10 —The Daily Collegian Monday, Oct. 15,1979 AFC Miami New England Buffalo N.Y. Jets Baltimore Central 5 2 5 2 4 3 1 6 Houston STEEI.ERS Cleveland Cincinnati West 5 2 5 2 4 3 4 3 2 5 Denver San Diego Kansas City Oakland Seattle NFC Dallas EACiI.ES Washington N.Y. Giants St. Louis Central 5 2 3 3 3 4 3 4 1 6 Tampa Bay Minnesota Chicago Green Bay Detroit CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING INFORMATION Ads can be placed in person at our office, Monday through Friday 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., or mailed to Room 126 Carnegie Building (make checks payable to: The Daily Collegian). DEADLINES Classified —ll a.m. one business day before publication Cancellation —ll a.m. one business day before publication. Renewal —no later than 11 a.m. the last day the ad is to appear in the paper. RATES Number ofwords. i-is 16-20 21-25 26-30 31-35 POLICY • Ads must be prepaid. • Changes cannot be made after the first insertion. • Cash refunds will only be given for ads cancelled by 11 a.m. the day before the first insertion. Only credit vouchers will be giver, after this time. • The Daily Collegian will only be responsible for one day’s In • correct insertion. Please come to room 126 Carnegie Building immediately if there is an error In your ad. .•'The'Dalfy'nCblleglan. will hot: to'be printed or published any notice or advertisement relating to employment or membership indicating any preference, limitation, specification or discrimination based upon race, color, sexual orientation, religious creed, ancestry, age,, sex, national origin or non-job related handicap or disability. ATTENTION !!? jGUITAR INSTRUCTION: Classical, -v Jazz, Folk. Experienced college instructor. 18 years teaching ex perience. John Mitchell 466-6806 -SMALL REFRIGERATORS for rent or T sale. Free T-shirt given with either, llnllmitled Rent-Alls, 140 N. Atherton -St., 238-3037 . .RED LION chimney sweep insured, * inexpensive, professional work, the ‘August West System. Before you say yes to anyone get my price. Call 234- 5740. .. JMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send ; $l.OO for your 306 - page catalog of Collegiate research. 10,250 topics fisted. Box 25097 G, Los Angeles, California, 90025. (213)477-8226 INSURANCE FOR your auto, ' motorcycle, home, personal belongings, hospitalization. For professional courteous service. Call 238-6633 . . WILL YOUR resume do you justice? Ours will! House of Resumes 237- :4508 . fSMALL REFRIGERATORS for rent ot [ • sale: Free t-shirt given with either. (Unlimited Rent-Alls. 140 N. Atherton [238:3037 ■ ■BUSINESS, PERSONAL and student I loans. Any amount, any purpose, fcall K. Krevda, 237-7104. INFORMATION and j. counseling. Finest medical care (available. 9am - 9p m. Toll Free, 1- , 'Museum of'Art Store unusual gifts'for- f,;“ /•juniisyai people v> v Art Books r ' 7 - Jewelry OFotk>Vt> ./>';/ v''' ' s 1 Penn State, University 1 Mti'Seum of Art: - 1 l2-5 AUDIO STEREO SPECIALS! Best prices on many top brand hi fi components. One week delivery. Call Dale: 238- 3436 CASSETTE TAPES! Sony, Superscope, BASF, Scotch, Memorex, Ampex, Maxell, TDK. Television Service Center, 232 S. Allen MARANTZ MODEL 2252 receiver 52WPC Sanyo TPIO2O direct drive turntable ESS Tempest speakers 100 watts. Also, Sony 1978 17" Trinitron w/remote control must sell 234-1663 SANYO RD-5250 Cassette deck. Five months old. $l4O. Call'(Free), 692-8424. JVC SK-12 speakers, 6 speaker - 4 way. system with 12" woofer, 80 watts. 300 or best offer. 234-2398 HEATHKIT AMPLIFIER, FM-tunet and beautiful sixteen element speakers in four ft. cherry cabinets. All very reasonable. 238-2090 or 234-4705. FOR SALE: Pioneer SX 750, 50 watt receiver. $250 or .best offer, call 234-9094 ask for Jim _____ STEREO EQUIPMENT, Calculators, low prices. Call for quotes. Tapes, lowest prices in town. Bob 238-5868. AUTOMOTIVE WHUFF ALOON isiJ ' HOURS 2 PM - 1 AM ORIGINAL GOLDEN OLDIES I Tuesday: West 4 3 0 3 4 0 3 4 0 0 7 0 yesterday’s Games Miami 17, Buffalo 7 New Orleans 42, Tampa Bay 14 Cincinnati 34, STEELEHSIO New York Giants 32, San Francisco 16 Washington 13, Cleveland 9 EAGLES 24, St. Louis 20 Houston 28, Baltimore 16 New England 27, Chicago 7 Denver 24, Kansas City 10 Oakland 50, Atlanta 19 Green Bay 24, Detroit 16 San Diego2o, Seattle 10 Dallas 30, Los Angeles 6 Today's Game Minnesota at New York Jets, (n), 1-os Angeles Atlanta New Orleans San Francisco College Scores t EAST Ashland 13, Slippery Rock 3 Brown 24, Penn 18 Colgate 17, Holy Cross 16 Cornell 41, Harvard 14 PENN STATE 24, Army 3 Pittsburgh 35, Cincinnati 0 Princeton 35, Columbia 0 Rutgers 26, Connecticut 14 Temple 49, Syracuse 17 W. Virginia 20, Boston College 18 Yale 3, Dartmouth o Five 4.55 5.75 6.95 8.15 9.35 Four 3.80 4.80 5.80 6.80 7.80 2-6 PM .571 125 .429 145 .429 180 .000 129 125 161 178 204 FOR SALE AMERICAN AND UNITED AIRLINES 50% coupons... Call 234-7946 after 6pm...price negotiable... 'DISCO SUCKS" bumper stickers for $l.OO. Arboria, 151 S. Allen St. FOR SALE: Female dorm contract Winter/spring. Call Betsy. 865- 4360. LOWER PRICE than David Weis. All Zenith 1980 color TV. Television Service Center, 232 S: Allen. VIDEOCASSETTES! Beta, U-Matic, and VHS. All lengths for all makes. Television Service Center, 232 S, Allen. SMALL BW TV $35 Jason after 8 238 6839 FEMALE DORM contract for sale. South. Call Lynda. 865-5853 OLYMPUS OMI 50mm lens and case $240 Olympus autowinder $ll5 Olympus 3xteleconverter $3O. Call Rick 234-1787 FOR SALE: FULL sized coin operated bumper pool table,, w/cues balls and lights. $75.00. 238-2090 or 234-4705. MUST SELL: Desk, two snow tires (G7B-14), couch, arm .chairs, playpen, carpet 234-9070 CANON FTB. 35 mm.camera with fast -1.4 lens. Includes case... S 150. Phone 238-5213'. ‘ ACOUSTIC 1 2-string ■ guitar w/case mint condition must sell $175 call Mike 237-6457 rebuilt schoolbus. MOTOR HOME Can be used for camping, deer hunting, football .trips or to live in. Best offer over 2,000. Can be seen at Brownson's used car lot. Just beyond Centre County Memorial Park on Benner Pike FOR SALE: Car battery - medium size, never used $25 863-0865 CRAIG TlO2 underdash casette deck. Never used, brand new. Retails for $l2O, take best offer. Steve 234- 4414 MALE DORM contract for sale.i Call Rick 865-9900 TWO BOARD-And-Pad Daybeds. No reasonable offer refused. 238- 8965 after 5 p.m. •FOR SALE: One female dorm contract. Call 865-7143 available winter term. MALE DORM contract for sale - south area winter, spring, call Don 865- 6733. 2 single beds, 3 chairs, 2 desks, 1 drawer. 234-0931. FOR SALE Male dormitory contract. Winter spring. Centre Halls. Call 865-5123 Paul. FOFI SALE one dorm contract, Centre Halls. Winter, spring. Call Lisa 865- 4596. __ KNOCK-DOWN - Desks: stable, convenient, portable. Start at $35 (65x24), Also custom made shelves and furniture. Call Michael Svoboda 237-6171. SNOW TIRES like new G7B-14 with rims best offer. Call alter 5 pm 238-1702. Instant Cash For Used Records Mon-Sat 11-5:30 Fri 11 -8:30 MIDWEST Akron 24, E. Michigan 12 Ball St. 42, Illinois St. 14 Bowling Green 28, Kent St. 17 Cent. Michigan 31, N. Illinois 11 lowa 58, Northwestern 6 lowa St. 7, Kansas St. 3 Kentucky St. 30, Lincoln 0 Long Beach St. 17, Drake 14 Michigan 31,Minnesota 21 Nebraska 42, Kansas 0 Ohio U. 9, Miami, Ohio 7 Ohio St. 47, Indiana 6 Oklahoma St. 14, Missouri 13 Purdue 28, Illinois 14 S. Illinois 31, Wichita St. 7 Toledo 17, W. Michigan 0 Wisconsin 38, Michigan St. 29 quia] Q: What player has the most career base hits in World Series play? Friday’s answer: Felix (Doc) Blan chard won the first Heisman Trophy for the Cadets in 1945, 10 years after the award was first given out. He was followed by Glenn Davis in 1946 and Pete Dawkins in 1958. APARTMENTS SUBLET: Large one bedroom apt. Winter and spring. Furnished or unfurnished. Free Bus Passes. Call 238-6351 or 238-2600. TWO BEDROOM BUNGALOW just two miles from campus. Perfect for two. students. $220 plus utilities. Call Associated Realty 234-2382 TOWNHOUSE Park Forest 3 bedroom 2V4 baths 325 plus utilities. Call Associated Realty 234-2382 FOR RENT ONE BEDROOM apartment slso'month. Call Melissa 865- 6502 or 238-8577. SPACIOUS ONE-BEDROOM unfurnished apartemtn. Free bus pass. Lion's Gate. Win ter/Spring/Summer options. Call 234- 6216 FREE CASE for subletirig large unfurnished efficiency winter - spring. $215 a month includes all utilities. Free bus. Call Jphn, .234- 8118 • ...J i iV".;.: : ROOM IN THREE b'edi'obm'tdwnhbUse Briarwood apts. Available winter,,, through summer. Rent $89.00. Great 1 accommodations, bus service, 234- 3076 ■ ONE BEDROOM (2-3. people) Beaver Hill Apts. Call 237-0433 or 237- 0985 ' SUBLET furnished efficiency in Foster Arms. Three blocks from campus $192/mo. plus utilities. 234-4639, 863-0597 Anil . SUBLET TWO Room apt. 285/mo. lots of extras free $lOO security deposit call 237-3257 SUBLET AND SAVE: Share Vi 2 Br. Kitchen, Bath. Walking distance and bus route Reasonable 238-4681 FURNISHED TWO Bedroom apartment Sutton Court available Winter, Spring Rent Negotiable Call 237-1500 EFFICIENCY ON College Ave. winter/spring/summer. $2lO/mo. inc. electric and cable. 237-5494.. FURNISHED EFFICIENCY on College Ave. starting winter..s2os/mo. all utilities included. Janet 238-7469 or 865-0208. WANTED PAYING TOP sss for gold class rings you never wear. For information phone Irv, 234-0155 CLASS RINGS, wedding rings, sterling For appointment 237-7483. EXPERIENCED WOMAN will do child care in her home. 234-2223. 4 reserved tickets for any home football game. Call 237-5500 after FEMALE NEEDS place to live winter term. Call 237-5500 after 5 pm. WANTED TICKETS for remaining home games. Please call Fred 238-2861 UNLOAD your general admission tickets to Temple on me before you can’t unload them at all. Bill 865-4951 OLD COMIC books wanted. Small or large lots. Cash paid. Call 865- 4445 TOP DOLLAR for gold, white or yellow, Jewelry, dental gold, rings, etc, Any cond. After 5 p.m. call Frank 237- 1095. ’ WANTED: HELP me pass. I need to buy, physics 215 study guide. Call 237- 1841. ; TRADE 1 junior Pitt football ticket for 2 junior Miami football tickets. Call 237-6077. • GREAT COLD WEATHER CLOTHING BUYS! The Family Clothesline now has in stock the following items with savings up to 50% OFF suggested retail price. •Men's & Women's Wool-Blend and Acrylic Sweaters 8.89-13.99 Fleece Lined 8.99 •Knee - High Thermal Boot and Ski Socks 1.99 PR. - 3 prs. for 5.50 MANY OTHER GREAT BUYS. HURRY IN SOON TO THE FAMILY CLOTHESLINE. •Down or Polyester Fill Ski Jackets and Vests 32.99-38.99 •Prewash Wrangler Jeans 13.99 Bengals club Steelers in upset By the Associated Press CINCINNATI (AP) Defenders Howie Kurnick and Jim LeClair returned second-quarter fumbles for a touchdown apiece as the Cincinnati Bengals scored three times in less than two minutes and upset the Pittsburgh Steelers 34-10 in a National Football League game yesterday. Ken Anderson threw touchdown passes to tight ends Dan Ross and Rick Walker and Pete Johnson ran one yard for a score as the Bengals snapped a six game losing streak before the first Riverfront Stadium football sellout crowd this season. The Steelers, 5-2, scored on a 46-yard field goal by Matt Bahr two minutes into the game and a 33-yard pass play from Terry Bradshaw .to John Stallworth midway through the final period. In between, the defending Super Bowl champions were unable to sustain a drive because Of repeated turnovers. Pittsburgh gave up the ball nine times, with seven of onfumbles. Cincinnati capitalized on a fumble by Stallworth in the second quarter. The Bengals drove 31 yards in five plays and Johnson crashed over from a yard out for the touchdown. Pittsburgh kick returner Larry An derson fumbled the ensuing kickoff and Kurnick returned it 12 yards for another Bengal score. THESIS/GENERAL TYPING, EDITING, Ten years experience including Federal proposal development. IBM Correcting Selectric: 234-4288, TYPING: THESES and general. Good rates. IBM Correcting Selectric typewriter. Call Joyce 865-1814 CALL US first for typing. Lowest prices in town. Fast, accurate, reliable. 238-1933 or 234-7007. THESIS DISSERTATION,-term papers '. i lancjii product ■’gudrantbea, ? excellent. 1 ; skills and credentials. Dianne 234-1903. QUALITY TYPING services available at _____ , , , House of Resumes, 237-4508 ROOMMATE NEEDED for winter, spring term $ll5/mo. 234-4681 IBM CORRECTING Selectrlcs for rent. As low as $1.50 per day. Unlimited Rent-Alls, 140 N. Atherton St., 238- 3037 NEED TYPING DONE?. Just call Michele 865-1811 IBM Correcting Selectric experienced in thesis typing TYPING - All kinds by experienced typist. Reasonable rates. 359- 2648 after 5 pm. RIDES FREE GAS • will.pay for gas or share driving for carpool from Rock Road (Houserville) to PSU. 238-3521 ROUND TRIP rides needed to Southern Virginia or Richmond area end of term. Call 865-4690 or 865-7745. LOST LOST: a blue clear "PSU Number One” key chain holding two' keys in Rec Hall Sat. Oct. 6. If found please call Bill 422-8483 or Bonnie 234-6642 LOST: BLUE/WHITE JACKET. Penn ' Siate embroidered on back, Debbie ,perience. Good pay! Europe! S. onfront. PLEASE call, 865-8275. ’ Pacific, Bahamas, World! Send $4.95 SEIKO WATCH lost Oct. 6 vicinity for application/info/jobs to Cruiseworld, Prospect and Garner St. Call Jim 93, Box 60129, Sacramento, CA. 237-5911 95860. HELP! I lost my blazer with keys and ID YOUR TIME is your own. Sell Avon in Docket at SAE Wed. 5-8036 part-time and set your own hours. BLACK GREY and brown striped young ' 0 9 °,° d cat. Double paws. West College interesting people. Call 238 7070. Avenue area. Reward. 234-8479 LOST - OUTSIDE-Schwab on Oct. 10 Gold St. Christopher medal with chain very sentimental. Call 237-4013 $5O reward . REWARD: FOR blazers lost at SAE Wed. Contain much needed I.D. and keys. 865-8589, 865-8036. OVERSEAS JOBS- summer/year round. Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All fields, $5OO - monthly. Expenses paid. __ _____ Sightseeing. Free info-wrlte:lJC, Box FOUND - one gold watch, girl’s 108 52-PB, Corona, Del Mar, Ca. 92625 Forum. Call 234-1089 to Identity FOUND LOUHDES CHEERLEADER I have youi .. red jacket, 865-3152 TWO FEMALE rings In Pattee Call Mitch at 237-4939 FOUND GREY and white tabby cat witl red collar. Call 237-6000. (none higher) •Hooded Sweat Shirts •Sweatpants 4.99 On the Steelers next possession, Franco Harris fumbled op the third play and LeClair returned the ball 27 yards for the Bengals’ third touchdown in less than two minutes. The outcome left San Francisco as the NFL’s only winless team. The 49ers lost 32-16 to the New York Giants as rookie quarterback Phil Simms passed for 300 yards, including two touchdown tosses to rookie Earnest Gray in the Giants’ 27- point • second quarter. The 49ers’ touchdowns came on Steve Deßerg passes to Mike Schumann and Freddie Solomon. In yesterday’s other afternoon games New Orleans routed Tampa Bay 42-14, Miami beat Buffalo 17-7, Philadelphia edged St. Louis 24-20, Washington shaded Cleveland 13-9, Houston defeated Baltimore 28-16, New England whipped Chicago 27-7, Denver downed Kansas City 24-10, Oakland smashed Atlanta 50- 19, Green Bay defeated Detroit 24-16 and San Diego beat Seattle 2-10. In last night’s action, the Dallas Cowboys demolished Los Angeles 30-6. Reserve runningback Billy Campfield bolted 11 yards for a touchdown with 2:54 left in the game, lifting the Philadelphia Eagles to a 24-20 triumph over St. Louis in a seesaw game. Campfield’s splint capped a 33-yard Philadelphia drive set up by Wally Henry’s 34-yard punt return and wiped ROOMMATES fIE TWO ROOMATES wanted male/female to share clean two bedroom Southgate apt. Private bath, furnished,' rent SlOO each. Call Dominic 237- 0072. ROOMMATE WANTED; professional grad, preferred to share '/■> of 2 bedroom apt. Available now, country enviornment. Bus route. $125 plus utilities. Sharon, 237-7776. FEMALE ROOMMATES NEEDED W/S. Spacious 3/br., 2/bath apt. University Terrace. Free bus pass. Call 237-5408. ■ FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to share room In large house two blocks from campus. $lOO . plus utilities. Call 234-1607 SUBLET 'h of 2 bedroom apartment 2 baths living room dining room and kitchen. Female roommate only. Rent $95 negotiable. Winter and spring. Southgate Apartments. Call Kathy evenings 237-0412 ROOMMATE FOR W-S share -Vi 1 bedroom apt. walking distance. All utilities neg. Helene, 237-9388. FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share V* of 2 bdrm Briarwood townhouse wiri/spr summer option $lOO month Call Lisa23B-CIBBB . FEMALE ftOOfvIMATE neSde'd rioW to " share ,large one bedroom' 234- 8824 “ '' 1 ROOMMATE NEEDED to share spacious two bedroom apartment in Beaver Terrace winter and/or spring. Great roommates • low rent. Call Margaret. 237-9377 MALE ROOMMATE Needed for winter and spring terms apartment 512 Beaver Hill call Carl or Chuck 238- 5225 WANTED ONE or two roommates to share 2 bedroom apt. Starting Nov. 1 Cheap Call 237-7065. 2 FEMALE ROOMMATES wanted to share 2*3 one bedroom Cedarbook apt! Winter spring. Call 234-2041. ROOMS GRAD COUPLE has room in nice 3 . bdrm house for female student starting winter term. Call 238-5802 after 5 HELP WANTED MEN! WOMEN! JOBS! CRUISESHIPS! SAILING EXPEDITIONS! No ex- WANTED ROCK guitarist versatile serious 238-3214 10:00 a.m. - noon , • EARN EXCELLENT money typing, addressing or stuffing envelopes at home! Details mall stamp: Robert Williams, 1026 East High Street, Bellefonte, Pa. 16823 . Conserve Energy Thermal lined 11.99 STOP HERE! , Read this ad it you are looking tor an opportunity to make extra .money. * LET US HELP! For only 3*4 hours of'your spare time each week you cdn earn up to , r $2O. ' ■ HOW??!! By donating urgently needed plasma in a relaxed atmosphere while making new friends. ALL IN YOUR SPARE TIME! For more detail call or stop by SERA-TEC BIOLOGICALS 120 S. Allen St. (rear) 237-5761 PERSONAL H.O.P.S. GAYUNE . 863-0588 7-9 p.m. dally for raps, Information and referrals on homosexuality and gay lifestyles, N.F.L. FOOTBALL every Monday at "The Scoreboard’’. 7' screen. Happy hours nitely (below The Scorpion). ' PLANNING -TO TAKE a Graduate School Entrance Exam (MOAT, DAT, GRE, GMAT, TOEFL, OCAT, VAT)? Call Stanley H. Kaplan Ed. Ctr. to )Ilnd' oufiftitjSuE bUTSTd'st '"jiff . courses.-£3B-1423. ■ • YOUR RESUME is an investment In your future. Invest wisely. Call House of Resumes. 237-4508. JOB HUNTING? We can show you how to make the best possible Im pression... to.get results! Best Resume Service. 234-.1220. PSU HOCKEY HOTLINE: Chalk Talk October 18, Varsity tryouts Oct. 19. All questions answered. Call John 234-8276, Joe 865-9786, Jim 234- 1575. ■ ’ TO THE PERSON who found my letter In Schwab Aud. It is very valuable. Thanks so much. - S.R. BLOND from Erie Met at Mall Wed. Watching Pirates. Next game -.my place? Red-headed Pittsburgh fan. 234-8494 - BIG BUCKS to the holder of 4 West Virginia General Admission tickets! Call Kathy 865-3354 t=} BOBBIE, Thanks for the Bock at Phyrst Friday. Love to see you. Jeff 238- 1347 . COUNSELING, INFORMATION, referral offered by the Student Counselors in 135 Boucke M-F 4 p.m.- midnlght, S-S noon-8 p.m. NEED MCDONALD'S game piece A, H or M. Make good deal. Call 865- 5948, anytime. CHRISTI - I'M lucky to have a Big Sister like you! Hope to become real close. Love ya, Brad. NURD DANGER signals...flood pants, terminal leisure suits, buckle galoshes, CURE:The Gap. SO YOU want to. be a lawyer? Come meet the people who can tell you how to get there. Thursday Oct. 18 7:30 pm HUB Ballroom. BOJO AND Spider: Thanks for a super birthday. You guys are the best. Love, Bidette. ; ; GLENN H. from first floor Beam, Love your pink-striped underwear! They're right! Good things do cum In small packagesl Love-Apple Jack. BOOZY SUZY Happy 18th we have photo of you in-mid act. Will publish unless repeated on Monday night in our room. Guys in 231 since 1962 RESUMES Creative professional services by the nation's leading authori ty In human resource development & marketing. Through years of research and testing we have developed an ap proach to resume preparation that has been uncommonly ’’successful for our clients. In fact, over half of our business to day comes from client referrals. Why are we the BEST? Experience : . . some of the leading . experts in this field are on our staff. Quality . . . you won't get a better product—anywhere. Knowledge . . . years of study have shown us what to accent, how to market "key" qualifications, and what it takes to get interviews—and of fers. We are the ONLY firm in State College with a full scope of professional resume development services. 234-1220 by app’t SPECIAL STUDENT RATES n BEST RESUME SERVICE 116 Heister Street _A—' State College, PA 16801 O OFFICES IN PRINCIPAL CITIES (not an employment agency) SPECIALISTS IN JOB SEARCH & CORPORATE OUTPLACEMENT "our fees are tax deductible" out a 20-17 St. Louis lead taken 11 minutes earlier on rookie Ottis An derson’s 1-yard run. The Eagles, 6-1, extended their victory string to five games with the aid of Harold Carmichael’s 3-yard touchdown pass reception, Tony Franklin’s 51-yard field goal and a 5-yard touchdown jaunt by Wilbert Montgomery. St. Louis, 2-5, played more than three quarters without regular Jim Hart, who suffered a sprained left foot during the Cardinals’ second offensive series. Backup Steve Pisarkiewicz took over and, after a string of errant passes, hit veteran Mel Gray on a 78-yard scoring play in the third quarter. The bomb gave St. Louis a 13-7 edge, but Franklin followed with his long-distance field goal and Montgomery with his touchdown ramble to send the Eagles back on top 17-13. Archie Manning ran for one touch down, passed for another and completed 11 of 14 passes and Mike Strachan ran for two touchdowns against the NFL’s top defense as New Orleans handed the Bucs their second straight defeat. Rookie Tony Nathan ran 86 yards with a punt for a touchdown and Larry Csonka rushed for 90 yards and a touchdown as Miami extended its winning streak’ against Buffalo to 20 games. SEL, ITS easier over the phone. Call me alter class 10:30 pm. 234-7030. AZ YOU'VE got the field experience. We'Ve got the wild oats. What's your crop schedule? ' DEB DO you think hunting blueberries in the dark Is suspicious o Not as much as meeting people in a sleeping bag. Happy 20th. Bruce. ALICE, DONNA,' Helen, Kitty, Maryalice, (Six Pack), Cindy, Josh, Mike,. Patty, Rick, Spencer, Sue, ahd Wilma: Thanks for the unexpected, my feelings were quite susceptive. As days go by I'm sure you can bet, what I remember, I'll never forget Love, Beeline (Adnileb), NITTANY FLASHERS! Here’s an offer you can't refuse. Come back and' klssimmeel! Feels so good! If you won’t read these 7 signals of cancer... You probably have the Bth. ; in bowel or Harder T- habits." ” 2. A sore that does not heal. ' 3. Unusual bleeding or discharge, 4. Thickening or lump in breast or elsewhere. 5. Indigestion or difficulty in swallowing. 6 • Obvious change in wart or mole. .7. Nagging cough or hoarseness. 8. A fear of cancer that can pre vent you from detecting cancer at an early stage. A stage when it is highly curable. Everyone's afraid of cancer, but don't let it scare you to death. i American Cancer Society Happy Valley doesn’t have to be in' the middle of nowhere. Read the Collegian and bring the world here. Quality of Continued from Page 1. COLLEGIAN: Has so much money been reallocated that it has begun to affect the quality of the University? OSWALD: I'think the fact that in some areas the class size by necessity has had to increase, making it more difficult to have the most favorable type of student-. faculty interaction. As a result, I think it takes some v6ry special efforts to offset! that disadvantage of larger classes in some areas. I think that is one of the more serious problems as far as the institution is concerned. I think we’ve also had to cut ourselves short, or at least shorter, than I wished in the renewal of academic equipment and research equipment. The equipment not only becomes obsolete by usage but also technology... I believe we perhaps have had to be more frugal in that area than I wished. Also an area in which I wish we had more funds is one in which inflation has hit the hardest, and that is in the library. I’m told that the items that we purchase in large amounts, the books and scientific subscriptions, and so forth, have probably inflated higher and faster then almost anything else in the A University. It’s pretty hard to measure the quality. I do not think the quality of the faculty,... the quality of the students has deteriorated. If, anything, I think there has been some improvement. I’d like to think there has been. On the other hand, I think the conditions under which « instruction takes place, and some of the -equipment that is used, is perhaps the area where there has been some drop-off due to just lack of money. COLLEGIAN: During the budget crisis in 1976, there was talk that Penn State could suffer a “brain drain” by not , being able to attract new faculty. Has ip that been a problem? ' OSWALD: No, we’ve been able to keep , up salary-wise and fringe benefit-wise pretty well with our competitors. With the kinds of institutions that we compare ourselves with, I don’t think we’ve lost heavily. In fact I wouldn’t say we’ve lost, # seriously, people as a result of this. COLLEGIAN: Will there be a time when program cuts will become necessary? OSWALD: I think there is no question that we’re going to have to make some tougher and tougher choices in the --decade ahead. That’s the reason we’re putting sUch strong emphasis upon and setting our highest priority on the planning for the ’Bos. We must not only have general long-range plans and goals, but we must devise ways arid means linking our resources as close as #11 " ' ‘ The Office efforeign Studies announces the Availability of Applications for Foreign Study in > NAIROBI, KENYA ROME, ITALY TAIPEI, TAIWAN Application Deadline January 4, 1980 for Fall and Winter Terms 1980/81 For Information and Application Forms see Office of Foreign Studies 314 Willard Building SMALL FARM ENERGY PROJECT Roger Plobaum, from the Nebraska Small Farm Energy Project, will speak on energy independence on the small farm. Topics include: low energy agriculture, solar applications on the farm, wind electrical generation, nd composting. Bring friends and questions. students, faculty we can to our priorities. This leads to the very intensive effort we’re makng in five-year budget planning ... , beginning to think in terms of these three and four years ahead. I think to the extent that we can do that, we are going to be less likely to find ourselves with the wrong kind of faculty to teach the students that are here five years from now. That is the problem some universities are in right now, of actually having to let people go, even tenured people go, because they really have gotten up to the point where they have a mismatch between their faculty that’s on hand and the student body that wants a certain type of education. To this point we have not encountered that. And I would hope that the intensive planning we are doing now is going to keep us from finding ourselves in that position. We’re looking ahead in every single department. Each is being asked to assess every position that becomes vacant. Through retirement or through a person’s death or resignation, we’re asking ourselves if the kind of work that person is doing is going to be high priority five years from now, and if so we will fill it. If not so, we’ll move it to another area where we have a much stronger feeling there will be a high priority. The second thing we’re doing is developing a fairly husky, what we’re calling a revolving, fund. This is for the B ASSEMBLY ROOM ED- Oct. 17, 7:30 PM purpose of permitting a college to hire faculty for a three- or four-year period, with the idea that they have that money for at least| three or four years. They can get a better-caliber person s and do a little better planning. But at the end of three or four years that money is still not committed to that college, and these people that have been teaching are • not part of the tenure tract of the in stitution, and you might find that we will have to shift that revolving fund from college A to college B at the end of that period... Ideally, it would be nice to have a permanent person in every single position.. Then at the end of six years make the determination as to whether or not that individual has sufficient potential to give them tenure ... We have between 50 and 60 percent of our faculty on tenure, which I might say is low when compared to. some universities; We don’t have any quota on tenure . . . that would be a mistake because there might be some areas that decide to go fairly high on permanent people... Another factor in our planning ... is flexibility,' so you can keep the University as flexible as possible so that as there are changes you can be responsive to those changes. When we look ahead, we are pretty sure that there are going to be about the same number of Pennsylvanians 10 years from now as there are now. But ECO-ACTION Ig/ 863-1972 improved, Oswald says we’re equally certain that there are going to be fewer 18- to 20-year-olds 10 years from now, maybe by as much as 30 percent... The thing we don’t know is what is going to happen to the percent of young people going on to college. That figure grew every year up until about three years ago. The last three years it’s even dipped some. There are some different theories as to why. Some say it’s finance, and that the universities have gotten too costly and given the cost, it’s not that high priority in some families. Another is that the magic about going to college isn’t as magical as it was viewed maybe 10 years ago. In other words, certainly when I went to college, and that was a long time ago, we thought in terms of people who went to college were pretty well assured of a job of some type in the line. And you know as well as I know that is not as assured as it was. Because of our uncertainty of this, and yet our certainty in other areas, we’ve got to keep very flexible at this in stitution to be able to move in different directions. Even this year, we grew 1,000 students more than projected. We thought we might lose a few this year. We didn’t think many. We ended up with an overall ehrollment the highest it’s ever been at Penn State. This is at a time when people are talking about enrollments dropping. I’ve got some guesses as to why, but we’re not certain. COLLEGIAN: What are those guesses? OSWALD: One of those is the diversity of the offerings of Penn State and the fact that we are particularly strong in some of the areas' students are most interested in. Engineering, mining, and business would be three very good examples of areas where enrollment is very, very heavy and where we have very, very strong programs. I think another is the impact that the tremendous increase in student aid has made. We had a tuition increase last year; the total cost of that tuition in crease to the students was around ss'/2 million. That’s about the amount of money it brought into the University. The students in turn received $2l million through a whole variety of student aid programs, mostly federal, some state. Actually the figures jumped from about $4O million for Penn State students, about half of which is in grants and about of half in loans, to about $6O million. I think that perhaps helped Penn State a little more than some other institutions because we’ve been an institution that has been responsive to the middle in come and lower middle income student and we’ve been losing some of those. That’s what I’ve been saying to the Legislature that we’re concerned about in out tuition increases. I think the The Daily Collegian Monday, Oct. 15,1979—11 I don’t know whether this is known or not, but Penn State, I’m sure, in Penn sylvania and probably nationally, is among the leaders in those universities' that have students where they're the first that have ever been to college ini their family ... . That gives one a very good feelingj about this being an institution that perhaps adding something to the overall intellectual and cultural growth of this state. 1 COLLEGIAN: When you talk about the effect of tuition increases on the .middle and lower middle income families, do you have any figures on how many students are forced to leave the University because of increasing costs? OSWALD: ... I spent two hours once with the Legislature about two years ago' with a whole series of charts which’, demonstrated that we were keeping, about the same percentage of low in-: come students because they were get ting student aid. Photos by Sherrlo Weiner We were losing a percentage of what, we call the lower middle income, students because they were a little too’ high for student aid but too low to afford to go to college, particularly if there was more than one kid in the family. And where we’ve gone up is in what we call the higher income category. Now two or three things are happening. , First of all, the federal aid has in-i creased. Also this has enabled PHEAA (Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency) to be more responsive to the somewhat, higher in come families. PHEAA now requires every student that applies for a PHEAA grant to first apply for a BEOG (Basic Educational Opportunity Grant), the federal grant. Then if they get a BEOG grant, and there is still some need left, PHEAA will make up the difference. So instead of picking up the whole package, they pick just a portion of the package. That frees more PHEAA money now to be loaned as guaranteed loans for higher income students. Now you see, any student regardless of in come, can receive a guaranteed student loan, where they don’t have to pay in terest while they are in college, and they pay only 7 percent, which nowadays is a very modest percentage, once they get out. ! In the second part of the interview,; Oswald talks about the addition of Uudent trustr nd his future plans. student aid increases last year probably helped us much more then a school like Swarthmore or Penn or some school like this because we have so many of those kind of kids.