10---The Daily Collegian Thursday, Sept. 20,1979 the SC • daily oreb collegian PIRATES Montreal St. Louis PRIMES Chicago New York Cincinnati llouston Los Angeles San Francisco San Diego Atlanta Late games not included Yesterday's Games Montreal 3-4, New York 1-1 St. Louis 6-2, Chicago 3.3, 2nd game, 10 innings Atlanta G. Houston 5 PIIILLIES 6, Ist game 1 , 1111.1.1 ES 6, PIRATES 5, 2nd game, Int Cincinnati at San Diego, San Francisco at Los Angeles, I n 1 toll . ..„ . s •• oglan • • ••• •.. . . . . . Q: Penn State ranks ninth on the all- Yesterday's answer: Mike Reid was time college football victories list. What the only Penn State lineman to win the college football team is number one on Outland trophy. Reid won the award in the list? 1969. ••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •, • •, • • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••• Study Skills learn more . about *time management •study habits etaking exams 4/ O in aerospace awaits you at SEE OUR REPRESENTATIVE ON CAMPUS OCT.B Our Denver Division has many new op portunities awaiting recent college graduates. Major facilities are located at Denver, CO; New Orleans, LA; Santa Maria, CA. Currently there are 365 con tracts that involve work in such exciting areas as Space Launch Systems, De fense Systems, Command and Informa tion Systems, Payload Integration, Space Satellites, Solar Systems, Space Shuttle and the new generation Missile System. Opportunities Now Within these areas are many entry level growth positions that offer prac tical experience In the advanced state of the engineering art. Such fields as • Pct. GB .607 .601 1 .527 12 W L 91 59 89 .59 79 71 79 73 77 74 56 93 .520 13 510 14 , 2 376 34,2 563 .550 483 .447 .417 .400 85 66 83 68 73 78 68 84 63 88 60 90 Study Skills Workshops Weekly —9/20, 9/28,10/4 10/11, 10/18,10/25,11/1 3:30 P.M Thursdays 319 HUB for information —863-2020 Student Assistance Center, 135 Boucke R "T'l MALII mire - -ir-na EAST W t. 98 52 89 62 85 65 81 •69 82 70 77 75 50 102 Baltimore Milwaukee Boston New York Detroit Cleveland Toronto California Kansas City Minnesota Texas Chicago Seattle Oakland Late game not Included Yesterday's Games Chicago 6, Minnesota 0 Texas 9, Oakland ,4 Boston 8, Torontoo • • New York 2, Cleveland 0 Detroit 5, Baltimore 0 Kansas City 6, California 4 Milwaukee at Seattle, t n Software • Test • Propulsion • Ther mophysics • Structures • Mechanisms • Dynamics • Stress Materials Mis sion Analysis • Product Development • Industrial Engineering • Logistics • In tegration • Systems • Guidance & Con trol • RF Systems • Communications • Data Handling • Power Systems • Payloads & Sensors • Quality • Safety and Manufacturing. Careers Begin Here If you're considering a. career in aero space, you won't find the challenge greater nor the work more rewarding than at Martin Marietta. In addition to job opportunity the corn- Houston loses ground HOUSTON (AP). Glenn Hubbard clubbed a three-run homer and Bob Horner hit a solo home run to fuel a five run Atlanta third inning that lead to a 6-5 victory over the Houston Astros last night. • Pct. Cal .653 .589 9 .567 13 .540 17 539 17 .507 22 .329 49 The victory was Atlanta's first in eight games in the Astrodome this season. Gary Matthews saved the triumph with a tumbling catch of Art Howe's deep drive to right field with two out and a runner at second base in the ninth. Houston second baseman Rafael Landestoy staked the Astros to a 2-0 lead in the second inning with a two-out triple to left-center that scored Julio Gonzalez and Vern Ruhle. 82 70 80 72 78' . 74 77 76 67 84 63 89 52 101 The Braves jumped on Ruhle, the Astros starter, in the third for five runs on Hubbard's third homer of the season, a single by Ed Miller and Horner's 29th homer. Bo McLaughlin, 2-3, who relieved Braves starter Larry McWilliams to start the fifth, got the victory. Gene Garber registered his 24th save for Atlanta while Houston's Ruhle dropped to 2-4. pany's comprehensive program of em ployee benefits has a financial value equivalent to approximately forty percent of the employee's income. Included are; Company-paid insurance, performance sharing plan, retirement plan, vacation, education reimbursement and long term disability plan. Interested graduates please contact Martin Marietta Aerospace. Attn: College Relations, P.O. Box 179 (#06310) Denver, CO 80201. Martin Marietta is an Affirmative Action Employer actively seeking the Handicap ped and Veterans. National Security regu lations require United States Citizenship. Braves 6, Astros 5 Tigers 5, Orioles 0 • DETROIT (AP) Detroit's Steve NEMEIEMME MMIE=I Kemp drove in a run and scored one last . night and Jack Morris checked Baltimore on four hits as the Tigers defeated the Orioles, 5-0. Kemp scored from first in the first on 'Champ Summers' doUble. Lou Whitaker, who went 3-for-3 off Baltimore starter Dennis Martinez, 15- 15, singled in •the Detroit third and scored from first on Kemp's double off the wall in left. The Tigirs also scored in the fifth, the sixth and the seventh. Morris, 15-7, never allowed an Oriole runner past second base. SAN DIEGO (AP) Hot-hitting Johnny Bench belted a two-run homer to lead Cincinnati to a 3-2 victory over the San Diego Padres last night and boost the Reds' lead to 2 1 / 2 games over the .' • ..4"'t:~.k!=%p*v,`i~!'+Y-f7;~"~:.:lT.`~'S'~eFiki'..`R:lui".l3l:2h9'i4s 5.,.•y. Reds 3, Padres 2 iZEMEE :=======Zt , in 6-5 loss Houston Astros in the National League West. Bench's blast, his 22nd of the year, followed a sixth-inning single by George Foster off Padres starter Bob Shirley, 7- 16, and gave the Reds a 3-1 lead. Bill Bonham, 9-6, allowed San Diego just two hits but was forced to leave the game with one out in the sixth with a stiff arm. The win gave Bonham a 6-2 record since the All-Star break. Trailing 1-0 in the fifth; the Padres tied it with the help of .a mental mistake by Foster in 'left field. After Ozzie Smith walked and was sacrificed to second, Gene Richards singled to left. Smith rounded third and broke for home to score when Foster threw the ball to shortstop instead of third base. The Reds had taken a 1-0 lead in the second on singles by Foster, Bench and Ray Knight's run-scoring ground out. Red Sox 8, Blue Jays 0 TORONTO (AP) Bob Stanley tossed a three-hit shutout and Butch Hobson pabed an 13-hit Boston attack with a pair of doubles and three RBI as the Red Sox blanked the Toronto. Blue Jays 8-0 last night. to Atlanta r f r "The only hits off ttanley, 10-10, were leadoff singles by Alfredo Griffin in the fourth, Rico Carty in'the fifth 'and John Mayberry in the eighth:' Boston picked up an unearned xun ink the second off Dave Stieb, 7-7, when Jim! Rice reached base on an error by shortstop Griffin; then scored on, a single, and two fielder's choices. The Red Sox made it 2-0 in the third'); and added one in the fourth. " • Rangers 9, A's 4. OAKLAND, Calif.'