o—The Daily Collegian Thursday, Dec. 10, 1981 111 I NEW YORK I TIMES I SUBSCRIBERS: 111 IF YOU •HAVEN 4 T I RECEIVED YOUR WINTER ICOMBINATION I CALL 234-1788 Ell 1,1144444414, se. ATLi, Thanks for helping .. 41 " us to "look into our' V 49 hearts." You made it ei 100 miles seem like 1p agi V 1! You're Great! 1 . The AO fl U-154 4,4414444444, eeeeeeeesnoe. On Drugs, Inc. • needs Volunteers - 4 D. On Drugs, Inc. is seeking volunteers to (-) staff agency hotline counselor positions. a O Must give one year commitment after r% successfully completing 8 week training 1,) program. Potential for paid employment. (31 i) Counseling background helpful but not O '"" required. Applications available: 236 A IL) South Allen St., State College. Applica lion deadline: Dec. 14, 1981. No phone O CO calls. An EOE. QQQO6)iii)OO6)QQQO4) taSt . 'We e*** (WWII e A'2,l 'Rea< S. Bea avec Me. 1 ecioone.. 2.3-5655 kkoOs ** 00.2%00 9.0.-IW.tts. A033..00 F6.•Suo. CHICKE\ .c t rict • Country Tavern Tl 5 crickiewoxi drive in fioffrees • 137-1048 tijoam to 100 a.m. SPEAK OUT w e 3 3 ``;4o°°'° Itlli spk ' r .,.. ,tt\ • .•1/ s .. . if or k , 130 Heister St. rk/ SE O FINE BEEF LUNCHEON SELECTIONS HOT ROAST BEEF HOT TURKEY SANDWICH 325 FISH SANDWICH PRIME RIB SANDWICH' OPENFACED . . RIBEYE STEAK SANDWICH OPENFACED . 45a CORNED BEEF ON RYE .......... ...... . 275 ARENABURGER ALL THE ABOVE SERVED WITH STEAK FRIES GLASS OF WINE OR BEVERAGE Create Your Own Salad with Sandwich 1.50 EXTRA 130 Heiste "PRIME TIME" Every Thursday night $l.OO off prithe rib dinners Never a better time, never a better place, never a better price for roast prime rib beef at its tender, juicy best: All prime rib dinners include the fabulous ARENA Salad Buffet Join Us For Lunch! The Fabulous Salad Buffet Served daily 11:30 - 3 p.m. FEATURING HAND CARVED TOP SIRLOIN OF BEEF By STELLA TSAI Daily Collegian Staff Writer The controversy over the conversion of two floors in Beaver Hall to interest houses is reminiscent of a similar situa tion. last Spring Term in Porter Hall. The fifth and sixth floors of Porter were converted into the Engineering and Applied Sciences interest house this year, which forced the occupants to seek reassignment elsewhere for Fall Term 1981. "It still kind of upsets me a lot and I see the same thing unfolding," said Mark Bianchi (sth-electrical engineering), a former Porter resident, in regard to the interest houses that will be located in Solidarity petition may be presented to VValesa By SCOTT G. OTT Daily Collegian Staff Writer A petition supporting the Polish workers movement may be presented to Solidarity leader Lech Walesa if he makes a planned visit to the United States in March, the chairman of the University chapter of College Republi cans said. Suzanne Harbolis said although the petition, which is signed by about 5,000 students and area citizens, is a symbolic gesture, it should give hope to the workers. "The average worker doesn't know how successful the Solidarity movement has been in terms of world wide support, because the Polish press has been con trolled and censored," Harbolis said. Harbolis and about 25 other students are winding down a three-month "Poland Will Be Free" campaign which took them from classrooms to banquets in search of signatures. Ralph Reed, national projects director of the College Republicans National Committee, said efforts made by the Penn State chapter are part of a nationwide cam paign. More than 100 chapters of the organization have collected about 200,000 signatures. 3.45 BAKED HAM AND CHEESE .... 2.45 4.50 - TUNA SALAD 2.75 EGG SALAD GRILLED REUBEN Beaver controversy paralleled Displacement for interest housing similar to Porter last year r 237-0361 Fruit Pies, Cakes Ice Cream 1.25 237-0361 Beaver starting Fall Term 1982. Bill Marshall (9th-finance), last year's house president for fifth and sixth floors Porter last year, said, "We were all upset the way the administration went about it. It was also two weeks before finals." Marshall said his grades were affected last year because of time he spent ap pealing the interest house decision rather than studying. Terry Riley (sth-engineering), a for mer Porter resident, said, "I felt shock and disbelief