Education and Two should cooperate, By JUSTIN CATANOSO Daily Collegian Staff Writer Higher education needs a new look, state Sen. Jeanette Reibman, D-Northampton, said. And that new look should come in the form of a cooperative venture with industry. "Look at all the higher education industry is getting into," Reibman said in an interview Saturday. "General Motors is running a large engineering school. ITT, IBM they're all running education programs. They're doing the job that higher education should be doing." Reibman, who is minority chairwoman of the Senate Education 'Committee, was on campus this weekend to participate in Penn State Alumni Day. She conducted a political advocacy workshop encouraging women to get involved in politics and explaining how to run for office. Afterwards, she discussed an issue that has remained one of her primary concerns as a legislator. "Higher education is in for some rough sailing," she said, "(It) is going to have to share its resources." Reibman, a senator since 1966 and the only woman in Pennsylvanian history to be elected to the Senate, said many people in the job market are not adequately prepared for what she calls "a vocation-oriented society." "Industry is demanding computer analysts and data processors. I think higher education should be bridging' that USG spending investigated By ANNE CONNERS Daily Collegian Staff Writer The Undergraduate Student Govern ment Senate last night voted to form a committee to investigate where the mon ey came from to place a full-page ad in the April 1 issue of The Daily Collegian after executives had told the senate its allocation of column inches had run out. "First we were told we had 800 column inches, then we were told we had none," USG senator Ed Dougherty said. "Where did the money for the ad come from?" The ad informed the students what USG had done for them during USG president Joe Healey's administration. Bill Cluck, USG president-elect and sponsor of the bill, said the commitee's intent would be to investigate how money was spent during the election. "The intent of the committee is not . to look for wrongdoing but to come up with an objective report on what happened," Cluck said. ' The senate also allocated $895 to Hori zons, the spring festival to be held May 7 through May 10, for various educational r the CANBY Cang 128 W. College Ave.. and cultural activities "This thing has the potential to get big in the next couple of years," Senator John Bravacos said. "It needs something to get It off the ground." Monies will be spent for: repair of the Earth Ball, Free University films, on art, music and experimental subjects of in terest and education and a film on El Salvador. Other activities will include: a mime show, a speech by a cyclist who has toured China on a bike and a presentation by the Ice Hockey Club. USG's department of minority affairs received $1,295.39 from the senate for its 3rd annual fashion show to be held April 23. "It (the fashion show) provides a serv ice that we need to bridge the gap be tween minority students and non minority students," Antoine Murray, a member of the department, said. The senate also agreed to write a letter to Joe Paterno, athletic director, 'asking that the University grant the Penn State Hockey Club National Collegiate Athletic SURE there are bigger pizzas than BELL'S R : K PIZZA but there are no better pizzas. 538 E. College 237-8616 industry: speaker says gap and educating those people for them, rather than industry doing it," she said. Reibman said she envisions a cooperative university-in dustry arrangement with central books and supplies buying, and computer and faculty sharing. "It's going to be a new look," she said. "While people are saying education is a dying industry, it's not. One segment is higher education because industry is taking over that segment. Reibman said she spoke with an official at General Motors who told her that company has "millions of dollars" for educational programs. "Colleges may have to do things a little differently," she said. "They may have to use more work-training programs, as well as academic programs." Reibman also said universities or colleges situated in close proximities could share faculty members for courses with limited enrollment. "Sharing would cut costs. It may be too expensive to run a humanities program with a small group of students, but you still want to have it. The college down the road may have the same problem, so you share that faculty person," she said. "Higher education is going to have to build partnerships with the business world, with the community and with each other." Association inter-varsity status. "We don't want to play bozo operations anymore," Joe Battista, president of the club, said. "We want to upgrade our schedule. "We're not asking the athletic depart ment for a cent," he said. "We're just asking for NCA inter-varsity status." Correction It was incorrectly reported in Friday's issue of The Daily Collegian that a stu dent has 30 days to appeal his tax case before the case is closed. The student has 30 days to appeal after the auditor has officially closed the case. It was also reported that Steve Ander son said University policy states that assistantships are 50 percent service and 50 percent fellowship. Anderson was an swering a student's question when he said some University departments con sider assistantships that way. However, GSA does not officially • endorse that position and members do not necessarily believe that is University policy. rjrura yotir in thea.= SUMMER EMPLOYII_CNT DAY Tues6axiliiril 7 1108 ' Osler SO amps f, , o4her summer' employers will be intert 7 imaittis *students kr posidcraf Yor more irdreinati:ort, eentleci 301-A Boucice- 865'0356 Thc Steufeat Ernetoysn t ra-of4ue Office of .st44‘..sosrAi.ct- Marathon runs away with success By DINA DEFABO Daily Collegian Staff Writer Participants in the Delta Chi Mar athon spent this past weekend running laps around Old Main and raised approximately $3,500 $1,200 more than last year, for the Delta Chi Hand icapped Student Grant Fund. Chairman Pete Pierce said 312 run ners helped make this year's race the most successful marathon in its sev en-year history. "We had great participation," he said. "It seems to be a growing event."• Pierce said the money raised will benefit a scholarship fund set up by the fraternity to aid handicapped stu dents at the University. The race was sponsored by Delta Chi fraternity and Alpha Phi sorority in conjunction with the Pepsi Cola Bottling Company of Altoona. Seventy-eight teams competed in four divisions Men's Independent, Women's Independent, Fraternity Brezhnev By STEPHEN H. MILLER Associated Press Writer PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia (AP) So viet President Leonid I. Brezhnev flew into Prague yesterday on the eve of a CoMmunist Party meeting where Po land's labor turmoil was expected to be the key topic. He immediately conferred with Czechoslovak leaders on "interna tional problems." In Berlin, the East German news agen cy ADN reported that fresh military units, including tank, rocket, artillery, and communications troops, were join ing the 2-week-old Soyuz-8l maneuvers in and around Poland. "In the concentration and jump-off points, army members were informed politically and militarily of the upcoming combat mission," ADN said of the war games. President Reagan sent Brezhnev a message Friday night, White House spokesman Larry Speakes reported yes terday in Washington. An administration source said it concerned Poland, but declined to provide details. NBC News and Sorority. The team that ran the most laps in 55 minutes in each division won. Sigma Pi fraternity placed first in the fraternity division. Members of the winning team were Don Ziter (12th-management), Kevin Clark (6th-biology), Mike Hanlon (6th-com puter science), and Mark Hanlon (12th-computer science). Tau Epsilon Phi fraternity placed second and Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity placed third. The Elks, who won the Men's Inde pendent Division, completed the most laps overall. Members of the Elks team were: Bob Houseal (4th-adver tising),. Dave Muggier (4th-market ing), • John Hanlon (3rd-business administration) and Tom Parmelee (3rd-engineering). Last year's win ners finished second in the division and Beaver GDl's finished third. In the Women's Independent Divi sion, JPWD took first place. Members of the winning team were Rosanne meets with Czechs quoted a senior administration official, which it did not identify, as saying the message warned against Soviet military intervention and was the first from Rea gan to Brezhnev on the Polish situation. • There had been speculation that Brezh nev's presence was a tipoff to a Warsaw Pact summit on Poland, but a top Cze choslovak party official, Mikulas Beno, said yesterday at a news conference the Soviet leader would be the only foreign party chief at : the 16th Czechoslovak Communist Party Congress, which be gins today. Beno said Poland would be represented by Stefan Olsowski, a Politburo member considered a hard-liner on policy toward the independent union ; Solidarity. Beno said Poland and three of its neighbors the Soviet Union, East Germany and Hungary would be the only foreign delegations to speak before the full con gress. Sources elsewhere in the East bloc refused to rule out the possibility of a summit in Prague this week to decide 11,&'/Nr ,%)ilertiovm) ORDER NOW AND SAVE 20% We offer over 1200 styles of wedding invitations and announcements, and napkins in 300 combinations. "If we do not have it, You will not find it" Call for an appointment (814) 237-7679 Robert Gregg Enterprises 443 Glenn Road, State College, Pa. Petak (Bth-health planning and ad ministration), Jen Werner (9th-horti culture), Wanda Beaver (9th accounting) and Denise Holl (12th computer science). Pi Kappa Alpha little sisters came in second in the division and the Cannibus Connection came in third. Delta Delta Delta sorority won the Sorority Division. Members of the winning team were: Cill Braham (6th nutrition), Laurie Nestler (9th-busi ness administration), Joan Harrison (12th-art) and Bryn Martin (9th-ad-: vertising). Phi Mu sorority finished• second and Delta Gamma sorority finished third. Bob Houseal (4th-advertising), a runner for the Elks, said running more laps than any other team was a great thrill and his team will partici pate next year. "We had a great time doing it and it was nice helping out a good cause," he said. "We will be back next year t 6 break the record!" whether to try to crush Poland's indepen dent union movement. Brezlinev was met yesterday at tho Prague airport by Czechoslovak party chief Gustav Husak, the official media of both nations reported. The Soviet news agency Tass in a dispatch filed from here,. said the two leaders had a "friendlyr meeting," discussed relations between their countries and "exchanged views on international problems." In recent days the Soviet press has sharpened its criticism of the Polish. Communist Party for failing to dea sternly enough with Solidarity's de mands and strike threats. As Brezhnev left Moscow, a commen tary in the Soviet Communist Party . newspaper Pravda said "outside reactio nary forces" were behind a "direct,. struggle" against socialism in Poland? Similar words were used in 1968 to justify the Warsaw Pact military intervention ousting the liberal regime of Alexander Dubcek in Czechoslovakia.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers