4—The Daily Collegian Friday, Nov. 6, 1981 na r Jf , s By JOSEPH KAYS Daily Collegian Staff Writer When first lady Nancy Reagan opens an exhibition of design projects from the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Design Competition on Nov. 10, a design by Roy Vollmer, associate professor of architec ture, will be among them. The design, which is to be displayed at the Octagon House in Washington, D.C., is one of 46 meritorious designs included with 18 winners chosen from among 1,421 entries. The competition was held to obtain a design for a memorial to the veterans and dead of the Vietnam War. Vollmer described his design as consis ting of a 400-foot base of grey granite out of which rise 30 white marble-faced slabs on which the names of approximately 58,- 000 dead and missing soldiers are in scribed. "The memorial structure is con structed along an east-west axis depict ing the rising and the setting sun, nature's life cycle," Vollmer said. "The linear and axial concept of the memorial expresses repetition and eternal dura tion." On the outside of the first slab, the title "Vietnam Veterans Memorial," a ded ication statement and a background his tory of the conflict are inscribed. On the outside of the last slab, an inscription includes an account of the numbers who served, were wounded, permanently disabled, killed and unac counted for along with an excerpt fiorn the poem "Aftermath," by Siegfried Sas son. show at Yale, the purpose was to give a The winning design was submitted by clarification of an ideology for making Maya Ying Lin, an undergraduate in , architecture. It added that the architec architecture at Yale University, and it ture of Louis Kahn was the departure will be constructed in the Constitution point for defining the particular set of Gardens near the reflecting pool whi . ch concerns with which the exibition dealt. joins the Lincoln and Washington Memo- Vollmer studied with Kahn at the Uni rials. versity of Pennsylvania's Graduate Another design by Vollmer, entitled School of Fine Arts. He , also worked in "Housetemples," was displayed along Kahn's architectural offices in Philadel with five other designs at Yale Universi- phia and in Dacca, East Pakistan (now ty. . Bangladesh). According to the introduction to the "The Housetemples Series of drawings , Academic Assembly - tO hold final exam hotline By MARY BETH HORWATH • Quizzes and narrowly limited Daily Collegian Staff Writer tests can be given during the last If you have three comprehensive week of classes, but may count no final exams and a huge project all more than 20 percent of the final - due on the last day of classes, don't grade. - despair. There is someone you can e Professors cannot determine call for help. the time of a final during the final The Undergraduate Student Gov- exam period. Only the University ernment Academic Assembly will registrar can determine final exam ' monitor a final' exam hotline 7to 11 schedules. , p.m. on Sunday, Monday and Tues- • A comprehensive final is not day to answer questions about final required, but if one is given, it must exam policies. be scheduled during the final exam Assembly staff member Bob Gal- period. •. lagher said the assembly is monitor- Information about scheduling for ing the hotline because many conflicting exams will also be avail students think their exams are being able from assembly members on the given unfairly, but are not sure of hotline, Gallagher said. the policy. If a student has two or more ex " Everything we tell them is in the ams scheduled for the same time, 'a Student Handboo6under academic conflict must be filed. If a student , policy 44-20," he , said. "But we can has three' or more exams scheduled explain it to them." ' for different times the same day, a Gallagher said students should be conflict is not required but is allOw aware of the major exam policies: ed. The last date to file for a conflict exam was Oct. 23; a $lO fee is • Final exams may be in the form charged for filing late. of a term paper, project or take- "Most students don't know what's home exam, but cannot be due ear- in the handbook," Gallagher said. Her than the first day of the' final The hotline phone numbers will be exam period. 865-9111 and 863-1874. Tonight WINE AND CHEESE PARTY - IF ttY at the I' November 8, 3:30-6:OOpm Zs) Jech Residence a THE 634 Glenn Rd. BRICKHOUSEM Tickets $6.00-$4.00 students 7 TAVERN . Are , Aft 9l 'I O A 10:00 'til 2:00 Proceeds to Located la Homes Alley around !hemmer from Uack Ell's AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL Vietnam Vet Memorial wins award rimussemsummomismommommimisemssminumwmumummeammissommesul i A Au 1 i •wisiiii , 250 oFFIN .. ~,,,, ._.. . . . . • .„.,, Every Friday is two bit Friday. Save I I it,. r o : .® '2ss on every dinner until 4 p.m. I I 131 .S. Garner 234-4725 I I (near the corner of College & Garner) I I HOURS:M Sat.on -I a.m-12 p.m. I I iallLam I I Sunday 12 p.mrll a.m. I Lionemsom Num eummesmonumm nom issums onionsms mom No No on so sommenia An umbrella, a frisbee, or both. Before you start your day, check the Collegian weather forecast. Prof's design on display in Washington D. C. Part of a Vietnam Veterans Memorial Design Competition, this model of a meritorious design by Roy Vollther; associate professor of architecture, will be displayed at the Octagon House, Washington D.C. J 111 It J •► 1 ► I 1.-1 J and models is a work about origins and lines. He said he sees the boy and the girl evolution in making architecture," Vol- as composites of both. • lmer said. "This systematic process is structured by concepts of order, element, hierarchy and ideal." In one design titled "Man, Woman, having genders or personalities. I tend to Girl, Boy" Vollmer has progressively read them that way." more elaborate designs evolving from a single cube or cylinder. The cube rep- Another design, "Housetemple I,".is a resents the male, who Vollmer said he small wooden shelter divided into two envisions along harder, more angular parts a lower section to house tools and lines and the cylinder represents the an upper section to be used as' a play female who he envisions along rounder house. collegian notes • The Astronomy Club is liolding an dy, will be presented by the Penn State Astronomy Open House from 8 to 11 - Thespians at 8 tonight and Saturday in tonight on the 6th floor 'of Davey Labo- Schwab Auditorium. Tickets can •be ratory. If the sky is overcast, open house bought from 9:30 a.m.•to 3:30 p.m. across will be held on Saturday. Admission is 'from the HUB desk, or, at the door before free and open to the general public. the performance. • Pre-Law Interviews will be given by • Yachad/ASA is - sponsoring Israel the Delaware Law School from 10 a.m. to Week now until Saturday. Exhibits, films noon and 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. today in 124 and speakers will be featured; times and Sparks. For further information contact dates will be posted in the HUB Browsing Earl Davis at 865-7515. Gallery, and everyone is welcome. • 'The Kung Fu Club' will hold a joint • Yachad/ASA is sponsoring an exhi workout with the Tai Kwon Do Club from bition of the "Cultural Aspects of Jerusa-, 6:30 to 8:30 tonight in 106 White Building. lem" now until Saturday in the HUB, Browsing Gallery. • The Archery Club will meet from 7 to 9 tonight in 10 Intramural Building. soring a First Annual Pancake and Sau • The Krishna Yoga Society is spon- 'sage Feast • from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. soring a "Free Vegetarian Feast" at 7 Saturday at the Wesley Foundation Din tonight and 5 p.m. Sunday at 103 E. ing 256 E. College Ave. Proceeds Hamilton Ave. will benefit the Literary Council and e The Ballroom Dance Club will meet are $2.75 for adults and $1.50 for children at 7 tonight in 133 White Building. The fox under 12. Tickets may be bought' at the trot will be taught o "Oil From Coal: Direct and Indirect Liquefaction Routes," a speech by Irving • Eco-Action is sponsoring a Benefit Wender, 1981 Nelson Taylor Lecturer in Car Wash from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday Materials Science, will be given at 4 at the Sunoco Station on the corner of today in 122 Kern. East College Avenue and Hetzel Street. They need people to help, as well as people with cars. • "Guys and Dolls," a musical come- • No charge to you or your department • Reading packets prepared FAST! kinkcrs 256 E. Beaver Ave. (across from Penn Tower) copies Open 7 days Phone 238-COPY info available Not sod RN mum no pm los es ami mai ow on Dec. 31, 1981 es and tobacco Blends accessories OM= "Architecture is like people," Vollmer said. "I tend to see buildings as either Youth and Scholarship Services. Prices door or in advance at the Volunteer Action Center, 427 S. Allen St. Attention Faculty Members! DO YOU NEED CLASS MATERIAL DUPLICATED FOR WINTER TERM?? • Leave required material with Kinko's. We duplicate and sell direct • Low cost to students 4iggiagiEßEL . RigagggEREIRENEIrPIKi ) E.ZiMa2O 7 2OS' 7 IIP a. . The Gtaduate Student A44oc,Lati.on Ll 6 PSU would Lae to expkezz its heatwaA.in 4! - . I THANKS to the individturts and buzineszeis who contAibuted to the. ANNUAL HALLOWEEN* PARTY FOR CHILDREN wfUeh waz held on Satunday, Oct,iben. 31 in -the Ketn aaduate 1 Buiexii ng. N iTHANK .- Beta Alpha Psi P 7, The End Result • 1 Mur Jewelers • ‘ E3 7., G.C. Murphy Co. m ißoy Rogers Roast Beef Restaurant 7 13 L.B. Thomas of Elby's Family Restaurant Lech_Michele Loh El Kern Graduate Commons Dannette Hie ' • B' and DOMINO'S PIZZA . ....r•iqrk for their quick, prompt & large deliver Zs UO9l .1 , 4 4 2 i MIREIREMP" e The Altrusa/Astra clubs are spon- Canadian leaders adopt new , constitution OTTAWA (AP) —'Burying a half-cen- guage education. tury of discord, Prime Minister Pierre The Ottawa agreement, which came on Elliott Trudeau and the premiers of nine the fourth day of a federal-provincial Canadian provinces reached agreement constitutional' conference, now requires yesterday on cutting their country's last approval by the Canadian and British colonial tie toßritain and establishing a , parliaments. truly Canadian constitution. It means Canada for the first time.will Only Rene Levesque, separatist pre- have a U.S.-style bill of rights and will be mier of French-speaking Quebec prov- able to enact constitutional amendments ince, rejected the historic accord, on its own. denouncing Trudeau's constitutional re- • For 54 years, through nine previous form plan as an attack on provincial conferences, Canada's national and pro autonomy in the decentralized Canadian vincial leaders were unable to agree on federation."bringing home" the 1867 British-con . As always, he declared, "Quebec is trolled constitution, primarily because alone .. . Never will we surrender on they could not settle on a method for The constitutional split threatens to In a public statement closing the con fuel separatist sentiment in Quebec, ference, Trudeau . said of the. final where voters in a referendum last year agreement, "This means after 114 years rejected a Levesque proposal to take the Canada will become• in a technical and first step toward seceding from the rest lega l "iense an independent country for of English-speaking Canada. once and for all." The Quebec leader objected, foi one But to achieve the deal; Trudeau had to thing, to a new constitutional language- retreat substantially on both major el rights guarantee that would nullify Que- ements of his original constitutional bec legislation restricting 'English-lan- ,plan. ' ' • A Christmas Self-Help Craft Sale • Amnesty International is sponsor will be held from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. ing a Wine and Cheese Party from 3:30 to r` Saturday at the University Mennonite 6,p.m. Sunday at the Thomas Jech Resi- Meetinghouse, .318 S. Atherton St. Pea- dente, 634 'Glenn' Road. Tickets will be tured are quality traditional crafts from sold at the door. Prices are $6 for general around the world; proceeds will benefit admission and $4 for students. Proceeds the Self-Help program. will fund local AI work. • Yachad/ASA is sponsoring a Chu.g • The Sailing Club will be sailing at 1 Sunday afternoon at Stone Valley. The Bait at 4:15 Sunday afternoon at the HUB Information Desk. Featured will be c HUB, weather permitting. DiscountslUb will be leaving at 1 p.m will . from the food, a speaker and discussion. Everyone be available to new sailors. , , is welcome. The Undergraduate Student Gov- sponsored by State College-Bellefonte ernment Supreme Court will • hold an Hadassah at 2 Sunday afternoon at the Open Session Review of various organi- Sheraton Penn State Inn, 240 S. Pugh St. zations at 7 Sunday night in 227 HUB. The The show will benefit the Seligsberg groups reviewed will include the PSU School in Jerusalem, a vocational school Flying Lions, the PSU Philosophical So- where the students made the designs ciety, the Penn State Lady Lions Boost- being shown: Tickets will be $5 at the ers, the Modern Rock Appreciation door and are also available at the Hillel Society, and Women in Networking, a Foundation, 224 Locast Lane, or by call placement service. ' ing 237-8950. • State Rep. Gregg L. Cunningham, • The Episcopal University Parish of R-Centre County, will hold his weekly St. Francis will,be holding a coffee hour town meeting at 7 Sunday night in the Mt. preceeding the Holy Eucharist at 11:30 Nittany Residences (behind Hill's Pla- Sunday morning in the Informal Lounge za). All constituents are welcome to of Eisenhower Chapel. Everyone is wel attend. come. ST. P 2 A SO U'S UNITED E L CoIIegeA M Ave., State sta E te T c nlS ol o le D geP T RCH A C I6 H BO U I Sunday Worship - 9:15 & 10:45 a.m. Students/Young Adults Class - 10:30 a.m. Guest Speaker, Dr. Al Haas Hymn Sermon 1:77.tiv7F411 Y 0 U Delta Sigma Theta Tracey Carter Sharon Scipio Elaine Garrison Judy Leach Racine Leonard Leslie Page Michele Long Dannette Hill Sandra Clark Robinn McClendon Sherri R. Nicks intrienntirErMang Grad students get fellowships • Joanne L. Benn and Anne C. development and field adviser for Looker, graduate students at the the division of continuing education University, have been awarded Gen: at Altoona Campus. She plans a eral Foods Fund Fellowships for the . career in university teaching and 1981-82 academic year. research following completion of her Benn, a doctoral candidate in hu- dissertation on the transition to par man development and family stud- enthood. ies, is studying individual Looker, a doctoral student in nu development and family relations, trition education, holds a.bachelor's particularly the parent-child degree from Miami University in relationship during infancy and ear- Oxford, Ohio, and a master's degree ly childhood. from Penn State. She is also a regis tered dietitian. names . She earned her bachelor's degree and do research in nutrition educa from Michigan State University and tion. Her doctoral work centers on her master of arts and master of education theory and evaluation education degrees from the Teach- technique. She is also designing and ers College of Columbia University. evaluating nutrition education Benn is an instructor of human materials. FINELY TAILORED ( Osumi, &ea: ALL WOOL SLACKS 49 50 REG. 56°° MICHAEL'S CLOTHING CO.. FRASER ST. gentielli MINI MALL 1 0 44* 238-4050 OPEN DAILY FROM 10-5 ' Following completion of her doe- toral studies, she intends to teach ratification of future amendments. • An Israeli Fashion Show will be Kim Brown Julie Natale Lisa Ludwig Cathy Armsby Donna Meek Tony. Fede Jackie • Maureen MoGawan Christian Academy: School provides education with strict rules By MARY C. STEPHENS Daily Collegian Staff Writer Some of the school rules of the Centre County Christian Academy might seem severe to students educated in the public school system. For example, students are forbidden to listen to rock music or to discuss drugs at the Bellefonte school. "Because rock music is a part of the counter-culture which 'has as its purpcose planting seeds of rebellion, immorality and lawlessness, Centre County- Christian Academy takes a firm stand against any form of rock music, including the so-called 'Christian rock.' We consider the listening of this kind of music detrimental to the spiritual, moral, and academic life of a person," said school administrator Robert W. Baylor in the academy's student handbook. a, The The academy also has a different approach to discipline, Baylor said. "If you take the restraints off and yOu say, 'Well, we can't really tell him what is right and wrong,' then the sky's the limit," he said. "The only time the reigns are drawn tight is when he comes up against someone who has a little more authority than himself. "Then the hammer falls and that's really unfair to the student because they never know what the restraints are," Baylor said. ' James A. Mauger, high school science and physical educa tion teacher, said, "It is important to be supported by the administration in the area of discipline. As teachers, if we lose control of the classroom; we can't teach." The academy supports its faculty and receives family sup port in all areas of discipline such as the dress code, 'Baylor said. This cooperation makes for a strong parent-faculty relationship, he said. The school has a strict dress code. Dresses and skirts cannot be more than two inches above the knee and anything see through or skintight is prohibited. Boys must keep their hair from touching the back of the shirt collar and their ears must show completely. In addition, jeans are prohibitted. "Lots of kids used to complain about having to wear dresses, but now they're used to it, and even like it," sophomore Sandra K. Apple said. "It was never hard to follow the restrictions," sophomore A%..u• so CANTON -A— OUR SIGN HAS BEEN TAKEN! A reward of $50.00 will be given if returned within 10 days. No legal charges will be made. Any info. will also be rewarded. 222 and 238 Calder Way, State College Phone 237-3266 Chinese Restaurant and Oriental Food Store Bobbi Jo Neill said. "They have high standards, but they're very good standards." The selection of faculty members is another way in which the academy differs from the public schools, Baylor said. Faculty members must first have a strong relationship with Christ and a desire to serve him through teaching, he said.. "It's not the money that draws them, but genuinely a personal desire to serve the Lord in this area, a call to teach," he said. The academy is funded through tuition and gifts and receives no federal or state aid. It is associated with three churches: the First Baptist Church, Bellefonte, Calvary Bible Church, Centre Hall, and Berean Bible Fellowship, Fleming. Mauger agreed that the faculty members' salaries could be seen as a disadvantage. However, he said the advantages far outweigh the disadvantages. The academy allows its instructors to teach from a biblical standpoint, Mauger said. "As a teacher in a Christian school, I can work with the student on a spiritual-counseling basis, more of a friend, pastor relationship„" he said. "Spiritually, we can have an effect on the lives of our students that will last forever." High school history teacher Barry L. Monsell said he also liked the freedom the academy gives him to teach the way he sees best. "I don't feel the pressure to pass children on. I can motivate the kids to give•their best, require them to put more effort,into the subject," he said. Marvin D. Apple, minister at the First •Baptist Church of Bellefonte and a parent of one of the academy's students, said: "There is much more of a personal concern from teachers in the area of the student, a good relationship between the student and the teacher. They take it personally. They're not there just for a job; they're there because they're dedicated to the job. Money is not the factor." Although the academy is not able to pay its faculty as much as the public system, that does not mean the academy is academically inferior, Baylor said. The academy's students overall are anywhere from 18 to 24 months ahead of the national average on the Standard Achievement Test scores, he said. However, senior Candi Confer said she would like to see the academy offer a wider variety of courses, such as foreign languages. IMINM By W. DALE NELSON Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) The Rea- gan administration said late yester- day that a possible nucleai warning "In its consideration , of nuclear em shot in the event of war in Europe has ployment issues, NATO a number of been considered as a NATO option years ago identified the so-called de but always with "significant doubts" monstrative use as a possible option. that it evgr would be done. It is this that Secretary Haig referred With that statement, prepared at to yesterday. the Pentagon and issued simulta- neously at the White House and State er indicated today, there is no precise Department, the administration at- NATO military plan, and there have tempted to resolve a contradiction in always been significant doubts ex congressional testimony by Secretary pressed in NATO doubts which the of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. and U.S. shares, about the utility of this Secretary of Defense Caspar Wein- option." berger. At the White House, spokesman Haig said Wednesday that "demon- David Gergen also insisted that nei strative use" of a nuclear weapon was ther secretary was mistaken. Then he a NATO contingency plan should con- read directly from the prepared ventional war break out in Europe. statement. But Weinberger testified yesterday Gergen said Weinberger and Haig that he knew of "absolutely nothing in met over breakfast for a discussion any plan that even remotely resem- before Weinberger went to Capitol bles that." Hill to testify. The administration's statement Notably, the statement didn't ac pronounced both men correct. But it count for why Haig mentioned the also changed the wording of what "contingency plans ... to fire a nude each had said on Capitol Hill. ar weapon" if there were significant Haig told the Senate Foreign Ftela- doubts about that tactic. He had vol tions Committee Wednesday that unteered the disclosure without voic- NATO had such a "contingency ing such doubts. plan," but Weinberger told the Senate Specifically, Haig said: "There are Armed Services Committee that such contingency plans in the NATO doc a plan didn't exist, even though such a trine to fire a nuclear weapon fOr ",suggestion" was made "in the '6os." demonstrative purposes to demon " Secretary Haig was correct in strate to the other side that they are noting that demonstrative use is an exceeding the limits of toleration in option that has been considered by the conventional area." NATO," the statement said. "Secre- No member of the committee asked tary Weinberger was correct that this Haig any follow-up questions on the option has never been translated into plan, so he did not elaborate. He did a military plan." not give reporters a chance to ques- /81 7:45 p.m.Chug Bayit ' speaker Dr. Dan Walden Meet at Hillel at 7:45 p.m. Call 237-2408 for more information 1 1 /7/81 9:30 am. Traditional services & Kiddush 11 p.m. Late skate meet at Sir Skate Nuclear warning shot a 'possibility' The document was titled an admin- hi I istration statement prepared by the Defense Department. In attempting to clarify the issue, it "However, as Secretary Weinberg- tion him The Daily Collegian Friday, Nov. 6, 1981-5 But when Sen. John Warner, R-Va., asked the defense secretary about Haig's remarks yesterday, Weinberg er replied: "There was a suggestion, as I un derstand it, in the '6os, from some military planners . . . But there is absolutely nothing in any plan that evenly remotely resembles that, nor should it." Haig has frequently clashed with other senior members of the Reagan administration on defense and foreign policy issues, both publicly and pri vately. Haig's spokesman said yester day that Haig believed he was the target of a "guerrilla campaign" to oust him, by an official in the White House. The official was never identified and the State Department has de clined any further elaboration on Haig's complaint, saying, in the words of one official Wednesday, "It's the end of it as far as we are con cerned." The interpretation being given to Haig's remarks before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee was that in the event of an impending defeat at the hands of Soviet conven tional forces, NATO forces might fire a nuclear warhead to signal their intent to employ nuclear weapons to defend themselves unless the Soviets backed off. Haig did not say what kind of weap on would be used or where it would be used, but the assumption of State Department officials was that it would be a warhead detonated in the air over a deserted area, or over water.
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