(AP) kickey, Rivers' two-run single highlighted'a six run third inning as the Texas Rangers' blasted the Oakland A's 9-4 yesterday. ' 4 :j. Texas sent 12 batters to the plate,in the inning, chasing Brian Kingman, 7-6,, • Winner Doyle Alexander, 5-7, fell', behind 3-0 in the second inning, with Rob' Picciolo's two-run -double doing the biggest damage. ' ' ' • Then Pat Putnam singled and Jimij Sundberg walked to trigger the six-run third. Putnam and Sundberg advOced on a passed ball and both scored on.. Rivers' single. Successive singles by; Bump Wills, -Al Oliver and. Buddy Bell: added two more runs. ==tial NOW..v.ito',- . .presiclOnt, to By DAVE PERLIS Daily Collegian Staff Writer A replacement for Stanley 0. iken 'berry, former senior vice president for administration, will be named by ganiveisity President John W. Oswald when the Board of Trustees meets tomorrow, following two board com mittee meetings this afternoon. Arthur Ciervo, director of public .in formation, said, earlier this month the next senior vice president for ad vinistration will most likely come from ithin the University. Ikenberry left the University Sept. 1 to become president of the University of Illinois. Since Ikenberry's departure, Vice President for Administrative Services. Richard E. Grubb has taken over some of the responsibilities of the g t lice of senior vice president for ad . mi stration. epiS RESTAURANT LUNCH SPECIAL Egg Roll, Fried Rice Egg Drop Soup plus a selection of 4 main courses. ALL FOR $2.50 OR LESS 29 Locust Lane Every Day 11E30-2:30 Formerly Tippy's Taco 234.2700 . . Answering Service 237-4279 7 Jo-milli, . llll4 u, DUSK 1053 N. ATIliTt76l9 I I :Fri-Sat-Sun I . • • Stsol li viritt es r • e. 411.410 fb • • , . . . . ICo-HitILONELY WIVES (R) ELI THE HAPPIEST HOURS IN ;TOWN.. . served at State College's newest and most authen ,: r Italian Ristorante. Enjoy your favorite drinks in the intimate at : mosphere of La Bella i yita's rustic Grotta. 119 S. Atherton St. telephone 237-6191 "Under the Red Canopy" Board of are now being ob- NIGHTLY 10 PM - 1 AM Trustees committees to review legal matters The Committee on Educational Policy also will meet at 1:15 p.m. today to discuss the possibility of appointing a Mediator as a communications link between the board and WDFM, the University radio station. The board is reviewing the need for a mediator to avoid problems like those experienced by the University of Penn sylvania, whose campus station was suspended by the Federal Com munications Commission for broad casting material with sexual content, WDFM program director Brian Toft said. Until the incident occurred, the board of trustees at the .University of Penn sylvania was unaware bf its direct legal responsibility for the station, Toft said. As the license'holders for WDFM, the Board of Trustees is legally responsible *********************** 4 i t t Peßni na nms - ARMS PRESENTS! - " " II( 1776 I TONIGHT IN POLLOCK frfne Vae * R. 073 getA;mte e4h,t6, gedatfta *********************** COTTON SHOES from CHINA women *********************** "Marketing in the Real World" Come Spend a Day in Hershey, Pa. ** IV Enjoy the Park Afterwards * . .. . ... is .: ri U i .V.:._ ‘ : ff e ... iK_ : , .....Ait ~ '0..-....• AMERICAN MARKETING AWCIATION Sign up in the * HUB Ground Floor Sept. 20, 21 * 4(u-122 SPONSORED BY THE MARK MHO CLUB * ••• • • 4•■ la • AL 4 SCREENING .7C, 11 , - ROOM I M 4 3/4 STARTS TOMORROW 7:30 8:45 10:00 51.50 Mallnus Fri 2:30 8 4:00 for the program content and overall operations of the radio station. Administrative reorganization in the office of the vice president for research and graduate studies and in the College of Human Development will alsO be reviewed. In addition, the Educational Policy Committee will hear a report on