the daily collegian editorial opinion Personalize. justi %Agi New discipline system treats students more,like people Getting busted on campus, used to be a little like getting busted in New York City. The ~, , lecused student wouldn't be thrown in a dirty h:Ading cell with pimps, junkies and drunks, bat the University's disciplinary process was almost as slow and impersonal. Offending students were told by their RAs that they would be referred to the director of he Office of Conduct Standards, an unknown entity somewhere deep in the bowels of Boucke Building. The correspondence from that office often took three months to arrive. No immediate hearing, no visit from some disciplinary en forcer•. Entire college careers were at stake, yet students were getting the old "just another number" routine again. New York City's justice system may not be getting any better, but the University's disci pline procedure is now being personalized. Imltead of waiting those three long months, cases will be heard by dorm area coordinators within three working days. Big deal, you say, an administrator is an The Daily Collegian's editorial opinion is determined by its administrator they're all out to get students. Board of Opinion, with the editor-in-chief holding final Not necessarily. responsibility. • „„ L „,„ kw asterofri p?e,rits This is what I wish were true: Mark Green is on vacation this week. His column will return next Thursday. I could really use the vacation. Here's what is rue: Niarh Green is caught in the midterm crunch, a :form of ::or? - ure and slow death by deadline. His :mind is chaos, but his column will still run. 'The presses stop for no man. Batt no orderly thoughts will floW around those .ieeded for my classes. My mind is like the screen of a.r. Asteroids game. Big thoughts, little thoughts, medium thoughts, all unrelated, drift by :with no order apparent to me (yet maybe there is .a pattern beneath.) Some asteroid thoughts-. • ''. •• • ' 5(1 ' TS. a - 1.• • . ;51 , • • ;V' • ‘V , • 47 3 c "Sadat is dead. What, I ask you, what is this • ;world coming to?" That is what the note in my mailbox. said on Tuesday morning. It's always been that way to me. I remember a !Jay when I was five, my brother and I running up and down the street, balanced on the curb, chas j.ng the cloud shadowS on the ground. • When we made it to the top of the hill one time, Danny Farnan, a year older than I, told us President Kennedy had been shot. He was dead. we called him a liar and ran home to ask the_ ;authorities. ; My mom was in the house watching the guy install our new rug. They confirmed the news. I was still' learning about my world. Some guy shot The president dead. Our new rug was brown. • This type of thing has happened enough throughout my life and even more so in the recent past, to reinforce the fact in my mind: people in the public eye, people who lead, people we rely on, Some pretty good people, they get killed for reasons I don't usually associate with death. • I accept it, even expect it to some point, but it 'till bothers me. r+ r ' lif '4lO, pi. •.' • .„. ' , • i'.4i11447.4,1,..).* • Illustration by Anthony Ciccarelli prgsscidass , :wag ALI.INCCOM 5011 V MISSILES OVER HERE. MX PLEASE f-,, 11E11 , ( K 4 t • •^lii , . .. '. „. . .:•''',.•; . •Y,. 0 •. .... . ...,,. , :,, , •.. ...„, , „.... ' ..... ~ ~ ~ . , ... , .•.. .. ~. . _,. ~ 1 ' . 114 " - S _ , „a 1,71 „f a 444 r 11,:ft j / lit 44 t 114., acive Pr ViCSITRNER I S VIEW OF AN EASTERNER'S VIEW OfiliE U Students now have the chance to argue their cases before a person who is closer to their environment. They may eventually end up talking to Donald Suit the director of the Office of Conduct Standards but not without a chance to talk with someone closer to the incident. Students, especially those new to the Univer sity, will benefit from the procedural change because it will give them immediate feedback on their problem. No waiting, no sweating. Staff members of the Office of Residential Life will also benefit, because they May see personal problems before they get out of con trol. Although some discrepancies may result because coordinators may have different methods of dealing with similar situations, University policy is specific enough to ensure fairly equal treatment. Personal treatment by the University ad ministration is a rare and cherished thing. Maybe this change will help ease the unplea santness of one aspect of University life. • Here's a poem I wrote: When in the midst of all this joy I get depressed a bit I remember that Even something good as an Oren Leaves you with brown spit. Here's a true story Bob McGough told me Once, very late, at night, Bob was walking his large German shepherd along the road { that runs along the border between Philadelphia and a neighboring township. He found a large crowbar lying in the street, picked it up and continued walking. It was kind of a tough neighborhood. A township cop car pulled up alongside Bob. Not being the most respectable looking of people, Bob backed away. But instead of grabbing him and pulling him inside the patrol car, two cops got out and pulled a old guy out of the back. They threw the guy toward Philadelphia. "And don't come back!" they warned him. The guy was obviously drunk, down on all fours, staring at Bob. "They threw me out," the drunk said Bob saw fear in the drunk's eyes, then under stood why. So, standing beneath a "Welcome to Philadelphia" sign, he outstretched his arms to embrace the drunk, a large crowbar in one hand and the leash to a large dog in the other, and smiled. "Welcome back," Bob said. /4, , //% ////fr -,,•4*.P4r17i. "): liZ t / l a tlti) ; 4*t•:::. , - - • ' • " •, . o#l,'!,' l,!1' .„, _ ~e c , I' f 'l.. .l' '214 \'' 1 ,•'; W,, '-' ' ,1' ....t4J 't:SV\7.b4: '. li: 1tifi,,,,,, ~,,,tlin , Zir.. PA ',,, t•q4i.i'Z'„ i..,ie...:4,:.,:, 1, , , 1: . 11 41q,„%ifk l It . :e .dr , ' I t/4-7'2 , - • "The Return of the Beverly Hillbillies" was on TV the other night. It reminds me of something my brother Karl (with a K) always says. If you think back to the theme song of that show, you'll recall that it had a banjo playing the theme song which would end with the announcer's voice saying, "The Beverly Hillbillies," and then the song would start up again. Karl holds to the theory that if you start that song playing in your head it's next to impossible to stop. I agree, because it has.happened to me before. You hear it once, then the announcer says, "The Beverly Hillbillies" and it plays through again until the announcer again and then the song again, ad infintum. Karl said that maybe when he is old and his mind is less strong, he won't be able to stop it. He paints the scene of him in an old age home rocking very rhythmically. People talk to him but he doesn't answer. He's too busy listening to the Beverly . Hillbillies song in his head and rocking to the beat. • . 0 • • The Homecoming parade is this Friday at 5:45. I suggest you go. I went last year and had a lot of fun, but I don't know why. If you like crowds, there's plenty of them. If you like band music, there's the Blue Band and it's pretty good. If you like floats of big footballs or wedding scenes or Nittany Lions you'll probably find them there, too. You even get lots of frat people on the floats waving like they're Captain Kangaroo in the Macy's parade or something. Even that's okay. . It gives you 'a chance to laugh and cheer and clear the way for all these asteroids. That's my tip for the week. Mark Green is a 10th-term journalism major and a staff writer for The Daily Collegian. His column appears on Thursdays. ITCP srA-r.s. • What country,besides South Africa, treats the inajority of its population as second class citizens •? 7/, ' f MIAMI AOO.--- wsru ro Itri NOR" oof I .c...l.—tr dt:Collegian Thursday Oct: 8, 1981—Page 2 Paula Froke Editor BOARD OF EDITORS: Managing Editor, Phil Gutis; Editorial Editor, Tom Boyer; Assistant Editorial Edi tor, Becky Jones; News Editors, Cindy Deskins, Dave Medzerian; Sporti Editor, Mike Poorman; Assistant Sports Editors, Sharon Fink, Ron Gardner; Arts Editor, Elaine Wetmore; Assistant Arts Editor, Judd Blouch; Photo Editor, Stelios Varias; Assistant Photo Editors, Janis Burger, Renee Jacobs; Graphics Editor, Lynda Cloud; Wire Editor, Maryann Hakowski; Copy Editors, Cindy Cox, Karen Konski, Denise Laffan, Jackie Marti no, Iris Naar, Lynda Robinson, Leslie Zuck; Campus Editor, Joyce Venezia; Assistant Campus Editor, Chuck Hall; Town Editor, Rosa Eberly; Assistant Town Editor, Margaret Ann Walsh; Features Editor, Scott McCleary; Weekly Collegian Editor, Neil Axe; Assis tant Weekly Collegian Editor, Charlene Gowarty. BOARD OF MANAGERS: Sales Manager, Paul Rudoy; Assistant Sales Manager, Monique Rura; Office Man- Loeb: death of a It is January 1972 in New Hampshire and a heated presidential primary race is 0n... A man, the front runner of the Democratic race, is addressing a crowd outside a newspaper office building during a downpour of snow. Suddenly, he breaks into sobs. The publishe r/editor of the statewide, weekly paper has just published a series of editorials attacking his wife. That newspaper publisher was the com manding voice of New Hampshire politics and that state's quadrennial primary until his death Sept. 13 at 75. The man outside the office of the The Manchester Union Leader was Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine. The man who drove him to this human but politically digastrous mo ment was William Loeb, the publisher of the Leader since 1946. Loeb wielded an envied power over the New Hampshire primary, and most presidential candidates cowered before the authority of this self-proclaimed "19th century liberal," and "Teddy Roosevelt con servative." • • . • " 1.1 4 41, 0 ~1 .4 • •' :4)1 Loeb decided that Muskie was soft on the Soviet Union and shouldn't be president. His first assault on Mtiskie was the damaging "canuck" letter, signed by a fictional Paul Morrison, published 11 days before the prima ry. The letter was later confirmed to be a fabrication and written by Richard Nixon's Dirty Tricks operator, Ken Clawson. The letter accused Muskie of calling French Ca nadians "canucks," a racial slur. About 60 percent of New Hamshire's voters are French Canadian. The letter was printed on the front page of the Leader along with an editorial attacking rgiuskie. The letter, and perhaps Loeb's in volvement, was part of what Nixon's Dirty Tricks henchmen called "rat-fucking" opera tions. It was later learned that Clawson had contacted B.J. McQuaid, then editor-in-chief of the Leader. The letter alone would have damaged Mus- 1981 Collegian Inc Debby Vinokur Business Manager many don't mourn ager, Michelle Forner; Assistant Office Manager, Mike Conklin; Marketing Managers; Sue Largtnan, Mark Pulps; National Ad Manager,' Owen Landon; Co-op Managers, Donna Dauterich, Jodi Shubin; Creative Director, Tracy Meyer; Layout Coordinators, Sue Largman, Paul Lynch, Barry Reichenbaugh; Special Projects, Mary Beth Johnstone. LETTERS POLICY: The Daily Collegian encourages comments on news coverage, "editorial policy and University affairs. Letters should be typewritten, dou ble-spaced, signed by no more than two people and not longer than 30 lines. Students' letters should include thott term, major and campus of the writer. Letters from alumni should include the major and year of graduation Of the writer. All writers should provide their address and phone number for verification of the letter. The editorial editor reserves.the right to edit letters, and to reject letters if they are libelous or do not conform to standards of good tastO. Opinions expressed in columns, cartoons or letters to the editor are those of the writer and artist and not, necessarily the opinion of the !Japer. Mail letters to: The Daily Collegian; 126 Carnegie Building; University Park, Pa. 16802. Names may be withheld on request. Letters may also be selected for publication in The Weekly Collegian. mudslinger kie's chances, but Loeb went on to attack Muskie's wife,.Jane. Loeb twice ran an editorial chiding her for her remarks in a fluff piece that appeared in Women's Wear Daily and Newsweek that had her saying flippantly, "I can't mix booze and wine." These attacks led to Muskie's last stand. On that winter morning, nine days before the primary, Muskie broke into sobs and said: "This man doesn't walk. He.crawls . . . . It's an insult to the people of New Hampshire that you have to pick up this' rotten newspaper every morning." Muskie's chances for the presidency died that morning, Unfortunately, Muskie's outburst was just what Nixon and his henchmen wanted be cause it allowed George McGovern to get the Democratic nomination. McGovern, as every Watergate buff knows, was seen by Nixon as the easiest Democrat to beat In 1972. Muskie was not the first of Loeb's victims. He wrote a front-page editorial on Henry Kissinger headlined "Kissinger: A Kike." He called Gerald Ford a "jerk," Jimmy Carter, America's "most incompetent president," and Eugene McCarthy "a skunk's skunk's skunk." Loeb despised Democrats, whom he charac terized as "left-wing kooks." He perennially attacked the Kennedys, prompting Robert Kennedy to comment, 'AU there's anyone more reckless with the truth, I don't know him." But Loeb did like some politicians all fervent conservatives. Those he admired most were Sens. Joseph McCarthy of Wiscon sin and Robert A. Taft i of Ohio; Nixon until he went to China; and Ronald Reagan. His philosophy was simple: "Things are either right or they are wrong - ," Throughout his career, h 0 encouraged nar row-mindedness, racism. and a. hypocritical world of moral absolutitm-: He felt that "grays" confused the reader. Few politicians will mourn his death consid ering he attacked so many. It's sad, but I suspect that many New Hampshire readers, too, are decidedly ambivalent or happy about his death. Gene Grygo is a 9th-terrn Jour:holism and history major and a senior reliorter covering municipal government for The Daily Colle gian. By MIKE HEIMOWITZ Daily Collegian Staff Writer State College, along with the rest of the nation, is suffering from a penny shortage. Tom Wulf, manager of Majik Mar ket, 151 S. Garner St., said his store has been running low on the copper coins since the middle of the summer. - "There is definitely a penny short age. We've run out, not too often, about four or five times," he said. "The banks can't give us any because they don't have them. They give us $2 worth a day." Wulf added that since Majik Market has a lot of stores in the state, he can sometimes get pennies from stores that don't have the problem. "If not for that (the other stores supplying pennies), we wouldn't have any," he said. ...........:.....:.....::..,.:,...:„,,.::,,,?:].:.:,.:.:,.,:,::: , :: ., : , . ,,,, ..: 1 : , ...:: ,, 1 ,,,,, : , .::::::':: , :':::::::':.;:: ,, 5 , '::: , :. , ::: , :f , ;,,,.,:::..:,,,....::,„., • ••••••••••••••••••••••••:''.i. , ?..Ei'..: , : , : , .::::: . .........................:-........ , :::;.::::::::::„...„....„...„,„,,:........„,.....„„,..........,„,...:..........,:,..„....,........,:,:::::,-,.......:::,.......................:::::,..,-:::::::::::::, ......•••••.' ....•••••••'.......:......:::./...'::''....:::,,.:•.1.:•„•.........:,.::::i•.,•..,',:::..,1,.........,:::::,..i.....:,,,.:.::-•..;•::::,...,.,::::,::::::••.;::•••...f...:.•::::........:,.........,:---,,,:::::::,..,.•::i:-,. „ •-••• .:'•••• •'....... •'"''''•••••••:•...,.......,..: ......„,....,......„...........,„n„........... .....................:::...........: - .1::.. 7......... - ..........;::;:.;:::: . ,..:,.....L.:.'......i . j ..... .•.:',.......:.........::::::::. -. ..::: ..... :'': -..-...... '................ ,-..., ::: . :':':: ... : ':::'.s th A penny saved is a penny. . .shortage The manager of McLanahan's, 414 E. College Ave., said that store is also running low on pennies. The manager, who asked not to be identified, said the problem started when students returned to the Univer sity for Fall Term. He said the banks in the area cannot give the amount of pennies he re quests. "If you ask for $lO worth, they give you $5 worth. They cut in half what you ask for. Some days they give even less. Every bank seems to have a short age," he said. "We appreciate stu dents or whoever with the right amount of change. The odd cents are killing us." The manager said that although his store has come close to running out, it never has been caught penniless. , "We go to other (McLanahan's) to .... i t . „..-,8 , j ~,,...,..„„. *UR BIGGEST SALE Ws Welcome You Danks Charge. Master:Card or Visa, , State College: Shop Thursday, Friday, 10:00am to 9:oopm, Saturday Oct. 10, 9:ooam to s:oopm, other days 10:00amlo s:3oPrrt. t-~+:~g t tt , 4 . ,' , 4, , ~ .k,..t, ),11,&.1,, ~ ~ . ~,,,,,‘ .....:. ..,1.,.,, , , , ,, , ,. , , i , , ; ,,.,,,.,, , ,, `',‘'.... ~ ~•.!,/,. './,' , :, ~ i 1 ' .. , :f i , // • ; ;:. ,' 3 17 r , , II h fit I iiii i .....a...., - r•y.i.,;. L L . :l , ;~~~~~ '_: i :x~„ help out," the manager said. Lloyd Jackson, regional vice presi dent of Central Counties Bank, said the penny shortage is not a problem just in State College, but throughout the na tion. "It's gotten worse over the last few months," Jackson said. "It's a nation al problem. People are holding on to pennies. We've had to ration them." CCB sometimes runs programs in which people who bring in pennies are paid a premium, he said. Right now the bank is not paying the premium, which is 10 percent of the amount, but will be in the future, he added. Paying a premium "doesn't alle viate the problem," Jackson said. Bob Frederick, vice president of Farmer's Community Bank, said his bank is not having as much of a prob lem 'with the penny shortage as other ept*********************** 3 l * Ac twice, * You're our knights in shining armor. * Hail to the Lion! * * * HomecOming 'Bl. * 4+ * . Love, * .2 . ` .. U-154 . The K-Dees I 44444*-104444444c4c44***4444444 In honor of our 57th Anniversary, we've gathered the ripest fashions for our biggest sale of the year. We have bushels of delicious valuesbut: here is just a taste'of the savings ready to be picked by you! Now t ru October 17th. Save 25% on Men's Flannel Shirts Team your jeans with a 100% cotton woven flannel shirt. Available in cotton assorted plaids, machine wash/dry. Reg. $l5 10.99 Save $5.00 on Men's Shetland Sweaters The sporty go with everything sweater comes in crew or V-neck styling with saddle shoulders. Made of 70% wool/ polyester for easy care. Reg. $22. $16.99 i 1..„.„..„.,,, , 0 ....„.„.„.„....... .... il , j t...... ,illVellifitlait'V'." . ..':: : '':i . •i .. '. : ::i . O''li . 'o. Get the initial idea: Have your sweater monogrammed area banks "It's not a desperate problem with us," Frederick said. "It's more a prob lem with banks that have big commer cial accounts. We have a better mix of accounts than most banks." "There is definitely a penny short age. They're not printing enough," he said. The penny shortage is just a local problem, Frederick said. "If you mention 'penny shortage' to someone in Indiana or Illinois they look at you with a quizzical glance," he said. "They don't know what you're talking about. It's an Eastern prob lem." But Larry Murdoch, vice president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Phila delphia, said the shortage of pennies is causing problems throughout the na tion. DEPARTMENT STORES r / L~ OFTH E YEAR Nittany Mall: ShoP 10:00am to 9:00PIT1 each daY, Closed Sunday Bellefonte: Shop;Tuesday, Friday 10:00am to 9:oopm Wednesday to 1:00pm, other days to s:oopm. "It's all across the country," Mur doch said. "It varies in intensity though. It's particularly troublesome on the West coast and in Chicago, Detroit and around here. I don't know about the Sun Belt, but it's more or less a burden everywhere." "The problem started in January of 1980 when gold and silver prices went high," he said. "Copper went up at the same time and people thought if they hung on to copper pennies the price would go up further and they could melt them down. Actually, the price (of copper) went down," he said. Murdoch blamed the shortage on two opposite effects. "One, people think pennies are worth something as collector's items and they hang on to them," he said. "Two, other people put pennies in their You'll know you look your best when you're wearing beautifully tailored separates in navy, camel or grey. (broken sizes) Blazer, Reg $B5 55.99 Skirt, Reg.s4s 29.99 Pants, Reg. $55 Create a whole new wardrobe for Fall and Winter with mix and match coordinates in sizes 8-18. • Poly/Wool Coordinates: Camel and Grey • Poly/Crepe Coordinates: Green and Rust • Poly/Acrylic Coordinates: Black, Ruby and Blue • •••••• I,e ",,, The Daily Collegian Thursday, Oct. 8, 1981-3 pocket or pocketbook, take them out at the end of the day and don't use them. They don't think they're valuable and they don't bother with them. "There are an awful lot of pennies in bureau drawers. The mint is making more than ever and putting out more than ever, but they're not circulating." To alleviate the problem, a new penny made of zinc will be made by the government in the near future, Mur doch said. "Copper pennies are now 95 percent copper and 5 percent zinc. The zinc pennies will be 98 percent zinc and 2 percent copper. They're cheaper for the mint to produce and should be put in circulation quickly," he said. The mint "will continue to make both kinds of pennies, eventually phas ing out the copper," he said. Stunning Misses Separates of 100% Wool Flannel Save 1/3 on Misses' Coordinates by Russ 33.99