrosse, vs. Pennsylvania,
8 p.m.
University Theatre, "Unruly Children: A
Pennsylvania Bicentennial Vaudeville,"
8 p.m., Pavilion Theatre.
Penn State Thespians, "South Pacific,"
8:30 p.m., Schwab.
Claremont Woodwind Quintet, 8:30 p.m.,
Music Bldg, recital hall.
Saturday, May 8
College of Agriculture Open House, cele
brating the development of agricultural
technology during the past 200 years,
' 8:30 a.m.-2 p.m., headquarters, lobby
of Ag. Adm. Bldg.
Sports: Women's tennis, l vs. Ohio State,
9:30 a.m. Golf, Lady Lion Spring Invi
tational. Women's lacrosse, vs. Cort-,
land, 1 p.m. _
University Theatre. "Unruly Children: A
Pennsylvania Bicentennial Vaudeville,”'
8 p.m., Pavilion Theatr^.
Penn State Singers' Music of American
Composers, 8:30 p.m., Music Bldg, recital
hall.
Howard Cosell, 8 p.m., Recreation Bldg.
Sponsored by Colloquy.
Penn State Thespians, "South Pacific,” 8:30
p.m., Schwab.
Sunday, May 9
Chapel Service, 11 a.m., Eisenhower Chap
el. Rev. Charles L. Coleman, program
director, religious affairs.
Black Christian Fellowship worship service,
11:15 a.m., Eisenhower Chapel. “Today,
Is Women’s Day," Mrs. Carrie Lucious,
Pittsburgh; special women’s day choir.
Shavers Creek Nature Center, Early Morn
ing Bird Walk, 7 a.m.; Spring Wildflower
and Ecology Walk, 3 p.m., Mineral In-
dustries' 81dg.,. Stone Valley
Penn State Glee Club Mother’s Day Con
cert, 3 p.m., Schwab.
Fenske. Robert A. O'Dell, graduate stu
dent, on "Mechanisms and the Rate of
Sulfur Dioxide Uptake by Vegetation.”
Physics, 3:50 p.m., Room 119 Osmond. Dr.
Thomas Appelquist, Yale University, on
“Recent Developments in Weak and
Electromagnetic Interactions."
Anthropology and Population Issues Re
search Office. 3:30 p.m., Room 107 Soc
ial Science. Dr. Alice B. Kasakoff, an
thropology, University of South Carolina,
on “Spatial Location and Social Organ
ization: An Analysis of Tikoplan Pat-
terns."
Agronomy, 4 p.m., Room 111 Tyson. S. Set
ty on “Inheritance of Leaf Area In
Corn."
Astronomy, 4 p.m., Room 445 Davey. Dr.
Mark Reid, Harvard College Observa
tory, on “Stellar Masers."
Mathematics, 4 p.m., Room 103 McAllis
ter. Joseph Schoenfield, Duke Univer
sity, on "Some Results in Logic.”
Meteorology, 4 p.m., Room 26 Mineral
Sciences. Morris A. Bender on "Tem
perature Gradients and Clear Air Tur
bulance Probabilities."
Singers offering
“Americana”
"Americana," an evening of vocal novel
ties, will be performed at the fifth annual
concert of the Pennsylvania Vocal En
semble at 8:30 p.m. Thursday and Friday,
April 29 and 30, in the Music Bldg, recital
hall at the University. The ensemble, made
up of 25 vocalists, including University stu
dents and singers from the State College
area, performs under the direction of Bruce
Trinkley, assistant professor of music.
The first portion of the program will
consist of Randall Thompson’s "Americana”
to texts from “The American Mercury";
by Charles Wakefield Cadman from
the University's Cadman Collection iri the
music department; Virgil Thomson’s “Capi
tal, Capitals" with text by Gertrude Stein;
two southern folk hymns; and "General
William Booth Enters Heaven" by Charles
Ives. In the second portion, a selection of
songs by Stephen Foster will be performed.
Soloists in this segment will be soprano
Karen Scott, assistant professor of music,
and baritone Douglas Smith, a music
graduate student and assistant director of
the ensemble.