because how swift the deci sion was." Pat Peterson, associate director of the Office of Residential - Life Programs, said The campaign began on Sept. 1 the one-year anniversary of the signing of the Gdansk Agreement between the Communist government of Poland and Solidarity, Reed said. The agreement allows the forma-. tion of workers' unions. "The movement is something college students can identify with, and it's very important to demonstrate' support for the cause," he said. "The nation would explode in anger if anything was done by the Soviet Union or any other country to stop Solidarity, and the Polish people are living under a 24- hour threat," Reed added. Reed said members of the Polish Workers Task Force, based in the United States, made contact with workers in Poland, who said they were pleased with the petition effort. Loysous Mazeuski, president of the Polish National Alliance in the United States, has contacted Walesa by telephone, and the Solidarity leader is "aware of the petition and pleased," Reed said. Although Walesa could not make a scheduled visit to Washington on Nov. 16 because of labor tension in Poland, the College Republican National Committee Tuesday that the Engineering and Ap plied Sciences interest house will move to Beaver next fall. She said she is consid ering moving Porter residents who were displaced last year back to. Porter. But Riley said, "We aren't too pleased since we got kicked out for no reason. Nobody liked the first move and I doubt if they would like to make another." In the spring, residents of fifth and sixth floors Porter were told of the possi bility of an interest house on their floor at 11 p.m. one night, and by noon the next day they were informed the decision was final, Riley said. Some floor members found available rooms on the fifth and sixth floors in 4WZ s 'aZ=:!k- There's a better way to get there this Christmas. Greyhound is going your way with trouble-free, economical service. You can leave directly from campus or other nearby locations Most schedules have stops at convenient suburban locations. And talk about comfort. You get a soft, reclining seat and plenty of room for carry-on bags. So next trip, go with the ride you can rely on. Go Greyhound. Friday PENN ST. CAMPUS LOT 80 PITTSBURGH Harrisburg Prussia PHILADELPHIA Wilkes-Barre Scranton Sunday PHILADELPHIA King of Prussia Harrisburg PITTSBURGH Scranton Wilkes-Barre PENN ST. CAMPUS LOT 80 6:15p 6:45p 9:50p 9:50p 9:45p 9:10p For convenient daily service and complete information call 237-5865. Schedules operate every weekend except during holidays, exam week and semester break. Prices and schedules subject to change. Some service requires reservations. GO GREYHOUND /4" And leave the driving to us. ~, .... 1n..._ °•• _~„~„~- "Ho-Ho-Ho!" 12:20p 4:10p 4:55p 6:55p 7:10p 8:30p 7:45p 9:00p 7:30p 8:00p 5:30p 5:50p 6:05p 8:OOp 8:OOp Shunk Hall on their own, Riley said, because the displaced Porter residents were not offered reassignment together. Bianchi said, "We had a lottery to determine who could live in the area." Also, the Porter residents were told oil , their mandatory relocation late in the year, so apartment hunting was difficult, Marshall said. "They weren't really considerate to ward us," he said. During a hearing with Peterson "con cerning the reassignment, Riley said that he and other students presented a plan that outlined several suggestions for future interest housing. still conducted 27 candlelight, marches around the country, Reed said. The largest gathering involved more than 1,000 students at George Washington Univer sity, in Washington, D.C.. Because the Penn State chapter of the College Repub licans has collected more signatures than any other, college chapter, Harbolis may be part of a delegation that will present the petitions to Walesa during his scheduled appearance at the Polish National Alliance banquet to be held in Chicago in March, she said. "Although we haven't been granted it yet, there is a chance that we might also get a White House reception with the President," she said. Gov. Dick Thornburgh recently presented a procla mation commending the Pennsylvania branches of the Republican College Council's and the College Republi can National Committee's efforts in support of the Polish workers. "I urge all students on campuses throughout Pennsyl vania to join with the College Republicans in hoping that: the voice of reason and human equality will reach the ears of the persons in authority in all countries where freedoms are repressed," Thornburgh said, fk4:jj* lg. r.:: --- e , 01901 Greyhound Lines, Inc imam sports Penn State's John Hanrahan (left), shown iii action last weekend, won his match last night, but the Lions fell to Michigan, 19-17, at the Wolverines' home mats. Philadelphia's Greg Adams (left) mixes it up with the Penguins' defenseman Pat Price in last night's 4-1 Flyers win in Pittsburgh. Flyers put Pens on ice 4 , PITTSBURGH (AP) Ken Linseman and Bobby Clarke scored first-period goals and Bill Barber added two goals in the third period as the Philadelphia Fly ers ran their winning streak to five games with a 4-1 NHL victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins last night. Linseman scored shorthanded at 11:55 Aeof the first period, intercepting a pass by Pittsburgh defenseman Randy Carlyle and backhanding his own rebound past goalie Michel Dion. Four minutes later, Clarke fought off a check from Carlyle and sent the puck past Dion at the corner of the net. Wildcats sink Lion swimmers b quite handily ' After a "miracle" weekend in which the men's swimming team finished fourth in the Penn State Relays, the Nittany Lions suffered a major setback yesterday by losing to Villanova, 71-42. According to distance ace Rick Kenne dy, the team went into the meet overcon fident from the big weekend. "We definitely had a letdown from last weekend," Kennedy said. "We were un emotional going in there. It was a real slap in the face because this was a meet we could have won "They took the first event and we tied up the meet by winning the second event. Everything fell apart after that." Kennedy, along with diver Mike Ceca tiello, were the only two Nittany Lions to take first places in the meet. Kennedy won the 1000-yard freestyle, to the event in which he holds the Penn State record, and was closely followed by Nittany Lion Mike Murray. Cecatiello captured the overall one meter diving competition. Second in the one-meter dive was Cecatiello's room- mate, Dale Dmitrzak. The two divers • have alternated victories in the diving competition this year. For captain Andy Cosgarea, the strength of the Wildcats might have been a surprise. "They were the strongest they have been in the four years I have been here," he said: • - - —by Greg Loder Paul Gardner scored for Pittsburgh at 2:08 of the third period, slipping the puck by goalie Pete Peeters for his 15th of the year. Lineman scored shorthanded as the Flyers successfully killed off 4:05 in penalty time assessed to winger Paul Holmgren. Holmgren was given a major' and two game misconducts at 7:57 of the first period after an altercation with Penguin defenseman Paul Baxter. Holmgren punched Baxter three times while Baxter was stretched out on the ice, then took a swing at referee Andy Van Hellemond after the fight. s~ , . nS. ~~ ~ f> • x+:w~ds"" ... ... . Erving paces Sixere win over Nuggets PHILADELPHIA (AP) Julius Erv ing scored 27 points and Darryl Dawkins added 19 in three periods as the Philadel phia 76ers blew away the Denver Nug gets 137-109. in a National Basketball Association game last night. Neither Erving nor Dawkins played the final quarter after the 76ers tallied 46 points, an NBA high for a period, in the third quarter. Philadelphia boosted its record to 16-3 and stayed on top in the Atlantic bivision while handing Denver, 8-11, its seventh straight loss. The Nuggets have never won in Philadelphia, losing all nine games here since entering the league in 1976. Kiki Vandeweghe was high for Denver with 24 points, followed by Dan Issel, 21, and Alex English, 16. Bobby Jones scored 17 points for the 76ers, who had six players in double figures. The 76ers hit 15 of 21 field goals to lead after the first quarter 35-30. Issel and English each had 12 to pace Denver. The Nuggets closed to within one point at 55-54 when Glen Gondrezick scored a layup with 2:23 left in the half. That was the closest the Nuggets ever' got. Virginia downs Duke; Louisville survives scare AP Laserphoto CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) Freshman Jimmy Miller and sophomore Othell Wilson, with a little help from All-American Ralph Sampson, keyed a late Virgin ia surge as the fifth-ranked Cavaliers overcame Duke's Blue Devils 92-83 in college basketball last night. The conquest enabled Virginia to remain unbeaten at 6-0 and dropped Duke to 1-3. It was the Atlantic Coast Conference opener for both teams. Miller, a 6-8 forward, scored 26 points 18 in the second half while Wilson tallied 18 14 after intermission. Miller and Wilson combined for 17 straight Cavalier points late in the game as Virginia overcame an eight point deficit to beat Duke for the fifth straight time. Sampson, Wilson and Miller teamed up to rally the Cavaliers and spoiled the. Blue Devils' upset bid. Virginia still trailed by six points, 71-65, with 7:13 remaining when the Cavaliers made their move. They scored nine straight points on a pair of free throws by Sampson, a three-point play by Miller after a Wilson Photo by Nathan Lader Wrestlers drop decision to Michigan By LEE DeORIO Daily Collegian Sports Writer The beginning of a long road trip is often the most important part of the journey. It is there that momentum and confidence is either gained or lost in front of hostile crowds. Penn State's wrestling team opened a grueling road trip last night in Ann Arbor, Mich., on the wrong foot with a narrow 19-17 loss to Michigan (1-2).. It was an important meet for the Nittany Lions ( I-1) because they will not wrestle in the friendly confines of Rec Hall until Jan.3o, long after even the most persistent New Year's hangov ers have disappeared. The' Nittany Lions took a 17-13 lead into the final match between heavyweights Jim Sleeper of Penn State and Michi gan's Eric Klasson. All Sleeper had to do was stay within eight points of Klasson and the Nittany Lions would have come out winners in their first dual road meet of the season. Instead, Sleeper was disqualified for stalling with only 17 seconds left in the match and trailing 7-0. "Eric (Klasson) took the action to Sleeper throughout the entire match and he definitely made him look bad," Michigan head coach Dale Bahr said. "I think the referee made a legitimate call in throwing Sleeper out - of the match." Penns t State took control of the match early by winning three out of the meet's first four matches. Michigan's Joe McFarland decisioned the Nittany Lion's Philadelphia's Maurice Cheeks (right) drives into Denver's Billy McKinney in an NBA game last in Philadelphia steal, a short jumper by Wilson and a 12-footer by Miller. Duke never got any closer than three points the rest of the way as Virginia connected on 12 consecutive free throws in the final four minutes. PHILADELPHIA (AP) Sophomore Granger Hall tossed in 21 points in sparking undefeated Temple to its sixth victory of the season, a 54-51 defeat of South Carolina in the second game of a Palestra college basketball double-header last night. Bradley, led by forward Mitchell Anderson's 16 points, defeated St. Joseph's 58-45 in the opening game. David Thirdkill had 13 points and 12 rebounds for Bradley, while Bryan Warrick topped St. Joseph's, 4-1, with 12 points. WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) Wiley Brown rebounded a missed Louisville free-throw attempt and, with four seconds remaining, went back up with a short victory. Temple 54, South Carolina 51 Louisville 73, Purdue 71 Lions' Farrell a finalist for 1981. Lombardi Award Penn State offensive guard Sean Far rell is one of four finalists vying for the Lombardi Award, symbolic of the na- tion's top collegiate lineman of 1981, which will be awarded today. The other finalists are defensive epd Billy Ray Smith of Arkansas, linebacker Bob Cra ble of Notre Dame and University of Texas defensive tackle Kenneth Sims. Farrell, 6-3, 265, is the first player in 20 years to start three seasons for the Nitta ny Lions. A native of Westhampton Beach, N.Y., Farrell earned first team honors this season on six different All- American squads. Sims earned first team All-American status, helped the Longhorns to advance