12—The Daily Collegian Friday, Oct. 9, 1981 L.A. senior • Eileen M. Mallon, Pittsburgh, is the 1981-82 recipi ent of the Julia K. Hogg Testimonial Award at the University. Each year the award is presented to the senior in the College of The Liberal Arts who ranked first academi cally at the end of his or her junior year Mallon, daughter of Mr. and Mrs Pittsburgh, has a 3.97 average .•' Arthur Goldschmidt Jr., associate professor of history at the University, has been awarded a citation in the first national Professor of the Year competition sponsored by the Council for Advancement and Support of Education. Goldschmidt was one of five citation winners Ernest L. Boyer, president of the Carnegie Founda tion for the Advancement of Teaching, chaired the selection committee. The CASE citation is not Goldschmidt's first teaching award. This year he was one of four Penn State faculty members to receive the AMOCO Foundation teaching award • George L. Maimer and William R. Schmalstieg have been named Fellows of the Institute for the Arts and Humanistic Studies at the University. • A graduate officer of his department since 1967, Mauner has written the book, "Manet, Peintre-philo sophe." He has given lectures in this and other countries and serves as a consultant to private collectors, 'pub lishing firms and other organizations. He is working on a second volume of "Manet" and complete works of Cuno Amiet. Schmalstieg, a professor of Slavic languages, has been head of his department since 1969. 5 81 ,9 82 Grads! • Get Yourself a plece of the pie. OPEN HOUSE FOR STUDENTS AND FACULTY Sheraton Penn State DATE - October 12 Monday TIME- 7PM - 9PM PLACE Parliament Ballroom All Electrical and Mechanical Engineering and ent to answer any questions and discuss career Computer Science students and faculty are cor• opportunities with graduating seniors and ad dially invited to attend. Displays and literature vanced degree candidates. about the high technology, state-of-the-art pro- Refreshments will be served. Join us. grams and products of the Fortune 500 Harris On campus interviews: Tuesday Oct. 13th Corporation will be available. Engineers and tech nical managers from Harris divisions will be pres- M IHLAFZFZIS • An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/V/H wins testimonial award He is the author of the first grammar of Old Prussian ever published in English, and the book, "Indo-Euro pean Linguistics: A New Synthesis." Considered one of the two leading specialists in the Old Prussian language, Schmalstieg was elected presi dent of the Association for the Advance of Baltic Studies. He will serve from 1982-84 for this 900-member international organization devoted to the scientifiic study of the Baltic states Paul Mallon, • Robert G. Jenkins, assistant professor of fuel science atthe University, has been appointed director of the University's Fuels and Combustion Laboratory. He had been serving as acting director. He has both a bachelor's degree and doctorate in fuel science from the University of Leeds in England. He previously worked for the University from 1970 to 1973, and again since 1975. The Fuels and Combustion Laboratory is the site of research into the efficient and economical combustion of coals and liquid and gaseous fuels. '4O Robert E. Newham, professor of solid state sci ence, was elected to a 3-year term as vice chairman of the U.S. National Committee on Crystallography, spon sored by the National Academy of Sciences. He has also recently lectured at the International Union of Crystal lography Congress in Ottawa. • Jaan Kiusalaas, professor of engineering mechan ics at the University, has been honored by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration for work done jointly with the George C. Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. Kiusalaas received a certificate and cash award from NASA for a finite element conputer program that both analyzes and does structural design, improving on the original design. Graduate student G.B. Reddy helped with the program. • Allen L. Soyster, a 1965 Penn State graduate, has • Stephen R. Grecco, associate professor of English, been appointed professor and head of the Department of has been awarded a National Endowment for the Arts Industrial and Management Systems Engineering at Playwright Fellowship Grant of $12,500 and has been the University. elected to membership in the Polish Institute of Arts Soyster graduated from the University in industrial and Sciences of America. DoN - 7 - orr MIDNIGHT VIGIL at the lion ravoim AT 73r AvrrANy I 4"/ AIM E' ONV/NIT - 7:0 A.M. - HafIECOM/Ale /98/- engineering and earned his master's degree at Cornell University. His doctorate was conferred by Carnegie- Mellon University in 1973. Soyster has most recently worked as aprofessor of industrial engineering at Virginia Polytechnic Institute. He is a member of the American Institute of Industrial Engineers, Operations Research Society of America and the Institute of Management Sciences. • James D. Bennett has been named director of continuing education in the College of Earth and Miner al Sciences at the University. He is also director of mining engineering continuing education services and an instructor in mineral engineering. Bennett came to the University in 1974. He is responsi ble for the design, curriculum development, implemen tation and evaluation of health' and safety training programs provided by the Univeisity for coal, metal and non-metal mining industries. Bennet serves as coordinator and co-director for about 30 short courses and workshops offered yearly for • mining industry personnel by the Mining Engineering Section of the department of mineral engineering. • Carole J. Brinson, King of Prussia, received the 1981 John Henry Frizzell Award at the University. The prize, including a cash gift of $350, is presented each year by the Pennsylvania Lambda Educational Foundation of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. It honors Frizzell, a professor of public speaking, University chaplain and head of the department of speech at the University until 1946. He died in 1976. Brinson, daughter of Albert J. Brinson, King of Prussia, is a senior French major. She was selected by a committee of the foundation and the College of the Liberal Arts on the basis of scholarship, leadership and need. MT 9 ,rtCarved representative will be on campus soon to show you the latest in class ring designs. ' ith dozens of styles to choose from, you'll be proud to select your one-of-a-kir design. Just tell us what you want. And be on the lookout for posters on campus to get you where you want. Tenn State "Bookstores A p Tum p , on campus 1"` INCREDIBLE JEANS SALE WranglerTCRUITM 14 3 / 4 OZ P J IESHED Reg 1 .99 lAlranglerr uu ? T 14 3 / 4 oz E P I CIS H R T eg 19)39 , 14.99 WranglerJEFl43Tkoz P j I E iE A :SHED Reg 19_,91 $16.99 Lee Lee Lee Levi Levi Levi Dee Dee Dee , ,-- 0 , ,.. . ,-c7 ", VISA' 0 Puerto Ricans learn with internships By LAURA BIDDLE Daily Collegian Staff Writer •The need for Hispanic profession als is steadily increasing and the problem could be decreased with greater interaction between Ameri can and Puerto Rican citizens, the coordinator of the University's bil ingual education program said. "There are 2.2 million Puerto Ri cans in the eastern United States and in the past 10 years Penn State has maintained the same recruiting level of Puerto Rican students," Joseph Prewitt Diaz said. "When I first came here there was one Puerto Rican student involved in the graduate program," Diaz said. "I asked why there weren't more Puerto Rican students, and I got the answer that none wanted to come here. "Internships are a great way of bridging the gap and getting the two peoples together." Twelve Puerto Rican students join 28 other Puerto Rican students in the Division of Curriculum and Instruc tion this year, Diaz said. The eight new students in the master's degree program work in Bethlehem with Puerto Rican stu dents who - are going to return to Puerto Rico. "The children are considered out casts here because they have re tained their customs and language," he said. The master's degree program will prepare the students to serve as supervisors of curriculum in math ematics, English, elementary edu cation and instructional design. The four students in the doctoral ......7 . ust fell us ''.':.....at you want. CARGO JEANS OFF WHITE FLAP POCKETS CORD RIDERS BOOT CUT TRIM CUT 26"-29" WAIST HEAVYWEIGHT RIDERS HEAVYWEIGHT 20% OFF ORIGINAL JEAN PREWASH ED BOOT CUT JEAN PREWASHED STRAIGHT LEG JEAN CePAINTER PANTS t.. ALL COLORS CeeFATIGUE PANTS BRIGHT COLORS CeeCHINO PANTS ALL COLORS Cee WHITE 818 OVERALLS program participate in field work and teacher training in the sur rounding areas. The students will serve as curriculum administrators in reading, mathematics, social studies, science, curriculum, super vision and instructional design. "There are two basic reasons for the internships," Diaz said. "First, they learn in the classroom and it is also part of a political process be cause Puerto Rico will become a state in four to eight years." Diaz is an adviser to the Secretary of Instruction of, Puerto Rico. "I want to feel I had a part in the upgrading of the education system of Puerto Rico and I wish more American students would partici pate in internships at Puerto Rico," Diaz said. Frederick Wood, head of curric ulum and instruction, said, "I think the program has been very success ful and we've been very fortunate to have such outstanding master's and doctoral students." The enrollment is increasing and will continue to increase because Hispanics are the second largest minority in the United States, he said. Jose Martinez, of Manati, Puerto Rico, is a doctoral candidate for social studies and progress director for in-service training for teachers. "In Puerto Rico, a student is re quired to take English from the first grade throughout college," he said. "Dr. Diaz is a wonderful adviser and a goo.d friend," Martinez said. "He got Penn State in contact with Puerto Rico." *.iy..- ~ , ~ 1 , / . 7 . ,""777,4 . 1.1 ,, A ri . ,,, , i ). .. 1 1 \ ' ' - ' 4 \ ( . i 1 3% (..; Tir:. 4 . : 1 4 2 i g Of' SB.97Reg•PO Re, .1 4.99 Re, Al 5 99 „117.59 Re, 2.1 4.99 AegslB.99 Reg,-99 $8.99 5 8.99 Re, al 2.99 Re,A12.99 Hours Daily 9:00-5:30 Mid-State .441 Wilson's Thurs. & Fri. 9:00.9:00 Bank ' I under bank Sat. 9.5 234 E. College Ave., State College, PA 234-0166 College Ave daily 'collegian Lions look to By SHARON FINK Daily Collegian Sports Writer Boston College may have to worry more about scoring points than shaving points in its football game with Penn State at 1:30 tomorrow at Beaver Stadi um. Oops. Wrong sport. But there is some truth to that statement. The Eagles (1-2) have scored - 37 points in three games, and even though they scored 10 points while losing to West Virginia last week, BC's only touchdown was made by its defense on a blocked punt in the final 10 seconds of the game. So the Eagles average 12.3 points a game. The Penn State (3-0) defense has two shutouts sandwiched around the 20 points Nebraska scored, which averages out to eight points per game allowed. That means the Eagles have a theoreti cal chance to score around 10. Match that against the 37.3 points per game the Lions' offense is rolling up, and •p you have all the makings of a game that could have less excitement, than the Homecoming parade at least from the competitive standpoint. Not if the Eagles are primed, coach Joe Paterno and his players feel. They have the potential to keep the Lions off balance with a multiple-formation of fense and massive linemen. "They'll try a lot of different things on us," safety Mark Robinson said. "Mainly formations. They run over a lot of differ ent sets. They'll try to confuse us. We've worked on the defense to •adjust to the , offensive patterns. 4F "We have to put them down to just playing football. That's the bottom line, to stay back and play football." Paterno credited the Eagles' offensive manuevers to BC quarterback coach Tom Coughlin, who, for the past three years, was the offensive coordinator at Syracuse, "with all of the motion and shifting and that kind of stuff." One of the problems the Lions will have with the Eagles' offense, Paterno said, will be trying not to line up improperly. Dealing with BC's mass of humanity on tithe offensive and defensive line is anoth er problem. The defense weighs in at an Even with problems, Stet- will be missing a jewel of a player in Coles By RON MUSSELMAN Daily Collegian Sports Writer Joel Coles missed all of the 1981 spring football drills because of a stress fracture in his right foot. But once recovered, and three games into the regular season, Coles never would have thought he would fracture Fullback Joel Coles (right) rushed 17 times for 109 yards in the Lions' first three games before breaking the fibula in his left foot against Temple last week. He is out for the season. Assuming some of Coles' duties in the backfield will be Mike Meade (left), who has 77 yards and one touchdown in 21 carries this year. the S • is BIG opposition average of 249 pounds. On offense, it's 264. The second figure caused Paterno to sound a theme that, this year, is usually connected with the Lions. "They have a big, strong offensive line," Paterno said, "probably the big gest offensive line in the country, may be:, Heard that one before? But it's a point flanker Kenny Jackson brought up, too. "One of their strong points is the size of their offensive line," he said. "They have some big people, but they're slow." Dave Laube, short tackle on one of the other biggest (but not slowest) offensive lines in the country (average weight 252), said size will play a big part in the game. "We expect a bunch of really big, strong guys who are gonna go nose-to nose up against us," he said. "They're gonna try to out-physical us, beat us up." The talent is there for Boston College to play well against the Lions. It's just a matter of translating it to performance on the field, something the Eagles haven't done, Paterno said. "They have a good football team," he said. "They just haven't played offen sively yet." The young Penn State defense will have some say in how BC does that tomorrow. And Robinson, who is tied for the team lead in tackles with 20 (10 solos, 10 assists) said its performances in the previous three games have set some standards for the unit that is normally overshadowed by the offense. "In a place not noted for the shutout," Robinson said, "it's hard not to shoot for the big goose egg every time now. It's great. We know more or less what we can do. If it gets hot at our end, we know we can up and stop the other team, and that's the true test. "We've come a long way from a group of players to a team of players. In time we'll get it together more as we get more strength and starts, more effort." Paterno said he'd like to see the de fense get its tackling together tomorrow. It tackled better earlier in the season, he said, but not against Temple last week. And for the second consecutive week, the the fibula in his other foot, thus forcing him to miss the final eight games of his senior season. "I thought I was just starting to come into my'own," he said. "And now, what can I say?" Not much. If hasn't been an easy week. r s Photos by Renee Jacobs ruffle a few Eagle feathers Tackles Joe Hines (left) and Dave Opfar and the rest of the Penn State defense quarterback Tink Murphy last week when the Lions play the Eagles at I :30 try to harass the Boston College offense the same way they bothered Temple tomorrow afternoon at Beaver Stadium. line may be without tackle Leo Wisniewski. Wisniewski sat out last week's game with strained ligaments in his knee and is doubtful for tomorrow. Paterno also said the Lions' offensive line has to do a little better job staying on some blocks, something it did well against Nebraska but slipped on last week: And again, Paterno said the pass ing game must improve. By 'JEFF SCHULER ; Daily Collegian Sports Writer In football, Penn State rarely faces a team that is similar in size to the Lions. But when the Lions and Boston College square off tomorrow afternoon in Bea ver Stadium, that will be the situation. "They are a BIG team," Penn State coach Joe Paterno said, "so much bigger than most other football teams. We are not going to push these guys around without some real intense blocking. "They got in two tight ends at the end of the ballgame against Texas A&M and went right down the field on them. They come at you, and they're.tough. We better be ready." BC's interior offensive line averages 264 pounds, its defensive downlinemen 250 pounds apiece. But so far, size has been of little help to the Eagles; after surpris ing A&M 13-12 in their opener, the Eagles 'have been grounded, losing 56-14 to North Carolina and 38-10 to West Virginia. "It's a lonely feeling," Coles said the other day, referring to the five days he spent lying in a hospital bed. "Anything that puts me in the hospital is serious to me. I'm not going to be able to come back this year." Coles described the play which occurred in the third quarter of last week's Temple game that put him out for the season. "I was planting my foot, and I got hit just as I planted," he said. "My body was twisting, and it didn't give. Then my leg popped out from under me." Tomorrow's game, Jackson said, might be the type of game in which quarterback Todd Blackledge and the receivers can concentrate on im provement. "Against the big teams, you can't do that," Jackson said. "You just go out and do what you have to to win. You might have to pass if you don't, you don't. "BC's defensive line is strong, and we "Of the teams we've played to date, their record is 14- 1," said first-year BC coach Jack Bicknell. "The only team that lost is A&M, and that was to us. "The teams we've been playing are just playing well, and of course, Penn State is one of the top teams in the country." A team effort has led to BC's 1-2 mark. Offensively, BC averages just 277 total yards a game; defensively, the Eagles have given up 414 per game. "We've been behind, and we've been struggling," Bicknell said, "so of course we've thrown quite a few balls. But I'd like to say we're a balanced attack. I'd like to. be in a position where we can run, where we can control the football. But we're not in that position the way we've been performing." Despite the statistics, Paterno doesn't hide the fact that the BC offense scares him. "They have excellent personnel," Paterno said. "They're huge, and they have an excellent tailback in (Shelby) Gamble. He's as good a tailback as we'll see After being carried off the field, he still wasn't certain to what extent his leg was injured. "I wasn't really sure if it was broke," Coles said. "I had some feeling in my foot, and I could move it, so I just thought it was going to be a severe sprain and, at most, keep me out a couple of weeks." Once in the locker room, Coles was still hoping for a positive report from the medical staff. "But after the X-rays came back, can't run through them all the time. When you can run the ball like in the Nebraska game, that was Curt (Warn er's) day you don't need the pass. But you can't do that every game. And no matter how good their line is, certain things don't always work out." Like being able to score enough points to win a game. NOTES:Paterno said the Lions are in then we found out it was broke," he said. Coles, who had rushed 17 times for 109 yards through the first three games, will spend the next eight weeks in a cast. He will probably be granted a medical redshirt by the National Collegiate Athletic Association, enabling him to play next year. "The rule is written so it would appear he can," Lion coach Joe Paterno said. "If you're hurt and only play in three games, and you'ie hurt in the third game in the first half of the season, you can apply for a hardship. "Now that doesn't mean that they'll give it to you. But the precedent has been set. I would think that Joel will qualify for a hardship." Coles, however, realizes that if he does receive a redshirt, the comeback trail will require a lot of dedication on his part. "I plan on going down and working with (strength coach) Dan (Riley) on my good leg," Coles said. "Until I at least get half the cast off, I won't be doing anything with the broken leg." While Paterno isn't used to having Coles out of the lineup, he didn't express much concern about finding a replacement. "We have another good fullback, in fact, an excellent fullback in Mike Meade," Paterno said. "Tommy Barr has worked hard, and he's a good all around player. And I have a lot of confidence that Barr will do a good job for us." Paterno admitted, though, that his backup fullback has played an important role on this year's team. "We're going to miss Joel, not only in a sense of what he can do on the football field," Paterno said, "but in a lot of other ways, intangable ways. "He's been a super leader for us and one of the hardest workers, a guy that knew how to win, a guy who knows what better overall shape than they were last week. . .The Entertainment and Sports Programming Network (ESPN) will tape tomorrow's game for airing later in the week. . .Bill O'Donnell will do the play-by-play and Terry Hanratty the color. . .The game is scheduled to be aired Sunday at 9:00 a.m. and Monday at 3:30 a.m. and 9:00 p.m.. . .The local ESPN channel is 13. =MIMEO all year. "They played some good football teams, and they have not played nearly as well as they're capable of playing offensively. I just hope they don't put it all together this week " Instability at quarterback and running back have hurt the Eagles. John Loughery was expected to he Bick nell's No.l QB this season, but a preseason injury sidelined him for the first two games. He returned against the Mountaineers, completing seven of 21 passes for 106 yards but was reinjured on the last play of the first half and did not return. That only compounded Bicknell's problems. Dennis Scala, the Eagles' N 0.2 quarterback, was injured in the North Carolina game. He's still out and probably will not make the trip. "Loughery has been practicing, so if I were to say who's gonna start right now, I would think it would be him," Bicknell said. If not, the responsibility falls on it takes to stay on top." And because Coles is such a team player, he feels the team's loss as much as his own. "I feel like I let the team down a little bit," he said. "I was looking forward to this year, but these things just happen. "I can't let it stop me. I've been injured before. That's just how it works. I'm just going to have to come back. But I'm used to it." Coles is also accustomed to breaking tackles and picking up yardage on Saturday afternoons, something he hopes to resume next season. "You never know about that thing, you never know what the pro scouts are thinking," Coles said, when asked if an extra season picked up by redshirting would increase his worth in the professional football draft. "I just want to come out and finish up with a good senior year," he said. The injury isn't easy for Coles to accept, because he wanted to play an important role for what he considers to be the best Lion team he's seen yet. "I think we're probably more experienced overall than any other team I was on," Coles said. "I think we've had the gift of being able to play together for some years, and right now, we're starting to come together and be a great football team. "In the past, we've had a few seniors here and there, and the guys really hadn't played together that much. Mostly everybody here's in the same class, so we've been together longer." Although Coles is confined to crutches, he expects to be in Beaver Stadium tomorrow afternoon when the Lions host Boston College. "I'll be there every Saturday I can," he said. "They just don't get rid of me that easy." Friday, Oct. 9 13 Please see EAGLES, Page 14