Editorial opinio Landlords beware. There is the beginnin movement in this tow; may just put students equal footing with the o of high rises and tenemei Tuesday’s Daily Col reported on a meetin tween Laurel Glen tei and management call solve problems of sno 1 ice removal in that com; Today’s Collegian i story about tenants of gate who may have to class action suit to get imately $60,000 in deposi rent money the Ear Apartment Management poration skipped town w ? Sensitivity Beirig a fifth term law enforcement and corrections major, I am bombarded with a lot of reading assignments. This is not unique except that I am constantly finding myself reading about black people. One example is a quotation by a white police' officer in Newark, “I’m sorry, but after you’ve seen What I’ve seen Negroes looting, burning, yelling—they just seem to be a bunch of animals.’’ Now, I understand the police officer’s feelings to a certain extent, but while reading these statements, I can’t help feeling that a white person would act the same way under the same conditions. Then I go to my sociology class, and I am faced with the same thing. For instance, a homosexual spoke to our class about societies norms, and to illustrate his point, he used the topic of black discrimination several times. Several unspoken responses by the students, myself included, was, “Would you get off of blacks and talk about homosexuals.” Now, these little illustrations are no big deal except that blacks get to hear, read and talk about inequality and discrimination all the time, which we know quite a lot about. This sensitive area is just that,' sensitive, and it hurts. I know that blacks are not the only group of people being discriminated against, but that is just the topic that is given the most attention. A lot more could probably be said, but it is very hard to put these feelings into words and into the newspaper. Who cares? I certainly do. Mains treaming ' A very important and controversial topic in the last several months has been the new so called “help” for mentally retarded children mainstreaming. For years, the mentally retarded have remained segregated “TO>&.V fc&LMBfcCH, TDMORCOVJ.,,. Soup kitchen education offered Where does it say “taxpayers give kids a free ride?” Why should the state be held responsible for the education of its citizens? The students of this state have taken their free ride as far as it is going to go. The state is not running glorified soup kitchens for twenty year olds. If they want to get an education and better our society, let them work for it. Six years down a mine will give them a better ap preciation of the education to which they’re entitled because America is a free country. Why should old folks, orphans, and widows be taxed so the sons and daughters of the middle-class can learn etymology? It is about time the state put its proverbial foot down and quit providing these over-age juvenile deliquents with tennis courts and greenhouses. Enough is enough. The state never had any obligation to provide these people a means to escape the draft which has outlived its usefulness. How can they be upset that the gifts are no longer coming. They should be grateful for what they once had. The idea that they not pay this increase is ~,... . . I n:: “ | ig of a for water will help protect these rights. fck ,i n that seepage into apartments and All the student needs to do is //jzSSfL twners Apartment owners in State you’re unsure much legian captive audience, an advan- group^of roommatescanhave t >w and down houses where students are not exceptions, 1 f| j. iplex. who want independence from just examples of a bad situa- 'Mgr &£%/*, ln®w 13 m has a expensive _ dorm rooms are tion that plagues all of State • ' f.[' l istgate demand their rights. The Or- their customers s—the 5 —the power MwSf g;| it Cor- ganization for Town Indepen- to demand and receive decent y " (WRy gj 1 ith. dent Students and the local housing at a decent rate. I Denise Lewis sth-law enforcement and corrections Jan. 22 absurd and childish. They lost at the game of politics when their lobbying effort failed, and are now too much sore losers to pay the price. The students have a distorted sense of values, anyway. Don’t they realize that you get what you pay for? That a quality education is expensive? The names of Harvard, Yale, and Prince ton mean nothing without the price. People are not impressed with the name or the high quality in struction, but that the student worked to pay that price. Students should not complain about the current tuition increase, but rather look forward to a time when their school will cost as much to attend as the Ivy League, and its name will carry the same respect and dignity. Letters to the Editor in special classes and schools; but now with recent federal legislation, handicapped children must be educated within public school systems to the greatest extent possible. Most schools, because of depleted funds, do not have the equipment or the teachers to provide all the hardicapped children with an education equivalent to regular classes. In order for schools to fulfill the requirements of the new legislation, handicapped children needing special care will be ousted from special classes and situated into regular classroom settings. Some children can benefit from regular classroom activities, but others need special attention which a regular classroom cannot give them. The regular teacher does not have the time or the education to properly educate these children. If this legislation had been implemented in a succession of years, schools could have made appropriations to uphold the act; but with standards that say three to 18-year-olds have to be educated to the greatest extent by 1978 and children up to the age of 21 by 1982, it is impossible. In order for the schools to meet these regulations, the children must suffer. The new generation of our future? Cindy Dougherty 2nd-education Jan. 23 Protect and serve Friday morning, while seated in the third floor of East Pattee looking out one of the windows which faced a parking lot, I witnessed a disgraceful act or rather, lack of action. The snow was falling swiftly, and a man in an Oldsmobile slid into the parking lot. He found an open spot in the corner of the lot and departed from his parked vehicle, neglecting to turn off.his headlights A few minutes later a campus patrol car entered the lot and parked next to the car. Expecting the officer to get out and turn out the lights, I waited to see if he would succeed. A few more minutes passed, but no door opened. The police car then backed up and parked about 30 feet from Jew By RABBI ROBERT A. KAUFMAN State College Resident In the Jan. 17th edition of the Collegian there appeared a very interesting article called “Jews for Jesus.” Much of the discussion in the article centered around pro and con statements on Jewish prophecy in the Old Testament. It seemed to be most important to Jewish Messianics that Yeshua (Jesus) is the messiah of the Jewish prophets. There is, however, another school of thought which rejects completely the idea that Jewish prophets predicted any kind of a ‘superhuman’ God annointed messiah . . . Jesus or anyone else. This school of thought holds that the Jewish belief in the coming of a messiah is strictly post-Biblical in its development. The messianic movement among Jews had its major development in the time of the Roman Empire. Jews were a subject people living under the domination of Rome. They had lost their political in dependence and their political freedom. They longed for a change. Unable to change things themselves they looked toward the day when a God would send a redeemer to save them, just as He had done in ancient Egypt with Moses. Onpe this movement took hold among Jews, many of them read back into the scriptures the idea and prediction of a superhuman Messiah who would bring deliverance to the Jews at the behest of God. To the early Christian Jews, who were the first followers of Jesus, this Messiah was the “Christ,” which in Greek means “the anointed.” To the Jews who did not accept Jesus, the messiah Thirty-five dollars a term? What’s that anyway? 280 pinball games. That’s all it means to them. For most students there will be only the in convience of hitting up the old man for an extra few bucks, or getting a state grant or loan so we, the tax payers, are burdened again, anyway. Why don’t the students quit their grumbling and do something worth while. If they put as much effort into something constructive as they do into complaining, they might get somewhere. They want this great country of ours handed to them on a silver platter. Well the taxpayers are tired of giving handouts. What’s the sense of their crying over spilled milk, anyway? Sooner or later, they have to be weaned and awakened to the harsh, cold facts of life that money doesn’t grow on trees, and that in this land of plenty every person is entitled to learn all that they desire— provided they can afford it. Anything that’s worth having is worth working for. I say three cheers for the state legislature on a job well done. Now if they could only do something about those goldbricks on welfare. the Oldsmobile. Two men emerged from the car. To my amazement they did not walk towards the car but walked away from it. I presumed the policemen had seen that the doors were locked when they pulled up near the car and thus could do nothing. My presumption proved false. Minutes later, another car slid into the parking lot and parked near the Oldsmobile. The : driver got out, opened the Oldsmobile’s door and turned off the headlights. The moral of the story is: Don’t expect a cop to get out of his nice warm car and go into a blizzard to turn off your lights. Police.are all too ready to protect (handing out parking tickets), but when it comes to service, performing a simple act of courtesy, they are quite apathetic. Miscarriage You’ve heard there’s more than one way to skin a cat. Each has its good and bad points. If the University’s ultimate goal is to prepare us for society qs thinking individuals, then what is a professor who only accepts his suggested method a grade dictator. Or is he trying to stiffle American ingenuity? They failed Einstein too! PSU blows Penn State, you really blew it Friday. You needlessly en dangered the lives of thousands of people. I do not know which is worse, your stubborness or your ignorance. Stubborn because you have an attitude that Penn State must never close. Ignorant because you did not realize the full extent of the storm. sh belief was someone yet to come. After the destruction of the is no basis in the Bible for this concept. To the Biblical Temple by the Romans in 70 A.D., this belief in a Jew the idea that an innocent person should suffer3K>r| messiah and its grounding in scriptures took even a the sins of the guilty, thereby cleansing the guilty of gjjjij greater hold. would be the greatest injustice of all. ««* Dr. Harry M. Orlinsky, a professor of Bible at the Even though I speak as a Reform Rabbi and a forffier Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in student of Dr. Orlinsky, I feel that most modern Jlgtts New York, is recognized as one of the world’s out- would agree with,Dr. Orlinsky and the school of thought standing Biblical scholars. This recognition comes from he represents. S* both Jewish and Christian sources. Dr. Orlinsky in his j n my y ears 0 f experience in the rabbiniate I found book Ancient Israel states as follows: many Christian clergymen who would agree withjfor.| “Not only did Jews of the first and second century Orlinsky’s view on the prophets and his findings onjjjje read in the prophets a prediction of the new exile and a post-Biblical nature of the messianic movement. As one j second restoration, but the early Christians found in the Christian minister I knew once put it, “The role of Jesus same source predictions of the coming of Jesus and his in Christianity must stand or fall upon its own merit£. messianic role. But just as the dubious quality of Either one accepts Jesus as the messiah based on'thfc prediction was only retroactively associated with the New Testament account or he does not accept him. IFJs prophetic writings, so too was the concept of a ,as simple as all that.” He told me further that he wdpjd messianism improperly projected back into the never try to use Jewish scripture to support his beliefrin prophetic writings. ’ ’ Jesus. He did not feel that it was necessary. 25 ! Dr. Orlinsky feels that the greatness of the prophets Jn conclusion I would say that many Jews, including of Israel is not found in the area of prediction, but in myself, feel that Jesus as a great teacher and per their role as spokesmen for the godly ideals that their sonality has an important place in Jewish history, jjjit people were supposed to uphold. Thus the prophets we feel that he holds this place not as a messiah or as»a cried out against social injustice and hypocricy, and divine. person, but as a great human being, and were often persecuted for their stand. So when in the therefore a great Jew. ‘ p<- 53rd chapter of Isaiah the prophet speaks of the “suf fering servant of the Lord,” he is speaking of his own suffering. I often heard Dr. Orlinsky in class speak of the 53rd chapter and tiow early Christians read into it the idea of “vicarious atonement.” He stated, however, that there KJfcu pxu Legislature teams with apathy Students get 35 dollar reminder Thank you, Mr. State Legislator, Just what I needed. Hell, what do I have to complain about? What can an extra $35 a term do to me? I only have a few minor expenses to worry about. Little things. Frivolous things. Like food, for instance. I only live in an apartment that costs twice what it’s worth and has a heating system (that I pay for) which heats the outside more than the in side. I can always figure out some new way to finance things like clothes. I’d sell my Mom, but she had to go at the beginning of the term for books. But I’m not bitter. Oh no. In a way I suppose I deserved it. I deserved it because like 30,000 other students, instead of screaming my lungs out and keeping you bozos in line, I buried my nose in my books and my work, confident that if I paid no attention, the tuition problem would just go away. I made the sad mistake in assuming Paul A. Tomasofsky 2nd-political science Jan. 23 Ted Metrose Bth-agricultural engineering Jan. 19 in messiah traced! that Math 420 was more important than keeping a bunch of self interested politicians under some code of ethics. My friend Jan thought his meteo lab was more important. Kim thought her geology was more important. Mike and Roz, well, they had each other to worry about. But I don’t want to tly off the handle. State legislators need money for other things besides'universities. Think of your typical legislator and of what else he needs taxpayer money for. Henry Cianfrani for example. He’s pleaded no contest to a charge You tailed to listen to Penn State’s meteorologists and other| professionals who knew at 11:30 p.m. Thursday that State! College was headed for 10 to 15 inches of new snow by { afternoon. That is more than enough snow to warrant the® closing of any university. § So wise up, Penn State; if the weather situation looks potentially dangerous, close the University. Classes can al ways be made up. Lives can not Role reversal Mr. Micklo, in your Jan. 24 letter, you state you.cannot understand the magnitude of the female reaction to rape. The “hole,” as you so glibly call it, is not a device women uSJe against men as you seem to think. Rather it is ap intimate part of a woman’s body. The trauma, in rape, comes from tne. Violation, which js on a different plane than that of being best up and robbed. £ Perhaps if you were set upon by a thug (or thugs), and castrated, you would appreciate the trauma a rape victigi undergoes Jeffrey Hawkes Editor r&M ; It also can be said that the need for a personal l messiah no longer exists for most Jews as it once isd. Instead Judaism tends today to emphasize the idealpfla messianic age in mankind’s future. It will be a time when, as stated in one of our prayers, “mankind wilJDjje one and God will be One throughout the world. ’ ’ > Business Manager! r*m that he paid his girlfriend wittgj taxpayer money. Who else should pay™ it but the taxpayers? Legislators needS secretaries arid sometimes need girlfriends too. It™ sounds like he was just trying to sav<£» some money. Yeah. . . sure. gjj- Obviously these legislators, politicians, these people who are® supposed to be looking out for and» representing us, are simply not doingJJ their job. As citizens, we haven’t beeigj doing ours. Now, every three mohths, we’re--" going to get an extra $35 reminded that we screwed up. That ought to bfgj enough to carry us to the next elec*™ tion. ' g Instead of some sparkling Marxist revolutionary slogan to drive the* masses of Penn State students oiffi though, I can only think of something** Scotty once said on Star Trek: tan “Fool me once, shame on you. Foo£S me twice, shame on me.” , See you at the polls. . ' N K, Rich Burkhart llth-meteprology] Jan. 23] Tim Milleri llth-animal science; Jan. 24 «e i tf*a jj Scott R. Seslerfl : *■-. !