The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, March 29, 1982, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    opinions
editorial opinion
The art of compromise and the art of writing
It's like 20 weeks of boot camp everyone
knows they _must take. It isn't much fun
while it's going on but like the Marine
who graduates from basic training before
his proud parents and girlfriend it's all
worthwhile in the end.
Those necessary evils English 10 and
20 are needed to discipline students in
the useful art of writing. However, , some
times these beginning composition courses
get bogged down in banal compositions
and irrelevant assignments.
As part of the transition to the semester
calendar, the English department has
proposed some beneficial structural
changes for beginning English. classes.
That's a favorable sign that the calendar
conversion will be more than regurgitating
the same course material under a new
name.
The English department's first proposal
to offer a freshman/junior year compo-
reader opinion/dorm contracts
Editor's note: The following letters concern
ing dorm contract issues were submitted by
representatives of on-campus housing groups.
Hard pill to swallow
The recurring debate over the value and
privileges of interest houses seems to be inspired
mainly from ignorance. From without appears
to exist a minsunderstanding of the sense behind
an interest house. From within, 'one often sees a
confusion concerning the mission of the house.
To the best of my understanding, President
Oswald authorized the foundation of the . interest
house program to encourage an atmosphere of
heightened academic awareness and involve
ment in dormitory living. Interest houses are
intended to stimulate an interchange of ideas
through such mechanisms as an extensive sched
ule of programs, close contact with a faculty
associate and the controversial but essential
social interaction. Some houses have a specified
departmental attachment and others, such as
Renaissance House, aspire to the more difficult
goal of a general education.
My argument regarding the situation at hand
namely, reserved space and dorm contract
lines -- centers on, the need for continuity.
Students entering into an interest house ought to
be immediately struck with the difference in
atmosphere and the degree of involvement as
opposed to other dormitory floors. This situation
is tremendously dependent on a returning core of
students versed with the purpose of the house
and dedicated to preserving its distinction and
direction. Without these conditions, any sort of
continuation of an interest house tradition would
survive only be chance.
Now for the pill that is hard to swallow.
Assuming that interest houses display a laudable
effort to enhance the academic environment of
the University, their maintenance should be
provided for. I propose that to insert a risk factor
as great as revoking reserved space or forcing
students to wait in dorm contract lines is unwise.
Considering that interest house members are
under a continual pressure to fulfill their pur
pose, the loss of a housing guarantee could easily
undermine the institution. Imagine the level of
dedication you might have to a volunteer group
from which you might be expelled irregardless
of your contributions. For these reasons, I would
be pessimistic of the future of interest houses if
these supports are lifted. •
Above all, though, I would invite any student
who is challenged by the types of goals I men
tioned above to visit an interest house and
'Well, I can't say right
2 AM (SN) MOVIE Biography (BW)
"The Winning Team." (1952) Ronald Reagan
as the immortal baseball pitcher Grover Cleve
land Alexander. Doris Day, Frank Lovejoy,
Eve Miller, James Millican. (2 hrs., 25 min.)
—TV Guide, March 23, 1982.
With the possible exception of Hawkeye and
Hot Lips on "M*A*S*H" reruns, President
Reagan is on television more often these days
than just about anybody. Which is both good and
bad.
Good because the public should see and
perceive the president as being both accessible
and responsive. Bad because the president is
i.lsoher responsive nor accessible.
When it comes to the media, Reagan is mostly
visual and very little audio.
Outside of his late-night movies, Reagan's
television existence primarily amounts to photo
opportunities, where he waves and smiles to the
cameras on his way to a plane or car, or when
he's greeting an important guest. Occasionally,
he'll provide a quip in answer to an aggressive
reporter's serious question.
Ah,
/&:07,/,4-/-
sition program was rejected by the
powers that be because of a lack of funds.
So the department came up with English
15 (an intensified version of English 10)
and four English courses offered anytime
during or after student's fourth semester
the middle of his sophomore year. The
idea is to allow enough Commonwealth
campus students to take the second En
glish course before coming to University
Park, thus saving money here.
After a student has mastered English 15,
he can move on to one of four English
options depending on his interest or his
major or both.
While this plan doesn't have the advan
tages of offering students a chance to
refine their English skills as they ap
proach graduation, it will give them the
chance to write about ideas they are inter
ested in. The new plan is also an im
provement over the department's original
become involved. It may be your most reward
ing experience at Penn State.
Dan Bollag, former president
Renaissance House
March 15
Major drawbacks
Guaranteed Reassignment is an alternate sys
tem for assigning dorm rooms. This system,
which was used by the University before the
first-come, first served basis, is a system where
a person wishing to remain in the same room for
the next year, simply submits their contract
early and is then guaranteed that room. The
remaining rooms are allotted to freshmen, re
serve space and branch campus students.
This sounds like a logical, trouble-free system,
but there are a few major drawbacks. The
University had to abandon this system because
the number of people who wanted guaranteed
reassignment along with the incoming freshmen,
and the number of reserve spaces added up to
more rooms than were available. This system
may still be used with a few changes so as to
eliminate the problem of more spaces requested
than available.
As members of the Dorm Contract Acceptance
Committee (DCAC), we are studying this alter
native method. Another problem that arose was
that too many people wanted direct room
switches to obtain wanted rooms and this caused
problems with housing. DCAC proposes that if
this system were to be used, a clause should be
included to prevent abuse of the direct room
switch policy, except in emergency situations.
Mike Foote, ARHS Representative for West
Halls,
Dean Ball, South Halls President
March 21
Sororities entitled
Each year thousands of students are told that
dorm space will once again be allocated on a first
come/first served basis. Lines begin to form
earlier and letters to the editor of The Daily
Collegian about the inequity of reserved space
also come earlier each year. One such group that
is entitled to this controversial reserve space are
the women who make up the sorority system at
Penn State.
Sororities are socially based organizations.
They depend on close friendships and a feeling of
Otherwise, the nightly 30-second news shots of
the president are of him speaking to the lowa
legislature or building dikes or horseback rid
ing at his ranch in California.
There are enough of the photo opportunities
and "action" shots to maintain the public
illusion of accessibility, while in reality the
president slips into a world of isolation and
confinement. This has been especially true ever
since the assassination attempt on Reagan,
which took place a year ago tomorrow.
"I think every president has over time felt
confined in the White House," said David R.
Gergen, the administration's head of commu
nications. "The fact is you simply can't walk
down the street; you can't go out to lunch; you
can't do anything without having a retinue of
agents, photographers, reporters, assistants
a long parade of other people going with you."
The media, eager for stories and eager to
inform the public, must be placated. The White
House has obliged by making available all the
president's men, from top advisers Ed Meese,
Jim Baker and Mike Deaver to Secretary of
State Alexander Haig. They provide the meat
and potatoes that normally originates with the
president. The media swallows it, partly be
cause the White House correspondents like
Reagan personally, partly because they like,
being spoonfed.
There are times the president still likes to
reach the Masses directly, but he prefers to do it
on his own terms.
As a former radio broadcaster, TV host and
veteran of the rUbber chicken circuit, he knows
how to give a speech and how to effectively read
a teleprompter. He also knows how to warm an
proposal requiring students to only have
one semester of English.
Students would choose from:
• English 201, with a • social science
emphasis.
• English 211,
humanities.
• English 218, technical writing.
• English 219, business writing.
But the courses still have to be approved
by the University Faculty Senate's Curric
ular Affairs Committee.
Is the plan that will be presented to the
committee the ultimate in English instruc
tion? Probably not but it is an im
provement and as Wendell V. Harris,
English department head, says, it won't
decrease the writing competence of Uni
versity students.
It will "kind of improve it, we hope," he
said.
Ideals are never easy to reach.
unity to accomplish the various events that Penn
State students and the community have come to
expect from the Greek System. These events
include Homecoming, the Dance Marathon and
the Regatta. The only way to organize such
events is to be within close access to each other
so that communication is not lost through- va
rious channels.
Sororities also have a contract with Resi
dential Life that guarantees them a suite in the
dorm they occupy and reserved space in certain
cases. Girls who live off-campus are required to
wait in line to be put in temporary space. These
girls are then given last priority to move out to a
regular space not on the floor at which time
direct room switches to the sorority floor may be
worked out. To get reserved space, a girl must be
a sister or a pledge by the Spring Term of the
year in which she is requesting housing. There
are various other restrictions that Residential
Life and the Panhellenic Council put on the
sororities in the way of housing.
A question often asked is: Why don't sororities
move off campus? There are numerous reasons.
