11!12—The I)aily Collegian Friday, Nov. 13, 4State Senate to consider bill on 'fraudulent loans ( A bill which would allow lending agen cies to issue subpoenas in the case of cv iolations or fraud concerning loans is now on the state Senate calendar, said Helen Caffrey, director of the Senate - Education Committee. • "There have been cases in the past s when a fictitious name was used on the loan," Caffrey said. The bill would allow a the agency to go back and check the a original document, she said. Robert Pearl, legislative liaison for the t Pennsylvania Higher Education Assis tance Agency, stressed that "it's a very 3 narrow subpoena power. It gives the .agency limited subpoena power if there is suspected forgery or fraud," he said. c. The bill was prompted because several lending institutions have been reluctant c td release data for fear of the Fair Credit Reporting Act, Pearl said. ' .•.The Fair Credit Reporting Act is a ' federal law dealing with an individual's ,right to know if somebody is releasing personal data concerning that individu al's credit rating, Pearl said. ."Lending agencies are a little edgy about releasing certain documents," he said. A second part of the bill would protect 3 f PHEAA's advanced computer system, a h system that helps at least 11 other states, t working through the Student Loan Mar keting Association in Washington, proc ess their student loans, Pearl said. c •..This would protect the "proprietary t data" of the computer system from other competitors across the nation who other t wise could "come in and take advantage of our system," he said. —by Joyce Washnik Congratulations to DELTA DELTA DELTA on 93 years of sisterhood! • Love, PHI MU u • 154 *********** * * * * * * * * * * * o, * ~, . 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Office - 2nd Floor H.U.B. * ************.* * * * * * * * * * * * * CONTACT LENSES SOFT $9B HARD $65 INCLUDES; • EXAMINATION • CONTACT LENSES * ACCESSORIES • 50% 60-DAY SATISFACTION WARRANTY DR. ANDREW BLENDER OPTOMETRIST 242 Calder Way 234-1515 The Finals Frenzy is here... and so is KINKO'S K INK°' S KINKO'S ' 256 e. beaver ave. 2 1 / 2 c copies on our self-service copiers offer good 11/16 thru 11/20 William W. Scranton `May the Force be with you' U.S. needs more colleges Need 'caused by supremacy, competition By BRIAN E. BOWERS Daily Collegian Staff Writer The United States needs more technically oriented upper-division colleges to maintain its position of techno logical supremacy in the world, said William W. Scranton, former Pennsylvania governor and U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. Another reason upper-division institutions such as the University's Capitol Campus are necessary is .because competition for jobs and education standards have in creased, Scranton said Wednesday night following the convocation for the 15th anniversary of Capitol Campus, where he was the keynote speaker. "At the moment (upper-division institutions) are most necessary particularly those in engineering and in fields of technological development because that is where America is supreme and that is where America has to remain supreme," he said. "I think that we have come to the point where we do need more (upper-division institutions) because these days, although it is wonderful to get a college education because there is so much competition and our educational levels have gone up, it is very important to have graduate degrees," Scranton said. • "You need as many hyper-higher education institutions as you can get so that that is possible," he said. "It is very hard to afford that, either for the student or the state but the more that we can do, the better off we are going to be." Former University President Eric A. Walker, who also spoke at the convocation, said some Third World nations such as Mexico are developing rapidly because they set up technical institutes dedicated to upgrading the labor force and technology. The United States needs more of these institutions, he said. "In some way we've got to start making our educational system match what the industrial system needs," Walker said. "It's a job to do." And the universities are the ones who will have to do this job, he said. "Is there something wrong with our educational system. Isn't education supposed to teach you how to earn a living?" he asked. "Who's failing? The school boards, the community colleges, the trustees of our great universities? There's a mismatch here that we have got to remedy." Scranton said: "America and the developed world has got to accentuate education and technological enterprise and development." Capitol Campus is an institution dedicated to higher level instruction in these areas, he said. The campus is planning a science and technology building that will help build the campus's reputation in this area. 'You need as many hyper-higher education institutions as you can get so that that is possible.' Scranton also said he thinks educational institutions have special services they must perform for people in their area. Before the Capitol Campus, "There was no real public type of operation in the area for anybody beyond the sophomore year of college. There was also no really good graduate school in the area other than the law school at Dickinson," he said. "At long last in this Commonwealth, anyone who really wants a good education can get one, as costly as it can be in some places. That is a great step forward," he said "Now all we have to do is take that pluralistic system and really make it the best there is anywhere at a cost the people can afford." "We do have an extraordinary pluralistic system of education in this commonwealth," he said. "It isn't just good because it is pluralistic and it isn't just good because it is led by very fine people, but it is best because it is serving all people. TWO CAN DINE 11981 Ponderosa System, Inc. Chopped Steak is USDA Inspected 100% Chopped Beet Steak. - 2J' •"7' a a m C A O I 6P F7 O ti N z M A US Y T me al BONUS COUPON COUPON MUST 0 I®®l I I A WI 12 ' II I I 111 111 m in 2 RIBEYE mill ® 2 RIBEYE NE MI NE STEAK IN PONDEROSA MI STEAK NE a DINNERS II CHOPPED a DINNERS a ii 9 . a STEAK $4O . a a BURGER gi • $4.99 a a or or • .• Or 111 2 Special 1 / 2 lb. I FILET OF FISH NI A Special 1 / 2 lb. 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F t giffis,gfr°4B6l ® ti ) ,, f 47,1 1 76 6 1 mi lli t C ht e kru ° . g l 2 l , 76 6 1 4 , 4 1 _ . - ilo " n os!, root ßostt. . ~.. foot wasi,. 4. 4111 r° -..- 1111111111 -.- . INIIIN lb „ —William W. Scranton STEAKHOUS E f!ir as kiss*/ as ......-r::... ........, ....,..., Buy two dinners and save ...with these coupons! All dinners include All-You-Can-Eat Salad Bar, • Baked Potato and Warm Roll with Butter 1630 S. Atherton St. (At University Drive) the daily • collegian Lions bracing for Crimson Tide Penn , State tailback Curt Warner, the Nittany Lions' leader rusher with 859 yards and a 6.7 yard per carry_ average, sits and watches at last week's game with North Carolina State... its By MIKE POORMAN Daily Collegian Sports Writer One can just see .Joe Paterno. It's the winter of 1977 or 1978 and he's hopping from Ohio to New Jersey to New York to Pennsylvania, stopping in countless of living rooms along the way. In each home, after discussing the young man's grades, his mother's pasta and his father's cigars, the talk briefly turns to Penn State's 1981 football schedule. "...and then it's Alabama and Notre Dame at home, followed by Pittsburgh away." He had 'em right there. And at 12:35 tomorrow afternoon that incredible three-week period one of the main reasons many Penn State players are Penn State player's begins when the Nittany Lions (7-1) host the Crimson Tide (7-1-1) at Beaver Stadium. ."That's one of the reasons why me and all the other guys came to Penn State," said wide-out Kenny Jackson, a sopho more from New Jersey; "to see what we were made of by playing high quality teams. "And for the next couple of weeks, and most surelythis week, we'll see." "Talking with most of the guys," said shortside tackle Pete Speros, "when we see that schedule, it's what we really have been waiting for to be challenged like that. And to have the experience of playing in games like this and to work as a unit and then come outwinners." The Lions haven't exactly overlooked every opponent up to this point, but Nov. 14 has taken quite awhile to get here. "It seems like we've been waiting to get to Alabama and some of these of teams for an awfully long time," tackle Jim Brown said. For Paterno, this game represents what he has been building for, too a schedule so demanding no one can deny the Nittany Lions a national title, if they're winners. With his fate firmly in hand, Paterno was as effervescent as Speedy Alka-Seltzer at his weekly press conference Wednesday. "I'm excited' about Alabama coming to State College," Paterno said. "That's fun. That's why you coach." That coaching job won't be easy. On the opposing sidelines will be Paul "Bear" Bryant, shortly to become college foot ball's winningest coach. On Penn State's sidelines will be tailback Curt Warner, and he might be there for the entire game. He has pulled two separate muscles in his left hamstring in the past three weeks, and his status for tomorrow is questionable. "Maybe he'll be ready," Paterno said. "I don't know." Without Warner (with his 859 yards and 6.7 yard average), the Nittany Lion running game has slowed to almost a walk. Against Miami, they ran for 69 yards; against North Carolina State, 95 yards. ' "After looking at the films I think there's some reasons why we maybe have not been that productive," Paterno said. "One of them is that we did play without (Vyto) Kab. When you're talking about your running game, he's, probably a . good a blocking tight end as there is in the country." • Another was that Penn State only ran 54 plays on offense at N.C. State, 18 less than normal. And most of the time with the obvious exception of a successful fake punt you didn't have to be Jeanne Dixon to know what to expect.' ,:.'t 4 t 7, " ,: , 1, , ,, s . . *Se ~~~~ ...as a result of a muscle pull suffered against Miami (above) Alabama at 12:35 tomorrow afternoon at Beaver Stadium. "I suppose there's something to that," agreed Paterno. "You do what you do best. But that's not the reason some of the plays didn't work. Regardless, it's a matter of executing on first down even if they know what play's coming." The tide could change, and quickly. "Right now, there comes to a point where, are we going to run through a brick wall?" Jackson asked. "If we can, good. If not, we're going to do something else. And I think we're going to do it a lot sooner." • That means the passing game, which was Dr. Jekyll (26 for 41, 358 yards) at Miami and Mr. Hyde (8-19, 52) at N.C. State, must come 'up with the right antidote if the 'Bama secondary copies the Wolfpack's. "Of all things in that game that disappointed me," Paterno said, "most of all was the fact that we weren't able to get any kind of a passing game going to keep some momentum." Penn State's place-kicking game has got the momentum, and it's trying to lose it. Brian Franco has missed his last five field goal attempts and with regular. Alabama kicker Peter Kim recovering from an injury suffered against Mississippi State two weeks ago, a return to normal for Franco could provide a crucial edge. "I think he knows I have confidence in him," Paterno said. "It isn't necessary that I say, 'Hey, Brian, I'm behind you,' like ~„, • , ('‘, '...., -k '.l . ~.„... . '', . ••'''' ' ,ft , '";",i' i • , — V ' . • • ' ' , I. i • 1411•. , 0. 4 ',i',• . . '"'" '''..,`•;' •:..., - ~. soh ti , 4,...., ".''.. N . r ...e.mlf"',, '''l i t,fr. ~ ',,,,,,i• ,10°` f ' . Witi L '''' 1 ' i ` 's , : 41r, ',. . ' , 'i , ' . '4'.. " ' 4 " '". 1.- : , • ' ' Aar N 314 w• ' '. ).-- 4 , .o. .... • A` , . • •-•.•,‘ ie .-1 ":' ' `,l r . Warner's status is uncertain some of those owners say to their managers; that they have all kinds of confidence in their managers, then fire them the next week." Backing up the Tide's Kim is freshman Terry Sanders, whose 28-yard field goal won the Mississippi State game. Those three, points emphasize one of Alabama's strongest points: its depth. Nearly everyone on the Tide offense with a number under 50 has carried the ball (actually, only 19 backs have). Bryant uses three quarterbacks, one of whom (Walter Lewis) runs a 9.4 hundred. And 14 'Bama players have caught at least four passes this season (Penn State has seven). But Paterno has been using a revolving door of his own to usher Penn State onto the field. The Lion coach has gone heavily to his second-string in every game this season, hoping, to collect the dividends in the next three weeks. "We have enough depth that it will not be a question of getting worn down," Paterno said.. "It may be a question of getting outplayed." The Nittany Lion defense, Paterno . said, will try to hold `Barna to a few yards and "hope they stop themselves." Operating out of the wishbone, the Tide has fumbled the ball 41 times in nine games, losing 20 of them. On the other hand, Penn State has only fumbled 14 times, surrendering only seven. Please see LITTLE THINGS, Page 15. Alabama set to meet Penn State challenge By SHARON FINK Daily Collegian Sports Writei Rutgers football coach Frank Burns tells an amusing story about an incident that happened before the Scarlet Knights' 31-7 loss to the Crimson Tide last month. It seems the Scarlet Knights got a police escort from their hotel in Besse mer, Ala., to Tuscaloosa, the site of the game, about 40 miles away. And they had some company along the way. "There was a police car in front of us," Burns says, "a police car in back, five motorcycle cops in the procession and a helicopter overhead. I told the bus driv er, 'This is really nice to get such a police escort.' "He said, 'Bear wants to make sure you show up.' " Lion coach Joe Paterno probably won't have to send the Campus Police, much less the State College Police Depart ment, out to the Holiday Inn in the Lewistown "suburb" of Burnham to make sure Tide coach Paul "Bear" Bry ant and his team make it to Beaver Stadium for tomorrow's game with the Lions. In fact, Alabama is so anxious to play Penn State that it checked into the Inn last night so the players have a day to practice at a local high school field and get used to the cold weather. No, the Tide won't need extra incentive of any kind to make it into town. "Right now," Tide senior middle guard Warren Lyles said, "this is the biggest game we've had since (the 1979 Sugar Bowl). It means a lot to each team." Lyles' impressions of this year's Penn State team come from that Sugar Bowl meeting 'between the two schools, when he was a freshman and had to sit out the game with a pulled hamstring. But he was there, he was with his teammates, and he remembers the experience. "That particular game was the most intense football game I've ever been involved with," he said. "They were were class players then, and I have the greatest respect for the players we'll be going up against. And I have the highest respect for (offensive guard) Sean Far rell." Farrell and the Penn State offense will be up against Lyles and an Alabama defense that has allowed an average of 111 yards rushing, 152 passing and 263 yards total offense in nine games. The Lions are averaging more than twice that in yards rushing and total offense even after their performances in the past two games. Friday, Nov. 13 13 4ln 7 , -,, f:.. , % , ~ ~_., •':' 1 1 't, '-"- - 14.1- e• .Y! ... . . , 0 tklll.re." ' • '04.'4 for Penn State's game with The Tide defense doesn't have great size, offensive tackle Pete Speros said, but it has speed. "The linebackers aren't really big peo ple," he said, "and they just rely on quickness and on their down people tak ing away a good shot at them. And they're quick into the holes stopping the backs. "They have been known to stunt an awful •lot. That's one of our main con cerns; we want to be able to be prepared for their stunts. (But) the main thing is to get off the ball and control the line of scrimmage." The best action in the game, though, should come when the Tide is in its wishbone offense. Penn State's defense is facing that formation for the first time this year. The wishbone is the most heralded part of the Alabama attack, and Paterno said the reason it's been so effective for the Tide is because of the speed they recruit for the backfield "Defending the wishbone in itself is not the problem," Paterno said, "it's the people who run the wishbone who are the problem. When they've got the kind of speed Alabama has and execute like Alabama does and they're as disciplined as Alabama, then you have some prob lems." Statistically, the Tide backs aren't l impressive. Two of their top three rush ers halfbacks Jeff Fagan and Joe Carter have run for 293 and 280 yards, respectively, in nine games. But Ala bama has depth. The leading rusher i third-string quarterback Ken Cole (298), who is also seven-of-12 for 19 yards and one touchdown. "It's tough to tell who's playing half• back for them," Paterno said. The Lions won't be trying to stop th. Alabama backs, Paterno said. The, can't stop an offense like Alabama's Penn State has to try to control it. "You have to somehow get control o their speed," Paterno said, "and you'v got to try to make them go in fives ant sixes (yard runs), and not 30s and 35 - and hope they stop themselves." The Lions aren't planning any speci' kind of defensive formations to stop th wishbone. They'll stick with the 4 which in itself is made to stop the rut defensive tackle Dave Opfar said. "(In the 4-4) the defensive tackle's jc is to keep people off the linebackers," . said. "When you have four linebacker flying around like that, it's pretty hard run against." 7i : '`) • .; *°lr. Photo by Renee Jacobs Please see TIDE, Page 1
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