opinions editorial opinion Football follies? Football fans across the country will settle down in their armchairs this Saturday and watch Penn State battle Nebraska. CBS cover age of the game will bring Penn State $500,000 and the prestige of being broadcast on national tele vision, which is always gratifying. But along with the fame and fortune comes an added danger, a danger that will be minimal if the fans sitting on hard benches in Beaver Stadium keep a few things in mind. Tailgaters will have two extra hours before the game. And rather than stay at home watching car toons, most tailgaters will show up at the stadium the same time they usually do and party a little longer. With the game beginning later in the afternoon, fans will have more time to drink and will be more likely to drive home drunk. Which is related to the next prob lem getting out of the stadium. Because the game will not be over until later, people who would usual ly stay for tailgates after the game will be leaving en masse, clogging the outlying roads for at least an hour. ' Spring Creek's comeback? `Spring Creek has been able to regenerate itself time and time again be.cause there are so many good streams feeding it. But no body ever helps it. As soon as it starts to make a comeback, some body dumps a load of chemicals in it.' —Joe Humpheys, a conservation ist and expert trout fisherman ThOrton Spring Creek in Lemont has survived man-made pollution in the past and probably will again, but this time the company respon sible for the pollution is apparently making an attempt to clean up the stream. HoweNier, it seems this clean-up is the least Ruetgers-Nease Chemi cal Company Inc. can do about an almost hopeless situation. Frances Benton, who owns the creek, said last year that the dete rioration of Spring Creek began in 1957 when the former Nease Chemi cal Co. built its plant. After the plant had been built, Benton said the water began to smell and yel low 'slime formed on the creek's bottom. Benton suspected the com pany was responsible. Raper spells success at Penn State and beyon. By ROGER KARAPIN Liberal Arts Student Hold on to that paper Hold on to that paper Hold on because it's been taken care of Hold on to that paper —David Byrne (Copyright 1979 Index Music/Bleu Disque Music Co. Inc.) To the sophisticated University student, paper is where it's at. Syllabuses, exams, graduation requirement checklists, letters of recommendation, transcripts, resumes: with these papers, the student can chart her way through a degree at Penn State and emerge with the future he or she wants. If he or she does the course work (on paper) in the right major and gets good grades, then he or she will graduate with the right de gree, receive so many dollars and be suc cessful. The procedure for succeeding is deter mined and well-marked; every student needs only to carefully execute the formula. Control the paper and you will be a success at the University and be on your way to winning in life too. Of course planning is not itself an extraor dinary human activity. It seems as though we spend much of our time trying to grasp , and control the future, to write a script and then live it. The University may (among other things) teach us to apply rationality And all that traffic will be strain ing to get out of the stadium under a different type of lighting. Jim Tarman, director of intercollegiate athletics, has said that, after the game, some of the lights used dur ing the game will be turned around to face the parking lots. Fans will have to adjust to the new phenome non of maneuvering out of Beaver Stadium under the glare of bright lights. So, should the University tell the boys at CBS to pack up their bags and go home? Should the Universi ty scorn the $500,000 booty in the name of increased safety for all? No. The University's athletics program can use CBS money to help fund other sports. Although Penn State game has never started this late, Penn State has weathered similar situations. Fans have left Pitt games under similar lighting. Saturday's game should be an enjoyable one. That is, if fans drive, drink and behave properly. After all, Sunday's headlines should read Penn State kills Ne braska and not 500 killed in wild stampede.. Benton's suspicions were con firnied when the state Department of Enviromental - Resources discov ered kepone and other cancer caus ing chemicals in the stream came from the storage lagoons, located beneath the plant site on Route 26, which were deteriorated by acidic rain. After years of legal maneuvers, in June 1981 the DER ordered the company to remove the wastes beneath the plant and build a better groundwater facility. As part of the clean-up, the com pany will have to pump the waste out of the lagoons, treat it and move 350 to 400 truck loads of the Chemfix soil-like material to a new disposal site in Ohio. DER officials are optimistic the stream will recover if Ruetgers- Nease completes this clean-up process. But DER official William Parsons said it might take several years before the stream is rid of the Kepone and other chemicals. It seems Spring Creek might make another comeback. No one, however, is willing to say that the clean-up will bring the stream back to its original state. That would take a miracle. (the rationality of deductive logic) to our planning. Mimicking the University, we might try to logically analyze a personal problem, discover a rational solution, and apply it in order to produce an assured outcome. We seem to have strong reasons to accept and rely on a purely logical method of making decisions. The University, a re spected institution, is a thoroughly ratio nalized structure. At every turn, it teaches us implicit lesions about the authority of rationality: at registration, at drop-add, through computer scoring and calculation of grades, and•even in the division of the day into periods of standard length. Everywhere we go a specified procedure seems to pro duce a completely predictable conclusion. forum But this search for control and logical certainty is dangerous in several ways. First, it leads to unrealistic expectations about how predictable the future is, and perhaps to shock or refusal to recognize the truth when things do not work out as planned. Second, many problems and chal lenges in our daily lives are not susceptible to logical analysis and controlled solutions; they include any situation which involves • I. 1.1 t• \ ...SIR,COULD you SU- U$ P. 11.6 KONOtti t GUI 1011JRN POUR reader opinion Rivals When I read Kathleen Pavelko's comments about newpapers and competition in the Sept. 13 issue of The Daily Collegian I couldn't believe my eyes. She is quite right in saying that competition can be a spur in a journal ist's side but some other remarks and insinua tions cannot go unchallenged. She should realize The Centre Daily Times and the Collegian are not even close to match ing the Pulitzer Prize performances of the papers of Los Angeles and Philadelphia. The Philadelphia Inquirer had tough competition for years from The Bulletin, and still does from the many suburban publications. The only competition I see between the Collegian and the CDT is who prints the most pages. As stated, the Collegian caters to the students and the CDT is for everyone else. Philadephia is anything but journalistically deficient and if Ms. Pavelko visited the local newsstand occasionally she would see that the Inquirer even has a strong following in this area. One point overlooked in her article - was the new Sunday edition of the CDT. I feel this was a legitimate step toward improving the image of that paper. Yet a paper that publishes only d t ail; Collegian Friday,•Sept. 24, 1982 C)1982 Collegian Inc Phil Gutis Editor Business Manager The• Daily Collegian's editorial opinion is determined by its Board of Opinion, with the editor holding final responsibility. Opinions expressed on the editorial pages are not necessarily those of The Daily Collegian, Collegian Inc. or The Pennsylvania State University. Collegian Inc., publishers of The Daily Collegian and related publications, is a separate corporate institution from Penn State. people, (even if only ourselves), their feel ings, thoughts and actions. When confronted with such problems, we may be tempted to do one of two things: redefine and change the problem to make it entirely logical, or attempt to directly control the unpredict able elements, notably other people. For example, for purposes of planning rationally, people sometimes reduce the problem of attaining personal happiness to the problem of accumulating wealth. Even more serious, people often approach rela tions with others from the standpoint of how to control and make predictable the other person's actions. People want friends and lovers they can count on, but often this means attempts to control; the resulting games and power maneuvers can poison a relationship, cause mutual antagonism, dis trust, disrespect and ultimately, destroy love. Finally, even attempts to control simple, material aspects of the environment are not guaranteed success. The future is not very predictable in a society as complex as ours. Accidents (fortunate or unfortunate) are likely to play a large role in our, lives, whether we like it or not. Job forecasts can change rapidly, or a diploma may secure a first job but not a second or third. The best job on paper can turn into a dead end or unemployment, the most stable marriage into angry divorce, economic security into widespread economic depression, nuclear superiority into nuclear holocaust. The six (or five) out of seven days still has room for improvement in that area. One last issue nementioned in the article concerns mistakes. Whether they involve grammar„ photography or editorial policy, each paper could gain much on its'competitor if the large number of mistakes were re duced. Everyone is human, but how many times can you let a 1929 Westinghouse refrig erator make the front page or read an article unfit for English 10? The two papers do an adequate job of reporting the news and I am a more-than occasional reader of both. Yet there are days when I find my math book more appealing. However I am hopeful that as rivals"; each paper will give it the "ole college try" and , start satisfying their readers. Kenneth Fioravanti, 10th-metallurgy Sept. 17 Works of art I have made my peace with the gazebos. When I returned to University Park after a six-month absence, I noticed that the campus had been transformed into a formal garden complete with two gazebos: My first reaction was one of appreciation, my next was one of disgust. The same disgust that the French peasants felt for Marie Antoinette's extrava gance or the Iranian populace felt toward the Shah's ostentatious monarchy. Is Penn State plagued by the same diseases as those monarchs: too much money and too little conscience? I can answer no, because I have seen the light: I see the magnanimous intent in those gingerbread pillars. Not only are the gazebos fine examples of art, but they are also creating artisans gaiebo makers. Penn State has the ability to exploit this situation,, rejuvenate skilled craftsmanship and give it the prominence it deserves- in American society. Paul Rudoy To encourage this revival of craftsmanship, the University could develop an interdepart mental option entitled gazebo studies. The quest for certainty in all aspects of life is doomed to failure. Why can't we, control, or at least accu rately predict, the future? The answer flies in the uncertainty inherent in all human activity. For_ one thing, communication be tween people is , usually very uncertain: difficulities arising from different experi ences, language conventions, and concep tual frameworks and, from the misunderstanding of subtext and intentions limit attempts to communicate. For another, our emotional lives have great impact on our behavior, but they are usually poorly understood, add in any case notoriously difficult to control or predict. So, much of human behavior (even our own) will appear spontaneous to us. Trying to control people can come to no good; only each person can attempt to determine her life and herself. The sun should rise tomorrow, Just like today. I'd like to guarantee it, Bait's more than I can say. I see the world around me; I act in the play. But I won't make predictions, 'Cause it just don't work that way. —Scott Synder, 1980 PSU graduate (Copy- . right 1982) Ths does not seem to leave us with very much: no certainty, no control, no 'hope of seeing our plans acted out. But to know that processes in society must be spontaneous 011!IDEVIiYt,411 ..OILSORF. 114 E. Ull4 ..., , - OMNI • N... 1N1*...,A11.. OWN_ :A1....UK6,Y0u Oa s t. , AL AND., OH,. SO, AV ER.........., :1 .• &s," : • architecture department could sponsor a' course in design analysis of gazebos while the department of man-environment relationi; could offer a course on behavorial aspects or: student-gazebo relations. There could be 4: history course called gazebos through the ages and the political science department- could create a seminar on gazebo7class.work ers' impact on the' American political struck ture. Now, when I stroll past those romantic pavilions, I sigh with pleasure, and reflect one the contributions they can make to society. Y, And to think all this can be possible because otl: a 00,000 donation. Louise Witt, 10th-political science Sept. 21 _ The crowd usually follows the cheer inic; tiated by the pep squad and the Penn State; cheerleaders. This year at -the helm of the: squad is one Gregg Cook, alias "Mr. Mike." believe Mr. Cook is a very poor choice to head an otherwise A-1 group of people as the Penh: State cheerleaders. The current "Mr. Mike" doesn't know when' to start a cheer and when he tries, he has a , hard time getting audience participation. I've, noticed that he fails to utilize two popular, cheers, namely the "Go Bananas" cheer anct "Get the Ball You All" chant during the , game. Mr. Cook, why don't you resign and bang uZ your microphone. That way, the enthusiasm; the fans bring in with them won't be wasted,-c, Sal Bronti, sth-agricultural business manage; meat Sept. 20 and uncontrolled does not prevent us from setting goals or from acting to reach them. However, in setting goals, we must respect the unpredictability of people's actions, and cope' with the unpredictability of our com plex world; these limits make any goal less than certainly attainable. We should also appreciate the importance of accidents in our lives. As an exercise; list the important people and activities in your life, and try to decide if you first came across them mostly intentionally or mostly by accident. Knowing that accidents pro= vide some of our best opportunities helps us to recognize them in the future; it frees us from the closed-minded attempt to execute a chosen plan. , • Another major benefit comes from adjust- Ang to uncertainty. Personal relationships have a much better chance of benefiting the people involved if attempts to control others are abandoned; and everyone's spontaneity and right to attempt self-determination are recognized and respected. People are not to' be controlled; the best of life flows freely, spontaneously, and cannot be delivered by the cold, iron grip of control and certainity. Uncertainity can be frightening; however, it also opens up dimensions for everyone to make his own life, uncoerced, and that is a valuable thing. No one can live on paper. Don't think I can fit it on the paper Don't think I can get it on the paper Go ahead and rip up, rip up the paper Go ahead and tear up, tear up the paper. —Daivd Byrne (copyright 1979 Index Mu sic/Bleu Bisque Music Co. Inc.) The Daily Collegian Friday, Sept. 24; Wasted enthusiasm .1 Whenever there is a home football game 'at Beaver Stadium, countless numbers of fans get psyched for the game by tailgating. Eacg one of the fans there carries a great deal of, enthusiasm and spirit into the stadium, ready to cheer on the Lions. 112, Handcrafted Gifts from around the world' Unusual Jewelry and Toys Craft, Photography, and Art Books Beautiful Prints and Posters Sculpture, Wall Hangings, Museum Postcards and Notes. The Pennsylvania State University Museum of Art, _ between the Creamery and the Forum on Curtin Rd Tues.-Sun What Is A Quaker Meeting Like? It is a gathering of Friends who sit quietly together, who search for meanings and a 'better way to live, who share their thoughts and visions with each other. It follows no program and it ends with a handclasp. A worship based on silence Quaker Meeting House every Sunday at 11:00 a.m. 611 E. Prospect Ave. MUSEUM OF ART STORE Charles D. , Reighard is proud to announce the opening of his salon for contemporary hair care at 512 E. College Avenue in the very near future. He apologizes for any inconvenience this interruption of service may cause his valued customers. For more information call 355-0093. People with foresight read The Daily Collegian. But you already knew that, didn't you? HALSTON PACO RABANNE LAGERFELD DESIGNER FRAGRANCES FRASER Si . entle/ N.4 MINI MALL 10‘ 238-4050 11-4:30 MICHAEL'S CLOTHING CO. NOTICE The Campus Loop will not operate on home football Saturdays between the hours of: 11:00 a.m. - 6p .m. The Daily Collegian Friday, Sept. 24, 1982-11