The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, April 15, 1983, Image 12

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The Daily Collegian i
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, . Friday, April 15 i •
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. Internationale Dancers .7) , I. '
peanuts ®
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Broadway revisited: .
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YOU SURE AREA CUTE HAVE ME TELL YOU NOW /.• /'' 4!3 .4,
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rt .: 0. LITTLE THING—I SEE YOU
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• set fors pring Conce SECURITY BLANK THAT HABIT 7 ' 4 el, ° , , l'Olg P.i Th. 4 ... .
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• I BROKE MYSELF OF :,, , Orm. STUPID KID!!!
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Carefree moments to come alive in URTC .production . .
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By RON YEANY folk dance is that everyone starts eivc,r—__
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By LYNETTE CIERVO Director Helen Manfull, a profes- "Mary's a Grand Old Name," "The an jewel box. Most of the props are Collegian Staff Writer at the same place," Wise said. , _
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collegian Staff Writer sor in the Department of Theatre Yankee Doodle Boy" and "You're a painted on the back drop a char- "Everyonecan learn and progress . '.), '„f . ,/ i/ ..4 7 - 7 ,,,,. mi --; ' , - -7 Ak• <- .--'4 4,1
and Film, sums up her views on the Grand Old Flag." acteristic of settings during that and really become good at it with- - I , , r. , i1i .. E... .-....i .. ; ,
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01983 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
. Remember a time when life was play: Musical director Tim Shuey, vo- time. out any'prior experience." . .1
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:simple and carefree? If it seems "It is a play about America at a cal director Margaret Shuey and a Choreographer Karen Balzer has .Wise has certainly done so. Heis ) . o
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:difficult to imagine such a period, time when we were maybe a little former music student named Carol put together a variety of dances now not only a member •of the d • 1
WELL, IF YOU DO, I M YOU SOUND LIKE I'VE NEVER HEARD
~ the University Resident Theatre more naive and we didn't know • Lindsay will provide the evening's including waltzes, soft shoe and tap'
HERETO HELP THAT PERSON! SOMEONE WHO NEEDS THAT ONE BEFORE a
:Company will help bring that flit of about things like nuclear wars," she music, consisting of a piano, violin ,to entertain the audience. Internationale Dancers, but also ,
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ANYONEH O O R
p N R I MORNING! 66
IN
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A O yRoo Y uo O RN U O
choreographs most of the material ,
HIS RACKET RESTRUNG • - i
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:nostalgia to campus this weekend said. "It was a time when this and drum. Other instruments such • The Manfulls combine their tal- with Hanley and Atkinson. One of
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-when George M. Cohan's musical country had a lot of energy and was as whistles, ratchets and pop guns ents in hope of taking the audience Wise's particularly noteworthy, I CAN TELL HIM OR HER
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melodrama, "45 Minutes From not ashamed to be patriotic. will be used in a chase scene. . back to the turn of the century for pieces is a wild and loud Bulgari- 'i _ A SECURITY BLANKET? HOW 1 7. 6 , 1:0 : 1_ ,...; E ,.. :ME . HA81T 1 ,
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• Broadway," opens at 8 tonight at The play is colored with. 23 old- The stage is treated to resemble aan enjoyable evening. They both an-Serbian St. George's Day Cele- .; /f /r.:-.. • (1T ii
the Playhouse Theatre. . The show fashioned, fun tunes. Among them stage at the turn of the century. Red agree that, for the audience as well bration. - , 1 .I* , 1 - k 4-'
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:runs through Apr. 30. are such musical favorites as "Give and gold painted canvas frames the as the actors, the play will be "one - - s , , I ' .
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My Regards to Broadway," stage to make it look like a Victori - night of fun." ( , ..,...... i 1 1 = 0 : 41.,,,Ltihi,/,i •
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For those of you who had the
pleasure of seeing them last Satur
day night at the NCAA individual
gymnastics finals, it was just a
small sampling of what is yet to
come. For those of you who missed
them, your chance is here, as the
Penn State Internationale Danc
ers present their Spring Concert at
2 this Sunday afternoon in the
White Building Dance Theatre.
The group grew out of a folk and "We usually get ideas from
A glimpse back to the year 1906, square dance class during the fall books and have noted teachers
:the play provides an array of old- of 1978. It has since progressed to come in to show us," he said.
:fashioned dances, old-fashioned -I
• -< 3 an outstanding and well-known Hanley added that the group also
songs and an old-fashioned love .- s , ~:•:: •• performance organization of some does much traveling to see other --.
`story. . , t - 2 , •
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The plot is simple. In the town of : 4 ',.
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- -• 'A ', ...0, •`•;',4 1 1 -, - - ritzans of Pittsburgh, which often 1
'New Rochelle N.Y. located 45 o ,fk • i • ,; • , , l l, • -, • 1 ,,,A, •.,••-:. 4 ....f• -. ; ;....- Y.' 1 . ifie •'` ' structor in the College of Health, give the dancers some interesting
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rminutes from Broadway old Mr. 0, , *-.„.1.1`..•• .:.:•: . ' '. - 0 ' ' •`•;101," "i".. -•-:e . v• •-- '. • -:,,, ',‘;''' ,
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Carol 1 1
Bennett has died and his will is . k .';`':.,,,r, - •_• ,:.;;•1• , * • - , ~:q .., - h-'....,, , ; 1 e,.. :- -to - ',..:, ,* ~..,„ :
ation. Assistant director Mary a bloom county.
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,nowhere to be found. The story 41.4:,*Th'1 '17 , .. • .0,. •• t rvi.„7 - 1: „y r , •: ~,-.•- Cr., ' l, ‘ fly I- -.., .. . ii • Atkinson (11th-quantitative busi- :
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centers around who will be the re- ' t'..fr ;•
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. 4 4 ' ' 4.,,,:.. wt.: ..-- .44 ',`;' 0 ~" -''..'F.4 , t,' .. i' Hanley, who served as the Penn
cipient of his inheritance. Nephew ~ • • ',••4 ' 4 .,. :: ~ " • N f:V kr.t' ~- -, lzy , •-• ; ',...' 9•Y." `V • * •
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from 1968 to 1971, turned seriously ness analysis) said many of the , 1 , HAM BUR GER 1411 ;;A: M 5 . POT 5Y1113111 ...1H 1 15 7 4 5 N . 511 / 111
dancers are interested in learning : r , QUI% THE DEVILISH ROMP; 1 -
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Tom Bennett assumes he is the `. about the culture of other coun- ,a,
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' e 'P' ;* ' !.ip, toward dance after attending : ' __,..-ff-_--It• • _Air DIANA ? II r :I'\ • w
heir, which in turn attracts .• - ~.„ • . .
tries through dance. Hanley :, '
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;the interest of the infamous chorus • -„ ' ..' .%•-e . u 4 •,,, . -••. ' kv• workshops at Brigham Young Uni
agreed: "When you learn a dance ;
versity and other places. ..'F i • 0
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'girl Flora Dora Dean. But we can't ‘(/`O-0"" '..'", ‘,' of another culture, you often look 4 ,
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:forget about the old man's faithful "Gymnastics and dancing went into the heritage of that culture. 71 We
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parallel for me for a long time. I 4 , -
:maid Mary Jenkins. And when a -•st, .• .' 4k --:, -:. ~ ..: ; - • . •••• , ;. : This type of learning is often just a' ' 1 .......,‘,..
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'villain named Cronin, along with ~; t i 1, . , N.c .. . . „., tp - .. ' judged gymnastics, coached for a as exciting as learning the steps." ` 1
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while, and judged some more. But 1 ••. • . N ..._ . liiiliii f '...*:•A i • v
Flora Dora's mother, Mrs. Dean, "' ' ' .• N - • '' ' The group's repertoire includes 4 ,
-come into the picture, matters be- !• 4 . .?
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-dome a little sticky. for me, I pursued dance," Hanley a
nation of which they performed at . .411,m_widi •i, Ar, k•• 1; a 1 fEld •'. dui,.
said.
: Lowell L. Manfull, professor of . 14 ,1 4 toriarat err Iv ~ , ~ _.. - ..---= „..- , . A; ' ' the NCAAs), Sweden, Greece, Po-
:theatre history and .criticism, has , , •-' '''.'Arin ' , 1..' .'"--1 - - ..-° ,' ; #' ~ , ~....... •/`: • ' And indeed she has. In addition land, Scotland, Romania, Russia, : i
-rewritten parts of the original play -• ;:- .- - ~•,; --------- - .• •'.. - -,• •••"`3. ' , F . ' , to the Internationale Dancers, the Croatia, Serbia, Macedonia, Is- : 71415 15 WHAT RIGIIT-0! YOU 141151F.R
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, MY WIFE 'AVE YE& CHICKEN McCHEESE.
for the URTC version to include .!.•,, : .. -•,- : • ..' •• - ' '''' ' . - Ballroom Dance Club has resulted rael, France, Slovenia, Bulgaria, $ ,
ORPEREP ? McNU&K,TS, EEO . REALLY.
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,Various vaudeville sketches and l'e • ` front a Hanley dance class. Italy, Dalmatia, Mexico and the : , \ Mc.MUFFIN AND AS ..--
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songs. -„, • But a dancing background is not United States. The dances range ` 1 MISIER McCHEESE. 56- q
. . "I've tried to keep the play as ...,, • . , a prerequisite for involvement in from serious and soft, like an 4 ,‘ f , i r.. f 4 '\ ißti
-close to the spirit of the original .. . 4 ' * . '. ' ' ' • the gioup. Scott Wise (9th-health Israeli circle dance for women, to N 11
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..piece as possible,'.' Manful! said. planning and administration) had a humorous French Quadrille a a '5 jk44'. 'l'
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'The vaudeville routines that were . ...., • never had any dancing experience farce that has peasants mimicking ~
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-were rewritten to tie them in with Theatre professors Helen and Lowell Manfull discuss preparations for "45 Minuts From Broadway," the URTC production tionale Dancers in one of Hanley's Wise said that although the i , .-1 , Y 1
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,the plot." that opens at 8 tonight in the Playhouse Theatre. classes. group can't fully costume every- a f' ‘' in ---.=- ; 44.7-4,
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"One thing I really like about one in authentic costumes for all : ' 1)
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the countries, "we can do so for ' 1
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, o k n e e ep oo dc:i r n :o:i v s e p r year, which is ,
'Best' director i I °
Frightmare just a bad dream And the ideas keep coriiing. ! i
. . . "I've been to Italy and many oth-
draws criticism ers have been to different places,"
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By CHRISTINE CURCIO ring of my mother's so I could all she gets is a bloody lip. Another he said, "and Betz has been all \, 1
. LONDON (AP) Some follow- Collegian Staff Writer secretly marry you. You took me girl burns to death in front of the around •the world." , . •
ers of Mohandas K. Gandhi said weirte JUST GONNA ,
away and we made love in your house but her hair is still perfectly Hanley, who plans to take a NOW LETS GET ohke- C H RE A FRIENDSHIP
yesterday they were "horrified" "He lives. He stalks. He sucks," coffin. It was beautiful." Young coiffed. ;THING STRAIG-HT OF GOOO CLEAN FUN_ •
, , sabbatical to Yugoslavia, Bulgar
by Sir Richard Attenborough's • according to one bubbleheaded teen love. There wasn't a dry eye in the The surviving teenagers search ia and Greece next spring seines Tommy- et.l NoT WE couLo DO EVERY- THAT'S e. GREAT .
CrOING•TO Buy you YEAN,OkAY... HoW, START! WHAT DO
THING- Two REAL BRO- llitouT A MOVIE ? you wANT "r 0
plan to attend a whites only South caught in the grips of a "Fright- house. "all over the house" but cannot find ter, said "(traveling) is the best , ,1, ANY BEER oR ANY- THERS MIGHT 00-Y OO- SEE?
African premiere of the film mare." They do all kinds of disgusting the victims sprawled all over the -
way to learn the culture and heri- 4 'ft , -THING. 6166 I=°-S- KNOW , 60 To BALL' a_ / w , o-t... How ABouT
"Gandhi." They charged the di- , You... o K PO ( r
(TAMES ANI)II 4 INGS
I have no idea why I subject place. It left me wanting to yell, tage behind the dances. You know, 1 i
..• / YEAH.. boy tr I 3 : ..IKE• THAT.. :.) . 'oEep-rwrops - t?
rector was violating the spirit of i )
myself to B-grade horror movies. - 'When in Rome, do as the Romans .
Gandhi's fight, against racial seg- ,
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The acting is always laughable, and ' ots!" Three of the dead teenagers do' ." ) , .........1
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when the scary parts come, I close movie review are set inside a dumb waiter and -I
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my eyes. At any rate, "Fright- lowered to the ground floor. A logi-
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mare," currently frightening peo- immaremisow.-- -- ® cal assumption is that they will be
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pie downtown, is so bad that it's discovered later, but nothing ever ' - .. A g l
funny. comes of it. This scrambled scene
and others like it leaves the viewer
with an overall reaction of "Huh?"
In South Africa, where Gandhi
began experimenting with passive
resistance,. an Indian group ded
icated to his memory said it had a
print of the film and would show it
in Lenasia, an Indian township,
one day before the opening in
Johannesburg next Thursday.
• But Attenborough defended his
position during a news conference
here. He said the only way to bring
his message of human dignity and
non-violence to South Africa was
to go along with its strict apart
heid, or segregation, laws.
He said he was "absolutely cer
tain" Gandhi would have wanted.
people to see the film.
Skating spectacular
the first for Pavilion
By BRENDA BOGUT
Collegian Staff Writer
The Penn State Ice Pavilion,
together with McDonalds, will pre
, sent "Ice Rhythms," an ice show
incorporating the skills of a wide
variety of skaters from all levels
of expertise, at 7:30 tonight and
' tomorrow night at the Ice Pavil
• ion.
This venture, the first of its kind,
is designed to promote the figure
skating aspects of the rink, which
is part of the Indoor Sports Corn
plex located near Nittany Halls.
The program's talent is drawn
from both student and public pro
grams, heightened with perfor
mances from the resident pros and
visiting skaters.
David Jamison, the 1983 Junior
'Men's National Competitor and
silver medalist at the Eastern
Competition, along with Mark and
Kathy Todaro, sectional compet
itors from the Skating Club of
Wilmington, Del., will be featured
in the show. Various members of
the Penn State Student Figure
Skating Club and the Town Figure
Skating Club will also perform.
The musical score of the show is
Conrad Radzoff is a has-been hor
ror movie actor who looks like Bela
Lugosi with a hangover. When he
dies, he captures the imagination of
some Hollyweird hooligans, ob
sessed with horror flicks, who de
cide to steal his body for a night.
They bring him back to their huge
creepy-looking house and throw a
party in his honor, propping him up
at the head of the dinner table. One
schizzed-out girl with blue hair tells
the corpse in loving terms, "I stole a
every bit as varied as the abilities
of the skaters. In fact, a wide
swath is covered in its entertain
ment selection. "At the Hop," the
Beach Boys' "Surf's Up" and the
recent hit "Stray Cat Strut" are
just a few of the numbers included
in the show. .For the mellower
enthusiast, there is also a skating
rendition of ballroom dancing.
In addition, a $27,000 lighting
system has been installed to fur
ther enhance the routines, rou
tines which have all been
choreographed by the Pavilion's
professional staff.
Dena Yeagley, director of "Ice
Rhythms," stresses that the phi
losophy behind the show "is to
make the ice show a fun experi
ence for skaters, while improving
their skills."
What the show hopes to leave the
audience with is the impression
that skating is fun regardless of
age or skill.
