—Editorial Opinion This morning, the University Board of Trustees will act on the 1980-81 University budget and proposed state appropriation request. Contained in that budget is a proposal that would provide an automatic 5 per cent increase in tuition next year. This is a sharp departure from past University policy of waiting for the state ap propriation before instituting tuition hikes. We ask the trustees to wait. Don't vote on that Proposal yet - table it until the October meeting of the board. The rational behind the proposal goes something like this: • In the past, when the University has gone to the state Legislature for funding, it has gone with the premise that there will be no tuition increase. But in light of continuing inflation, it is unrealistic for the University to assume that there will not be tuition increases in the future. . In a major change in approach, the University will now go to the Legislature Rounding up night rowdies a near impossible task for police, but students beware When Custer took on the Indians, the odds were overwhelming. In attempting to crackdown on State College street revelry, the State College police have a valiant cause, but the odds they face are at least as overwhelming as the ones General Custer had to contend with. It seems the recent trouble flare ups the State College police have been faced with come in unmanageable sizes. While a rapist or rapists may be too in conspicuous to track down, rowdy sometimes destructive students may be too overwhelming to round up. Police cite 200 phone calls they received last weekend, in regards mostly to the abundance of night noise. And they say that vandalisni, underaged drinking and? F,44y Pajlifds.: noticeably this Surprisingly, it seems many of those complaints about student disturbances Student counselors at the Student Assistance Center, who man the telephone lines for the Student Escort Service from 4. p.m. to midnight weekdays and froth noon to 8 p.m. on Saturdays. The Association of Residence Hall Students and the Undergraduate Student Government's Department of Policy, for trying to get the escort service back on its feet. To the Class of '7B, for resurrecting the tradition of a More tickets After receiving a $5 ticket for parking my car overnight, two rows from the small Parking Lot 83 on Bigler Road, near East Halls, I began to Wonder about the efficiency of the campus police. Every car I passed, including those on the row directly adjoining the legal overnight area, had a ticket on its windshield. Technically and legally, the tickets issued were valid. However, better overnight parking facilities should be considered. Space is available for only about 250 cars in small Lot 83. When considering there are thousands of vehicles registered on campus, there is not a lot of convenient overnight parking space. The only alternative when no space is available (which most often is the case) is to park in Lot 83 beyond the Rose Gardens. Due to the fears reinforced by the attempted rapes on campus these past few weeks, it is not safe walking from the rose garden lot to the dorms, especially' when it is dark. The parking lot is not very well lit the path back to the dorms along Bigler Road and Park Avenue has even poorer lighting. Instead of wasting the campus police's time and energy issuing tickets to those students with registered automobiles, who were most likely afraid to risk the walk through the parking lot and back to the dorms from the Rose Gardens, a campus policeman should be assigned to patrol Parking Lot 83 during evening hours for our protection. Also, better lighting should be in- Wait until October Delay the decision until students have the facts on tuition hike A last stand situation? class gift. At the Penn State- Rutgers football game, the class presented University. President John Oswald with a victory bell. Curt Warner, who provided the Nittany Lion ground game with some unexpected thunder and lightning in his college football debut. The s'll' ', 183- pound freshman tailback exploded for three touch downs in the second quarter against Rutgers, earning him the Associated Press' Of- stalled from the parking lot to the dormitory areas. Granted, certain people who park in the "Restricted Parking Areas fiom 2:30 to 6:00 a.m." are just too lazy to park any further from their residences than necessary. But for those of us who park illegally because of fear, our greatest fear right now is that 'we might receive more parking tickets. Happy little feet There it was, halftime of the Penn State- Rutgers football game, with the score 27 to 3 in Penn State's favor. The Blue Band marched out onto the field for their first halftime per formance of the year. Then,• what did we hear floating through the air? Was it strains of Donna Summer's "Last Dance" and "Stayin' Alive" by ' the Bee Gees? We turned to an also amazed firend who assured us that, yes, it was disco music. The Penn State Blue Band was marching its happy little feet to disco music. • Is it not enough that we hear disco music on the radio, in stores, on the streets, coming out of dormitory windows and being hummed by disco crazed people? Now the Blue Band, too, has succumbed to the disco fever. Is there no end to this madness?!! Whatever happened to John Philip Sousa and his marches, a good 2-4 beat with the 5 percent tuition hike built in as a gesture of fairness and honesty - fairness in the sense the legislature would see thatit is not being asked to bear the brunt of the burden of Universty funding; honest in sense that the University is now ,facing facts. • By doing this, the administration hopes the Legislature will be more sympathetic to the University's financial straits. We are not debating now whether the automatic increase is right or wrong. The extent of information on this proposal to the University community and probably most of the trustees is one paragraph buried in the second to last section of the Trustee docket. But behind the formulation of that paragraph are hours of research and administration discussion. For students, .tuition increases are an emotional issue. Student government leaders have already said they believe the automatic increase is, risky. What aren't solely from elderly townspeople, Thus, on the morn before another but from other students. The complaints party-filled football weekend, students that police describe discharged fire who are under 21 should beware that this extinguishers in hallways, a shopping may not be like all other weekends. cart launched from a Penn Towers On the other side of the street, police highrise balcony and the like -- indicate should know that they aren't going to that many students who live in the mid- clean up the problem in a single weekend. town highrises are equally disturbed by Their commendable efforts should not Beaver Avenue barbarism. turn into a power stuggle with students, This isn't to say, though, that town- If it does, the streets could become as student relations aren't on. the line. ugly as they did last May, when a rowdy Surely, those townspeople who would -crowd at the Phi Psi 500, an annual attempt a venture downtown . on a drinking and running race for charity, Saturday night have trouble enjoying a broke the mirrors off a police cruiser, relaxing meal or stroll in the midst of knocked an officer down and shattered an near-anarchy. automobile windshield. Police-student relations, which have And at night, the potential for a serious been favorable for the most part, will also accident in a police-student scuffle is hinge on the avowed crackdown policy. even greater. Althpugh , police admit that / police pluo. keep in mind .that there,are fraternities is ,out of their diimain,. thy 'lot of Ipdiaas in this town." - While their iiiterid . keep 'a Cria m e9e on liqtre shops 'edii - Victiobs may be as Cener'al: " and bars for underage alcoholic pur- Custer's, their task is Practically as chasing and drinking violations. impossible. Winners. . Letters to the Editor fensive Player of the Week Beaver Stadium award. The Student Advisory Board and student , govern ment in general for focusing their latest efforts on im portant issues of student concern like the campus loop fare increase and- the drop add fee increase. Sinners Athletic Department ticket office, for overselling tickets to senior section in and a pleasant rendition of the Penn State Alma Mater ( this year's abbreviated version was very disappointing)? To hell with minor issues like OPEC and the gas shortage, the president's lagging popularity, inflation and Russians in Cuba! What about discomaniacs in the. United States? !! We, for two, would like to see disco stamped out in our lifetimes and would hope the Blue Band would take the first bold step forward in this campaign by eliminating disco music from their repertoire. Elise Eckhard 11th-psychology Paul M. Eberts 13th-English/pre-med Sept. 17 Linda S. Fox sth-advertising Sept. 13 Debunk the myths In response to the young men questioned on the escort service and those of like mind, let pie say that research, including a project done at the University has shown that students are reluctant to interfere (become involved) in a situation where they feel there is a male-female friendship or marrital type relationship. Such relationships often are assumed more than actual. And what of those of the students who for various reasons have few or no friends to call on? Any young woman, for instance, who might be screaming in a dorm might be interperted to be involved in an intimate sexual relationship rather than needing protection of her wishes and best judgment. In such a situation, furthermore, his fellow dormmates out of fear of em- • kind of bind could the automatic increase put students in if it doesn't do what it is intended to do? Is the University playing reverse psychology with the legislature at the expense of student money? Did students have any input in the decision? The issue is complex, but as it stands now, students have only a one paragraph explanation of why they may automatically pay $6O more a year to go to Penn State. That is not enough. This is an important issue to students, and they should be heard on it, be allowed to comment on it, and be given the full story behind it. Student government leaders are committed to looking into issue and giving the trustees their views. Holding back on the issue until October should have no ill-effect on the status of the appropriation request. • The students are only