•Editorial Opinion USG should commit itself to naming a replacement representative to the vacant student seat on the CATA board The decision - or lack of one on the part of the Undergraduate Student Government to fill the vacant student seat on the Centre Area Transportation Authority board suggests a lack of com mitment to student representation onCATA. The position has been vacant since March. USG President Joe Healey said a new student representative to the CATA board will be named in the fall. But why do students have to wait until Fall Term to have their con cerns voiced to the board a voice that has been mute since former USG vice president Vicki Sandoe resigned early Spring Term? Healey said when he took office Spring Term he heard only “rum blings’.’ that Sandoe would resign Faulty comparison 1 would like to respond to four points brought up in Jean Guertler s letter of Aug. 8. First of all, I find the comparison between prohibition and the pro-life movement absurd and insulting to the value of human life. The pro-life stance against abortion does not claim in any way to be “the answer to all society’s ills.” Second, when a couple makes a decision to engage in sexual intercourse the possibility of conception and pregnacy is a natural result. As it stands now, if a woman’s quality of life is threatened or she is inconvienced by an'unwanted pregnacy she can end it. Being a women I realize the great trauma pregnacy brings but to assert that abortion is a viable option is wrong. Both men and women must learn to live with the respon sibility of their actions. According to Guertler, the ending of a pregnacy is a choice which “will determine some possibilities which will be lost forever.” 1 think the possibilities Guertler is talking about are the unique lives of children aborted because the mothers did not want them. Thirdly there is Guertler’s statment that “No one can dictate moral choices.” I hope she isn’t serious. Taken to its logical conclusion, society has no right then to try and sentence a man : pwhp-;hasshot and killed another person. • iH ri arni thankfuFthat society has a law system Where we can | Jhatjpan’s moral choice against killing someone else by placing him in jail. ThatTs a simplified'versidn version, I realize, and I do not think there are simple answers to moral choices, but the killing of innocent, unwanted children is not a valid answer either. Finally, I want to express my concern that pregnant women be treated with love and concern. When I take a stand against • abortion, I also am taking a stand for helping expectant mothers deal with their pregnacy. It is crucial that each woman be treated with respect and compassion, as individuals with individual needs. Laurie J. Hildreth, class of 1978 August 11 Another view The abortion issue has again surfaced in the local news and I would like to offer an opposing opinion to that expressed by Jean Guertler in the Friday, August 8 Collegian. We live in conditions of choice. One may rob a neighbor, rape He's really harmless—if you leave him alone If Jimmy can't, maybe He should run for president. He is experienced in government and foreign policy. He name is on the lips of all the power brokers in Washington. He is fast becoming one of the most visible public figures of our time. Not bad for a guy who graduated last in his high school class. But he learns fast, his detractors say. So fast, that in less than four years he made the transition from gas station owner to foreign policy spokesman and arms negotiator. Billy Carter. The name is synonymous with American influence and prestige. Foreign dignitaries tremble in his presence. They are aware of the power he wields. At home, parades are held in his honor, coins bear his charicature, and no one makes a move without first consulting Billy. Yes, when Billy speaks, even E.F. Hutton listens. "Never mind his brother Jimmy,” many an elite has been known to say. “If you want the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, go to Billy.” Only in America and only with the help of the her seat and he said he did not receive official notification of Sandoe’s resignation until May. However, Sandoe said she per sonally told Healey when he assumed office in March of her intentions to resign from the board. She said she also told CATA of her resignation in March. If so, then why didn’t Healey produce a nominee for the board in the spring? For the summer, Healey selected Beth Brickman (lOth-labor studies) as interim representative from a group of Spring Term applicants. However, Brickman said she never recieved official notification of her appointment to the CATA board. Brickman said Healey and his vice president, Andy Weintraub, have each contacted her only once this summer and she also said Healey Letters to the Editor and murder. Anyone can make these choices. But somewhere along the line, someone’s morals, and ethics based on these morals, have been imposed upon society to provide protection to the neighbor, woman and human being. The unborn child, however, has been ostracized from the ranks of human beings and no longer has the protection of law as we, the born, enjoy. Killing, thus, has been legalized and marketed in the form of abortion. All because of seven men (of the Supreme Court) who imposed their morals (or lack of it) upon the millions of innocent unborn. Ultimately, the goal of Gregg Cunningham, Ronald Reagan, and millions of other women, men and children of America isto make the Human Life Amendment law and reality. Hence, legal personhood and protection would be granted to all of us Washington press corps could a laughable, beer guzzling gas-pumper usurp his infinitely smarter, popularly-elected brother in the power position of the presidency, no less. No one knows quite how it happened. Never mind that Jimmy was valedectorian of his high school class, is a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy (with a nuclear engineering degree), a former member of the prestigious Trilateral Commission, a former governor and currently President of the United States. Piddling around did not define her functions as student representative to the board. Brickman also said she has not been able to reach either Healey or Weintraub this summer. Healey said he selected Brickman because “she was experienced.” Healey also said he will be looking for someone more qualified to handle the CATA seat this fall. But, if Healey considered Brickman qualified for the summer, then why should he and. the student government waste time in the fall selecting and training her replacement? Healey said he sent a joint letter with Bob Karp, president of the Organization of Town Independent Students, to the State College Municipal Council, which makes all appointments to the CATA board. xfLot human beings, born and unborn from the moment of con ception to the moment of death. We must grant this protection and personhood else we see the present day atrocities of abortion, infanticide and euthanasia rise to terrifying and uncontrollable proportions. Yes, illegalizing abortion will not “be the answer to all of society’s ills,” but neither will abortion. We must all accept the difficult responsibility of loving, caring and helping the poor, needy, desperate, lonely and all human beings of our society and, inevitably, the world. Killing is not the answer. Finally, I and millions of other citizens of the commonwealth and nation refuse to have our hard-earned tax dollars used to fund murder. For this reason, we are grateful to Rep. Cun ningham and others for their efforts on our behalf. Billy can Somehow, some way, Billy the uneducated redneck who has accomplished very little outside of driving the family peanut business into the ground suddenly emerges as.an influence-peddler. Who was he supposedly influencing? Jimmy, of course. Billy, on the sly, was used by Libyan tricksters who wanted to use him to get to Jimmy. Can’t you picture the scenario? “We’ll get Billy to carry out our wishes in Washington,” the Libyans plotted. “He’s relatively young, stupid and harmless if left alone. He’ll fall for anything.” Well, the truth is that the Libyans were right. Billy is relatively young, stupid and harmless if left alone. And maybe he did fall for it. But do you really think such a trick could slip by a politician so sharp he came from out of nowhere to win the presidency in 1976? I don’t. Jimmy Carter may or may not be a lot of things, but he isn’t stupid. If Ted Kennedy and most of the Democratic Party can’t undercut Jimmy, do you honestly believe Billy could get away with it? All of the rumblings in Washington concern Billy’s illegal or immoral dealings, not his brother’s. As Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., a member of the Senate committee investigating the incident, said: “We want to know why the President allowed his brother to deal with the Libyans.” Doesn’t Strom know that Jimmy can be no more his brother’s keeper than you or I can dictate to our siblings? If it worked that way, Billy could not only become an agent for Libya, he could run the economy, organize boycotts and, as he joked “sell nuclear submarines for desert warfare. ’ ’ But Billy is not the President. Nor is he the President’s complete responsibility. He is, for better or worse, an individual who thinks and acts as he sees fit, autonomous from anyone else, just like the rest of us. And, just like the rest of us, he alone must accept the consequences of his actions. Perhaps better than any of us, Jimmy knows the liabilities of having Billy as a brother. And perhaps we should adopt the philosophy which I’m sure Jimmy has about Billy. “He’s relatively young, stupid and harmless if left alone.' Paul Sunyak is a 13th-term journalism major and staff writer for The Daily Collegian. The letter expressed a desire to work with the council' to find a replacement for Sandoe. Acting Municipal Council President Mary Ann Haas said council recieved such a letter from Healey, Karp and USG Senate President Andrea Solat dated July 25 roughly four months after Sandoe’s resignation. Haas also said there has been no official notification of. Brinkman’s ap pointment. According t 6 Healey, CATA has continually threatened to do away with the student seat. Healey said elimination of the seat would reduce a “democratic voice” from the board. Healey’s concerns here are cer- The American advertising in dustry, always a bastion of social consciousness, has finally decided to cash in on the women’s liberation movement. The industry's success in using liberation to sell products has created a new stereotype about women that may be more damaging than the old one. Since the early years of television commercials,' the American woman has beenportrayed as a pretty, empty-headed housewife whose most meaningful conversation of the day is with a small, blue man in her toilet bowl. However, that old image is rapidly being replaced with an even more unrealistic concept of the typical woman The men on Madison Avenue have come up with a new fantasy that attempts to reconcile the traditional roles a woman has played with the more modern expectations of her existence. The new American woman is not only a sensuous lover, a warm mother, beautiful wife and perfect housekeeper, but she is also expected to be an Up and coming lawyer, paint like Rembrandt and parachute frorn planes without messing up her hair. We must stop the slaughter of the innocent today or ut may never live to stop it tomorrow. : Mark D. Vail Ouse, public relations chairman Penn State Students for I.ife August 11 Draft registration has divided many people in this country and on this campus. With Supreme Court Justice William Brennan Jr.’s stay of a Philadelphia court decision ruling the sign-up process unconstitutional, many young people will be anxiously waiting for the Supreme Court’s final ruling on the t matter. - The constitutionality of forcing persons to reveal their social security numbers has been questioned. Moreover, any registration plan excluding women may be ruled as discriminatory against males. Although The Daily Collegian has run op-ed pages in the past on women in the draft and on registration, the question still < lingers of whether registration is right or wrong. On Tuesday, Sept. 9, The Daily Collegian will focus its first op-ed page - of- -Fall •’Term;' ! on"‘thg ; ' i c‘dntinuing ) “ephtrove:rsy surrounding the new military draft sign-up. If you have attjy comments on registration, please submit them to the Editorial Editor, 126 Carnegie. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than 30 lines. Deadline is Friday, August 15. Wednesday, August 13, 1980—Page 2 Betsy Long Editor BOAIID OF EDITORS: Managing Editor, P.J. Platz; Editorial Editor, Andy Linker; News Editor, Rick Jackson; Sports Editor, Paul Boynton; Arts Editor, Paddy Patton; Photo Editor, Rick Graff; Graphics Editor, Randy Guseman; Copy Editors, Lynne Johnson, Bari Winemiller, Elyse Chiland, Callas Richardson; Weekly Collegian Editor, Martha Snyder McCoy; Assistant Weekly Collegian Editor. Wendy Trilling; Office Manager, Jackie Clifford. TV women make it tough for rest We’ve all seen the commercials tainly legitimate since a large number of students depend on CATA for transportation. But can Healey seriously expect the board to respect a student body that, through its government, must piddle around for six months until it can name a replacement? Council last fall postponed in definitely a review of the CATA board structure. When it does review the structure, it will decide if a board seat will still be reserved for a student representative. If USG wants the municipal council to value student represen tation on the board, USG should demonstrate its self-proclaimed concern for the students by main taining student representation on the CATA board. Now hear this -Collegian heralding her arrival she’s a virtual wonderwoman who can bring home the bacon, fry it up in a pan and never, ever let him forget he’s a man. Why is she so capable? Not because she is a gifted person with an ex ceptional talent for efficiency the jingle goes on to inform us that it is simply because she’s a woman. Housewives must feel hopelessly inadequate trying to compete with the image of a woman who not only fulfills traditional roles successfully, but also personifies every other aspiration a woman could dream of. Even worse is the demoralizing effect this new stereotype has on the woman who by-choice or by necessity does attempt to work, raise her children, please her husband, keep house, recreate and maintain her appearance. Realistically, not even an ef ficiency expert could integrate all of these roles successfully without some undesirable side effects. The wonderwoman stereotype is an inaccurate translation of the women’s movement. Instead of emphasizing the choices woiften can make, the new commercials demand that women fulfill every role available or admit failure and in feriority. In effect, the men on Madison Avenue are implying that women are only equal when they overachieve a new sexist burden that in many ways makes the old cliche about the small, blue man in the toilet bowl seem more attractive all the time. Lynda Robinson is an Bth-term political science and history major and staff writer for The Daily Collegian. ' 1980 Collegian Inc. Kathy Mathenv Business Manager Journalists should look inward in In the field of journalism there are | problems with competency just as there in other professions. ! Two of the worsts problems with in competence, as far as I can see, are occasional bias and the too frequent lack of knowledge by reporters on the subject they are covering. Not just coverage, but coverage that •Vill bring to the reader a complete understanding of not only the news i coverage, but the personalities and I events in the news itself. I would like to jsee this, because, like anyone else who drops a few cents at the news counters, I am a reader. ■n When Ronald Reagan was cam paigning in the Kansas primary, a reporter asked him a question con cerning parity. Ronnie, in his infinite : wisdom, did not know what parity is. For i those of you who know nothing of parity, ! here is as clear an explanation as I can give in a column: a system of regulating IllSlillf Ice 4 ccfjeelaeed wilVi IffeWtß/ VoiVa, flflltl 4 Ciewa da Cacao life pgf Diveeim • • y/ TfamSWion y' tJoirvcHon o? College 3 Qca«v\e»r- / Oscar Mayer ALL MEAT OR BEEF FRANKS (1 lb. vac. pk.) $1.59 Wilson Virginia SMOKED HAM *2.1 9 » OLD FASHION LOAF $1 .79 ib. r“” J Campbells J s PORK and j f BEANS(I6oz.) I ! FREE 29° i I B with coupon and $lO.OO purchase. 1 with coupon and $lO.OO purchase. 'I with coupon and $lO.OO purchase. B ■ Good only at Univ. Park PlazalGA. | Good only at Univ. Park Plaza IGA. | Good only at Univ. Park Plaza IGA. g 5 Limit one per shopping unit. ■ Limit one per shopping unit. ■ Limit one per shopping unit. ■ Offer expires August 16. 1980. £ Offer expires August 16.1980. £ Offer expires August 16,1980^^ WILSON ICE CREAM $1 .09 1 / 2 gallon prices of agricultural products to provide farmers with the security of having the same purchasing power they had in a select base period. Now, I do not expect many people to know what parity is, but as voters we should at least expect the former governor of a large agricultural state like California to know what parity means. It was the duty no, it was the job of the reporters following Reagan’s campaign trail to pick up on this mistake. You see folks, a presidential candidate not knowing agricultural policy is a big boo-boo, considering farmers grow what we pay for and eventually eat. The reporters should have had enough sensitivity or background to know this was a serious issue. If not, then at least enough inquisitiveness and initiative to look into a dictionary and find the meaning of the word. IGA TABLERITE - USDA CHOICE BEEF BONELESS CHUCK STEAKS $1.89 ib SAMSON SANDWICH STEAKS (14 07 pl< 9 .>s'| .99 SMOKED HAM SHANK PORTION T”cot"tOWe[sT" ! JUMBO ROLL ! I I IGA CANNED MILK (13 oz.) To be perfectly honest, they should have blown the roof on the man, at least on that particular issue. That would have been done by reporting the event thoroughly, without bias and with at least a familiarity of the problems and issues of the region. As history has documented, Ronald Mayor Alioto ordered the police Reagan won a lot of primaries in the procedures. The press was in a tiff. But largely agricultural states. He won them for the most part the reports coming out not knowing anything about parity, a of Los Angeles were clear and objective. (6 to 8 lb. avg.) 69° ib SWISS $o go CHEESE (per pound) Sandwich of the Week: Our Own Made Hoagies 79® plustax SCOT 49* TOWELS ( " P SB (Jumbo Roll) purchase) A blatant example of bias was discovered when the Zebra killings were an issue in Los Angeles in 1973-74. The , series of 13 murders were committed by z>yr> , y a group of black Muslims, and the police tactics involved the stopping and ( .( searching of any black man on the street who even remotely met the description of the suspects who were in ’ discriminantly killing whites. 49' central issue of the agricultural com munity. That says a. lot about the competence of the presidential hopeful, and says even more about the failure of the press at times to inform the public adequately. Then again, when competency is discussed the question of bias arises. SLICED SLAB BACON *1.09, FISH PORTIONS (2 Ib. pkg.) $1.99 SMOKED HAM BUTT PORTION (6 - 8 Ib. avg.) 79* ib. Campbell PORK and BEANS (16 oz.) FREE with coupon and 510.00 purchase TRIPLE COLA 69* (no returns) Minute Maid j ORANGE ! JUICE (16 oz.) ! 69 c with coupon and $lO.OO purchase. £ Good only at Univ. Park Plaza IGA. | Limit one per shopping unit. H Offer expires August 16,1980. j (64 oz.) their criticisms The American Civil Liberties Union began to bring litigation against the police department and Alioto. Needless to say, civil rights leaders recieved a lot of press, and Alioto was dubbed a racist. To get to the point, a columnist for the Baltimore Afro-American was writing columns calling Alioto and the LAPD racist. He also claimed the ACLU was not doing its job and the community should be concerned about this latest in the serious of discriminatory, tactics against blacks. I vaguely remembered a series of murders in Los Angeles in or around October of 1969, where there was a single white suspected of killing blacks on the streets in pretty much the same pattern. I checked to see what he had written about the crimes, known as the Zodiac murders, committed against blacks. Callas Richardson is an eighth tcrmjournalism major and a copy editor This guy not only knew about the for The Daily Collegian. Celery (large stalk) Cauliflower Seedless Grapes Pears Celery Minute Maid ORANGE JUICE (16 oz.) 69* with coupon and $ lO.OO purchase Lucky Leaf Cider Vinegar $1 .89 gallon Tetley Iced Tea Mix $1 .99 (320 z.) IGA Cottage Cheese .1 9 (24 OZ.) The Daily Collegian Wednesday, August 13, 1980 —3 tactics the police were using (which were the same as those used during Zebra), but he advocated stronger measures to maintain security in the black community. He praised Alioto for the tactics which “would ease the ten sion in black communities and would at least show them the city of Los Angeles was doing something effective in their behalf.” But only four years later he called the same tactics racist because it occurred on the other side of the color spectrum. That columnist and the majority of the reporters covering Reagan in Kansas, did not do the print media’s readership any good by being biased, or being uninformed. They do even less for journalism. .'!■/, University Park Plaza 236 W. Hamilton Ave. State College Hours Mon.'-Fri. 9-9 Sat. 9-8 !<• *■•.111 'it,, 39* *1 .19 99* ib. 49° ib. 3/ $ l.OO IGA CANNED MILK 030 29* with coupon and *lO.OO purchase