Egypt monarch topic of movie A.P.E.S. will hold elections and show the film ',`Tutankhamen: The Immortal Pharoah" 7:30 tonight in 269 Willard. Also, Dr. Bennett Dyke will speak on requirements and ad missions to graduate school at 8:30. , The Agronomy Club will meet 7 tonight in 15 Tyson. The Penn State Model Railroad Club will meet 7:30 tonight in 316 Boucke. Members are 'asked to bring any pictures of the Brookville trip. Speakers from Ritenour and the American Cancer Society will discuss women's physical concerns from 7 to 9 tonight in the PUB recreation room as part of Women's Health Week. ; Dr. Charles Hosier, dean of the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences, will discuss "Exotic Energy Sources; How the Newspaperg Will Solve the Energy Crisis" 7:30 tonight in Hamilton lounge. The Department of Architecture and. Foreign Study '76 are sponsoring, a 'color slide show, "Europe on the Slide," . 8 tonight in ,the HUB lounge. Admission is free. A student teaching forum• Will be held 7:30 tonight in - 111 White Building. The ChriStian Science prganization will hold a testimony meeting 6:30 tonight in the Eisenhower Chapel. !. The International Film Series will meet 12 p.m. aturday in the HUB "No smoking" lounge. FSHA 410 will present a ,'Polynesian Buffet in Tahiti' tonight in the Maple Room of the Human IF YOU CAN DRIVE A CAR, ' YOU COULD SAVE YOUR FRIEND'S LIFE._ . "? `For free information. write to• DRUNK DRIVER. Box 23.15 V,IIIMPK. Rockville Marylac Delta Kappa phi "When you're done with the rest, Come party• with the best!" Tl►ursday Rust► Party/at 8:00 • 240 E. Prospect 237-9923 WINTER CLEARANCE SALE discover ZIFF ' S / 1 / 2 PRICE SALE MEN'S - LADIES' - JUNIORS' - KIDS' Select groups of fall & winter fashions sportswear sweaters —slacks dresses long dresses sets tops shirts leisure suits coats jackets blouses Russ - Queen Casuals - Garland - RT You Babes - Campus - Donmoor - Vicky Vaughn - Toni Todd - Pandora discover ZIFF'S Westerly Parkway Plaza 10-9 Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. Development Building. For reservations call 865-7441. The Marketing Club will hold an executive board meeting 'for sophomores and juniors who may be interested in holding office next year 7 tonight in 201-B Business Administration Building. Dr. Baruch Gurevich from Tel Aviv University will speak on "The Super-Powers in the Middle EaSt" 8 tonight in 321 HUB. Carnations are available for 60 cents from 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. on the HUB ground floor. Delivery on campus is free. Collegian notes A video tape network will be on display from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. today and tomorrow tin the HUB Gallery Lounge. Anyone interested in leading a Free U course next term should pick up a course description form in 223 HUB. Engineering employers will hold "Engineering Career Displays 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. today in the Hammond gallery., Today is the final day. FSHA 410 will present a Austrian Dinner Feb. 17 at 5:30 p.m. Price is $6 and in cludes choice of entree and dessert. For reservations call 865-7441. The Penn State Catholic Chapel Choii will sing works by Darst, Hamvas, and Perischetti at the 5:05 Mass tonight in the Eisenhower Chapel. Student associates are asking everyone to save old keep America Beaut iff i! MIMIWEEI rrTHE SILVER CELLAR - Silver ; -Gold; Gem.4ones \\ 153 S. Allen Open 11.5:30 license plates for future recycling in support of Red Cross Aid to Disaster Victims. Details will be announced later. Cohen Hefferan will speak on "Adult Consumerism Problems" at the IFS-USO meeting .7 tonight in the Living Center of the Human Development Building. The Christian Awareness Group will meet 7 tonight in 108 Eisenhower Chapel. Mary Keith, a Peace Corps representative, will speak on "Wildlife and Forestry Opportunities in the Peace Corps" 7:30 tonight in 105 Ferguson. The Free U course "Messianic Prophecy" will meet 7:30 tonight in 251 Willard. 0.T.1.5. 