The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, April 23, 1980, Image 7

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    ■The Daily Collegian Wednesday, April 23,1980
Israeli
on Jew/Arab relations
• Israeli novelist Amnon Shamosh
will speak on “The Peace Process:
Golden Age for Cultural Cooperation
Between Jews and Arabs” at 7:30
tonight in 320 HUB. Yachad is
sponsoring the talk.
• The Sailing Division of the Penn
State Outing Club will meet at 7:30
tonight in 214 Boucke.
• The Penn State Overcomers will
hold a Christian Fellowship meeting
at 9 tonight outside 202 HUB.
• Nittany Divers, the University’s
scuba club, will meet at 8:30 tonight
in the Natatorium classroom.
• Craig Bohren will speak on
“Once in a Blue Moon,” or
“Demonstrations they never told you
about,” at 7:30 tonight in 608 Walker.
The talk is sponsored by the Penn
State chapter of the American
Meteorological Society.
Vi CUSTOM lx
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• T-Shirts, Sweatshirts,
Gym Shorts, Jackets
Baseball Shirts & Hats
• Fast Serviced
• In-House Imprinting
• Quantity Discounts
HONS PRIDE
114 E. College Ave. State College
234-2153
Spring
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43
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By Petrino's
Bridal Shop
Come in and let us help
select your formal
from $3O and up —Tux rentals
shoes dyed to match
v. 252 E. Calder Way
novelist to speak
• Entries for the Men’s Intramural
Golf-Medal Tournament will be
accepted all day today and until noon
tomorrow. The tournament is open to
undergraduates only. For additional
information, call 865-5401.
• The Penn State Marketing Club
will present a 45-minute film, "The
Clio’s: Award Winning Com
mercials,” at 7:30 tonight in 111
Forum. Admission is 50 cents for non
members and free for members.
• Pennie Vanderlin of the Penn
sylvania Department of Health will
speak on "Gay VD Is No Fun” at 8
tonight in 323 HUB. The speech is
sponsored by Homophiles of Penn
State as 'part of Gay-Awareness
Week. •
• Registration for the Sy Barash
Regatta will be held all week in the
HUB basement.
High service standard recognized
University Ambulance gets award,
By TOM BOYER
Daily Collegian Staff Writer
The University Ambulance Service,
which is free to all students, University
employees and persons on University
property, is no ordinary ambulance
service.
Located in Ritenour Health Center, the
ambulance service has been awarded
the Voluntary Ambulance Service
Certification (VASC), administered
through the Pennsylvania Department
of Health. VASC guarantees a high
standard of service to the University
community.
Only 25 percent of approximately 1,100
ambulance companies in Pennsylvania
have met VASC’s standards, said David
Lindstrom, director of the University.
Ambulance Service. The University
Ambulance Service and Hope Fire Co. in
Philipsburg are the only services in
Centre County that have received cer
tification, he said.
To be certified, an ambulance service
has to meet specific criteria in staffing,
procedure and equipment policies,
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Lindstrom said
For example, ambulance services
must have at least one certified
Emergency Medical Technician (EMT)
on duty 24 hours a day, must meet
certain levels of quality in medical
equipment and must have formal
agreements with other ambulance
services to cooperate in difficult
situations.
Lindstrom said the Alpha Fire
Company Ambulance Club assists the
University ambulance when necessary.
Ambulance service at Ritenour was
criticized last year in a series of articles
in The Daily Collegianfor operating
outdated, aging equipment and staffing
the University’s ambulance with people
who were not EMTs.
Tom Dagney (llth-health planning
administration), student supervisorfor
University EMTs, said the ambulance,
built in 1974, has some maintenance
problems and won’t last more than
another year or two
However, Dagney said, the quality of
the ambulance service staff has im-
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proved since he first came to the
University
“There’s been a turnaround in the
level of maturity of the group,” he said.
Dagney said the University ad
ministration has been responsive to the
changes required by the VASC cer
tification required.
Bob Balogh (graduate-non major),
one of the ambulance technicians, said
the company has been working for
several years to get the VASC cer
tification.
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Pennsylvania is the only state that
does not legally require ambulance
companies to maintain specific stan
dards. The VASC program, Lindstrom
said, recognizes high levels of quality
and encourages services to improve.
While there is no direct benefit to the
companies that participate in the VASC
program, future state emergency
medical grants may be linked to the
companies that are certified, he said.
Of the nearly 1,200 calls University
ambulances handle each year, Lind
strom said, about 1 percent are real life-
and-death situations. However, “you
have to be trained to handle the worst, so
when the worst comes you can do it, ! ’
Lindstrom said.
Dagney said the ambulance gets mpre
calls from people with orthopedic in
juries than medical emergencies,
because of the largely student
population it serves
He added that the number of
emotionally disturbed cases the am
bulance service has encountered
recently is higher than in past years.'; •
Lindstrom said he is always looking
for qualified emergency medical
technicians ,to work for the service,
“This is one instance where we want
people to know what they’re doing,” he
, said. ‘
University medical services g|so
cover all University events, including
football games and rock concerts.
Dagney said University Ambulance
Service has a problem with people not;
knowing what it offers. He noted that
public education has been one of the
least-funded components of the system.
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Cuban
Cuba
,! KEY WEST;'FIa. (UPI) A flotilla of
17 to 25 boats loaded with asylum
seeking Cubans who took refuge in
Havana’s Peruvian Embassy was
thrusting across the Florida Strait
toward : the mainland yesterday, a
spokeswoman for the Cuban exile sealift
Said.
Patricia Vilaboa said she was un
certain'. how many refugees were
aboard, 1 “but some of the boats are quite
large—4o or 50 footers. There might be
as nrany as 40 aboard each of the larger
boats,” she said.
:. She said her husband, Napoleon
Vilaboa, told her there were “anywhere
from 17 to 25 boats” loaded with
refugees.
Radio Havana in a broadcast
monitored in Miami quoted the Cuban
GommunistTlaily newspaper Granma as
-eporting 11 vessels with 300 refugees
,sboard i( would arrive in Key West
yesterday.
! Granma made no mention of boats
headed for Miami, but Mrs. Vilaboa
quoted her husband, leader of the ar
mlua of Cuban exile vessels from South
Florida, as saying some would sail
directly to Miami from Mariel, 28 miles
of Havana.
The first group of 40 Cuban refugees to
[reach Florida by the sealift arrived at
pey West Monday night aboard the
)o«ster boats Blanchie 111 and Dos
Hermanos.
i The Blanchie 111 broke down two miles
i
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Two State College
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refugees flee
in large boats
FOR FUN
feySj* , y a , **.**<-' /
rip#
outside the Key West harbor and had to
be towed to port by the Coast. Guard.
Both boats were placed under tem
porary detention by Customs authorities
but the detention was lifted yesterday.
State Department official warned
yesterday that anyone attemping to
bring Cuba refugees directly into the
United States would be committing a
felony, but a formal statement on the
issue was withdrawn.
Asked why the announcment was
withdrawn, one official said “policy ...
no politics.” He said the ad
ministration did not want to antagonize
Cuban Americans.
The last 15 of the refugees from the
Blanchie 111 and the Dos Hermanos
arrived in Miami by bus yesterday noon,
their fares paid by Key West’s Cuban
community.
They had been placed on parole status
by Immigration and Naturalization
Service officials in Key West and told to
report to INS in Miami late this week,
according to Art Espinola, Latin coor
dinator of the Key West Chamber of
Commerce.
In Miami, the 15, all men and most of
them young, were taken in a truck to the
Cuban Refugee Center in Little Havana.
Jorge Lopez Gonzalez, 22, a Cuban
postal worker, met an old friend, Allan
Lopez, oh arrival at the Refugee Center
in Miami. Lopez, a hotel steward, came
to Miami eight months ago.
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Four-horse hitch An Amish man hitched up his team to begin spring plowing at his farm about 7 miles west of Millheim on Route 45.
7 1/
d.
OPEN NIGHTLY EXCEPT SUN, TDESgj^
© _ /3§i \(S
f THE >
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• | Open £5 p.m.-_l_.^o_a ; rTv_ j
OPEN 8 PM • 1:30 AM
319 CALDER WAY
237*6235
calderway • evenings til 8:30
Concerned consumers read Collegian ads. Right? i
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USG Dept, of Women’s Affairs, Eco-Action & HOPS
present
HOLLY NEAR
with pianist Adrienne Tort
Friday, April 25 at 8:00
Schwab Auditorium
Free tickets available at HUB desk
r. 034 wheelchair access from Pollock Rd.
DO YOU DARE TO
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SEE:PIETRO OF ITALY
FOR THE STYLE
If OF YOUR
Square 238-2933 4
Westerly Parkway 237-6253 '
Mi a
Hiking is
WONDERFUL
unless you’re making an B*oo
Cedarbrook, Penn Towers
Beaver Hill, or Gamer Court
Easy walking distance to campus (in some cases closer to
campus than campus!),... Shopping, Movies, Restaurants...
wherever you make the scene! Studio, 1,2, and 3 bedroom
furnished apartments with All utilities, TV cable, Wall to Wall
carpeting, Balconies, Draperies, Air-Conditioning, Dish
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Renting Now for
Summer and Fall
So Call Today
237-0363
The Daily Collegian Wednesday, April 23,1980—13
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Photo by Stal Varies
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your
y for
eekend
Managed by A.W. & Soni
9 and 12 month
leases