weekend 'Adjora Faith McMillan plays Thelma in the sizzling hot blues review "One Mo' :Time," playing at 8:30 Wednesday night in Eisenhower Auditorium. Films On Campus "Caddyshack" The slob meets the snobs ..S , ,rhen Rodney Dangerfield begins playing golf at ": the local country club. Ted Knight plays the top snob and Chevy Chase plays a different sort of country club member. Bill Murray is classic as ^. the demented assistant groundskeeper. 7, .; 9:15, 11:30 tonight and tomorrow and 7 and '< 9:15 p.m. Sunday, 10 Sparks. "Scanners" Strange beings have the power 0 ., to make their victims explode in this recent science-fiction thriller. 7, 9:15 and 11:30 tonight and tomorrow and 7 and 9:15 p.m. Sunday, 111 Forum. "The Shining" When Jack Nicholson, his wife (Shelley Duvall) and child moved to a mountain resort to be caretakers for the winter, they thought they were just going away for some peape and quiet. But Nicholson's mental health is not all that it was cracked up to be and the the horror begins. First part of a Stanley Kubrick doubleheader. 7 and 9:30 tonight and Sunday, 112 Kern. "Dr. Strangelove".The second part of the Kubrick film festival. Peter Sellers plays three roles (a British officer, a Henry Kissinger prototype and the President of the United States) as American bombers are launched to drop A-bombs on Russia. The comments on militarism and Western bureaucracy are both humorous and disturbing. Slim Pickens is exceptional as the captain of the only U.S. plane that doesn't turn back. 7, 8:45 and 10:30 tomorrow night and 7 and 8:45 p.m. Sunday, 101 Chambers. "Lenny" Dustin Hoffman plays turbulent comic Lenny Bruce In this biographical film Bruce's volatile style is captured In reenactments of his nightclub routines. Directed by Bob Fosse ("All That Jazz") and co stars Valerie Perrine. 7 and 9 tonight, 101 Chambers: 7 and 9 p.m. Sunday, 112 Chambers "9 to 5" Jane Fonda, Dolly Parton and Lily Tomlin play three working women who would like to get rid of their fresh boss. 7, 9 and 11 tonight and tomorrow, 112 chambers. "What do you Say to a Naked Lady" This I tell ya Johnny! Rodney Dangerfield (left) comes to campus this weekend via "Caddyshack. And speaking of tough. The men's hockey team (below) takes the ice tonight at 9:30 and again tomorrow night at 8, both contests against Cortland State: ' • , ! • % r • h. , . ,• week's flesh flick is by Allen Funt, that 'amiable bald man from "Candid Camera." Instead of suprising old folks in Supermarkets, Funt is now suprising young people In bed. 7, 8:45 and 10:30 tonight and tomorrow, 102 Forum. "Tin Drum" Oskar, a little boy living In Poland between the world wars, purposely stunts his growth so that he can't become an adult. He proceeds to grow intellectually and develops an ability to break glass with a high pitched shriek. A fascinating movie in the Imaginative, almost absurd German literary tradition. 6:30 and 9 p.m. tomorrow and Monday, 112 Kern. "Up in Smoke" The comics of the drug world, Cheech and Chong, bring havoc to the United States-Mexican border. Their controlled substance van and rock concert are familiar to anyone who has Indulged. 7, 9 and 11 tonight and tomorrow and 7 and 9 p.m. Sunday, 105 Forum. "American Werewolf In London" Two young Americans go to the British Isles for a holiday. While there they are attacked by an unusual beast and one of the boys begins to grow lots of hair and act rather strangely. Warren Zevon, where are you? 7, 9 and 11 tonight and 7 and 9 p.m. Sunday In 108 Forum "Thunderball" Sean Connery plays James Bond In this early 007 thriller. A beautiful woman is kidnapped and Bond is sent to find her. Contains a superb underwater chase scene. 7:30 and 10 tonight, tomorrow and Sunday, Waring Lounge. "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" Clint Eastwood (what . would be a weekend at Penn State without him) plays a mysterious drifter who becomes partners with Mexican gunfighter Ell Wallach. Directed by the master of the spaghetti Western, Sergio Leone. 7 and 10 tonight, tomorrow and Sunday, Findlay Rec Room. "The Way We Were" Barbra Streisand plays a college activist and Robert Redford plays an All-AMerican jock. Their paths continually cross in the course of this nostalgic movie. Not recommended for those with aversions to mush. 7 and 9 p.m. tomorrow and Sunday, HUB Assembly Room "Monty Python and the Holy Grail" As a 64-year-old English professor once told a humanities class: "Maybe not the best movie I ever saw, but certainly the funniest." The Monty Python troupe at its peak. 7 and 9 tonight and tomorrow, 121 Sparks. "Easy Rider" Peter Fonda and Dennis Hopper play two young motorcyclists riding to the Mardi Gras in New Orleans. Jack Nicholson plays an alchoholic lawyer who catches a ride. A must for anyone who calls himself a fan of the 19605 and early '7os. Fonda produced and Hopper directed the flick. 7 and 9 tonight, HUB Assembly Room. Downtown "Reds" In the style of such epic films as "Gone With the Wind" and "DI. Zhivago," this movie explores the relationship of a man and a woman during times of conflict. Warren Beatty as Communist activist Jack Reed and Diane Keaton as writer and feminist Louise Bryant strike up an intimate but free relationship in 1915: The strong cast also includes Maureen Stapleton as anarchist Emma Goldman and Jack Nicholson as playwright Eugene O'Neill. Cinema I "Time Bandits" A gang of mischevious midgets steal a time travel machine and take a young friend on a Journey through past years in this latest effort from the remnants of Monty Python. John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Mlghael Palin and Sean Connery lead a well*nown cast. Cinema II "Tattoo" Bruce Dern plays a serious, almost maniacal tattoo artist who has a thing for Maude Adams. State "Raiders of the Lost Ark" God's Ark of the Covenant, the vessel which contains the remains of the Ten Commandments and a multitude of deadly cowed, is being sought by both the Allies and Hitler. Archeologist Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) goes to find It for the good guys and is assisted by Karen Allen. State "Arthur" Dudley Moore plays a spoiled, fun loving tycoon's son who must marry whom his father wishes or lose his fortune. Liza Minnelli plays the waitress Moore really loves and Sir John Gielgud plays his sharp-tongued butler. Garden "Halloween II" Hold on tight to your seats as the psychotic killer from the original "Halloween" comes back to hunt down Jamie Lee Curtis. A real thriller that's been a hit at the box office but a bomb on the entertainment pages. Screening Room "Touch me in the Morning" No, It's not the film version of Diana Ross's song. It's an X rated film. Flick "Just a Gigolo" Versatile David Bowie stars. Arena "The Nibbler" Adult cinema comes to North Atherton. Arena. The Juggernaut String Band (above) offers an , evening of bluegrass music and square dancing at 8 tonight in the . HUB Ballroom. Sponsored by the Penn State Folklore Society. Warren Beatty and Diane Keaton (right) star in "Reds," opening downtown. Sounds . The Bars . Autoport Jim Langdon plays everyone's favorites on the grand piano tonight and tomorrow. Allen Room Enjoy the contemporary sounds of duet Rem and Elizabeth tonight and tomorrow on the corner of South Allen and College. Brewery Rock 'n' roil with the one and only Daddy Licks tonight and tomorrow. Brickhouse Tavern J. 8., force of one and second to none, will perform country rock all weekend. Coffee Grinder Tonight listen to the sounds of Sherry McCamley. Dante's Trattoria Tom Huckabee sets the mood throughout the weekend. Gatsby's Acoustic pianist Bob Barry Is back, performing Wednesday.. The Deli.Hlppoßoom Sunday, vocalist David Fox invites you to relax with him. Le Bistro Kenny Matthieus plays tonight and Arthur Goldstein and Jeff Bowman take the stage tomorrow. Phyrst Tonight it's a double shot of Red Rose Cotillion, playing at 5 and 10. Tomorrow sing along with Happy Valley's own Phyrst Phamily. The Pub (Holiday Inn) Rick Jones plays throughout the weekend. Rathskeller Tonight and tomorrow hear Casey and Fenstermacher. Rego's Archie Blue, formerly the Arthur Goldstein Band, brings the crew to Rego's this weekend. Saloon Hear Menagerie Sunday night. Scorpion Tonight Foxie Rocks and Foxie rolls. Tomorrow night take the T.shoka Freeway to the Sdorp' exit. Shandygaff Ray Anthony spins the oldies tonight and Stan the Man is your host for the hot wax tomorrow. . Sly Fox (Sheraton) Let the sounds of Tiffany entertain you this weekend. Two shows nightly at 10 and midnight. Westerly Parkway Hiway Pizza Enjoy your pizza and brew with the Tarnished Six tonight. Concerts and Coffeehouses PSU Folklore Society presents an evening of folk music and square dancing featuring the Juggarnaut String Band and Debbie McCatchy at 8 tonight in the HUB Ballroom. Kern Start yout term off right with happy hours from 4:30 to 6 tonight in 102 Kern. Bring I.D. Jawbone A superstar weekend beginning tonight with Kevin Oremel playing the first show and G.E. Sassani playing the second. Tomorrow features California resident and Jawbone alumni Mara Eve Brenner, followed by Joy Annas. Open mikes between shows. Music Handel's Messiah The Nittany Valley Symphony Orchestra and the Penn State Office of Religious Affairs present a sing•ln of Handel's Messiah at 3 p.m. Sunday in Schwab Auditorium. The performance will feature guest soloists and will be conducted by Raymond Brown. The sing•in is free and complete scores will be for sale at the door. Savo! of Music The first American perforniance of "Two Preludes" by French composer Jean-Pierre Bengniot will highlight a recital by pianist Steven Smith, associate professor of music, at 8:30 p.m. Monday in the Music Building Recital Hall. The concert is free and open to the public. WQWK features a two-hour special on the Doors tomorrow night at 10. Sunday it's Jethro Tull in concert at 9 p.m. WDFM Sunday at 7 p.m. "In The Mood," the Big Band and Swing show hosted by Steve Potteiger and Dan Mushalko, will highlight some of the music that arose from the attack' on Pearl Harbor. Monday's programming features the Chicago Symphony Orchestra at 6 p.m. Galleries Chambers A display of various porcelain and stoneware works is showing. HUB As part of the holiday festival at the HUB, an International Cultural Artifacts exhibit is in the Art Alley cases. The Gallery features a Contemporary American Indian exhibit. Next week in the browsing gallery Is the annual laser photography and art print exhibit and sale. Kern An exhibition of woodcuts by Gordon Mortensen is on display until Dec. 18. Also an exhibition of watercolors by Dorothy Crowly is on display until Dec. 21. Museum of Art The Danish Ceramic Design show will continue through Jan. 24. Also, "Architectural Fantasy and Reality: Drawings from the Accademia Nazionale di San Luca in Rome," will open Sunday and continue through Jan. 31. Also opening Sunday will be "American Paintings from World War II from the Museum's Collection." Museum tours are given on Sundays at 1:30. Pattee In the East Corridor Gallery, recent i ill 4 1 , 4~';. ' J; - ~' ~ .., i~, ~.:' The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. 4 . S . P 571 • works irom Peter Jogo will be on display starting Wednesday and continuing through Jan. 8. Beginning Tuesday and continuing through Jan. 4 In the Lending Services Lobby will be watercolors by Sally Beundt. In Second Floor East Pattee, ceramics by Kathy Dobash will be on display beginning Monday and running through Jan. 7. Zoller Showing until Jan. 3 will be The Pennsylvania State University Masters of Fine Arts Graduate Group Show. Sports Women's volleyball The Lady Lions host Cincinatti in first round NCAA tournament action at 2 p.m. Sunday In Rec Hall. Wrestling The matmen make their first Rec Hall appearance of the season today and tomorrow at the Penn State Invitational. Sessions begin'at 1 and 7 p.m. each day. Ice Hockey The Icers return home to the Indoor Sports Complex to host Cortland State at 9:30 tonight and then in an 8 p.m rematch ' Saturday. Men's swimming After a grueling meet yesterday, the Lions host the Penn State University Relay Championships today and tomorrow at Ernest B. McCoy Natatorium. AWAY Men's basketball Coach Dick Harter's hoopsters are on the road against University of North Carolina-Charlotte at 7:30 tonight. Men's gymnastics Penn State competes in the Windy City Classic today and tomorrow in Chicago, 111. Etc. "Christmas Carol" Charles Dickens' classic tale of the Joy of Christmas comes to the University in the form of life-sized puppets from the Broadway Marionettes. Two showings of thli Artists Series presentation will be offered at 3 and 7:30 p.m. Sunday in Eisenhower Auditorium. Entertainment for the whole family. , "One Mo' Time" The cast may be small, but the sound isn't, Four actors are featured in this Brqadway smash that recreates a bluesy evening in 1926. The setting is the famous Lyric Theatre In New Orleans, where Bessie Smith, Bill "Bojangles" Robinson and Ethel Waters performed. The struttire begins at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, In Eisenhower Auditorium. "Habakkuk" intervarsity Christian Fellowship presents this multimedia production that looks at the corrupt and violent world in which we live and seeks alternatives. Included In the production are a soundtrack, 25 slide projectors and a 50-foot screen. 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and 7 and 9 p.m. Wednesday in the HUB Ballroom. Photo by Zoe Dominic 'West talks about writing By WENDY MILLER Daily Collegian Staff Writer Paul West, professor of English and comparative literature, believes writing is rewriting. Every line, has problems and the only thing is to keep solving them. • BECAUSE WE bEIIEVE PERSONAL GROWTH IS IMPORTANT TO EDUCATION . . CONSIDER JOINING A GROUP. WE, THE PROFESSIONAL STAFF of CAPS, will IM OFFERING THE followiNg GROUPS TO full TIME In addition to all these groups, the staff offers individual counseling for personal concerns. FOR INFORMATION & liElp iN dEcidiNg ABOUT PARTICIPATING CALL OR STOP BY = MON-FRI 8 A.M.-12 p.m.; 1-5 p.M. CENTER - FOR COUNSELING & SERViCES (CAPS) 863-0395 217 RITENOUR HEALTH CNTR: Paul West (TIMES TO BE ARRANGED) REGISTRATION CLOSES SOON Stress Reduction Learn to relax and examine beliefs and feelings in order to deal effectively with a variety of stressful situations. Male• Female Relationships --- Exploring and changing difficulties in intimate relationships. Personal Growth For students interested •in exploring themselves, their beliefs, feelings, relationships. Personal Growth for Women For women interested in exploring themselves, their beliefs, feelings, relationships. Basic Interpersonal Skills Overcoming shyness, learning to meet and talk to others, especially members of the opposite sex. Graduate Student Resolving issues related to work and interper sonal relationships of graduate life When Parents Separate - and Divorce -- Becoming more aware of and living with feelings, effects, changes in one's life. Growing Up With An Alcoholic For students who have or are hav ing to cope with parents or another significant person who is an alcoholic. For support, information about understanding and coping with an abuser, and exploring personal impact of being involved with an alcoholic. Self Criticism• Self harsh judgements acceptance. Controlling Substance Use and Abuse Will focus on reducing dependencies on various drug substances, working towards moderate usage or abstinence, and learning alternative sources of gratification. Childhood Sexual Abuse Therapy group for those troubled by ear ly sexual experience within or outside the family. Assertion Training -- Learning to express self and communicate with others indirect, positive, and mutually enhancing ways. Overweight-Binging For people who are over-weight and binging. Will focus on personal/emotional concerns. Binge. Eating and Vomiting Will focus on problem eating patterns and the personal/emotional concerns that accompany such behavior. Weight Reduction A two term sequence. The first term will prepare for successful weight loss through an exploration of the psychological problems which have interfered with successful weight loss in the past. The second term will focus on weight reduction. "If you solve all 50 problems on every_ page you probably have a goSod piece of work," West said. "I'm notorious I push my students to rewrite and rewrite and get it perfect until they sort of jibber in admiration in front of it and say, 'God, did I write that?' Wed IRE TO INVITE you TO STUdENTS WINTER TERM. ACceptance Exploring and modifying the we make toward ourselves; learning self Apt words from a man who wrote 20 books his most recent titled "The Very Rich Hours of Count von Stauffenberg" and who received the Governor's Award for Excellence in the Arts for literature last May. In his cluttered office West took the imported cigar from his mouth and said, "While I'm working on a novel, I work ' like crazy. I don't allow a certain number of hours; I begin when I feel like begin ning and I finish when I drop." West didn't start out as a novelist, though. He was a poet first, but found it • to be too limiting and turned to prose. "The poet is gambling everything on two phrases and if it doesn't work the poem is dead. Whereas, a novelist can gamble on big hunks of material that are floating around," explained West. West stepped into the world of ' the written word with a job on the London Times. Newspaper writing, he believes, is one of the finest disciplines because it teaches you to think within a dimension. "And it's' really creative, in the sense that you can invent your own career," he - said. "There's no sort of rigid progress as there is in academic life: 8.A., M.A., 'M.F.A., Ph.D., death." Although West's first novel garnered good reviews, he said he didn't like to talk about it. He said it took him several years and another book before he could look at his first novel dispassionately and tell himself that it was something which never should have been written. "Trouble is that people always seem to find it and use it against you this is like the other thing, you know, 'lO years ago you said so and so and now you're saying this.' And you say, 'Well, I've changed my mind.' • That's great, but you can't change your publishing career. That is always and forever going to be the first novel you printed," he said. Why do it? Why write? After listening to these blunt questions, West laughed and said, "If - I knew why I needed to write I probably wouldn't need to write another word. Ultimately, you give up saying why do I do it and you just go on doing it. It's a compulsion. I don't think it's anything you can choose to do or not to do. " Rendell spins classic thriller "Death Notes," by Ruth Rendell, Pantheon Books, $9.95, 208 pages. By CINDY DESKINS Daily Collegian Staff Writer With the cleverness of Agatha Christie, Ruth Rendell spins yet another intriguing murder mystery to delight mystery fans. This one has all the necessary twists •and turns, unex pected bodies, international travel and whiffs of comedy to make "Death Notes" a real gem. The story starts out in the British town of Kingsmarkham with the not-so-original murder of an old, famous musician a few days before he is to be married and subsequently change his will to disinherit his daughter. The daughter, of course, has just returned to the country to visit her father after a 19-year estrangement. But then the fun starts. The victim's fiancee, Dinah, reveals to the police chief that the dead man, Camargue, had seen his daughter and accused her of being a fraud. With this informa tion in the back of his mind, Chief Inspector Wexford sees the Mystery a late-night chiller "Missing Woman," by Michael Z. Lewin, Alfred A. Knopf, $10.95, 213 pages. By. ELAINE WETMORE Daily Collegian Staff Writer There's nothing like a good mystery novel to save a night when a jaunt down to the bars was declined because this term you are not going to fall behind in