Radio Club sends free holiday greetings nationwide By JOHN HOLT Collegian Staff Writer Now you can wish your friends a happy holiday even if they live thousands of miles away. The University Amateur Radio Club is offering its non-business message service to anyone who wants to send a friend a free message anywhere in the United States and Canada. Although yesterday was the last day for the sign-up table on the HUB ground floor, people . THURSDAY SPECIAL 0 / 4 - . Italian Ristorante ALL THE SPAGHETTI YOU CAN EAT:S2.99 (salad and garlic bread included) Free Delivery: Pizza, Stromboli, Dinners, etc.; 234.1033 goo o CALZONES & STROMBOLIS Come on in for our super Thursday Special Four delicious varieties are available cappocollo & salami, or 7 fresh sauteed vegetables, or marinated vegetables or bacon, spinach & mushrooms. If that's not enough, from 8:00pm on pitchers of beer are only $2&52.25! ON COLLEGE AVENUE ABOVE THE SALOON EA, 1-1) 16, 1982 may still contact the club at 202 Engineering Unit E behind Sackett Building or by calling 865-7231, club treasurer Bruce McKee said. To use the service, McKee said students should call and leave the name, complete address, and phone number of the person to receive the message. The message will be sent as close as possible to its location by shortwave radio and completed by telephone. A reply will be taken if desired. "We can get messages delivered by radio the same day in the states," club president Steve Fine said. "Although it can take a day or two to get it delivered by phone." The Christmas season is one of the more popular times to send messages by shortwave radio, but the free service is offered year round, Fine said. "We sent 600 messages last Valentine's Day," Fine said. "And in the past two days we've received about 100 requests." He said this is the tenth year the club has been offering this service. The Radio Club has about 40 members, Fine said, and membership is open to anyone interested in shortwave radio. Club meetings ~~-~~-tea:-~~- , Thank a farmer today are held on alternate Wednesdays at 7 p.m. in 206 Hammond. Members with a radio license run the club's station on a 24-hour basis. They contact other stations around the world using either voice or Morse Code. Club members compete to see who can call the most people in a limited amount of time. Along with contacting other stations, club members learn how to operate the radio using generators for power. Amateur radio clubs throughout the country participate in this Frats to host holiday parties for children Several fraternities are getting into . party on Friday night for orphan the holiday spirit this week by hosting children and several students from Christmas parties for area organiza- the Bellefonte area. tions. Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity will years old, will 'be brought to the sponsor its annual party .at 6:30 to- fraternity house between 6:30 and 7 night at 200 E. Beaver Ave. for mem- p.m. and will play games and visit hers of the Big Brothers and Big with Santa Claus. Each child will Sisters program in State College and receive four or five presents. surrounding areas. Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, to- Guests will decorate a Christmas gether with Delta Delta Delta sorori tree, play musical chairs, ping pong ty, will hold its Christmas party at 1 and other games and get a chance to p.m. on Saturday. Forty children socialize with each other. A magician from the State College Chapter of the will also perform. Pennsylvania Easter Seal Society will attend. One goal of the party is to encour- age more people to get involved in the . Games, 'prizes and a movie have program. The fraternity sponsors the been planned for the event and Santa party every year in coopera t ion with Claus will make an appearance. Pre the Youth Service Bureau. sents also will be distributed to In keeping with the spirit of the guests. This is the second year the season, Theta Delta Chi fraternity, fraternity has given the party. 305 E. Prospect Ave., will hold a COMING IN JANUARY THE BLUE KNOB SKI EXPRESS $11.50 lift ticket, transportation $22.00 lift, rental, lesson, transportation Leaves Penn State Campus 8:00am every TUES. and THURS. Call: THE SKI STATION 237-2655 Applications are available in Room 203 HUB for Chief Justice and 3 Associate Justices of the USG Supreme Court. Applications must be turned in by Dec. 21, 1982. R 268 100 emergency preparedness exercise, Fine said The University Amateur Radio Club also offers a class for those who want to earn a novice license. The most recent class started Dec. 8, but is still open, he said. The class meets at 7 Wednesday nights and will run until the end of the term or until each person earns his license. The class covers proper radio procedures as well as instruction of Morse Code, the international dot-dash code. The children, ranging from six to 12 —by Michelle Carter collegian notes • The College of Science Student Desk, at 424 Burrowes Building, the diet and disease in prehistory at 3 this Council will meet at 7 tonight in 307 Schlow Memorial Library, 100 E. afternoon in 107 Carpenter. • Circolo Italiano will meet at 7:30 tonight in N 348 Burrowes Building. • Penn State Internationale Danc ers will practice at 7 tonight in 133 • The College of Human Devel- • The physical education depart- White Building. AnYone interested opment Honor Society will meet at 8 ment announces that the downhill ski may attend. tonight in 5209 Henderson Human class scheduled for tonight has been Development Building. cancelled. • Interfraternity Council Dance Marathon Committee will meet at 7 • Student Performance Organiza- • Common Cause will meet at 7 tonight in the HUB Assembly Room. tion will meet at 7 tonight in 323 HUB. tonight in 308 Boucke. • Kalliope, the Penn State literary • George Armelagos, professor of magazine, is accepting literary and Anthropology at the University of • Eco-Action will meet at 6:30 art pieces. Submit work at the HUB Massachusetts, Amherst, will discuss tonight in 308 Willard. police log • Melissa Harless, 110 Hastings Hall, told State College police Tues day that her coat was missing from Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, 417 E. Prospect Ave., on Sunday. The value of the coat is estimated at $125, police said. • Andrew Blender of Altoona told State College police Tuesday that an AM-FM cassette player and a cas sette tape were missing from his Sunshine 220 g, Fraser mous oeett des fill 9 KING OF COPIES kinkois copicrs Across from PENN TOWERS Beaver Ave., or the Student Bookstore, 330 E. College Ave. • The Orienteering Club will meet Up-Understanding and Handling It, at 5:45 tonight in 101 Wagner. at 8 tonight in the HUB main lounge. automobile that was parked at the • Thomas Dell, 317 Porter Hall, Pugh Street' parking garage. The told University police on Tuesday value of the items is estimated at that $7O was missing from his room. $505, police said. • Mike Forish, 415 W. College told University police Tuesday that a Ave., told University Police Services sign was missing from the Mineral on Tuesday that his sweatpants and Museum and Art Gallery in Steidle shirt were missing from the main Building. The value of the sign is gym at Rec Hall. The value of the estimated at $5O, police said. items is unknown, police said. —by Bill Kraftsow r oo,======wstwor" Dr. James L. Smith of the N at USDA Eastern Regional Research Center i t V Microbial Injury What you can't see, can hurt you! 7:3opm, Thursday, December 16 305 HUB Sponsored by the Microbiology Club Everyone Welcome R-132 lit========toraAso...l, GI Qo iiOQ Q QQQ Q 4;4 4i)GioQ Ql6O 4;14;16)6i+ Q Gil 4i)4;4 Qo GP 4 4 Franco Brusati's C 4 1 --- ° lA4' .---3 ) _ 4 .. C at • t a a 1 c c -,s c c c c 11) You'll Laugh Till Your Heart Brea OStarrin g Nino Manfredi and Anna Karina. ADMISSION IS FREE! C) SPONSORED BY USG - STUDENT PROGRAMS FOR al) INTERNATIONAL AWARENESS R• 268 as part of the Holiday Festival IX 4D 6.O4;,QQQQQ6O4iOGIQIQQQQQQQQQQSQ4iDQQ • Martin Marder, University staff psychologist, will discuss Breaking SHOWING THURS. DEC. 16 H.U.B. BALLROOM 8:30 PM • Dave Snell, museum curator, USG sponsors buses home for break Worried about finding a way home for Christmas Break? Relax, because the Undergraduate Student Government is once again sponsoring buses to Philadelphia, Pitts burgh, New York City and Long Island. The buses will leave the HUB and Parking Lot 80 and will return from each city on Jan. 2, 1983. A one-way ticket to Philadelphia is $16.75 and a round trip fare is $31.75. The bus leaves the University at 5:30 p.m. Monday; at noon and 5:30 p.m. Tuesday; and at noon on Wednesday. All buses stop at King of Prussia Mall and the Trailways terminal, 13th and Arch Street. Bus tickets to Pittsburgh are $14.50 one way and $27.50 round trip. Departures are at 6 p.m. Monday; 12:30 and 6 p.m. Tuesday; and 12:30 p.m. Wednesday. The buses will stop at the David Weis store in Monroeville and the downtown Trailways terminal. OTIS plans apartment fee survey In an effort to better explain apart ment fees to student renters, the Organization for Town Independent Students is looking to the apartment owners and managers for some an swers. OTIS is developing a fee survey that will be sent to area apartment owners and managers. The survey should be sent before Christmas, said OTIS advisor Charlene Harrison. The fee survey is a relatively new idea which was considered during Fall Term, Harrison said. The idea was a combined effort between OTIS and Harrison. OTIS is gathering information Penn State 'Boo Owned and Operated by The Pennsyl about different apartment fees to help both landlords and tenants, Har rison said. The survey covers a num ber of areas, including pet fees, parking fees, application fees, lost key and lock replacement fees. Ques tions on the survey ask the amount of the fees, how prevalent the fees are, and how frequent they are. The main focus of the survey is on cleaning fees. For example, Mark Heavey, chair man of the OTIS consumer commit tee, said many students do not know if they are required to clean their apart ments before moving out. Instead, they may assume the cleaning fee TECHNICAL DEMONSTRAT December 14 - 2 t December 15 -10 tl December 16 -10 to The Daily Collegian Thursday, Dec. 16, 1982-3 Buses to New York City are $28.75 one way and $57.50 round trip. They will leave at 11:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. Tuesday; and 11:30 a.m. Wednesday. All three buses will stop at Sears in the Rockaway Mall in Dover, N.J., then go to the Port Authority Bus Terminal, Taxi Roadway. The bus to Long Island will leave at 5 p.m. on Tuesday. Tickets are $28.75 one way and $57.50 round trip. The bus will stop at Gimbels in Roosevelt Field Shopping Center and at Abraham and Straus Department Store in the Walt Whitman Shopping Center. All buses returning to the University from Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and New York City will leave at 7 p.m on Jan 2. The bus from Long Island will leave at 5 p.m. on the same day. Tickets will be on sale from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. today, tomorrow and Monday at the HUB Desk. For more information call 863-0295. —by Anne McDonough Will cover it Apartment owners and managers have until Jan. 7 to complete the questionnaire. Because of an editing error. in Tues day's issue of The Daily Collegian, a statement on the national use of scholarship and loan services was incorrectly attributed to Charles D. Bolan, University assistant director of student aid for institutional and private programs. -by BETH KAY Correction