'encourages all tenants with 60 and 90-day renewal clauses to let their landlords know now if they are not going to renew their leases. To see if you have such a clause, read your lease or bring it to 20 HUB. For more information call 865-6851. The Tae Kwon Do Korean Karate Club will meet 8 tonight in 10 Intramural Building. The Circolo Italiano will meet 7 tonight at 348 N. Burrowes. Espresso and cookies will be served; all are invited. The' University Coalition will ,meet 8:30 tonight in 75 Willard. IFC will Present awards concerning previous weekend marathons 7:3o , tonight in 301 HUB. The Phi - Mu Alpha Men's 'Chorale will practice 9:30 tonight in 110 Music Building. The Free U course, "Introduction to the Bahai' Faith" will meet 8 tonight in 309 Boucke. "The Equality of Men and Women" will be discussed. THE ROUNDS , BROTHERS IN THEIR FINAL ENGAGEMENT NO WHERE ELSE BUT Y‘,' Victoria's 4 M 1450 S. Atherton 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. En Weds. thru Sat. - • NO COVER CHARGE . Attention Penn State Students! Stop by the Jewel Box and get your Student Discount Card. ' You'll receive 10% off the purchase of any item in the store when you present your Jewel Box-Penn State Identification Card. eve got what you want. Pewter Fashion Strictly On The Cuff It's young and classy, engraved or plain. The cuff returns to make big news this year. Our classic cuff bracelet is ' crafted in satiny pewter and can be custom engraved just for you. $5. Use our Custom. Charge Plan, your favorite bank card or layaway. (FREE ENGRAVING) Jewel Box DIAMOND SPECIALISTS FOR OVER 50 YEARS NITTANY MALL STATE COLLEGE, PA. RIDE THE X-BUS TO THE MALL Turnover plagues student organizations By KEVIN McCANEY Collegian Staff Writer Graduation sends thousands of students out into the world every year. It also depletes the experienced ranks of many campus organi zations. Some groups face a high turnover rate and one is threatened with extinction. The Associated Student Activities (ASA) Budget Committee will experience one of the largest turnovers of any organization. The committee, which is responsible for hearing funding requests and allocating money to all other student groups, will have only one definite returning ' member and one other possible returnee on its nine•member staff. One organization threatened with termination is the , Undergraduate Student Government Department of Budget and Finance. "If there is no interest very soon, it will probably be defunct next year," Al Leard, one of the department's four co-directors, Said. 'The•budget and finance department is a small group aimed at researching student finances and opening and maintaining lines of communication with the University. A lack of experience within ASA may result in chaos, according to the one returning member, Jami Wintz, who has applied for the chair manship She said she has doubts about her chances of getting the job, because she will be a senior and the committee generally perfers to appoint a younger chairman. But whether she is appointed Senate expected to approve Warnke bid WASHINGTON (UPI) Foes of Paul Warnke, President Carter's choice as chief U.S. disarmament negotiator, assailed him yesterday as too trustful of the Soviets but his supporters predicted solid Senate ap proval of the nomination. Senate Republican Whip Ted Stevens of Alaska predicted Warnke "will come close to not being confirmed by the Senate." But Sen. Dick Clark, D lowa, of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and one of Warnke's most enthusiastic backers, predicted the former assistant secretary of defense will win Senate confirmation with . possibly 25 opposing votes. mmiumommw BANKAmiaicARD As head of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, Warnke would be the main American negotiator with the Russians for a new strategic arms limitation agreement. Sen. James L. McClure, R- Idaho, in testimony prepared for a second day of con firmation hearings by the Foreign Relations Com mittee, called on the entire Senate to oppose Warnke. "Instead of toughening the bargaining position of the United States with the Soviets, as President Carter promised," McClure said, "I believe the addition of Mr. Warnke to the negotiating DUE TO THE LACK OF INTEREST TOMORROW NIGHT, FEBRUARY 11, AT THE HUB BALLROOM FROM 9 p.m. to 1 am. MAY BE THE END FOR THE SPORITE DISCO SPONSORED BY HETZEL UNION BOARD & WEHR 001yiti,, i ., ;.. yK . A . ~ .., c!.. y ' . ' ,- ..4.'L • 7 ''' , q .' or not, Wintz said, she thinks the committee will lack experience. She said knowing how the committee works and being familiar with the organizations for example, knowing a particular group's status from the year before are always important factors in the committee's decisions. She said it took her about six months after she joined to get used to the system. Mel Klein, director of ASA, said he doesn't think the problem