the establishment of an American Indian Education Policy Center at the University. The center would serve as a research center for Indian Education policy within the Native American Graduate Program. The program was set up in 1970 to prepare American Indians for administrative positions in schools, tribal organizations and federal and state government. During the Committee on Finance SUNSHINE 220 S. FRASER (across from the Post Office) Sept. 23 Att be named "100%! Masterfully Made!" -SCREW meeting scheduled for 3 p.m. today, the University will respond to state Departme . nt of Environmental Resources charges of violations of two state air quality regulations leveled in July. The coal burning power plant, located at West College Avenue and Burrowes Road, is violating the state's particulate and opacity regulations. The particulate regulation involves the amount of fly ash that is sent from the smoke stacks into the air. University tests show that the number six boiler emits almost three.times the legal emission level. Also the plant's main stack is in violation of opacity regulations. Opacity, caused by the smoke coming from the stacks, is the amount of light that is blocked out by the smoke and particulate matter. 453 I t y tt_t 4s3€ (C ‹C • #3t V i ) i a IS N)/ W4t, 4 \sll/4\4 547 0 .4) 0 7 4 4 4 <CN +•*l I K \ 01/4 l eV 4tll / 4 4*ll / 4. itl/4 THURSDAY EVENING a a CO THE WALTONS The Wa!tons' exalted spirits, sparked by Olivia's homecom -8:00 IX WEATHER-WORLD ing, are' broken by an irate neighbor's threat INF I LII_VEAUCY to kill someone in their family: (Season (I) CM 142 , NEWS Premiere; 2 hra.) JOKER'S WILD ODD COUPLE 8:30 ONCE UPON A CLASSIC 'The Secret Garden' Mary Lennox learns more about the 1 ea CELEBRITY CHARADES 8:30 CC BENSON Benson's well-managed hou sehold is thrown Into turmoil when Katie talks him into helping her disobey her father, then 'secret garden,' Mrs. Craven's death there disappears after going to a forbidden rock and Mr. Craven's closing of the place. Later, , concert. she hears soft cries in the manor and is al YOU DON'T SAY baffled by two mysteries: who is crying, and 9:00 (3) THE MEDIUM at la secret about the garden. all TIC TAC DOUGH CAROL BURNETT AND FRIENDS SANFORD AND SON NBC NEWS ABC NEWS arKUNG FOR DOLLARS RS 1911 , CBS NEWS ID 9:30 ® LET'S MAKE A DEAL 9:58 al) NEWS CU NEWSBREAK 10:001M MUSIC AT PENN STATE a 0) NEWS • (ff) QUINCY Quincy goon on a search to WiMACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT discover what caused the death of a A.A.S.H. 15-year-old, girl whose body degenerated to CU f DAILY NUMBER that of a 70-year-old pekon within three days. il DATING GAME SIX MIWON DOLLAR MAN ODb COUPLE Season Premiere; 80 mine.) EP NEWARK AND. REALITY al ® Ilt .. BARNABY JONES. A routine MAKE ME LAUGH insurance investigation of a garment building NEWLYWED GAME MAUDE fire that claimed the life of one of Its owners P.M: MAGAZINE puts Barnaby on the trail of arson and murder. Season Premiere; 80 mina.) CROCKETT'S VICTORY GARDEN 10:30 W ESTAMPA PLAMENCA This documentary AU. IN THE FAMILY . presents the great American Flamenco ME FAMILY FEUD TIC TAC DOUGH NEWLYWED GAME. 111 NEW YORK, NEW YORK NEWS 11:00 a MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT JOKER'S WILD M.A.S.H. NEWSDRIEF i CO ®® NEWS BILL MOYERS' JOURNAL 'At The Edge BENNY HILL SHOW of History' A conversation with William Irwin ODD COUPLE 1 Thompson, whose vision for the future 11:15 ell MEET THE MAYORS dancer, Maria Benitez and her troupe. . ' NEWS includes , unified planetary culture. (BO 11 : 