The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, September 08, 1976, Image 4

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    —The Daily Collegian Wednesday. September 8, 1976
OONESBURY
SI 67
-tp •
MYERAKR ? Af/1.51.1171MY
AIISSIIIIIANSAIP HOW WRY
COMPLIMENTS OF THE PENN STATE BOOKSTORE, McALLISTER BLDG AND
THE GROUND FLOOR OF THE HUB.
LETTERMEN
ACROSS
1 More sagacious
6 To see: German
11 Bryant or Gillette
16 Absurd
17 -- up one's sleeve
18 Of sounder mind
19 Tease
22 -• to the throne
23 Feudal estate
24 Where the owl and the pussycat
went
25 Mine yield
26 Irish exclamations
28 Expectorated
30 Dined
33 Chemical suffixes
35 -. much as
37 "•• My Party" ,
IL THE CAMPUS LOOPS
INNER LOOP
Weekdays 7:30 AM to 6:00 PM
Two buses in service
Leaves student parking lot near
East Halls every 10 minutes
Timetable
(Minutes past the hour)
1. *East Halls 00 10
2. Computer Center 01 11
3. Wolf—Ritner Hall 02 12
4. McElwain pall 03 13
5. White Building 05 15
6. College-Meister 17 17
7. College-Allen
8. Bus Depot
9. Rec Hall
10. Library-Kern 14 24
11. Forum Building 15 25
12. Creamery
13. North Halls 17 27 37
*Timed atop.
Times p for other stops are approximate.
Effective September 2, 1975
OUTER LOOP
Two buses in service, leaping the HUB and
Graduate Circle every quarter hour.
Weekdays 7:30 AM to 6:00 PM
Timetable
(Minutes past the hour)
1. *HUB , 00
2. McElwain 01
3. Wolf—Ritner Halls 02
4. Natatorium 03
5. Wagner 04
6. Shields 05
7. Beaver Stadium 06
8. Land 6 Water Inst. 07
9. Materials Research 08
10. *Graduate Circle 12
11. Materials Research 12
12. Land 6 Water Inst. 13
13. Beaver Stadium 14
14. Shields 15
15. East Halls (2 stops) 17
16. Computer Center 18
17. Wolf—Ritner Halls 10
18. McElwain Hall 19
19. Creamery 20-
20. Forum—Library 22
21. Library—Kern 24
22. Mineral Sciences 25
23. Willard 26
*Timed stops.
Times for other stops are approximate.
Effective September 2, 1975
44- 4 e F
INAT/N6 71147 t REK
fizo6s , BUTYOU MST 60
RAVITAfe MTH
39 Seize
45 Mongol
46 And others: Latin abbr
47 Eskimo settlement
48 Angelic adornment
49 Onassis, for short
51 Married women, in Madrid
abbr
53 Theatre signs
55 Sawyer or Thumb
56 Poses for a portrait
58 Baby's milieu
60 Schoolmaster: abbr
62 Wall or Main: abbr
63 Ease
67 "-- Working"
68 Thallium and tantalum, in .
chemistry
69 Italian ices: slang
Only costs a dime
or
Buy a CAMPUS LOOP TERM PASS
Good for unlimited rides — available to everyone
Fall term passes now on sale at the HUB desk
$.lO EXACT • FARE
•
Weekdays 6:00 PM to 12:15 AM
Saturdays 7:30 AM to 12:15 AM
Sundays '6:00 PH to 12:15 AM
One bus in service. -
Leaves student parking lot near
East Halls every quarter hour
EVENINGS
AND
WEEKDAYS
WEEKENDS
30 40 50
31 41 51
32 42 52.
33 43 53
35 45 55
37 47 57
40 50 60
42 52 62
43 53 63
44 54 64
45 55 65
46 56 66
47 57 67
00 15 30 45
01 16 31 46
02 17 32 37
03 18 33 48'
04 19 34 49.
05 20 35 50
06 21 36 41
07 22 37 52
09 24 39 54
10 25 40 55
11 26 41 56
12 27 42 47
13 28 43 58
59 COLLEGE AVE
00
•
02
03 BEAVER AVE
i
By Mike Shenk
70 Auntie
72 Japanese distance unit
74 Makes mistakes
76 Church parts
79 Sal, for one
81 Quebec's neighbor: abbr
83 Alda, for one
85 Ghost
86 Wise
90 Flower
91 Michelangelo sculpture
92 Bar seat
93 Inclination
94 -- a happy note
95 Past, present or future
Price: $lO.OO
COLLEGE A
BEAVER A
oho ;kV!
POLLOCK
DOWN
1 "•• little help from my friends"
2 Prefix with view or national
3 Sarcastic
4 Word on a door
5 No longer employed, abbr
6 Gluts
7 in the normal place: Medical
8 Performance with a sombrero
9 Outer: abbr
10 Tennis needs
11 In neutral equilibrium
12 Penn State's "pool hall"
13 Dividing
14 Four: prefix
15 Soviet coop
20 World War I British force:
abbr
21 Oolong or pekoe
27 Religious groups .
29 Adroitnesses
31 Engrave
34 Rare
36 Northern France river
38 Jazz type
39 Pursue
40 Marie or Pierre
41 Red wine
42 Tasks
43 Shut
44 Count: French
50 Article
52 Drains: German
54 Tuscany city
57 Spore
59 Delivered to an enemy
61 Beginner
64 Relished
65 "..., -- rise makes..."
66 ".• Man," by Pope
70 Cleopatra's land
71 City official
73 Any: Scottish
75 Siberian mountain range
77 Belonging to a Greek war
goddess
78 Fashion
80 Destroy cells
82 Agate or pica
84 The Empire State: abbr
87 Partner to yang
88 One: Scottish
89 Bread ingredient: abbr
(answers to puzzle on page 3)
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Philly's school teachers
approve 2-year contract
PHILADELPHIA • (AP) Public school teachefs in*
Philadelphia accepted a new $57.9 million two-year contract
yesterday. But those in 30 Catholic high schools rejected a
much smaller wage offer and voted to strike.
Elsewhere across Pennsylvania three other school districts
were,struck yesterday, bringing the total to 18. In another 152
districts contracts remained unsettled with strike threats
pending. •
All told, the strikes affected 5,507 teachers and 134,768 pupils
across the state.
Most schools were scheduled to open. today and tomorrow
but in some districts where negotiations continued, opening
was delayed up to a week to 'permit talks to continue.
The Philadelphia public school settlement, reached after_
all-night bargaining session, affected 14,000 teachers and 8,000
aides and secretaries. ~_...
•
The pact, providing for the first pay hike to be paid next
February, was - swiftly and overwhelmingly ratified by
members of the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers. The
285,000 pupils report tomorrow.
The contract provides a 6 per cent pay hike Feb. 1 plus 2 per
cent more in fringes,'another 3 per cent in pay next Sept. 1 and
5.5 per cent in salary and 2 per cent in fringes Feb. 1, 1978.
Teacher salaries now range from a starting $8,900 for those
with a bachelor's degree to $22,600 for those with more than 10
years experience and a doctorate.
The school boaid estimated the agreement would cost $l2
million next year and another $45.9 million in the second
school year. .
The current school budget shows a shortage of $66 million;
and there was no indication where the additional funds to pay
for the new contract would be obtained.
Only City Council can raise taxes and last spring it imposed
the largest single increase ever in real estate and wage taxes
to wipe out a $l5O million deficit. Mayor Frank L. Rizzo had
indicated there was no more money available for the schools.
SCARS
The Daily Collegian is not willing to rest on its
laurels. To maintain the quality that has earned
honors and to improve the newspaper we need
people. We need reporters, columnists and
photographers. We need you!
If you're
Collegian
,Candidate School, Room 260, Willard
Building, Sunday, September 12, at 7 p.m.
Reporters, bring a blue book. This will be the only
opportunity to join the Collegian staff Fall Term.
We offer you a chance to meet interesting
people and work on a prize-winning newspaper.
Give us a chance to know you.
. "Best college newspaper in Northeast"
• "Consistently rated `All American' "
Associated Collegiate Press
• "One of only a few collegiate papers in the
association"
interested,
The Archdiocese of Philadelphia offered its lay teachers,'
who comprise more than 60 per cent of the parochial high
school faculties, a three-year contract providing increases of
around three per cent. The teachers voted 784-127 to strike.
The other strikes begun yesterday affected 726 teachers in
the Pennsbury District of Bucks County, with 12,803 pupils;
125 teachers in Penn-Cambria, Cambria County, with 2,700 pu
pils, and 300 teachers in Kiski Area, Westmoreland County,
with 5,995 pupils.
The Philadelphia Catholic high school teachers, scheduled
to report to work today, instead planned to be •there with
picket signs to keep . out delivery, trucks and any flculty
members who might decide to go in.
However, the Rt: Rev. Msgr. Francis B. Schulte, superin
tendent of the archidocesan schools, which also has 140,000
elementary pupils who are not affected, said the high schools
would remain closed until there is a settlement.
"The attempt to keep schools open in similar situations only
led to conflict and division which was in no way beneficial to
the students or the teachers," Schulte said in a statement.
"Our hope is to make a fresh start when the strike is settled." „,
An archdiocese spokesman said a high school teacher with'
seven years experience now earns $ll,OOO, around $4,000 less
than a public school employe, and would earn $13,824 at the
end of the proposed three-year pact.
Sc}Mite said that any pay increase would have to be paid by
the parents who now spend $5OO a year for tuition.
John Reilly, president of the Catholic teachers group, said
the contract rejection was great, adding: "I think it'sabout
time that we let them know where we stand."
At Pennsbury, where the largest number of public school
teachers in Pennsylvania are striking, the issue was money.
Teachers are asking for a 12 per cent increase. Present wage
scales were not available.
A spokesman for the Bucks County district said classes
would open today as scheduled but that pupils would be sent
home if enough teachers honor picket lines.
come to the first session of
Pimple heal a thousand
times faster than a burned
out forest. Once they're
down and black and
blistered. fortuat . ake
forever. It's a long and
ugly procesq.
Sigma Delta Chi
Pennsylvania Newspaper
Publishers' Association