is that bad, although there is difficulty familiarizing new members or a new chairman with procedures "I have a role there in providing continuity and filling in the members on the history of procedures," he said. Knowing those procedures is the only training a member receives, but he said that training, and "a general knowledge of this kjnd of thing," have proven sufficient in the past. . _ Klein alio said that ASA will receive its annual allocation of approximately $119,000 in the spring, when the current committee will fund the majority of student groups' activities for the next year. Wintz said the committee had problems this year with the three returning members and chairman. With potentially eight of the nine members unfamiliar with the system, she said, it could be "the blind leading the blind." Structural problems will be the least of worries for the budget and finance department, which has been described as an "ongoing process with long-terM goals." The department, team can only undermine any credible American posture." He said Warnke did not recognize the dangers of the aggressive Soviet arms buildup, and relied unduly on the hope that unilateral restraint would be reciprocated by the Soviet Union. He told the committee Warnke "thinks domestic issues are more _important than strategic issues, otherwise he would not have recommended big defense cuts" as a Pentagon assistant secretary. Nitze said, "If the United The Daily Collegian Thursday, February 10, 1977 r however, is a little more than a year old, and Leard said only one of those "long-term goals" the peer counseling group for student finan cial aid receives strong department attention. "We'll try to keep that going," Leard said. Since all of the co-directors are seniors, the committee's chances of staying alive are slim, he said. What it's suffering from, Leard said, is lack of interest, both from students and USG itself. "We said at the beginning we weren't • going to go to them, and they haven't-come. to us," Leard said. As for other organizations under the USG banner, USG President W. T. Williams said the turnover "won't be as bad as I thought it was going to be a couple of months ago," noting that most groups have been training their un derclassmen. He said all the department heads are seniors, but with the possible exception of Paul Stevenson, director of the Department of Political Affairs, all have capable replacements. Stevenson has a lot of knowledge of the ins and outs of political affairs and will be hard to replace'right away, Williams said. A good example of the kind of transition some groups can go through is the Organization of Town Independent Students. According to Dean Moore, OTIS president, though that organization now enjoys a membership of about 55, they started the year in September with only about 12, a situation which threatened its existence. And, Moore said, OTIS probably will face the same situation next September. States had followed Warnke's defense assertions, the United States would be in worse • shape than we are in today." Warnke, t testifying Tuesday, stressed his support for a .strong national defense and opposition to unilateral disarmament. But Rep. Samuel Stratton, D-N.Y., of the House Armed Services Committee, following him before the committee, said Warnke as chief U.S. negotiator on SALT II would be "the wrong man in the wrong job at the wrong time." Senate Republican leader STAre ti ji i t: • r, itz /1 ------ \lllEllllk, _ 4/ University Book Center SR-56 $lO Rebate. Texas Instruments will rebate $lO.OO of your original SR-56 purchase price when I you (1) return this completed coupon, (2) along with your completed SR-56 customer information card (packed in box), and (3) a dated copy of proof of your purchase, verifying purchase between Jan.l and March 31, 1977, to: Texas Instruments Incorporated P. O. Box 1210 Richardson, Texas 75080 SR•S6 Serial No. back of calculator) 121 ease allow 30 days for rebate. Howard Baker of Tennessee has said he does not believe the Warnke nomination is in danger. Democratic leader Robert Byrd of West Virginia has not hazarded a guess, and has reserved his personal position. "I have real trouble with Warnke," Stevens told an in formal news conference of reporters in his Senate office Wednesday. "I think he's going to come close to not being confirmed. "I don't think we'll believe Mr. Warnke. I'm not sure that his judgment is going to be trusted." Bookstore Bookstore