The top one is that there are no houses left in the
area that can accommodate 45-56 girls that the
dorm floor and fraternity houses do. Money is
also a problem. Most sororities here at Penn
State cannot afford to move off campus. A major
reason for this is that most national offices would
not back a move such as this because a chapter
would be so far removed from the other sorority
chapters. This would be particularly detrimental
during formal rush when there is limited time to
accomplish certain goals.
Sororities need unity to function. Living to
gether provides that unity. The University, by
way of a contractual agreement provides the
spaces for the sororities to live together. Sorori
ties are not a group of "close-minded elitists" by
any means. They are open to any female stu
dents who wants to be part of various campus
events and philanthropies and also to enjoy the
fun of forming close friendships by living togeth
er.
Pam Santoro
Special-Interest Group Representative
Residence Hall Advisory Board
March 15
Input needed
Penn State, Home of the Nittany Lion . . . or
Line? It certainly seemed to prove to be the
latter as the weekend of the "Great Contract
Race" resumed once again.
Little did many of the students, standing in line
now, but please take my photo
audience with simple messages and anecdotes,
earning him the label of "the Reader's Digest of
politics."
So when the president has made direct ad
dresses via national television, they have been
warmly received by both, the media and the
public. But these are definitely one-sided.
George Reedy, press secretary under Lyndon
Johnson, describes such presidential exercises
as merely "a means by which a man can
conduct a monologue in public and convince
himself that he is conducting a dialogue with the
public."
Traditionally, the most reasonable facsimile
cir
octiousrvAmoP;arrirveu4c , _crsortiontar
All
with an emphasis in
this year, realize that the system of allocating
dorm contracts on a first-come, first-served
basis was developed by a group of students in
1978. The students were members of the Dorm
Contract 'Acceptance Committee. The commit
tee was set up by the Association of Residence
Hall Students. After extensive research, meeting
with Housing and Residential Life administra
tors, and many student surveys, DCAC sub
mitted the first-come, first-served system to the
dorm residents. It was met with almost unani
mous approval. DCAC then gave the proposal to
the Residential Life and Housing offices.
So, you see, what has turned into an outdoor
experience is really not a new form of torture set
up by the students to test the endurance of
students to the elements. The first come, first
served allocation of dorm contracts was actually
a system set up by the students for the students.
In 1978, DCAC and the majority of students who
wanted dorm contracts felt that it was the best
and fairest possible way to give the contracts
out.
It's been four years now since students began
to wait in line for dorm contracts. ARHS feels
that the time has come to re-evaluate and find
out how the students feel after being a part of the
first-come, first-served system. A new Dorm
Contract Acceptance Committee has been
formed to investigate the other options available
for a system of handing out dorm contracts. We
need your input though. How do you feel after
waiting in line for a dorm contract? Would you
do it again? Is there a better way than the
current system? DCAC wants to make a recom
mendation to Housing and Residential Life by
May 15 on a system that provides the allocation
of dorm contracts. Whether it will be the present
system or a new one, that's up to you.
Robin Bronk, chairwoman
Dorm Contract Acceptance Committee
March 22
No special
Well, dorm contract lines have come and gone
for another year. Some if us will get contracts
and some of us won't. The thing that bothers me
is that some people will get dorm contracts and
they didn't even stand in line! I'm talking about
all those who have reserved spece: sorority
members, interest house members and athletes.
There are approximately 12,000 available
spaces on campus and nearly half of them aren't
actually available because these peoole have
special privileges merely because they chose.to
join one of these groups.
to a dialogue the president has at his disposal is
the news conference. (That's discounting, of
course, the ineffective call-in talk show and
town meetings of Jimmy Carter).
But Reagan, supposedly the Great Commu
nicator, has shunned this. When the president
holds his news conference scheduled for later
this week, it will only his 11th in 14 months of
office.
That's far less than any other president since
the news conference was first given regular
status by Franklin Roosevelt. Since FDR every
president, including Richard Nixon even
during Watergate has averaged twice as
y . .
j
l A y -,?1
, 1 (
- ' ' l , 11
otbing•
1. •
'`
•
*Kt
<VA:tiV;) I
QUESTION: HOW DO PORCUPINES MAKE WAR 7
ANSWER : VERN! veRY c.AReFuu-Y
privileges
The Daily Collegian
Monday, March 29
Don't get me wrong. I have nothing against
any of these groups and I think it's great people
keep an interest in them and keep joining them. I
just don't think that automatically getting a
dorm room should be included as part of the
deal.