asking for one month. Table the proposal until the next. trustees meeting. Dunks Department Store, which has recently advertised anti-gas crisis mugs and t-shirts which are insulting to the UniverSity's Arab community and the intelligence of the American people. to deal with a dilemma. The mugs and t shirts, which proclaim "I'm mad'er than hell and I'm not gonna take it anymore!," depict a man kicking an Arabian sheik and a gasoline pump. In one breath, the Collegian says that USG should watch its expenditures and that a concert is not what a student "government" should spend money on. In a second breath, the Collegian criticizes a money-free student discount card which may not give students free pizzas and text books, but certainly gives the students the opportunity they may need to gain discounts on pur chases. All this brings me to the point in fact why does the Collegian persist in downgrading every effort made by the student government? It seems that in the past couple of weeks •the Collegian has succeeded not only in shadowing USG programs with very negative viewpoints, but also in contradicting themselves in their own editorials concerning USG. • I find it hard to believe that the Collegian overlooks the fantastic job that the political affairs department is doing on voter registration this year. Although voter registration may only be the initial step, it,is an important step towards acknowledgement from state and federal governments, as well as the barrassment and possible heckling, would be quite reluctant to even inquire about the woman's safety. All too often, women are raped by "boy friends" or others of some acquaintance which is even more prevalent than rape by strange males. Very often the rape is, in essence, planned. Let us become educated and debunk the rape myths. . Myra A. Ladue Sept. 13 Troglodyte indeed I had the opportunity to enjoy the English classic, "Tom Jones," the first Artist Series film to be held at Eisenhower Auditorium. The film was superb! If you wonder why my praise of the film is belated, it is due to a self-imposed restraint. I needed time to temper my feelings about an'incident that occurred. My evening of total enjoyment was depredated by one of three young ladies, if I may use the term so loosely. The one "lady" propped her feet on the back of the seat in front of her. I ignored her complete lack of respect for herself and the others that comprise the university community. I was able to tolerate her vulgarity by concentrating on the fine art in "Tom Jones", such as the verisimilitude of the bawdy film. It soon became apparent that I did not have to get so engrossed in the film, because the "lady" was putting on her own display of revelry. The only problem is that she was doing it at the expense of all who Nyould like to continue enjoying the comfort of Eisenhower Auditorium. Conflicting criticisms hamper USG efforts By VICKI SANDOE Vice president, Undergraduate Student Government Is the Collegian confused? In an editorial concerning/ the Un dergraduate Student Government consumer card, the Collegian stated that USG should spend money on projects that would appeal to a wide range of students. Yet lust two weeks ago, the Collegian published an article criticizing USG for sponsoring a concert on the HUB lawn which attracted over 3,000 students throughout the day. Collegian forCrrii' MISS LILLIt+I'S cPGEGI4 OZITTOR. :. r+ i~ The senate is also very concerned with communications with their constituents;! a problem they . intend to remedy; through publishing weekly senate agendas and Senate office hours in the: paper. I think that until we solve the energy: crisis, drop tuition to a mere $lOO.OO, and; perhaps lend a hand in the formulation; of federal policy, the Collegian will , criticize USG for "not meeting the needs: of the students." This may not be realistic, but neithes; are the demands the Collegian is maki4 on student government. All I ask is that:• the students, as well as the Collegian,: take an objective look at what thig. student government is doing for the' students at the University. Give this administration a chance prove, as I.believe they have alreadr, that they are concerned with the student interest, and will not quit, until they provide the representation, services and attention the students at the University deserve! A scrapping sound had drawn my attention; The "lady" was dragging her foot across tii t ‘ back of the seat in rhythm to an , ale-drinking song. I could not abide her action any longer, if i had wanted to see or hear such ignorance, would have went to a local cinema when a Wz4 Disney movie was showing. Even at that, I do not think I would have been exposed to such infantile actions. At least if I would have asked a child tO remove their feet from a. seat, I do not think i would have received such an insolent reply. I had asked her to remove her feet. The im'• pertinent reply of, "Oh sure. Humph, excul. me," convinced me that this ignoramous was no a college lady, but a troglodyte that was excited by colors and pictures. If I am not so kind, it i s because I am concerned that the actions of a few, may mar the chance of more student activities being held in Eisenhower Auditorium. . Because the film portrayed a few boors, it gave her no license to act in such manner. 4 41 David W. Anderson. I tth-English; Sept. 18; m~Collegian Friday, Sept. 21,1979 Page 2 © 1979 Collegian Inc. Pete Barnes Marjie Schlessinger Editor Business Manag4 SIV4 II I2s4PC .1111 local government right here in State College, which affects the students perhaps more than they realize. • I fail to see the Collegian backing the Department of Policy and their efforts to produce a sound and productive 'escort system, one that when implementea provide more safety for the students iii campus. Nor does the Collegian'report the jnformation compiled on the Ritenour Ambulance service, a project this department, executive council and the Student Advisory Board have been working on for weeks. The Collegian seems blind to the fa 'that •the, USG .Senate is.. mombissue i l oriented than it has ever been in the Oast: -This , -elected -body—has- beguir-to investigate such issues as stadium seating, the unexpected curtailment : of, weight room hours, the Ritenour.Health; Services, and the raise in campus low costs. ITI More freshmen than ever before: 4,581 By, DAVID PERLIS Daily Collegian Staff Writer Fall Term enrollment at the University reached a record high of 53,680 'students, according to preliminary . figures presented yesterday to the Board of Trustees. Although total enrollment at University Park'dropped from 31,827 last 'yezir to 31,792 Fall Term, freshman': enrollment exceeded the target of 4,400 students by 581. `!,That is the highest freshman class I t that University,Park has ever had," Rubert Dunham, vice preseident for ;.: undergraduate studies, said. "overall we • are bulging at the seams.. "The bottom • line shows we are up p: over 3,000 in total enrollment," thinhain told the Education Com 4. mittee. % The. Education Committee also passed a revision of the policies and procedures governing WDFM, the caniptis:radio station. The revision, 1 1: which includes the establishment of two . advisory boards to the radio ' station, makes it clear that the board II is v. the licensed holder of. WDFM. 1 Although the board has control of the station, students will continue to 4 operate it. k An advisory board to the campus -‘...radio station has been established to t!! help it meet its responsibilities in the community and to review -its programming. ' The policy advisory board, con sisting of three faculty members, an administrator and four students, will provide direction to the station in their local service responsibilities. ) The community advisory board, consisting of, nine members selected frqm the, community, will review the SOMETHING 10 SELL? „.,,C0111414N Ck4SSIFIfD ADS!, station's programming and keep the vice president for student affairs informed on the effectiveness of the station in serving community needs. The board is designed only to ad vise the station and not to exercise any control over the daily management or operation of the station. The board's committee on the physical plant authorized an agreement with the state Department of Environmental Resources and the University to install the needed air pollution control equipment at the west campus power plant. Four of the five coal-burning boilers at the power plant are emitting a quantity of pollutants in violation of the department's air quality regulations. The University hopes , to fund renovations to the plant with money requested in the budget proposal submitted to the state legislature. If the budget is not passed, funding options open to the University include bank financing, "We've asked the General Assembly to include it in the budget," Ralph. Zilly, vice president for business; said. "If they do we're off the hook. If they don't, we have to do it ourselves." The general budget has not been passed in five years, Zilly said. Dr. Evan G. Pattishall Jr., associate provost for health education and chairman of the department of behavioral science at the College of Medicine, has been named interim dean of the Univer sity's College of Human Develop ment. - Faith United Church of Christ 300 E. College Avenue; 237-3904 \Pi Welcome to All Students Sundays: 9:30 am—Student Seminar 10:45 am—Worship 5:00 pm—Student Fellowship Meal and Program Tuesdays: 7:00 pm—Bible Study/Singing/Prayer Thursdays: 7:00 pm—Choir Practice A VITAL, ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP.. ~DaveNieckley .-. • Pastor , Student & Parish Worker' I • ` ? ' 3• ~~ • p . 0 -•fM • st"*:' "What an act! . . . and he gets to do it twice a night." For the real beer lover. 101, 4 ` "=\~~ ~Zc.: and CAROL ZEPP Daily Collegian Staff Writers University Provost Edward D. Eddy told the Board of Trustees yesterday that the University must become "superhuman" to adjust to changing conditions during the next decade. Eddy reported to trustee members on the status of the Plan for the 'Bos, a policy guideline which will affect the direction of the University in the future. The plan was started to deal with projected enrollment drops, budget constraints and changing priorities the University will encounter. The steering committee of the plan, headed by Eddy, will present a final draft to the trustees next month, subject to their' approval. Enrollment .at the University will be affected by a projected 32 percent decline in the number of high Student leaders to ask for defeat of 80-81 budget By 808 WARE Daily Collegian Staff Writer A resolution asking for the defeat of the University's 1980-81 budget, because of the inclusion of an automatic five percent tuition increase, will be presented by student organization leaders at the University Board of Trustees' meeting today. The Undergraduate Student Govern ment Executive Council, which consists of student organization leaders, ap proved the resolution last night and urged students to attend the trustees eport says Spenkelink was taunted before death TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) Condemned mur derer John Spenkelink was the target of verbal taunts but not physical abuse as he went to his death in Florida's electric chair, investigators report. But the findings of the two-man panel appointed by Gov. Bob Graham to study the charges of abuse surrounding Spenkelink's May 25 execution failed to satisfy either a capital punishment opponent or the state's attorney. At issue was the testimony of a death row inmate who swore former prison technician Gerald F. Greene told THE STROH BREWERY COMPANY, DETROIT, MICHIGAN 0) 1978 iiMMIN . ' A ) of r~ \1 The Daily Collegian Friday, Sept. 21, 1979-3 Final draft of Plan.fdr 'Bos due next month By KATHY HOKE school seniors between 1978 and 1990; Eddy said. In order to cope with this problem, he said, the University must stress quality, selectivity and flexibility in for mulating policy. "There will be no room for those who wish a com fortable and secure position;" Eddy said. "At Penn State, the 'Bos are bound to be uncomfortable and in secure." Eddy said the University needs courageous ad ministrative leadership to respond to unexpected conditions such as changing government attitudes toward education, an economic recession, energy problems or a sharp decline in the college participation rate of high school seniors. Because the University is the state's only land-grant college, it must maintain its position as "the true capstone of Pennsylvania higher education," Eddy meeting in protest of the automatic tuition increase. The meeting will begin at 9 a.m. in 402 Keller Building. To include a tuition hike in the general funds budget request "is a major change in policy," Hal Shaffer, USG president, said. "They always sent the budget request into Harrisburg, got what they could, and then raised tuition," he said. "Now they're including a tuition increase right in the budget.' "My initial reaction was that the University was trying to use reverse him Spenkelink was held down by guards while a hospital aide stuffed cotton up his rectum to keep his bowels from vacating when the electricity was shot through his body. Greene denied telling the story—or even being at the prison at the time Spenkelink was prepared for execution—and said he can prove it. But his supervisor and a co-worker told investigators that he was on duty. "Activities surrounding the execution were not as sterile and placid as the prison officials would want us to believe, even though there is no evidence of direct _ . a . ,rlq: psychology with the legislature," Shaffer said. In doing so, the legislature might pass the entire budget under the pressure from students' parents, he said. "But that's a risk," he added. "How can you work with psychology when it is not fact?" "I think they're giving up before they even try," he said. "The problem is that if the budget is defeated by the legislature, the the University will have to raise tuition even more." "This means the structural configuration of the University may be altered maybe even sub stantially," he said. "Nothing is sacred." Eddy told the trustees that the plan is a guideline for policy, but "not a detailed road map." It must be realistic, not visionary, he said. 1 The University will need to keep its functions of research, teaching and public service in balance in order to "fulfill the mission of the total University," he said. The plan is the result of a two-year effort by ad- ministrators, faculty and students. The steering committee for the plan will submit a preliminao final .draft to the trustees next month, subject to discussion and rewriting. The final draft of the plan will be adopted at the January meeting of the trustees. "When you go in asking for a budget, you shoot for the moon," said Mindy Morrison, student trustee liaison. "If you go in already behind, you're in trouble. You shoot and then you com promise. "You don't start at the back and work you're way forward," she said. Mark Berg, USG Senate president said there is a feeling among congressmen that, when they get a budget request, they have to cut something from it. Otherwise, they think they are not doing their job, he said. physical abuse," said the 20-page report signed by Miami lawyer Irwin Block and Graham's inspector general, Dick Williams. "The condemned • man was apparently taunted verbally," the report said. "There were loud exchanges between John Spenkelink and his guards. So many people crowded in that the people present cannot even remember everyone who was present at the time. "Several of those present have each individually taken credit for saying, 'John, it's time to go."'