The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, November 08, 1979, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    14—The Daily Collegian Thursday, Nov. 8,1!)7!)
[,asc;Q^fbocirJ
NBA
Kustern Conference
Atlantic Division
W D
11 2
9 2
7 6
:( 6
4 10
7GKKS
Boston
New York
Washington
New Jersey
Central Division -
in Rfi7 Vancouver
. I Z 2 St. Louis
6 8 .429 3',. Winning
6 9 .400 4 Chicago
4 7 364 4 Edmonton
4 8 ■ .333 4'-. Colorado
Atlanta
San Antonio
Cleveland
Indiana
Houston
Detroit
' Western Conference
Midwest Division
Milwaukee,
Kansas City
Denver
Chicago
Utah
Pacific Division
' ,U; !f >3
9 3
8 6
8 6
G 5
G 9
Portland
Los Angeles
Phoenix
Seattle
Golden State
San Diego
Yesterday's Games
Boston 117. San Antonio 105
iIiKHS 110. Kansas City 102
Atlanta 115, Detroit 107
Indiana 97. Portland9o
Houston 100. New Jersey tot
Denver m. Seattle 92
San Diego l H. P(jopnix 102 «•,
Los Angeles at Golden State. (ni
Today's Gaines
Portland at Milwaukee
Denver at Utah
Emotion on Mountaineers' side
MORGANTOWN! W.Va. (AP) Pitt has the edge in size,
speed, record and ability, concedes West Virginia University
Coacli Frank Cignetti.
But when his Mountaineers play Pitt, their oldest and
dearest rival on Saturday,'Cignetti says-West Virginia will
have one advantage emotion.
“I know the atmosphere for this game will be incredible. It
should be super,” Cignetti said. He was referring to the fact
that the 34,000-seat Mountaineer Field, where the Moun
taineers have played for the past 55 years, will no longer be
used for games after Saturday.
"Our players, coaches and fans look forward to the Pitt
game more than any other,” Cignetti said. “And we’ll be
playing for the last time in a stadium that has produced a lot of
exciting memories. We will be out there to add one more.”
But Cignetti concedes that’s easier said than done. The 12th-
;.n
s *°/>
V TOMORROW \
YOUR CAREER
How to Plan It, Manage 11, Change It
By Richard H. Buskirk
Drawn from case histories, this guide cov
ers topics such as career goalsiand plan
ning; college versus experience; the boss;
termination; office politics; image, and
more. Stresses choice, not chance, in
shaping the future.
MENTOR MJ 1537 $1.95
LOOKING AT LAW SCHOOL
Edited by Stephen Gillers
The most esteemed law professors in the
country offer invaluable advice on every
aspect of legal training and practice. Es
sential information for both planning a
general law education and
selecting a specialization.
@ MERIDIAN F 477 54.95
Campbell Conference
Patrick Division
W I. T
9 1 1
6 4 3
'5 4 3
5 6 1
3 8 2
Smythc Division
4 4 5
4 5 3
4 6 3
3 6 3
2 6 4
2 8 2
Wales Conference
Adams Division '
7 3 2
7 4 2
6 2 3
4 5 2
'471
Norris Division
8 3 2
•*,. 7 5 2
4 4 4
4 4 2
•3.6 2
Tuesday’s Games
New York Islanders 4, Los Angeles 1
Atlanta 8. Winnipeg 0
Hartford 7, Colorado 2
.84G
.818
.538
.331
.286
FLYERS
r
4
6
74
NY Islanders
NY Rangers
Washington
Minnesota
Buffalo
Boston
Quebec
Toronto
54
G
74
7*2
Montreal
Los Angeles
Hartford
PENGUINS
Minnesota 7, Vancouver?, tic
Y’cstcrday's Games
New York Rangers 8, Los Angeles 4
Detroit 5, Edmonton 3
Montreal 3, PENGUINS 3, lie
Washington 6 Winnipeg 3
FLYERS 4, Quebec 3 ..
Toronto 7, St. Louis 4
Today’s Games
Edmonton at Boston
Chicagoat Buffalo
(PLUME Z 5214 54.95
CAREERS TODAY
By Gene R. Hawes; Mark Hawes
and Christine Fleming
An up-to-date guide to securing oyer 150
different types of jobs with good income
and growth potential, requiring two years'
training or less.
© PI UMEZSIS7 53.95
HAWES COMPREHENSIVE
GUIDE TO COLLEGES
By Gene R. Hawes
The only guide that ranks colleges good,
better and best buys: the least expensive
schools with the best programs and repu
tations. The only guide that lists schools
categorically by state rather
than alphabetically, ottering the
■ H HH reader tresh insight and useful
ness
msamm© PLUME 25183 $7.95
NEW AMERICAN LIBRARY
Education Department
120 Woodbine Street. Bergenfietd, NJ. 07621
NHL
ranked Panthers are 7-1 and have won six games in a row.
West Virginia (5-4) has won five of its last six, including a 34-23
come-from-behind win over Virginia Tech last week, in which
the Mountaineers trailed 23-6 at the half.
Pitt Coach Jackie Sherrill said he fears West Virginia will
get an emotional and a psychiatric lift from the partisan
Mountaineer Field crowd. He said the Mountaineers got such a
lift in 1975, when WVU scored a stunning 17-14 upset over the
Panthers on Bill McKenzie’s last-second field goal.
“It will be 20 times worse Saturday than it was in 1975,” said
Sherrill, who was an assistant to then Pitt coach Johnny
Majors that season. '
Tony Constantine, a veteran Morgantown sportswriter who
has seen every game played in Mountaineer Field since it was
opened in 1924, except for one, said the 1975 game was the most,
exciting ever played in the stadium.
JE R. HAWES
first and only guidebook that,,
ntrates on tftose career areas
i will have substantial growth
ig tho1980s; Orawn from the
ipartment of Labor statistics,
als the highest-paying, most
re professiohs in the coming ,
lore than 100 are discussed,.
i information about:: . . -
character of the work
personal qualifications
quired
le salaries and personal
satisfactions offered
forking conditions
Ivancement and related
reers
iethod for “breaking in” :•
Homeless icers set
to defend league title
What’s the only athletic team at Penn
State that can win a league cham
pionship, but still cannot call University
Park home?
Well, it’s the men’s ice hockey team
This season’s team, like the 1978-79
squad, will practice and play its games
in Mechanicsburg, 98 miles south of
campus.
GF GA
31 36
51 37
43 37
49 48
38 56
New coach Mark Hofgas said, “It puts
tremendous sacrifices on the players.
Every Friday and Saturday is shot from
now until the end of March because we
have to travel so far to practice on
weekends.”
“This is the most responsibility placed
upon me,” Horgas said, “but I don’t
foresee many difficulties.”
Last year’s team posted a 13-5-1 record
on its way to capturing the cham
pionship in a five-team league that
consists of Villanova, Drexel, West
Chester and Delaware.
Horgas said he expects Villanova and
Delaware to be Penn State’s toughest
competitors this season. Besides the
league teams, the hotkey team will face'
off against Lehigh, Fordham, Penn’s
J.V.,and Navy.
Sizing up the team’s strengths, Horgas
said, “Basically, we have everybody
back. We lost three seniors, but we’re
loaded.”
“That has to be an added advantage,”
player Tom Horgas said. “It usually
takes time for a team to jell. The team
should be in better overall shape.”
—by Andy Linker
WITH AN
OUTSTANDMG
GRADUATE
FACULTY AT
RUTGERS
“One of America’s
top Graduate Schools of *
Business Administration.”
From A Guide to Executive Education
in Business Week Magazine
Keep Happy Valley beautiful, ©op’t litter.
EARN
THE MBA
Rutgers, The State University,
offers you an opportunity to
study with one of the nation’s
most distinguished faculties in
management education
whether as a full-time or part
time student. The Rutgers
MBA program is one of three
in the N.Y. Metropolitan Area
accredited by the American As
sembly of Collegiate Schools of
Business.
Trimester study program.
Full-time admissions June and
September. Part-time admis
sions September and February.
Convenient locations on our Newark
Campus and .in the Neiv Brunswick Area.
sy.
Former Corporate Officer
of the Government
National Mortgage -
Association. Consultant
and Advisor in Housing
Development and
Municipal Management.
Teacher of Real Estate
Finance and Land Use.
Professor of Business
Administration.
' *
David K. Whitcomb, Ph.D.
Columbia University.
Specialist in Industrial
Economics and Security
Market Operations and
Investments. Author.
Teacher and Researcher
in Finance and Economics
Associate Professor of
ro
!RUTGERS
I RUTGERS UNIVERSITY
I Graduate School of Business Administration
j 92 New Street, Newark. N.J. 07102
! Please send me full information on your
| MBA program.
j Name •
| Address
| City : State Zip
C? S. ;I ' v . ■
' RIDGE SOARING, INC.
16844
RD Julian, Pa-.
GLIDER RIDES, FLIGHT INSTRUCTION
STUDY WITH THE LEADERS.
Buckner A. Wallingford,
11, Ph. D.— University.of
Michigan. Teacher,
Researcher and Consultant
in Corporation Finance.
Securities Markets,
Investment Analysis, and
Portfolio Selection and
Balance. Author. Associate
Professor of Business
Administration.
Philip C. Shaak, 0.8. A.
Harvard University.
Internationally-known
Management Develop-
merit Specialist. Author.
Teacher and Consultant
in General Management.
Organizational Bdhaviour
• P - ■ p r -
Phone: (814) 355-1792
Open 7 days a week
<t V ? 1
Leather
• The Graduate Student Association
will hold a ‘Hands-on Crash Crafts’
workshop on how to make key fabs and
do other leatherwork at 7:30 tonight in
102 Kern. The fee for materials is $2. '
• The Greek Times newspaper staff
will meet to discuss its first issue at 7
tonight in 324 and 325 HUB' All greeks
interested in journalism, advertising,
art and photography are urged to attend.
• The Penn State Outing Club Bike
Division will meet at 7:30 tonight at the
Outing Club office in the IM Building to
discuss a term break trip.
• The Earth and Mineral Sciences
Student Council will sponsor Carl
Sherman, professor of petroleum and
natural gas engineering, speaking on
‘Oil and Gas Rip-off or Bargain?’ at
7:30 tonight in 112 Walker.
• The monthly Two Cultures Dialogue
sponsored by the Science, Technology
and Society Program will feature
Mortimer A. Schultz, professor of
nuclear engineering, speaking on
‘Technology Assessment and Risk
Analysis’ at 12:20 p.m. today in 101 Kern.
L • The Penn State Outing Club Ski
Division will meet at 7:30 tonight in 119
| Osmond. ‘ - ‘ •
• The Office of Religious Affairs will
sponsor ‘Final Choices,’ the final episode
of the film series ‘How Should We Then
Live?’ at 7:30 tonight in the Memorial
Lounge of Eisenhower Chapel/
• The Agricultural Economics Club
will meet at 7:30 tonight in 203 Weaver.
| • Homophiles of Penn State and the
I Metropolitan Community* Church will
i sponsor a womens’ coffeehouse at a
at4ls E. Foster Ave.
• The Penn State Model Railroad Club
will meet at 7:30 tonight in 307 Boucke.
f • Phi Mu Alpha will meet for a
| mandatory initiation at* 9:15 tonight at
.1: |the bulletin board in the Music Building.
ISRAEL
LOW COST
FLIGHTS
* X-mas/i\lew Years
* Intersession
* Easter
(212) 689-8980
Outside N.Y. State
t F r L e l e 1-800-223-7676
’The Confer for Sfudenf Travel*
1140 RROAOWAY NYC..NY
Forgot
to
DOIT?
see classified page
for your second chance
SURE
y there are bigger
y / pizzas than
BELL'S
' GREEK
PIZZA
but there are no
, better pizzas.
FREE DELIVERY
538 E. College 237-8616
- ssssssssssssssssss
Repulsive!
'jf
jg Disgusting! J§
!l Horrendous! 1
*■& t*
**B lets Face it
P Tin Ails
|;|g Downright ||
|| GROSS! H
The Creative Department m
is looking for students jit?
experienoed in layout and
! design. Apply with port
folio to:
<'iLjb Steve Zwillinger j)*^,
' Safo Daily Collegian Office
<#T Call 865-2531 £*
*V ~
\
craft workshop featured
• The Penn State Twirling Club will
meet at 9 tonight in 133 White Building.
Anyone interested in attending should
bringa baton.
• Entries for men’s intramural
basketball and squash will be accepted
until noon today in 2 IM.Building. Please
call 865-5401 for more information.
• The Rev. James D. May, 0.5.8., will
present ‘The Responsible Christian’ as
the morning message at ll a.m. Sunday
at the interdenominational services at
Eisenhower Chapel.
ANNIVERSARY SALE
SAVE UP TO 50%
☆ STEREO ☆ CALCULATORS ☆ TAPES
☆ TV’s ☆ CAR-STEREO ☆CB’s
FREE SS,HSf FINANCE UP TO 3 YRS.
LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER. LIMITED^QU FREE FINANCING 90 DAYS.
PIONEER SX-680
PIONEER SX-780
PIONEER SX-1250
SONY STR-V2.
SONY STR-V3
SONY STR-V5
KENWOOD KR-3090
KENWOOD KR-5030
CAR-STEREO & CB’s
Vz OFF all J G,
fD SANYO
Mini-size 8-track car stereo
tape player.
list $6O SALE:
FREE $5O
10 TDK OR SCOTCH TAPES WITH PURCHASE
OF ANY CASSETTE OR 8-TRACK DECK
m- GEIIH
*j?Sa *iy 4.$ V
THE SONY WITH
20 YEARS BEHIND IT
AND A $ 879 PRICE ON IT.
THE BIGGEST THING
TO HAPPEN TO TV
EM YEARS.
SONY
KV-2601
This new 26" (measured diagonally) Color TV Console, in its ultra '
modern white cabinet design, is Sony's newest product innovation.
0 A Young People’s Concert will be
presented by the Penn State Symphony
Orchestra at 10:30 a.m. Saturday in
Eisenhower Auditorium.
s The Lamb Fellowship will sponsor
Larry Tomczak and C.J. Mahaney
speaking on ‘Preparing for the ’Bos’ at
7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday in Sch
wab Auditorium.
• The Graduate Student Association
will sponsor the film ‘Midnight Cowboy’
on Friday and Monday, and ‘A Touch of
Class’ on Saturday and Sunday at 7 and 9
p.m. in 112 Kern.
WATTS/CH.
30
45 ,
165
25
35
85
26
60
$39
I IQT* <M en vertical design front load
LIO I . IDU STEREO CASSETTE DECK with DOLBY
SALE: $1298
(UNILLUSTRATED)
SALE:
$879
$lOOO
CAMPUS STEREO
307 WEST BEAVER
SALE
$219
$279
$599
$195
$248
$435
$209
$333
LIST
$3OO
$375
$950
$260
$330
$5BO
$2BO
$445
• 40-CHANNEL CB WITH AM/FM
STEREO RADIO. DIGITAL LED
CHANNEL INDICATOR. S/RF METER
LIST CA I C
s27o OHLC-
FT-81.7
NEW
SONY
SL-5400
4-5 HOURS
ELECTRONIC TUNING
LIST: $1250 SALE $995
* The Penn State Outing Club Hiking
Division will sponsor a walk and ex
ploration for a 200 series map on Sunday.
Interested persons should meet at 9 a.m.
at the HUB Parking Lot Brown ‘F’ on
Shortlidge Road.
• National Teacher Examinations will
be given Saturday in 108 Forum.
Common exams will be given at 8:30
a,m. and area exams at 1:30 p.m.
• The Graduate Student Association
will sponsor a Commonsplace Cof
feehouse featuring the Millo-Thunder
Band and Quintessence at 8 p.m. Friday
in 102 Kern.
AM/FM
RECEIVERS
SAVE 37%
I—-—_ —**• -
SANYO RD-5008
Dolby Noise Reduction Circuitry
Permalloy Recording/Playback Head
Tape Selector for Normal or Cro 2
5 Point L.E.D. Level Indicators
W9TCH THE SHOWS
YOU WEREN'T
HOME FOR
AT A PRICE YOU
WONT WANT TO MISS.
$99
CLOG SHOP
When your feet need a friend.
Smart people read
Collegian ads. Right?
SPEAKERS
SAVE 25%
JENSEN 20 QAI P*
SENSATIONAL SOUND SBOEA.OHLC. s**£.
BOSE 301
direct reflecting
12-INCH, 2
CALCULATORS
TRADE IN OLD
HP & Tl CALCULATORS
234-5888
The Daily Collegian Thursday, Nov. 8, 1979—K
242- Ga'lder Square
’State College, Pa. 16801
(814) 234-4592
$125 ea. SALE:
->!°° SALE:SI79
SAVE 37%
Texas Instruments
TI-30
TI-25
TI-58
HP-31 E
HP-19C
HP-33C
HP-34C
HP-41 C
SALE
$l4
$23
$B9
JJSI
$ 22
$ 33
$125
HEWLETT
PACKARD
LIST SALE
$ 50 143"
$225 $ll9
$l2O $lO5
$l5O $135
$295 $265