20—The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. 12, 1980 ~~h ~ .~~+. J' Photos, by Brian Gamerman SPRING BREAK IN DAYTONA BEACH BY THE ASSOCIATION OF RESIDENCE HALL STUDENTS sne.y World for First -90- to Sign Up SIGN UP NOW AT THE ARHS OFFICE (20-A HUB) OR CALL 865-9982 ABJ:LS9, ....and Special Drainfing for One FREE Trip!! -~z4gLlv~~~'~liliJii'ad~'`~~,~.auti~lsl~wt~~-~. ,' ~..:: - ~w 111111 MI MN EMI ME MEI WM OE Mil= MN lIMI BO Mill EU EMI NMI Mil 11111 MN of Penn State University FEB. 28 - MARCH 8, 1981 $195 $lB5 TRIP INCLUDES • Round trip motor cpach transportation on first class charter coaches leaving the campus Saturday Feb. 28 and traveling straight through with plenty of partying to Daytona Beach, arriving the following day. The return trip departs the following Sat. in the afternoon, and arrives back on campus the next day. • A full six nights accommodations at the Plaza Hotel of Daytona Beach. Florida. A great time in Daytona with special parties and activities.. • All taxes and gratuities 4 PER ROOM (2 Double Beds) 6 PER ROOM (3 Double. Beds) 7 fi,,,,,,,,. .......,,, . ......., ‘' '''. • 7 r' 4,,,,, ."'"' - ` ' 1 " , ,;; . ' ''' '`.•,` •".".".;,•.•!••".••""•• "" 1 (i'''. ' -..,,...• . 1., , .. '(,. ,• ~.....",.,:. ~,'",.. ...• , c...., -. :,..•!..-, .. -. .4 ,:-,.•• • ''- - _ ...4x- '' ' '' •. " 4.".i. , :-- , - -, •,• ~ • .----•P: t- ;es,. 4 * . fr.: . l""ctv* • g"'"74 : 11""'"' ..r - •:."'"t"xtl'l:`.." • t.-... k. ; ° :4 I ,i; !‘ i tql ' t , "" !VI rM " ST I ' 14 ' • fit s '' .lg6 ` $ ll 4 ffil fl , KA ei 01' 4 ** ok -el ,. tnlsel tos Ali r tirt 6r re' , ~•.tnlve, " , , r l / 40 ,46 k - ~, - • ' • 17Z'2.1 k ,of o , ‘ .I . L o e , * O O . . , ,•., . . • • -‘ • i / . - / r '" •A ' ' -` I2M; ~, ~. •,- . .~ ~~ ~~~ :; The stone menagerie If you haven't seen these odd creatures before, you have probably been spending too much time looking at your shoes. They haunt the eaves of many of the older buildings around campus. The winged ram, upper left, lurks in the shadows above the doors on Sparks Building.. Appropriately enough, lions abound on the campus. Strings of them like the one shown upper right adorn the frieze of Sparks, Burro Wes and Pond Laboratory. Eagles are another fairly popular sub ject on campus buildings. The proud bird on the lower left guards an entrance to Burrowes. Wouldn't you just know that right around the corner from The Creamery, you can find this herd of cattle. The bovines, along with an emblem from the State flag, are above the entrance 'to Borland Laboratory. %,." .1 YOURS FREE when you orde„our white or yellow gold OFFICIAL PENN STATE CLASS RING Look us over, you'll like what you see. The Class Ring experts. .er wides ONE HUNDRED EAST COLLEGE AVENUE 114 E.College Ave. State College MMMM3===ln==3 =MIMI • ' • '.,. t ~' '. ~~~:.~,'. '--'` ;. , ~ r- - - ... ~ :, ~ ev r SEE HOODED SWEATSHIRT by t OTh\ J;' • <l, $ 15 95 value 50% Cotton / 50% Polyester most respected symbol of educational achievement deposit is all it takes. n your men's high school ring and 's°' in cash and your Lustrium ring. n allowance for ladies' high school '32". ONS PRID Adt •••` , '" 1, 444.1 0 /' 00"" EMZ=E 5 t. ; ;;,..:i...- 7 ; : to ; :t;; , . .. .. ::.::,:. - - . i - t : 1 : : -I ~, `gt , ... I , \ wee en• daily collegian Films On Campus "Butterflies Are Free" Goldle Hawn stars ,as the woman in a blind man's life who teaches him to live again. Avery touching movie with an excellent portrayal by Hawn 7:30 and 9:45 p.m. tomorrow, 7 and 9 p.m. Sunday, HUB Assembly Room. Eco• Action Film Shorts: All four films are at 7 and 9 p.m. today, tomorrow and Sunday, Findlay Rec Room. "The War Game" Peter Watkin's astoun• ding and terrifying vision of a world in which nuclear holocaust has occured. One day diplomacy and bluff fail 'the nations of the world are backed into a corner' and the grim effects of a nuclear attack on Britain are shown in realistic detail. Watkins gathered information from experts in nuclear defense, economics, medicine and sociology to produce a chilling documen tary which.was banned on British television "Bate's Car. Sweet as a Nut" One man's answer to the gasoline shortage. Harold Bate Converts barnyard manure Into methane.gas which is fed through his own converter Into the engine of his car. Another energy saving device he has Invented is a self-propelled bicycle. "Solar Promise" Hosted by Dr. Donald Aiken, the film provides a basic Introduction to the principles of solar energy, explains the difference between pasSiveand active systems, and presents a cogent argument for using solar energy for heating water and buildings. The film also documents a variety of solar energy success stories. "City Farmstead" This film focuses on opportunities forifood-producing in an urban setting. Alfalfa 14' the lawn extension, an organic garden, rabbits and chickens in pens in the backyard, an attached solar greenhouse, honey bees, ornamental edible plantings are all part of the life support Tell-tale signs of the season are everywhere, including many downtown shop windows. Above, San ta plays merrily with three cheesy friends in George's House of Music on East Beaver Ave. Above right, Sally Fields stars in "Norma Rae," a role which won her last year's Academy Award for Best Actress, on campus through the weekend. At right are Jane Bockhard, Kathleen Hund, Peg French, Doug Edmunds and Charles Roney in a play by University professor Roger Cornish called "I Remember a Parade." The one•act drama is being performed at 5:30 today in the Pavilion Theatre. The Contemporary , Dance Company presents their semiannual concert Sunday afternoon; at far right are Elaine Reedman and Alison Caldwell in a number from the concert. system of the Integral Urban House in , Berkeley, California. "Rocky II" The not -quite-as-good sequel to "Rocky." Sylvester Stallone, the Italian Stallion•is challenged to a rematch by Apollo Creed. But when Adrian (Talia Shire) goes into a coma, so does the film. More of the same, but what a fight. 7, 9:15 and 11:30 p.m., today and tomorrow, 108 Forum. 7 and 9:15 p.m. Sunday. "Up In Smoke" Cheech and Chong's first film. Hilarious drug-oriented comedy with a rock contest end. 7,9, and 11 p.m. today, 10 Sparks. 7, 9 and 11 p.m. tomorrow and 7 and 9 p.m. Sunday, 105 Forum. "All the President's Men" Robert Redford , and Dustin Hoffman star as reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein of the Washington Post who exposed the Watergate scandal. A very informative film about one of the most important contem porary political events. 7:30 and 10 tonight, Saturday and Sunday, Pollack Rec Room. "Bronco Billy Clint Eastwood's latest film, in which he stars as a modern day cowboy trying to clean up a metropolis. Not Eastwood's usual gruesome style, but more light and entertaining than usual. 7, 9:15 and 11:30 p.m. today and tomorrow, 119 Os mond. 7 and 9:15 p.m. Sunday. "Camelot" Richard Harris, Vanessa Redgrave and Franco Nero star in Lerner • and Loewe's delightful and touching musical about King Arthur, Guinevere and the Knights of the Round Table. There's music you'll be humming for days after wards. 7 and 9:30 p.m. today and tomorrow, 112 Chambers. "Dark Victory" Humphrey Bogart, Bette Davis and Ronald Reagan star. 7 p.m. today and Sunday, Kern. "Key Largo" Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall and Edward G. Robinson star in this movie in which a bunch of gangsters cap ture a hotel, with our stars trapped inside. 9 p.m. today and Sunday, Kern. "Romeo and Juliet" Starring Galina Ulanova as Juliet, the only Soviet ballerina ever to be acclaimed prima ballerina assoluta. Yuri Zhdanov plays Romeo. Last of the Artists Series'"Ballet at the Bo'shot" film series. 8 p.m. Tuesday, Eisenhower Auditorium. "Femmes Fatales" Directed by Bertrand Biler, this Is a Thurberesque story of the war of the sexes brought to its ultimate conclu sion. Not recommended for militant feminists, this is an amusing satire from the director of "Going Places." With Jean Rochefort and Jean-Pierre Marielle. 7 and 9 p.m. tomorrow and Monday, 112 Kern. Downtown "Citizen Kane" Orsen Welles' powerful 1941 film about William Randolph Hearst, the newspaper tycoon. Filled with daring, and consequently highly successful cinematic techniques. Don't miss this one! 7:30 tonight only in Schlow Memorial Library, Allen and Beaver Ayes. "Private Benjamin" Goldie Hawn stars as Private Judy Benjamin, ex-Jewish American Princess. "It's a cute film; it's harmless, in nocuous, full of fun and frolic, sugar and spice and everything nice." (Dugan) Cinema "Flash Gordon" Sam Jones as Flash•Gor don and Melody Anderson as Dale Arden star in this comical film adaptation of the fantasy-adventure comic strip. Excellent special effects attribute to this movie's fun, but the best thing about it Is how absolutely corny and unbelievable everything is. A fun film. Cinema. "The Elephant Man" A sensitive film about the life of outcast John Merrick, a grossly deformed man who became the pet of late-19th century London society. "It does not create the same Impact as the play, but it works nicely enough in another wy: In stead of observing the effect others have on Merrick, we see more of their effect on him." (Piatz) State. "Ordinary People" Mary Tyler Moore, Donald Sutherland, Timothy Hutton and Judd Hirsch star in this extraordinary film directed byßobert 9edford: "In it we see that no one is ordinary, that no problems are ordinary. Everyone Is unique, everyone feels, and each of those feeling is unique in and of itself." (Platz) Movies. "Let It Be" and "Yellow Submarine" "Let It Be" is the Beatles' last movie, and "Yellow Submarine" is their classic animated fan tasy film. Both are absolutely wonderful. Midnight shows at the Cinema. "Caddyshack Chevy Chase and Rodney Dangerfield fight it out on the greens while Bill Murray tangles with a vicious gopher which is tearing up his goifcourse. It's back again, and who knows why. State. "Popeye" Robin "Mork" Williams is Popeye and Shelley Duvall is Olive Oil in this unusual film idea created by Robert Altman. See next week's review. Flick. Television Note: All programming can be seen on WPSX-TV, channel 3. Friday Chips of Time Tonight's show, 'Two Views on a Flitch," examines the woodcarv ing possibilities of the ruffed grouse and the female figure. 6:30 p.m. U.S. Chronicle Who will be the big win ners in the quest for profits from the in creasing use of Gasahol? Tonight, host Jim Lehrer looks at this question on the first of 13-parts of the return of this popular series. 9:30 p.m. The Christians "A Peculiar People." The 2000-year history of Christianity is explored in this 13-week series, starting tonight with a look at the first few centuries of the religion. 10 p.m. Saturday Symphony No. 5 This show traces the development of a new symphony by corn poser David Van Vactor from its first melodic Inspiration to its premiere perfor mance by the Knoxville Symphony Or- chestra under Arpad Joo. This documentary has been described as "a visually pulsing counterpoint to the classic fugue design of the work Itself." 6 p.m. Extensions Tomatoes are better red; tonight's show examines how green tomatoes are handled to bring them to the marketplace nice and red and ripe. 7:30 p.m Sports America "WCHA Hockey' Min nesota vs. Wisconsin." 8 p.m. Connections James Burke traces the fine thread of human endeavour from the inva sion of Switzerland in 1496, through Napoleon's search for better food storage, to implications in modern day rocketry. 9 p.m. Sunday Soundstage Tonight, the unmistakeable music, lyrics and voice of the inimitable Joan Armatrading. 7 p.m. Cosmos "Endyclopedia Galactica." Sagan notes in this program that com munication with other civlizations will pro bably be largely one-way: they talk and we listen. 8 p.m. Masterpiece Theatre: Testament of Youth The enigmatic Vera; supressing - her grief over Roland's death, turns her energies to nursing. After serving overseas, she sudden ly returns to England, determined to marry her brother's friend Victor. 9 p.m. To the Manor Born Audrey, moving out of the manor to make way for the new owners, resolves to keep her eye on the place and vows to return someday. 10 p.m. Matinee at the Bijou "Wildcat" with Richard Arlen and Buster Crabbe. 10:30 p.m. Monday Great Performances: Dance in America "Choreography by Balanchine, Part Four." 9 p.m. Music Penn State Symphony Orchestra and the University Choirs The University Orchestra and Choirs combine to give a performance of Vaughn Williams'"Hodie," 7:30 p.m. Saturday in Eisenhower Auditorium We're off! ...and running into another great weekend. Left, "Horse Race 1," by Gorden Studer, hangs in the West Pat tee Gallery. At right, Craig Buffie demonstrates the fine form he will be in for the game against East Carolina 8:10 p.m. tomorrow at Rec Hall. Winter Concert The Penn State Women's Chorus, Penn State Glee Club and Penn sylvania Vocal Ensemble present their winter concert 3 p.m. Sunday in Schwab Auditorium. Laurence Perkins, viola Featured works Include Boccerinl's "Sonata in C Minor," Brahms' "Sonata in F Minor, op. 120" and others. 8:30 p.m. Monday in the Music Building Recital Hail. "Candlelight Service for Christmas" The University Chapel Choir performs 7 p.m. Sunday in Eisenhower Chapel. Bill Staines, folk musician Staines will perform a concert of original tunes at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the University Baptist Church, 411 S. Burrowes St. On The Air: WDFM, 91FM The Fourth Tower of Inverness A ZBS hor roro fantasy .)adventure serial drama. 8 p.m. Friday. Jazz Alive Featuring the Mel Lewis Or chestra, the Tete Montollu Trio, and others. 2 p.m. Friday and 9 a.m. Sunday. Folk Festival, USA "Folk City's 20th An niversary." 8 a.m. Saturday. The Comedy Show Featuring 15 minutes of original comedy, followed by Robert Klien's "Mind Over Matter." 8 p.m. Saturday Featured Artist To be announced. 11 p.m. Saturday. Homegrown A WDFM•produced series of interviews and performances of notable ar tists. 8 p.m. Sunday. WQWK, 97FM AR Request Weekend An "anything and everything goes" weekend, 6 p.m. Friday to 6 p.m. Sunday. Midnight Album "Making Movies," the new Dire Straits LP, will be featured Friday Steely Dan's "Can't Buy A Thrill" plays Saturday GWK Presents Two hours of The Grateful Dead, starting midnight Sunday. Sounds Bars Autoport Jim Langton tickles the ivories tonight and tomorrow tonight, playing all your favorites. Allen Room Guitarist Rick Jones sings popular mood music tonight and tomorrow; regular feature Duet plays Sunday. Brewery Country rockers Tahoka Freeway play tonight and tomorrow, treats for your dancin' feets. Bistro Jazz is the bill with pianist Authur Goldstein tomorrow night. Phyrst Rockin' regulars Backseat Van Gogh plays tonight, and those harmonizin' hummers, the Phyrst Phamily, sing tomor row night. Rego's Enjoy the music of John Cunn ingham tonight and tomorrow night. La Bella Vita Guitarist Dick Olson plays mellow music in the Grotto tonight and tomorrow night. Press Box The unique blend of 'cello and guitar Is featured at today's Happy Hours with Duet, while the Killer Bees Sting Band gets the place jumpin' tonight. Rockers DOA are tomorrow night's feature. Coffeegrinder Randy Hughes, one-third of Menagerie, sings your favorites on guitar tonight and tomorrow night. Saloon Another third of Menagerie' Glenn Kidder' plays tonight and tomorrow night. Shandygaff Abandon Avenue plays Hap py Hours today, with Sallin' Shoes as the main feature tonight and tomorrow night. Brickhouse Tavern The rock sounds of the Hipsters play tonight, while guitarist Dana Austin provides the entertainment tomorrow night. Rathskellar Tom Casey is the featured ar tist tonight and tomorrow night. Coffeehouses Kern A special evening is in store tomor row night In the four-act show of Interna tional Music. Stan Shepherd plays Jamaican 4:1-I z, ) 4' . ... ......., ( • k cox ' fLawro . -v ••. Friday, Dec. 12 2 tunes, followed by Melody Yan with tradi tional Chinese music. Sheik Rashid presents Indian music, with Bob Jordan and Candice Waits tieing up the evening with traditional Irish, Scottish and English folk songs and ballads. Around the world in an evening! Galleries Kern An exhibition and sale of interna tional artifacts, including jewelry, clothing and housewares from Mexico, Korea, Thailand and Jordan, among other lands; and a photography exhibition entitled "China 1922 and 1979" by Alison Taggert and C. E. Reed, both through Thursday. A demonstration of Czechoslovakian Dough Sculpture will be presented from 11:30 to 1:30 today in the Kern Lobby. Chambers Relief paintings by Maureen Garvin and functional ceramics by Ron Gallas through next Friday. Pattee Paintings and drawings by Dave Hopkins in the Lending Services Lobby through Dec. 19; sculpture by Jack Enold in the Main Lobby through Wednesday; Hichs Etchprint National Invitational Exhibit in the East Corridor Gallery through Jan. 5; draw ings and paintings by Gorden Studer in the West Pattee Lobby through Tuesday. Museum of Art Contemporary prints from the permanent collection through Tuesday; The Art of the Needle through Dec. 21; Euro pean paintings from the permanent collec tion through Dec. 23;18th to 20th century American works from the permanent collec tion through Jan. 11. HUB Artifacts from around the world, through Christmas; and ceramics and paper sculpture by Jinx Webster, in the Gallery. Zoller An exhibit In mixed media by University graduate students through Friday. Playhouse Photographs and posters from past University Theatre shows. Sports Women's basketball In the first game of a basketball double-header, the Lady Lions take on Villanova at 5:45 tomorrow night in Rec Hall. Men's basketball The Lions look to re bound from Tuesday night's loss to Nebraska when they host East Carolina at 8:10 tomorrow night in Rec Hall. Bowling The bowling teams host Tem• ple at 1 p.m. tomorrow and Drexel at the same time on Sunday. Both matches are in Rec Hall. Women's Swimming Villanova challenges the Lady Lions at 1 p.m. tomor row in McCoy Natatorium. Etc. "I Remember a Parade" Theatre pro fessor Roger Cornish's one•act play, directed by department associate Helen Manfull, is being presented 5:30 today in the Pavilion Theatre. Admission is free. See to day's review. Contempory Dance Company CDC presents their semiannual concert, 1:30 and 4 p.m. Sunday in 132 White Building. "Glow at Christmas" A one-night buffet and musical Christmas, 6:30 p.m. Friday in 102 Kern. For ticket information, call 865-1878. Czechoslovakian Dough Sculpture demonstration Dagmar Tichy demonstrates dough sculpture 11:30 to 1:30 today in Kern Lobby. Medieval Mystery Plays The Luthern Stu dent Parish at Penn State presents five medieval English dramas portraying the history of the nativity of Jesus. 8:30 tonight in Eisenhower Chapel, and 8:30 p.m. Sunday at Grace Luthern Church in State College. IMI
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