30 - AB A CAPTIONED NEWS mins.) • K • O MOVIE -(ROMANCE-DRAMA) ***% (I) THE TONIGHT SHOW Host: Johnny "Jezebel" 1938 Bette Davis, Henry Fonda. Carson. Guests: Michael Landon, Dinah A southern belle goes too far in making her Shore. (90 mine.) fiance jealous. (2 hrs.) MI POLICE ' WOMAN—BARETTA Police Cl) BUCK ROGERS IN THE 25th CENTURY Woman —'Bait'Pepper and Crowley inves- Frozen in space In the year 1987, astronaut tigate an outbreak of attacks on a nearby Buck Rogers awakens 500 years later on an college campus. Baratta 'Carla' Beretta falls alien vessel en route to a 'peace minion' on in love and runs away with the young and Earth. Stars: Gil Gerard, Erin Gray. (Premiere; beautiful wife of a gangster. (Repeat; 2 hrs., 2 hrs.) 15mine.) Cl)' LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY Laveme.and • I NIGHT AT THE. RACES Shirley may be splitting up when Shirley (it ED CBS LATE MOVIE 'COLUMBO: discovers a passionate note written to Suitable For Framing' An art critic kills his keyeme from Shirley's love Carmine.. wealthy uncle in order to inherit a valuable CP MOVIE {DRAMA) es* "Johnny Apollo" collection of paintings, (Repeat) 'BANACEK: 1940 Tyrone Power, Dorothy Lamour. A good Ten Thousand Dollars A Page' Stars: George natured boy turns Into a crook; resentful of his Pappard, Daiid Wayne. (Repeat) father, a white-collar crook. (2 hrs.) ID ODD COUPLE Cement for storing waste researched Nuclear reactor wastes may be stored for thousands of years in bore holes and shafts sealed with a syn thetic cement being, developed by a University professor. Della M. Roy of the material Sciences department is synthesizing a substance that resembles building cement but contains mineral ad ditives able to withstand extreme heat, stress and radioactive elements. Nuclear wastes made as insoluble and stable as possible may be placed in bore holes or mines which are then sealed with the cement, she said. "Several different types of areas, from salt mines to hard rock, granite, shale and more sedimentary rocks are being studied as sites," Roy said. The Daily Collegian Thursday, Sept. 20, 1979-17 Roy's th'ree'-year project is funded by a $99,000 grant from the Depart ment of Energy. "This new grant is to look at the more long-term aspects of long-term repository sealing," she said. In the future, Roy said, a sample of the synthetic cement may be "doped" with radioactivity from the University's reactor in order to ob serve the effects of radiation. "Nuclear wastes are not identical power reactor wastes differ from nuclear weapon wastes," Roy said. "The research is a combination of chemistry, physics, and engineering. Chemical properties, ther modynamics and placement are studied," she said. 12:00 lap SOUND OF PROGRESS MOVIE -(ADVENTURE) • 1 / 2 "Call Of The Wild" 1976 John Beck, Bernard Freeeon. The story of men who must rely on sled dogs for their survival as they battle the bitter cold winter in Alaska in their search for gold. (2 hrs.) ED HONEYMOONERS 12:30 0 GONG SHOW 0 TWILIGHT ZONE 1:00 MI TOMORROW ID NEWS 1:30 iA NEW YORK, NEW YORK MT NEWS 2:00 0 JOE FRANKLIN SHOW W MOVIE -(WESTERN) •• "Molly and Lawless John" 1972 Vera Miles, Clu Gulager. A young criminal dupes a sheriff's wife into running away with him. (2 hrs.) 2:26 0 MOVIE -(DRAMA) •••• "Deep Valley" 1947 Ida Lupino, Dane Clark. Into a girl's humdrum farm life comes a gangster from a nearby prison camp. (2 hrs., 31 mine.) 2:30 0 NEWS 2:45 PRAYER NEWS 2:50 in NEWS 4:00 0 BIOGRAPHY '..-4)y Mark Mararavage
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers