The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, July 21, 1976, Image 5

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    ©OONESBURY
*/ THIS camp >
/CHOU IS 60001
AREN'T YOU
\ 60NNA EAT, )
Vmarcie?/
| fan
one day only
save on
"wardrobe-stretchers."
Famous maker
Misses Shells!
$5.99 to $7.99
Regular $8 to $l2
Shells and tank tops in crewneck,
U-neck, mock turtle and turtle
neck styles that go under suits
and jackets or go beautifully
alone. So stretch your wardrobe
with sleeveless, long, and short
sleeve shells, basic and fashion'
colors. Sizes 34 to 42.
Downtown State College
9:30 to 5:30
Nittany Ma 11... 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Bellefonte ... 9:30 to 5:00
Sorry, No Phone Orders ... No Layawaysl
COMPLIMENTS OF THE PENN STATE BOOKSTORE, McALLISTER B
AND ON THE GROUND FLOOR OF THE HUB
SEWING BEE
1 Middle -
5 Beast of burden
B Tales •
13 Simple
19 Type of buggy
20-Batman and
example
21 Faith
22 Country of 113 Down
23 Something very hard to find
27 Occur, In Soho
29 In the Rain"
30 Prepares a violin bow
31 -the horizon: become ominous
33 Certain coin
34 Orchard Items
35 With: prefix
37 Sunday sales restriction
39 Hamilton Burger was one:
abbr
40 One of the Kettles
41 Partner to tic
42 South Seas Isle
43 Famous volcano
44 Exclamations
THAT SAME KID HAS
BEEN CALUN6 ME NAMES
A6A1N,51R...1 CAN'T EAT...
4i Detains by conversation
49 Bible part: abbr
50 She raised Cain
51 Indian garment
52 Clumsy
53 Ump
55 First showing, as a movie
57 Horse strap
60 His: French ,
61 Newton-John, for one
63 Region
64 - Tomb
66 Classic language
67 Clothing fastener
68 Spoiled child
69 Urge
73 Famed violins
75 Type of year
76 Smudges .
77 Swiss river
yi peasioie
83 Beatty, for one
84 Sphere of Influence
86 Alaskan Indian.
88 Convention vote
89 "Fee-fofum"
Robin,
mbs a TBAmsKsrtteum
Aim/sfatHmtmmß
THAT’S >
OKAY.SIR..
IALKAtV
MAYBE HE'S
HURT...DOYOU
HAVE A FIRST
AID KIT?
HIT HIM.
HE UPSET WO SO
MUCH YOU CAN'T EAT?
90 American wood anemone
93 Branch of the armed forces:
' abbr
94 "-card, any card"
97 Curve
98 - Abner
99 Zhivago or No: abbr
100 M.D.'salde: abbr
101 Item carried by 106 Down
103 Artificial language
104 Small cabin: Spanish
106 Tossed Item
108 Adjust a piano agaln
-109 Chimney: Italian
110 Rope for holding a horse
112 Beasts: French
113 Roadway faced by the Bank of
England
116 -the drum
117 Dodge
118 British beverage
119 Shows agreement
122 John and Priscilla
123 Woodland deity
124 Concorde: abbr
125 Winter white
MW.; SUWWSAU
HfCHOttfA Hi it SHOT OF A
THAT'S WHAT I
.HIT HIM WITH!
:;',A741.2.•.f:== , 1' , . - . , • Se.t.r..
NO, I HIT HIM ,
WITH MY LUNCH!
■fll
Mike Shenk
Collegian
notes
There will be a special
student preview of the
musical "Little Mary Sun*
shine" at 8 tonight in the
Pavilion Theatre. Tickets for
$1 go on sale at 10 a.m. at the
Playhouse box office.
There will be a "Behind
the-scenes" look at the
musical “Little Mary Sun
shine" at 3 p.m. on Friday in
the Pavilion Theatre. Free
tickets are available at the
Playhouse box office or at the
University Auditorium box
office.
The Free U seminar “The
Biology of Cancer” will meet
at 7:30 tomorrow night in 317
Boucke.
The Free U course in disco
dancing is cancelled
tomorrow. It will meet as
Nation's growth rate stowed; inflation rate rises
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Massive inventory
stabilization slowed, the
nation's growth rate to 4.4 per
cent in the second quarter of
1976 less than half that of
the previous three months
and the inflation rate climbed
DOWN
. l Sullivan, for one
2 Gold, to a chemist
3 Come to your senses!
4 Apartment house
5 Summer beverage -
6 Lather
7 Sturdy
8 Stain
9 Palmer, for one
10 South American bird
11 Treetype
12 One of the Beatles
13 Type of nuclear reaction
14 Nine-saver
15 Common swifts
16 Endings for man or card
17 Gather, as grouse
18 - Cld
24 - Gay: plane which bombed
Hiroshima
25 Arthurian lady and namesakes
26 "May I show - a seat?"
27 Medieval lyric
28 North or barber
32 This continent
34 Destiny
35 Type of paper or rubber
36 Evicts
38 Made a basket
40 Unadulterated
42 Pub orders
45 Hesitate In speaking
46 Actress Theda \
47 Certain turtles
48 Preposition .
50 Tima period
51 Ooze
53 Ending for pat or pat
54 High note
55 Use as a scapegoat
56 Gershwin and others
58 Consume
59 "- Cold Blood"
62 Force: Latin
64 Mardl -
65 Pater Pan character s var,
67 Droop
68 Greatest
70 Item pushed by an alarmed
parson
71 Before
72 "Add"
74 "Little Rhody": abbr
75 Noisy
76 Head of the Family Stone
77 Fall flower
78 Common German expression
79 French kings
81 Equal • /
82 Gun sound
85 Afternoon: abbr
87 Swan girl
89 Qulndadmal numbers
91 North Africans: var.
92 African antelope
93 Join together -
94 Certain West Pointer
95 Famous Citizen
96 Grows older
100 Word with darby or coaster
102 Choice word
104 - blanche
105 Zeros
106 Assistant to 9 Down .
107 Bird abodes ,
109 African nation*
110 "In the-of the Night"
111 Highways: abbr
113 - Aviv
114 Gabor or Braun
115 Nlbbler
116 Collegedegree
120 "-untoothers-."
121 Compas point
(■niwera to puule on page 10)
regularly scheduled next
week.
The FYee U soccer class
will meet at 6:30 tonight on
the women's athletic field by
the University Auditorium.
The modern dance class
will meet at 7 tonight in the
south gym of White Building.
The magazine club will
meet at 8 tonight in 324 HUB.
The Free U class “Sexist
Ideologies and Human
Liberation" will meet at 7
tonight in 211 Eisenhower
Chapel.
There will be a panel
discussion “A Challenge to
African Unity" at 8:30 p.m.
Friday in 112 Kern.
Hie U.S.G. Gayline for
information, referrals, or just
to talk about homosexuality is
open from 9 to 11 p.m. on
Tuesdays, Thursdays, and
Fridays. The number is 863-
0588.
to 5 per cent, the government
said yesterday.
John Kendrick, the Com
merce Department’s top
economist, said the picture
presented by the statistics is
not as bad as it might at first
appear.
»>■ Mrfjfrl
SPECIAL
TWO ROAST BEEF
\V>.
Stop in for other specials
0 „, al Kmtiitfky
Doctor talks
By LAURA SHEMICK
Collegian Wire Editor
The causes and possible ways of dealing
with senility were discussed Monday in
Chambers by Dr. Alvin I. Goldfarb, a
psychiatrist of the Mt. Sinai Hospital in New
York City.
Goldfarb spoke as part of the Summer
Series in Gerontology, sponsored by the
Gerontology Clinic at the University.
The definition of senility is still a sticky
point with doctors and laymen alike, Goldfarb
said. Generally, it can be defined as dementia
or as organic brain syndrome, where the
power of the mind is diminished, both in
learning ability and in memory, he said.
The cause of senility is not very com
plicated, according to Goldfarb. Brain cells
from the reasoning and memory centers are
lost gradually throughout life through injury
or illness with their loss mostly felt in old age.
Senility doesn’t arrive at the same time for
everyone, he said, but it is inevitable.
“It’s possible that some people would not
become senile before they die," he said, but
added that if a person dies young, he may not
show symptoms of senility. “I believe that
everyone will become senile if they live long
enough.”
He said the slowdown in the
economic growth rate ap
peared ‘.'temporary," while
the inflation figures reflect a
stabilization of food and
energy prices. -
Kendrick said the decline in
the economic growth rate was
SANDWICHES
Wed. Sun.
July 21 - 2 5
“no cause for serious alarm. ’ ’
The Commerce Depart
ment report showed the
“real” U.S. Gross National
Product— the dollar value of
the nation’s total output of
goods and services, minus
inflation increased 813.4
$1.50
The Dally Collegian Wednesday, July 21, 1976—
on senility
Senility is often named as the cause for
irrational behavior in older people, he said,
“but true senility is not always responsible
for odd behavior." Illnesses such as
atherosclerosis, low _blood pressure and
vitamin deficiencies can cause behavior that
most people call senile behavior, he said.
Numerous tests should be run before a
diagnosis of senility can be made, he said.
There is no cure for true senility, Goldfarb
said.
“Once the brain cells are gone, they’re gone
and can’t be brought back,” he said. The best
way to care for very senile persons is to put
them in places where they can receive
professional care from understanding,
patient people, he said.
The only possible way to postpone senility,
Goldfarb said, is to constantly keep the brain
active.
“Mental activity may preserve mental
life,” he said. “Early practicing of good men
tal habits may help prolong mental life.”
Goldfarb said that so-called “senility
cures” are prompted by commercial in
terests.
“If it is said that Vitamin C cures senility,
and if only one or two people in every nursing
home uses it for a year, that adds up to a lot of
money for industry,” he said.
billion between
The second quarter in
crease was the fifth con
secutive quarterly rise in the
“real” GNP since the nation
began pulling out of last
year’s recession.
April and
131 S. Garner St.