Probably the most important
factor resulting from the "Ice
Rhythms" is the publicity the Ice
Pavilion will receive. The expo
sure will hopefully enlighten stu
dents who had been previously
unaware of the facility.
things with the corpse, convincing
the audience that they will soon get
theirs. Conrad comes hick to life
(yawn) and what ensues is two
nights of terror that-one will soon
forget. The death scenes are corny
and unrealistic except for a con
vincing decapitation scene. Before
a guy loses his head, Conrad chases
him down a long dark hallway. Of
course the guy turns and says,
"Stop."
One unfortunate girl is 'smashed
in the face by a floating casket and
Skaters performing in this weekend's "Ice Rhythms," a production spon•
sored by the Penn State Ice Pavilion and McDonalds, perform their version of
The confusing occurrences and
the loose ends lend nothing but
incredibility to "Frightmare." I'll
remember it for one reason: in the
beginning of the film, a fat man is
strangled to death and as the cam
era pans away from his face, he
blinks. Somehow, that sloppy bit of
editing set the tone for a potentially
good movie if it had made any
logical sense.
Tchaikovsky's "Swan Lake," called "Swine Lake." Program sponsors are
trying to promote the figure skating aspects of the rink.
Concerning the group's ultimate
objectives, Hanley sums it up like
this: "When people say 'dance,'
they think of modern, jazz, ballet,
etc. Where does 'folk' belong?
People get the wrong idea about
how much fun it can be: My goals
include making folk dance a viable
art form. I am always proud of
this group, and we have a good
reputation. We would like to con
tribute on campus to internationa
lize and to help everyone
understand our cultures and those
of our international students."
General admission to the perfor
mance is $2.50, $2 for students and
senior citizens.
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I SAY, MIGHT YOU
HAVE A MISTER
Itf3RVS G AS SPROUTS ?
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Across
1 Bottle
7 Pass on informa
tion
12 King of the fairies
13 Superior
14 Disobeyed
15 Pecan
16 Horus
17 Sward
19 Addition
20 Ice or stone
22 Looped knot
24 Tableland
26 Bodily
Down
1 Clipfish
2 Playwright Bur
rows
3 Stimulate
4 Sung by Scotto
5 Opponent
6 Periods
7 Haphazard
Oil-yielding tree
9 Stall
10 Grandparental
11 Scream
18 Shawm
20 Candlenut tree
21 Produce
23 Access
,__..
Jog into the Family Clothesline
for Great Savings!
n .
C . Wrangler Sweat Pants
va55.99
C ls. o a o s r s d o in rt a e t d ed co c l r o e r w s
neck
11111 11 1' .sweatshirts
W 'ow& 6.99
amiml- 4 Coordinated hooded
I WO sweatshirts (pullover or zipper) • 9.99
Gym Shorts 2 pair for 6.00
eilNylon Running Shorts 4.99 to
the family clothesline
/152 E. College Ave. 237.1946
***********************************
* BETA SIGMA BETA
SY BARASH
** ***-********************** *******
,' )
,
[.-1
P A NicDonald
IL
REGISTRATION BEGINS
Monday April 18th-29th
For Canoe Races & Tug-O-War Events
Free T-Shirts for canoe entrants $l5 per team of 2
Tug-O-War team-weight 1200 lbs men, 900 lbs
women $2O per team
REGATTA .May Ist * Bald Eagle State Park * llam-spm *
30 Tumbler
32 Academic session
33 French friend
34 Some
35 _Hydraulic pump
38 For
40 Gold In Heraldry
41 Fanciful
43 Purloin
47 Outdoor living area
48 Attractiveness
49 Abrasive
50 Restored to health
25 In the style of
26 Prod
27 Maudlin
28 Scottish name
29 Boohoo
31 Enlist
35 Suitable
36 Original sin
37 Allot out
39 Cravo
40 Jug
42 Zephyr
44 Suffix denoting
aptitude
45 Before
46 Angry
TABLES LOCATED AT
HUB Basement
Mall Gate (College & Allen Sts.)
Willard Steps
Crossword
East Halls (FUB)
Pollock Halls (PUB)
The Daily Collegiar
Friday, April 16
(answers In Monday's classifieds)