The Association of Residence Hall Students
has backed the "first come, first served" system
of accepting dorm contracts. ARHS also contin
uously reviews this system and looks for alterna
tives. As of yet, no better method has been found.'
It seems to me if "first come, first served" is
supposed to be a fair system, then it should be
fair and equal toward everyone. I would like to
propose that, if this system continues, there
should be no reserved space save one room in
each house for a resident assistant.
Many of you may be thinking, "But sororities
have to live in the dorms!" Contrary to popular
belief, this is not true. The University has agreed
to house them, but they are not forced to live on
campus.
However, my proposal is not an effort to kick
them off campus. It could, in fact, be more
beneficial to them.
I propose that when the time rolls around for
dorm contracts, all those who have now reserved
space should have to stand in line with everyone
else. If they all get contracts, they can be put on
a sorority floor or in an interest house.
Again, I'm not trying to get rid of these groups,
I'm just trying to make the system more fair.
My proposal could actually help these groups.
As it stands now, sororities and interest houses
are somewhat limited in their memberships
because of a limited amount of reserved space. If
there was no reserved space, whoever got a
contract could live on the floor with other mem
bers. The only catch here is that they must get a
contract. In this way, it might be possible to
expand membership far beyond what it is now.
You athletes might be out there thinking:
"What about us?" I can understand that living
on campus is a real convenience, especially
when you have long hours of practice. Again, I'm
not trying to get you off campus; however, I
think that if having this convenience is important
to you, you should stand in line to get your dorm
space.
I believe that this proposal is the fairest way to
distribute dorm contracts if the "first come, first
served" system stays in existence. However, if a
better system comes up, I'm all for it!
Dawn Smith
ARHS representative for Centre Halls
March 15
many press conferences as Reagan
And although all of Reagan's news confer
ences have been nationally televised, none have
been held during prime time. The potential
audience is just too big. And the ensuing compli
cations just too great.
Reagan has a habit, as his one aide termed it,
of "winging it." He often sways from the
briefing books he is given to study and "mis
speaks" himself, erring greatly in basic policy.
He has rewritten America's role in Vietnam.
He has mangled unemployment statistics. He
has labeled Syrian defensive weapons "offen
,sive."
And his attempts at being warm and flippant,
which work with individuals and small groups,
have failed at his news conferences. When
asked at his last conference what it would take
for him to declare war in Cehtral America,
Reagan responded, "I might' get mad if they
bombed the White House."
Only when he has a forthal conference must
the president really do his homework. And he
clearly doesn't like to, for his news conferences
to date have shown a shallow grasp of the major
policies and issues of his own administration.
The starring role is the true test of any actor,
especially when he must perform without
strong supporting actors, be they Doris Day or
Ed Meese.
It is a test Ronald Reagan has failed, for hig
interaction with the media on the public's
behalf has produced many questions and pitiful
ly few answers.
Mike Poorman is an 11th-term journalism and
political science -major and a member of The
Daily Collegian's Board of Opinion.
~W~MMIYYF.f
reader opinion
Correction
Regarding the Editorial Opinion/Topics in the
March 26 issue of The Daily Collegian:
- • Penn State's men's basketball team with
drew from the Eastern Eight three years ago,
not two.
• Penn State at no time "asked to be let back
in the game." Penn State was invited to return.
James I. Tarman, director of athletics
March 26
Time for creativity
At a recent breakfast sponsored by the Centre
County Council for Human Services, state Sen. J.
Doyle Corman said he sees this is a time for
human service agencies to be more creative in
how they go' about providing services. Creativity
is a positive response to the loss of dollars many
agencies are experiencing.
I suggest that the call for creativity be extend
ed further than to just the service providers.
When needs reach a point of desperation who
"do people turn to for help? Their neighbors?
Their churches? Their families? Their friendly,
local neighborhood corporation? Maybe. But
after they exhaust those options and do not get
the care they need, they will turn to government
funded agencies. Those funds did cut he coAt of
care for many who could not afford it otherwise,
especially people between the ages of 18 and 45.
Because of the president we as a people voted
into power, those agencies will not be able to
meet needs as well as before. This is where
creativity comes in.
Families and individuals requesting help from
the variety of human service agencies in Centre
• County are themselves not without strengths and
skills. An offer to donate skills and expertise as
part of receiving services could make a crucial
difference in the ongoing availibility of care.
4 The Sisters of Kappa Kappa Gamma :
* proudly announce their
* newest keymen
* Bob Conlon Tony Petroy
* Bob Tisinai *
U• 154
*lC** ** * * ** f t
* * * * * e t* . e t
I t
4
-•—•••••••- • • • • • • • • '
•
„ . _ •- • . - , ..• . •... . , • . • . - . ~.:, .. , , . , . . . •. • .. - - ..• .. •'• ' '' • . • ~: .•: • ••
' A'olliff T.C:::CDTK(RT S M . on MOND ' AY 4-9 • p.m. .
_
. AL i t u IL lbs A 't
- • . , • CHUNKS or aIICKFN IN A .. •
new ballanirmgre 444 41.11.141
1 4 11141."
'• :' .
I • 611,i:,:c*, TrtA 7f,( ra , -T-wr GR'EAlvly Y - 7 - ' TAI\I6Y SAUCE:, . .
. .
•
**i.f,ll ''.•;:;.:. - A -'(l` , co EESE AND SREAD RUMI3
, .
•
L 1 .
A shoe A shoe for The most It eats up dirt
(fi!..i.':".". !..:'.l.:',' , V - •
...;;; - .:i... ---..,-,- • . TOPP I I\l6 --.gAKEP , :
.
for runners . runners who are comfortable
testAval. ,
..., ive _____,.,. _
anc . :l ., spits
, it:ut.
murder on running shoe
t,,f. - 4-',._ . ~ri.,-,
.. , ...::.(kiv i ~ , - .;, , , c .17,. , , (c I - 1 --- nv T-c . 'l . -- / EN CASSEROLE_^'
r ,- , ..
..•
•
~
igt.,,,, ,, ,......
"... : !. , :•,4....., -"Ir
,;7,; . ±.',,:: : 1i• (-8) 1 J - ) . n F r z\\ 1L SERVI? 'AIIII-1 . who often .
r ~..:;.,! . ,i-,.. ..;...,.,,,,:.:.. ~,,;,,,,,,,,,.,::, --•— ,-,- --,:--- , STATION BAKED • running shoes. on earth.
'. .:-..%:;.:,... '!.. , .Wi ~...../ ~:',...::.V1) • oi-L-' . prefer to fly. ........--..„,rrwk.
Voi-41,..T.,....., arif.
!,;•,. . '!'‘,.,...!'!. r . .... ...4
iA... . .
.
keKgsk6i. bal 4 sap ..,............,,...
\ .... j • #
...,. h e
~....t v i•-: . ,•i•,.-..i6-:: : , ...7; . !b . ,._b . ,..
V '-r i ., For better
i ) F • ,
. . ~,,J. -,,..., , . . ..... . .„
performance on the baseball,
k - obg 'T'i '..-- ' Train ' l.- ( ,).. 1 ' • ' ... 1941 1) 11111 . -.....„44,1)11 .4iP° 1.-.1%
7 softball, football and rubgy
r • - ••• i i ...; :I AO' V4lllfr
i.' : ..... • t,i•
.„.. j Li . ......__________
field, you can't beat a
''.., it a " .411 - M • --,
~ r- , 1 • • . ' (:)
.. !
' \\, - r— , \\‘, ( 3 . a
101 : . „.....„..... The New Not to Gator. The New Balance Gator
'';‘:•:.. : ; : :,:l . i . : 2/ .
.:::::;::::... Z JUNCTION OF COLLEG• 4 GARNER The New • Balance 555 is designed for mention asphalt. For the has a unique houndstooth
second year running, the New outersole.that digs into dirt, then
people who are tough on
Balance 660 is designed running shoes, or who do their Balance 420 is the best selling sheds it with every step you
running in areas that are
for runners who prefer the feel running shoe in America above take. The slim is also remarkably
• ' of the road to the 'feel of a 940. Comfort is the reason. light, protective and comfortable.
tough on shoes. With a unique
. • shoe. It has a light, firm carbon rubber houndstooth With its EVA wedge and Really, now: couldn't you use
Morflex outersole, a Fethalite outersole and combination-lasted midsole, VibraME' Morflex a little Gator aid?
BLACK CAUCUS ELECTIONS :
wedge and midsole, a double
density Lunars Pillow ;
design, it's the most durable
running shoe New Balance
outersole and Lunaris Pillow
footbed, it achieves a level of
Available in a variety of widths •
4Ars
and double-extended Surlyn comfort that's uniquely
has ever made.
Counter. Yet for all this, . New Balance. new balance AV
Available in a variety of widths.
it weighs in at a mere 9 ounces.
, . Available in a variety of widths. Gator
• • Available in a variety of widths. .
Thurs. April Ist CP Fri. April 2nd . •_...,,, . new balance _,
=M. new balance 4 - -
45 . •
• new balance Alit 555 420
• PRES. -V. PRES. - ASST. V. PRES. - TRES. - SEC..
. 660
Candidate applications available in RM. 19 HUD . .
•
. - ° REG 518 6 REG i• i 0
) 'O. : REG 3Pli r REG
• DEADLINE•
• FRI. MARCH 26 ,
' NOW 47 88
NOW 4488 NOW 3988 NOW 2988
.
•
.
• .
ELECTIONS CHAIRMAN .
DAVID O. BYRD ,i ALSO THE LARGEST SELECTION, FAIR & FOUL WEATHER RUNNING APPAREL
• . •
•
R-032 063-0047
Find out what needs an agency is experiencing
that is giving you or your family care. Volunteer.
More than likely there are some demands that
you could help with. Plumbers, builders, cooks,
typists, car mechanics, seamstresses, electri
cians, accountants, managers and more all have
skills that will help human service providers
meet the challenges of funding cuts.
It is ironic that the "New Federalism" brings
John Kennedy's quite to mind: "Ask not what
your country can do for you. Ask what you can do
for your country." Put another way, now is the
time to ask not only what can human services
can do for you. Ask also what can you can do for
them. That is a creative response to the econom
ic realities of the 1980 s.
Dianne Marshall,executive director
Strawberry Fields, Inc.
March 23
Thrilling sport
I am writing in response to Tom Mosser's
cartoon about hockey in The Daily Collegian on
March 19.
Fighting in hockey is at the lowest point this
year than it has been' in the past five years. I
agree that some people watch hockey to see the
fights, but most fans watch the game for the
thrill of the action. Yes, Tom, hockey is an
exciting game to watch when it is played correct
ly, as it was this year by our own Nittany Lion ice
hockey team.
No team fights every game. Some people are
of the opinion that there is a fight in every game
and because of this they will not go to the games.
All this fallacy does is to keep them from
enjoying the skill and beauty of the fastest game
in North America which you have mistakenly
called a boxing match.
Jim Brusio, 3rd-business administration
March 24
FINANCE CLUB
Short Mandatory Meeting
'/2 hour maximum
Tuesday, March 30
7:30 . 214 Boucke
Stop
excusing
your
life
away.
Everyone has an excuse for not
seeing their doctor about colorectal
cancer. However, 52,000 people die
of colorectal cancer every year. Two
out of three of these people might
be saved by early detection and
treatment.
What's your excuse? Today you
have a new, simple, practical way of
providing your doctor with a stool
specimen on which he can perform
the guaiac test. This can detect signs
of possible colorectal cancer in its
early stages before symptoms
appear. Ask your doctor about a
guaiac test, and stop excusing your
life away.
51?.American Cancer Society
TfIE MISSION WAS A COMPLETE
SUCCESSDESPITE TENDIO AND
I'LUMBINGPROBLEMS. THE GUYS
WILL Tfli YOU IN lIRSON IN A
FER.UHAINVES.
Eco-Action Presents
THE ONGOING CRISIS
AT THREE MILE ISLAND
Monday, March 29
12-6 pm Films on Nuclear Power
HUB Assembly Room
7:30 pm Bev Davis, a resident from the TMI area,
discusses the continuing effects from the
accident three years ago.
P 067 - HUB Gallery Room
234-0166
Hours:
Daily P 065-10
Thurs. L Fri. POOAOO
Sal. 941
.ft.
...a
LOOK HERE!!
Get a delicious, new Catacho for
A ''' ' :. -
-
. 131 S. Garner 234.4725
' . .I Open Mon-Thurs 11 a.m.-12 p.m.
Fri & Sat 11.2:30 a.m.
Sunday 12.12 p.m.
(with this coupon)
Serving Pepsi• Cola
The Daily Collegian Monday
a> OS.
<a
A.
only $2.59
College Me.
um-sm. Wllrons
March