your classes but British maritime history and philosophers of ancient Greece? "Missing Woman" by Micheal Z. Lewin is an easy reading, immensely entertaining bit of literature, guaranteed to capti vate: the imagination. It is one of those novels that begs a reader to solve the case himself and absolutely defies him to put it down before having turned the very last page. The sleuth of the hour is Albert Samson, an intriguing character who's beset with financial woes, an eviction notice and a bleak future in the private detection business. However, in the midst of the packing and the worrying, Samson is hired by a woman who is looking for an old college chum. Although nt:4ta: 4 1127.41:2:4 1 1.27.412V11:2;41112:14W1QV1t:411,72;8112.;46,74861.:4112.;412V11,72;46,2•2/12:411:41:1We:t:4111,741112V112a1b:Vtac,116W1LV11ie,1112.;4616,11,2V621:4&a7,4ka;41,72:41,1V112g451;! k , l ..•.11,.•.11",•.11P.0.11/4..1114;711P...0.9.4por.i tot., top., p...1,7•71..•.1..•.1 Mg M4,17:4,.•.“...1t.e.4..•01,.•.it.,•.10.•Ap.e....ia PENN STATE CATHOLIC CENTER ME • • • • 'La:: • ME • 'slf, • • :;1R •=• er, •••• •••• Ir. Ire fro ••••• •••0 4 ••••,, 1,0 4 •••• 1,0 on, •••• i re, O.* ,47, 11,111 111..• 411 0.9. p0r.q..e.qp.e.et.0.4 .0. 1.0.1 . i` r NCAA DIV. II RIVAL The 7 and 1 ICERS! %win se Es is mu me NE wipm Es mmi mom ma mu Is Is ens Imp um Es um Es iso NE Eli MN NMI MO MEMO NW U-178 WELCOME PIZZA PARTY Today after 5:15 p.m. Mass (folk) Memorial Lounge --t Chapel IN :A11101:1]41:0 This Sunday Dec, 6th 9:30 - 11:00 p.m. Masses in Forum December 4th and sth (9:15 p.m.) CORTLAND STATE invades The PSU Ice Pavilion To Battle .4, This Weekend!! Tickets at the Rink Students $l.OO One of the toughest homestands of the Season! The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. 4, 1981-2:) daughter, Natalie, as a sly evil woman . From then on, the detective work of the inspector, a man of many literary quotes, and his assistant, the newly married and rejuvenated Burden, is skillfully described by Rendell to involve the reader in every possible aspect of the story and, eventually, that elusive answer to the mystery. In order to prove her innocence, Natalie calls on old family friends to vouch for her. She looks like Natalie after 19 years; she speaks all the foreign languages as fluently as Natalie; she knows little family secrets that only Natalie would know; but can she play the violin like Natalie? There's the clincher that leads Wexford on a trip to Califor nia to find out about the Natalie that lived there for the past 19 years. Rendell does a marvelous job of describing a Briton's view of California and Californians in Wexford's search through Natalie's past. Rendell excells in the traditonal murder mystery format without succumbing to the traditional plots and answers. "Death Notes" is well written suspense novel that keeps the reader guessing until the very end. the case seems straightforward at first a runaway wife an untimely murder throws a monkeywrench into the machinery and a purpose into Samson's life. Priscilla Pynne is the missing woman whom local Nashville • gossips have assumed left with the suave, fun-loving Billy • Boyd. Priscilla's husband Frank isn't actively searching for his wife, nor is anyone else until Boyd's body is found in a secluded wood. And since Boyd and Priscilla disappeared the same night, who is naturally suspected? The search is on. Samson tackles the case with all the wit and intuition he can muster. He engages the help of the Indianapolis police depart ment though he always manages to keep just ahead of them; he travels about the country following up on mere hunches and even survives three attempts on his life. "Missing Woman" maintains a hell-bent pace throughout, but doesn't introduce any new gimmicks or bizarre twists designed to keep it from being a run-of-the-mill • detective novel. Lewin, even in the traditional pattern of murder, murderer, crimestopper, has produced an exceptional sus pense story. (8:00 p.m.) Don't Miss the Action!! ~~0 ~~ min 1