to the Cotton Bowl New Year's Day against Alabama and was runnerup for the Outland Trophy. Sims suffered a bro- Chandler defends WBA title ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) -- Jeff Chandler defends his World Boxing Asso ciation bantamweight title last night against Eijiro Murata, the boxer he fought to a draw eight months ago. Chandler, 26+2, says retaining the title is crucial if he is to fullfill the aspirations that have eluded him since taking the crown from Julian Solis in Miami a year ago. "We still have more ground to cover," Chandler said between workouts at the begin road trip, Carl DeStefanis 4-1 for his second victory over the Penn State sophomore in less than a week at 118 pounds. McFarland pinned DeStefanis in the semi-finals of the Penn State Invitatio nal last weekend. However, the Nittany Lions came back with victories by Scott Lynch (126), Billy Marino (134) and Gary Kaschak (142) to grab a 10-3 lead. Michigan gained a key victory when John Beljan upset Eric Childs 5-4 at 150 pounds. Childs had shut out Beljan 4-0 in the semi-finals of the Penn State Invitational. The two teams then split the next four matches. Michigan's Nemir Nadhir defeated Eric Brugal 19-11 at 158 pounds and the Wolverine's Pat McKay edged Joel Johnson 3-2 at 190 pounds. Sandwiched between those two Michigan victories were a pair of decisions for the Nittany Lions. At 167 pounds, John Hanrahan defeated Scott Rechsteiner 9-1 and Bob Harr crushed Kevin Hill 10-2,at 177 pounds. That left the outcome of the meet in the hands of Klasson and Sleeper with the Wolverines squeaking out the win. The meet becomes even more significant when you consider that Clarion, who along with Penn State are members of the Eastern Wrestling League, handled Michigan 23-13 earlier in the season. And before the Nittany Lions return home from this demanding road trip, they will pay a visit to the Golden Eagles' home floor. Penn State will return to the area to compete in the Mat Town USA Tournament Saturday and Sunday at Lock Haven. jump shot that lifted the third-ranked Cardinals to a 73- 71 college basketball victory over Purdue last night. The Cardinals, raising their record to 3-0 for the season, rallied from a five-point deficit. Louisville was led by reserve Poncho Wright, who had 12 of his 16 points in the first half. Jerry Eaves added 15 and Smith wound up with 14. SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) The Syracuse University Orangemen, with forward Leo Rautins scoring a career high 25 points, pulled away in the final minutes to defeat St. Bonaventure 74-67 last night in non-conference basketball. The victory avenged a 74-71 upset last year and improved Syracuse to 4-1 on this season. St. Bonaven ture lost its first game in four starts. The Bonnies' guard Mark Jones poured in 20 points 12 of them in the first half. Eric Santifer scored 17 points for Syracuse and Ron Payton contributed 14. Andy Moore came off the bench to score 13 points for the Bonnies. The Daily Collegian Thursday, Dec. 10 Syracuse 74, St. Bonnie's 67 ken ankle against Texas Christian and won't be able to play against the Crimson Tide. Smith, the only junior among the fi nalists, is completing a round of ban quets before returning to Razorback workouts in preparation for a Gator Bowl appearance against North Carolina. Crable will be the first finalist in the 12- year history of the Lombardi trophy to miss the $125-plate benefit dinner. Cra ble, a Fighting Irish team captain, elect ed to remain in South Bend to attend the team's football banquet. The Lombardi Award is named in honor of the former Green Bay and Washington coach who died of cancer in 1970. Pittsburgh's Hugh Green won the 198 Q Lombardi Award. Sands Hotel and Casino The title made the 25-year-old fighter's name known, but not the way he antic ipated. "I'm trying to be a better boxer and keep this title," Chandler said. "Being a champion, there's this place to go and that place to go, endorsing shirts for people and going to banquets. Life has really taken off. There hasn't been too much rest for me. And I wouldn't change it for anything." AP Lasorphoto
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers